Questions

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

identifier question
22084And what did he?
22084Tell me, was that man sincere in his opposition to slavery?
22084Think you his work was easy?
2050''Any proposition to make?''
2050''Are there some called Brown?''
2050''Well, you still remember the prayer she taught you?''
2050''What, did your mother never teach you?''
2050And, if not, can we expect reasonably an outpouring of His grace while in this ungracious manner we are thwarting Him?
2050Are there many Abolitionists about here?''
2050Brown, suppose you had every nigger in the United States, what would you do with them?
2050Can you tell us who furnished money for your expedition?
2050Could n''t men migrate and change their minds?
2050Do you consider this a religious movement?
2050Do you consider yourself an instrument in the hands of Providence?
2050How do you justify your acts?
2050Is He a respecter of persons?
2050Is it not to deal thy bread to the hungry, and that thou bring the poor that are cast out to thy house?''
2050John Brown has swift argument within him as in his boyish days:''Has God-- their Father and ours-- set any line betwixt His children?
2050They stripped a poodle of the best of his fleece and handed it to the oracular Yankee with the inquiry,''What would you do with that wool?''
2050What were slaves?
2050Why came you here?
13176''Do you know any energetic contractor?'' 13176 Are you William Lloyd Garrison?"
13176But who will take care of you?
13176Did n''t we give it to those fellows down there?
13176Do you want your son or your daughter to marry a nigger?
13176How do you expect to destroy slavery, as it exists in Kentucky, by talking and voting abolition up here in Ohio?
13176Is it to be inferred that because I do n''t want a negro woman for a slave, I do want her for a wife?
13176What good would a proclamation from me do, especially as we are now situated?
13176Where is thee from?
13176Why is thee running away?
13176Will you indorse their paper for one thousand dollars?
13176Will you indorse their paper?
13176All these sacrifices were in the cause of human liberty; but of liberty for whom?
13176But did he not have a right to seek the higher office, especially when the policy pursued by its incumbent did not meet his full approval?
13176But were the Missouri Radicals so far disheartened by their rebuffs from the President that they gave up the fight?
13176But why, I again ask, were the Northern people so infatuated with slavery?
13176Can a bill of sale from Spain give to us any such privilege, if privilege it may be called?
13176Can an agreement with Spain bring to naught our responsibilities under our own Declaration of Independence?
13176Did the change of position lead to a change of opinion on his part?
13176How many of the perpetrators of these atrocities have been adequately punished, or how many have been punished at all?
13176Now, for what did those parties stand in 1840?
13176What should they do about it?
13176Which had the loftier motive?
13176Who were their presidential candidates in that year?
13176Why in any sense is slavery in Luzon more defensible than slavery in South Carolina or in Alabama?
13176Why was it that this devotion to slavery and this hostility to its opposers prevailed in the non- slaveholding States?
13176Would my word free the slaves, when I can not even enforce the Constitution in the rebel States?"
13176he inquired;''one who would be willing to take a large contract attended with some risk?''
23Shall I not visit for these things? 23 Well, do n''t he give you enough to eat?"
23Well, does the colonel treat you well?
23What, does he work you too hard?
23Will you succor and protect him as a brother- man-- a resident of the old Bay State?
23Wo n''t you?
23You will be free as soon as you are twenty- one,_ but I am a slave for life!_ Have not I as good a right to be free as you have?
23And why?
23Could any thing be more true of our churches?
23Does a slave look dissatisfied?
23Does he ever venture to suggest a different mode of doing things from that pointed out by his master?
23Does he ever venture to vindicate his conduct, when censured for it?
23Does he forget to pull off his hat at the approach of a white person?
23Does he speak loudly when spoken to by his master?
23Does he, while ploughing, break a plough,--or, while hoeing, break a hoe?
23Give thanks, and rob thy own afflicted poor?
23He asked,"Are ye a slave for life?"
23If with the latter, what are you prepared to do and dare in their behalf?
23Is it not evil, only evil, and that continually?
23Is it possible for the human mind to conceive of a more horrible state of society?
23Is there any God?
23Shall not my soul be avenged on such a nation as this?"
23Talk of thy glorious liberty, and then Bolt hard the captive''s door?
23Try it?
23What does its presence imply but the absence of all fear of God, all regard for man, on the part of the people of the United States?
23When I carried to him my weekly wages, he would, after counting the money, look me in the face with a robber- like fierceness, and ask,"Is this all?"
23Who can read that passage, and be insensible to its pathos and sublimity?
23Why am I a slave?
23Why should I fret?
23Why should its existence be prolonged one hour?
23Will not a righteous God visit for these things?
23and for what does he hold the thunders in his right hand, if not to smite the oppressor, and deliver the spoiled out of the hand of the spoiler?"
23are you with the man- stealers in sympathy and purpose, or on the side of their down- trodden victims?
23is that church which lends Strength to the spoiler thine?"
23preach, and kidnap men?
23we have got you, have n''t we?"
37191And who is this Thompson they''re talking about?
37191How is that?
37191The Townsmen,says Besse,"seeing a Ship with_ English_ Colours, soon came on board, and asked for the Captain?
37191What kind of a fellow is this Whittier?
37191''Do you know who wrote that?''
37191''I love you: on that love alone, And not my worth, presuming, Will you not trust for summer fruit The tree in May- day blooming?''
37191''What if a son of mine was in a strange land?''
37191*****"Do bird and blossom feel, like me, Life''s many- folded mystery,-- The wonder which it is_ To Be_?
37191*****"This conscious life,--is it the same Which thrills the universal frame?"
37191And who does not delight to do him honor?
37191But the folk- lore of the early days,--where is it?
37191But would a wise man be in love with a false nose, though ever so rich, and however finely made?"
37191Can such hollow sympathy reach the broken of heart, and does the blessing of those who are ready to perish answer it?
37191Did he abandon his principles and retire from the arena?
37191Did he quail before the storm?
37191Does it hold back the lash from the slave, or sweeten his bitter bread?
37191For a specimen of our author''s vein of pleasantry take the following bit of satire on"The Training":"What''s now in the wind?
37191He continued:--"I am sometimes asked,''Is the poet Whittier really a Quaker or only one by inheritance?''
37191How could he?
37191How little he wrote-- did he ever write anything--"which, dying, he could wish to blot?"
37191Is that thy answer, strong and free, O loyal heart of Tennessee?
37191One Sunday after meeting at Amesbury he said to his life- long friend, Miss Gove,"Abby, has thee a spare room up at thy house?"
37191Or stand I severed and distinct, From Nature''s chain of life unlinked?"
37191Shall we go into my room?''
37191Shall we have one more stanza about this lovely little school- idyl?
37191She replies:"''Nor frock nor tan can hide the man; And see you not, my farmer, How weak and fond a woman waits Behind this silken armor?
37191They asked,_ Whether he had any Letters_?
37191Was there ever before a revenge so complete and so sublime?"
37191What gave such fascination to the grand Homeric encounter between Christian and Apollyon in the valley?
37191What on earth are you here for?''
37191What strange, glad voice is that which calls From Wagner''s grave and Sumter''s walls?
37191What workman would not be glad to carol such stanzas as the following, if they were set to popular airs?
37191Whence came I?
37191Whither do I go?
37191Who does not admire and love John Greenleaf Whittier?
37191Who ever heard of a persecuting Quaker?
37191Why did I follow Ossian over Morven''s battle- fields, exulting in the vulture- screams of the blind scald over his fallen enemies?
37191Why do n''t you throw off your Quaker coats as I do mine, and show yourselves as you are?''
37191Why should he?
37191Why should my moul- board gie thee sorrow?
37191Why was Mr. Greatheart, in Pilgrim''s Progress, my favorite character?
37191With a rapid glance at Wilson, he said,''Henry, who is thy young friend?''
37191[ Footnote 27: What is the subtle fascination that lurks in such bits of winter poetry as the following, collected by the writer out of his reading?
37191[ Illustration: Handwriting: John G. Whittier] And what is love of freedom but the mainspring of Democracy?
37191are they not in his Wonder- Book?"
37191darest thou lay A hand on Elliott''s bier?
37191they exclaimed,"so you are the one who is with Thompson, are you?"
10401Daniel,he said, addressing me by my Christian name,"what are you doing here?
10401In what position is the prisoner placed by the evidence? 10401 Who is this man?
10401_ District Attorney_.--What newspaper is that from which the counsel reads? 10401 And does not this open a plain path for this prisoner out of the danger of this prosecution? 10401 And how did the slaves behave after they were captured? 10401 And, looking at those facts, is it necessary for me to open my lips in reply? 10401 Are you going to presume that the chickens run into his bag of their own accord, and without his agency? 10401 Are you to presume that the horse came to him of its own accord? 10401 Because the people in another land have arisen and triumphed over the despot, who had done-- what? 10401 But shall this prisoner be allowed to take advantage of his own wrong? 10401 But was not the vessel chartered in Philadelphia to carry off negroes? 10401 By what second- sight are you to look into this void space and time, and to say that Drayton enticed them to go on board? 10401 Can any man be a patriot who pursues such a course? 10401 Can you, without any evidence, say that Drayton enticed them, and that by no other means could they come onboard? 10401 Did he not know they were slaves? 10401 Did he, or not? 10401 Did not that show his authority over them,--that the slaves were under his control, and that he was the master- spirit? 10401 Do n''t you think he ought to? 10401 Do they get up a debate in Congress, and a riot in the city of Washington, every time a theft is committed or attempted in the District? 10401 Does that look as if he seduced them? 10401 For what have we rejoiced? 10401 Has he done anything to take this case out of the transportation statute, and to convert it into a case of stealing? 10401 Has the District Attorney, with all his zeal, pointed out a single particle of evidence of that sort? 10401 He came here from Philadelphia for them; they are found on board his vessel; Drayton says he would steal a negro if he could; is not that enough? 10401 He chartered the vessel to carry off negroes; and, if they were free negroes, or he supposed them to be, how was he to realize an independent fortune? 10401 How can you ask me to abandon it, and thus become a party to my own degradation? 10401 How is he introduced to the jury by his Philadelphia friends? 10401 If he had employers, who were they? 10401 If his confessions are to be taken at all, they are to be taken together; and do they not tend to prove such a state of facts? 10401 If they had been running away, would they not have been downcast and disheartened? 10401 Is he an enlightened friend of freedom, or even a judicious friend of those with whom he affects to sympathize, who adopts such a course? 10401 Is there any crowd or excitement here? 10401 It was all very well for the prisoner''s counsel to smooth things over; but was I, instead of calling him a liar, to say, he told a fib? 10401 Might not somebody else have done it? 10401 Might they not have gone without being enticed at all? 10401 Now, he can not be guilty of both; and which of these offences, if either, does the evidence against him prove? 10401 Now, is it the only possible means of accounting for the presence of Houver''s slaves on board to suppose that this prisoner enticed them? 10401 Now, what is possession of a slave? 10401 Now, which of these two acts is proved against this prisoner? 10401 Shall the record of this trial go forth to the world showing that you have found a fact of which there was no evidence? 10401 The question for you is, Does the evidence in this case bring the prisoner within the law as laid down by the court? 10401 The real question in this case was, Which had I done? 10401 The whole question in this case is, Were these slaves stolen, or were they running away with the prisoner''s assistance? 10401 The wood was a blind; besides he lied about it;--would he have ever come back to collect his note? 10401 There was the fact of their being under the hatches, concealed in the hold of the vessel,--did not that prove he meant to steal them? 10401 We now ask a categorical answer,--Will you remove your press? 10401 We now ask of you, Shall this be done? 10401 Were not these slaves found in Drayton''s possession, and did n''t he admit that he took them? 10401 When I call him a thief and a felon, do I go beyond the charge of the grand jury in the indictment? 10401 Where can the government produce positive testimony to the taking? 10401 Where is the least evidence that the prisoner seduced these slaves, and induced them to leave their masters? 10401 Who does not know that such men are, practically, the worst enemies of the slaves? 10401 Why discuss, when they can not act? 10401 Why first lay down an abstract principle, which they intend to violate in practice? 10401 Why had not these black people, so anxious to escape from their masters, as good a light to their liberty as I had to mine? 10401 Why say he knew he should end his days in a penitentiary? 10401 Why say he took them for gain, if he did not steal them? 10401 Why say if he got off with the negroes he should have realized an independent fortune? 10401 Why so, if the negroes were not slaves? 10401 Why, then, this sudden feeling in his behalf? 10401 Will not these wailings of anguish reach the ears of the Most High? 10401 Would not they have said, Now we are taken? 10401 Would they not exhaust the law- books to find the severest punishment? 10401 You are to look at the evidence; and where is the evidence that the prisoner seduced and enticed these slaves? 11454 ''And they arrived accordingly?''
11454''But who told thee this piece of news?'' 11454 ''By himself, or in partnership?''
11454''Did thee direct him as he requested?'' 11454 ''Did thee follow them?''
11454''Did thee speak to them?'' 11454 ''Hast thou heard of the old saying,''said Mr. Tyson,''Hell is paved with good intentions?
11454''How can you say that, and be a slave- holder?'' 11454 ''I understand,''said he,''that there are persons confined in this place entitled to their freedom?''
11454''Is he engaged in the traffic now?'' 11454 ''Is he not in partnership,''said Mr. Tyson,''with----?''
11454''Thee do n''t know of their having dissolved?'' 11454 ''Was any body with them?''
11454''Was the hack close, or were the curtains down?'' 11454 ''Were they gagged?''
11454''Were two boys among the number?'' 11454 ''What o''clock last night was it when thee saw the carriage?''
11454''You have been wrongly informed,''said the leader of the quartette;''and, besides, what business is it of yours?'' 11454 And are we to wait, it will be inquired, till this distant and uncertain period for the extinction of war?
11454And will it be said that all this is visionary and impossible? 11454 But by whom, and in what way it will be asked, is this example to be set?
11454But what are the means we shall use? 11454 To what well founded objections would such a treaty be subject?
11454''Did Henry Clay buy thee there?''
11454''Did Henry Clay buy thee there?''
11454''How many children hadst thou then?''
11454''How many children hast thou?''
11454''How old art thou?''
11454''How old is that?''
11454''Is there a school for colored people on Henry Clay''s plantation?''
11454''It is gone?''
11454''Was there any witness who could prove its payment?''
11454''We said nothing to them,''said Kin- na;''why did they treat us so?
11454''Well,''said Mr. Tyson,''what is there new in thy way of business; I suppose it continues as usual to be a good business?''
11454''Were the slaves any worse off, since the question of abolition has been agitated?''
11454''Where are they?''
11454''Where are they?''
11454''Where is my blanket?''
11454''Where is my shirt?''
11454''Where wert thou raised?''
11454''Who?''
11454''Wilt thou shew me his improved cattle?''
11454''Yes; where is he?''
11454**"But in_ what way_ are we to make the experiment?
11454After inspecting the machinery, the fabrics, and the great wheel, one of them turned to me and said,''Did man make this?''
11454And in what cause can the energies of Christian benevolence be more appropriately exercised?
11454Are they not, in fact, still less under the control of moral obligation?
11454But, on the other hand, how is it possible for England to extend her foreign trade while the present restrictions continue?
11454From what motive then, do we uphold a traffic, which is the curse of China, the curse of India, and a calamity to Great Britain?
11454Fu- li, on a former evening, being asked,''What is faith?''
11454He inquired,''if any of them were entitled to their freedom?''
11454How important is it that all the offices in a prison should be filled by persons of true piety; and where can such be more usefully employed?
11454How is it possible to evade the conclusion that Christianity flourishes most, when it is unencumbered and uncorrupted by state patronage?
11454I asked him whether, if I had brought a barrel of lard on board, he would have troubled me to prove property?
11454I asked''How old art thou?''
11454I asked,''Will they make all free?''
11454I said to him,''Canst thou read?''
11454If he would leave such a kind master, what might not be expected of the oppressed field hand?
11454Is dat like my brother?
11454Is dat like my father?
11454Is dat like my mother?
11454Is dat like my sister?
11454Is it not all the natural consequence of your electing slave- holders and their abettors to the highest offices of your State and nation?
11454Is not the true conclusion from such premises, the very reverse of this?
11454Is not this a pitiful business?"
11454Men are every where inquiring why the sacrifice was made?
11454No, my friend, they can no more reconcile to themselves the idea of sitting down by the side of a colored African,( American?)
11454On approaching the house I saw a colored man, to whom I said,''Where wert thou raised?''
11454The answer is,''You have drank them,''''Where is my gun?''
11454Thee was talking about a case of kidnapping; well?''
11454What are these States but the greatest colonies ever planted by Great Britain?
11454What can we do?
11454What favored portion of the United Kingdom could compare its religious statistics with New England?
11454What law governs the hereditary transmission of such traits?
11454What must be the power of that delusion which can render intelligent and philanthropic men the victims of such a fallacy?
11454What must be their wants, when he himself is even without a shirt?"
11454What part has the restrictive system had in producing this result?
11454Where can we find an anti- slavery organization more potential, and so dignified, as was the convention of American women?
11454Why a mighty city was convulsed with violence?
11454Why a noble hall was burned by incendiaries in the view of gazing thousands?
11454Why not?
11454Why the''shelter for orphan children''was set on fire, and why the houses of our citizens were surrounded by a ruffian mob?
11454Why, then, will not Christians use the talents and influence given them from above to effect this consummation?
11454Will the Southern still accept the shadow without the substance of equal and confederate powers?
11454Will the decision be less consistent with justice, from being impartial and disinterested?
11454[ A] But for what do they want gold but to purchase other supplies than food?
26123And how do men exert themselves to restrain this corresponding right of their fellow men?
26123And is not_ calm, rational Christian_ discussion the only proper method of securing this end?
26123And what, then, is the rule of duty?
26123And will the South stand alone in that burning hour?
26123Are not the minds of men thrown into a ferment, and excited by those passions which blind the reason, and warp the moral sense?
26123Are not the northern and southern sections of our country distinct communities, with different feelings and interests?
26123Are they not rival, and jealous in feeling?
26123Are we not approaching the very verge of the precipice?
26123But it may be asked, is there nothing to be done to bring this national sin of slavery to an end?
26123But there the question still recurred,''Are these things true?''
26123But what is the private character of Robert Owen or Fanny Wright?
26123But where do the laws of mind and experience oppose the terrific tendencies of Abolitionism that have been portrayed?
26123Can she not with propriety urge such inquiries as these?
26123Can we ask our Heavenly Parent to protect us from temptation, while we recklessly spread baits and snares for our fellow- men?
26123Can we not already hear the roar of the waters below?
26123Do not Northern men owe a debt of forbearance and sympathy toward their Southern brethren, who have been so sorely tried?
26123Does she not regard them as enemies, as reckless madmen, as impertinent intermeddlers?
26123Have not Abolitionists been sending out papers, tracts, and agents to convince the people of the North of the sins of the South?
26123Have they not refrained from going to the South with their facts, arguments, and appeals, because they feared personal evils to themselves?
26123How will the exasperated majority act, according to the known laws of mind and of experience?
26123How would Northern men conduct under such provocations?
26123If it is asked,"May not woman appropriately come forward as a suppliant for a portion of her sex who are bound in cruel bondage?"
26123Is a woman among those who oppose Abolition movements?
26123Is a woman surrounded by those who favour the Abolition measures?
26123Is every man to constitute himself a judge of the amount of time and interest given to the proper investigation of truth by his fellow- man?
26123Is every man to sit in judgment upon his fellow- man, and decide what are his intellectual capacities, and what the measure of his judgment?
26123Is every man to take the office of the Searcher of Hearts, to try the feelings and motives of his fellow- man?
26123Is it at all probable that the other sex will afford even a moderate portion of this supply?
26123Is not now the time, if ever, when our stern principles and sound common sense must wake to the rescue?
26123Is not the South in a state of high exasperation against Abolitionists?
26123Is not this example exactly parallel with the exertions of the Abolitionists?
26123Must the internal slave- trade, a trade now ranked as piracy among all civilized nations, still prosper in our bounds?
26123Must we give up free discussion, and again chain up the human mind under the despotism of past ages?
26123Must we rush on to disunion, and civil wars, and servile wars, till all their train of horrors pass over us like devouring fire?
26123Now what is it that makes a man cease to be a slave and become free?
26123Now what is the evil to be cured?
26123She can urge such inquiries as these: Ought not Abolitionists to be treated as if they were actuated by the motives of benevolence which they profess?
26123The inspired interrogatory,"thou therefore which teachest another, teachest thou not thyself?"
26123The question never should be asked, what_ ought_ a word to mean?
26123What are the plans, hopes, and expectations of Abolitionists, in reference to their measures?
26123What is the end of these things to be?
26123What is the thing that is to be done to end slavery at the South?
26123What shall be done when the post- office stops its steady movement to divide its efforts among contending parties?
26123What shall be done with our canals and railways, now the bands of love to bind us, then the causes of contention and jealousy?
26123What shall be done with our navy and all the various items of the nation''s property?
26123What umpire will appear to settle all these questions of interest and strife, between communities thrown asunder by passion, pride, and mutual injury?
26123What were his measures?
26123What will be the commotion and dismay, when all our sources of wealth, prosperity, and comfort, are turned to occasions for angry and selfish strife?
26123When she sends forth the wailing of her agonies, shall not the North and the West hear, and lift up together the voice of wo?
26123Where is the advocate of any measure that does not suffer sneers, ridicule, contempt, and all that tends to depreciate character in public estimation?
26123Where is the partisan that is not attacked, as either weak in intellect, or dishonest in principle, or selfish in motives?
26123Where is this army of teachers to be found?
26123Who can go from the presence of Infinite Purity after such an investigation, to"take his brother by the throat?"
26123Who is there that in this comparison, can not find cause for the deepest humiliation?
26123Who shall divide our public lands between contending factions?
26123Will it not still more alarm and exasperate?
26123Will not fathers hear the cries of children, and brothers the cries of sisters?
26123Will the appearance of a similar body in their own boundaries have any tendency to soothe?
26123Will the increase of their numbers tend to allay this exasperation?
26123Will the terrors of insurrection sweep over the South, and no Northern and Western blood be shed?
26123but simply, what is the meaning generally attached to this word by those who use it?
15263And now, fellow- citizens, you may ask, what is our object in thus exhibiting to you the alarming influence of the slave power? 15263 But are not the old slaves well cared for by their masters?"
15263Can anything be done for the rescue of this girl from the kidnappers? 15263 Can you read?"
15263Describe your father?
15263Did you belong to the Baptist Church?
15263Did you ever have any chance of schooling?
15263Did you ever hear of the Underground Rail Road?
15263Did you ever live with him?
15263Did you feel that the preaching you heard was the true Gospel?
15263Did you have to find yourself?
15263Did you live with her?
15263Do not the mills of God grind exceedingly fine? 15263 Do you ever expect to see them again?"
15263Do you think that many of the slaves are anxious about their Freedom?
15263Find them yourself?
15263From York? 15263 Had you a wife?"
15263Had you any children?
15263Have I yearned for a mother''s love? 15263 Have you ever seen it before?"
15263His whole set?
15263How about Sunday clothing?
15263How about a house to live in?
15263How could you make so much money?
15263How did Moore come by you?
15263How did you like him?
15263How do you manage to make a little extra money?
15263How does he treat them?
15263How have you been getting along in Canada? 15263 How have you been treated?"
15263How have you had it in slavery?
15263How have you lived then?
15263How long ago was that?
15263How many servants had she?
15263How many slaves did he own?
15263How many?
15263How much did your master receive a year for your hire?
15263How old are you?
15263How then,said I,"could you put yourself in the care of that sailor, who was a stranger to you, and leave your parents?"
15263How were you treated by your master and mistress?
15263How would you like to be free?
15263I can not but sometimes ask in my closet meditations: O God of mercy and love, why permittest Thou these things? 15263 I suppose you smoke and chew at any rate?"
15263In what other particulars have you been treated hard?
15263My father,said I,"has long been one of your first doctors, and do you think it right for him to sell my mother and his children in this way?"
15263Now do n''t you keep late hours at night and swear occasionally?
15263Suppose you are sick who pays your doctor''s bill?
15263Suppose your master was to appear before you, and offer you the privilege of returning to Slavery or death on the spot, which would be your choice?
15263Then how do you know that he belongs to you?
15263To whom did you belong?
15263Was he a member of any church?
15263Were his family members of church, too?
15263Were not your parents kind to you, and did you not love them?
15263Were you born a slave?
15263Were you not afraid of being captured on the way, of being devoured by the abolitionists, or of freezing and starving in Canada?
15263What are you doing here?
15263What are your impressions from what little you have seen of Freedom?
15263What business did Milton Hawkins follow?
15263What business did your master follow?
15263What did he do?
15263What do you mean by being treated badly?
15263What do you think of Slavery any how?
15263What has become of Harriet Tubman?
15263What have you been employed at in Richmond?
15263What is the reason you ca n''t get up the hill faster?
15263What is your name?
15263What is your name?
15263What kind of a looking man was he?
15263What kind of a man was William Parker?
15263What kind of a man was he?
15263What kind of a woman was she?
15263What kind of family had he?
15263What kind of preaching does he give them?
15263What made you leave, Charles?
15263What put it into your head to leave?
15263What put it into your head to leave?
15263What was the name of your master?
15263What was your master''s name?
15263Where are they?
15263Where are you from then?
15263Where did he live?
15263Where did you live then?
15263Where is he from?
15263Who held you in bondage, and how have you been treated?
15263Who was your father?
15263Why did you despise him?
15263Why did you leave then?
15263Why did you leave your master?
15263Why did you leave, John?
15263Why did you leave?
15263Why did you not remain then?
15263Why?
15263Will two hundred dollars do?
15263With whom?
15263Would your owner be apt to pursue you?
15263_ How long, O God, how long_?
15263''How came there was no more work done that day?''
15263''What are you going to do with it?''
15263''What are you lecturing about?''
15263''Why could n''t you sold me to some of the neighbors?''
15263''Why?
15263), becoming the promenading companion of a colored man?
15263*** Can you spare a little time from your book to just take a peep at some of our Alabama people?
15263***** Now, what man among them, professes to have seen this woman for twenty- one years?
15263***** What causes the delay of that book, the History of Peter Still''s Family, etc.?
15263*****"You wonder why her sister, E., my loved and faithful friend, seems to be so much less known among anti- slavery people than Abbie?
15263Abram''s master, Milton Hawkins, lived at Wilmington, N.C.""What prompted you to escape?"
15263After all, friend, do we not belong to one of the best branches of the human race?
15263After she does what she can in P., will you give her the proper direction about getting to New York and to Mr. Tappan''s?
15263Again he was asked,"What kind of a man was your master?"
15263Also how comes on the Underground Rail Road?
15263Am I naughty, being a professed non- resistant, to advise this poor fellow to serve Father Abraham?
15263Amongst other questions, he was asked:"Do you regret having attempted to escape from slavery?"
15263And even now the scale may still seem to oscillate between the contending parties, and some may say, Why does not God give us full and quick victory?
15263And for the sake of these few and uncertain years, shall we push off this present trouble upon our children, who have to stay here a little longer?
15263And now my dear- slave- holder, who with you are bound and fast hastening to judgment?
15263And what pray is that?
15263And who could then have risen?
15263And who need speak of the Zambesi and Dr. Livingston, or of Central or Eastern Africa; of India, or Australia, or of the prolific West India Islands?
15263Another question suggests itself-- how has this great matter been accomplished?
15263Are we not near in spirit?
15263Art thou not thinking, dear friend, of asking your people to emigrate to the African Coast, or the West India Islands?
15263At all events, could you not so reduce the price as to place it in the power of Peter''s relatives and friends to raise the means for their purchase?
15263At that instant one of my friends cried out--''Where is the man that betrayed us?''
15263At the moment of recognition she sprang up, overwhelming him with her manifestations of delight, crying:"You Dr. Fussell?
15263But was not such an event worthy the awakening of every power-- the congratulation of every faculty?
15263But what right had a negro, which white slave- holders were"bound to respect?"
15263But who laughs now at this irresistible reform?
15263By whom?
15263Can I depend on it?
15263Can I, in your opinion, depend on the"P. Boy,"and when?
15263Can it not be done?
15263Can not you send to me something that will be of benefit to him, or send it direct to him?
15263Can nothing be done for such cases?
15263Can slaves take care of themselves?"
15263Can they refer to any marks by which to identify this person?
15263Can you not give me the particulars?
15263Can you tell me where Sarah King is, who was at your house when I was there?
15263Can you tell me?
15263Can you think of anything for any of these?
15263Co. Is it doing good business?
15263Coming up to him, I cried out, Lord, master, have you sold me?
15263Did God make me to be a slave?
15263Did any of them know that you were going to leave?
15263Did he contribute anything to it stamped with the signature of so clear an individuality that no other man could have contributed quite the same?
15263Did n''t he preach?
15263Did not even Northern men, superior in education and wealth, fear to say their souls were their own in the same presence?
15263Did the English peers or peeresses?
15263Did the representatives of any other country have their notions of propriety shocked by the matter?
15263Did there ever live one who had less of that"fear of man which bringeth a snare,"than himself?
15263Do I not owe you on the old bill( pledge)?
15263Do I understand him to say we have no right to determine this matter judicially?
15263Do any tidings reach you of our friend, Frederick Douglass?
15263Do n''t you know they are after you?
15263Do n''t you remember me?
15263Do they help in the good cause?
15263Do they, with the exception of the first witness examined, state even the time when she left?
15263Do we not believe that the United States leads the cause of human freedom?
15263Do we wish to array the Free states against the Slave states in hostile strife?
15263Do we wish to excite in your bosoms feelings of hatred against citizens of a common country?
15263Do you ever have any Underground Rail Road passengers now?
15263Do you imagine that there is one among your hearers who does not agree with you?
15263Do you know any promising young man who would accept my scholarship?
15263Do you know what the gathering means?
15263Do you like the country?"
15263Do you need any money?
15263Do you need anything for that?
15263Does the counsel mean to say that in the case of a fugitive from justice he is not bound to satisfy the judge before whom, the question is heard?
15263Fear you not that iron rod With which he breaks his foes?
15263Fee''s daughter?"
15263Fountain?
15263Gentlest of spirits!--not for thee Our tears are shed, our sighs are given: Why mourn to know thou art a free Partaker of the joys of Heaven?
15263Great- hearted philanthropist, what heroism could exceed thy own?
15263Had not hunger and cruelty and prostitution done their work, and left her an entire wreck for life?
15263Had you a mother and father, brothers and sisters?
15263Had you not better keep the little one in P. till the other is taken there?
15263Had you seen a feeble lambkin, Shrinking from a wolf so bold, Would ye not to shield the trembler, In your arms have made its fold?
15263Has not this suffering been overshadowed by the glory that gathered around the brave old man?...
15263Has thee seen, or heard anything of her lately?
15263Have they produced the letter written by this kidnapper, showing how he described her?
15263Have we then a nest of Abolition scoundrels among us?
15263Have you a son ready for college?
15263Have you had plenty of work, made some money, and taken care of yourself?"
15263He then asked me if he might search the house?
15263He was called out, when Loguen said, in a rather reproving and excited tone,"What are you doing here; did n''t I tell you to be off to Canada?
15263He was next asked,"Had you a wife and family?"
15263How could she refuse?
15263How did I fare?
15263How did you make up your mind to leave your wife and child in Slavery?
15263How do they appear before you?
15263How does this strike you?
15263How is it that any great matter is accomplished?
15263How long must wrongs like these go unredressed?
15263How many other men in the United States, under similar circumstances, would have been thus faithful?
15263I always had it in my mind to leave, but I was''jubus'',( dubious?)
15263I ask if this grand passage of the inspired writer may not be applied to that heroic band who have made America the perpetual home of freedom?
15263I asked him if he believed Hardcastle would keep his promise?
15263I can say I was once happy, but never will be again, until I see her; because what is freedom to me, when I know that my wife is in slavery?
15263I forgot to inquire of Dr. T. who is the head of your Vigilance Committee, whom I may address concerning other and further operations?
15263I made it from the start, and always, my own case, thus: Did I want to be a slave?
15263I ought to say, that I have no doubt but there were good reasons for the P. Boy''s going to Richmond instead of W.;_ but what can they be_?
15263I suppose you know me?
15263IS SHE STILL RUNNING WITH BLEEDING FEET?
15263If a man pursues the only course that will bring peace to his own mind, is he deserving of any credit therefor?
15263If he promises to come here next trip, will he come, or go to Richmond?
15263If it is asked"how?"
15263If it was an insult, why not resent it, as became high- spirited Americans?
15263If so, should we send to New York, Philadelphia, or where else?
15263If the entire family can not be purchased or freed, what can Vina and her daughter be purchased for?
15263Impartial men, are they?
15263In comparison with the method and measure of such a conviction, what matters its specific form?
15263In one of her letters she thus alluded to a traveler:"I saw a passenger_ per_ the Underground Rail Road yesterday; did he arrive safely?
15263In reply I remarked:"Do they belong to you, Sir?"
15263In speaking of the good treatment he had always met with, a member of the Committee remarked,"You must be akin to some one of your master''s family?"
15263Indeed, who could close his eyes and ears to the plaintive cries of such a mother?
15263Is he doing anything for the cause?
15263Is it safe for her to remain in your city or anywhere else in our"free land?"
15263Is money needed to help those escaping?
15263Is not the love of God and man ingrained in every line of this writing?
15263Is not the reward worth striving for at any cost?
15263Is she dark or light?"
15263Is that you?
15263Is there any fund from which a pittance could be spared to help these poor creatures?
15263Is there no ray of hope in that?
15263Is this possible?
15263It is so with men, why should it be different with women?
15263Kline replied,"Do you really think so?"
15263Maria, is that you?
15263Men of Cleveland, had a vulture Sought a timid dove for prey, Would you not, with human pity, Drive the gory bird away?
15263Miles gritted his teeth and felt very indignant, but what could he do?
15263Moreover, if it is fitting that woman should dress in every color of the rainbow, why not man also?
15263My child, is it you?
15263My wife and children, dearer to me than my heart''s blood, were they made for the auction- block?
15263Nay, are we not under a law to do the base work of bloodhounds, hunting the panting fugitives for freedom?
15263No sooner was the old man within the enclosures than he asked Dinah,"Whose child is that?"
15263Now what is all this about?
15263Now, my dear sir, after this recapitulation, can you not see that I have reason for great embarrassment?
15263O, what will the end be?
15263Observing that Lizzie( Nat''s wife) looked pretty decided and resolute, a member of the committee remarked,"Would your wife fight for freedom?"
15263Oh, God, what shall I do, or what can I do for him?
15263Oh, could slavery exist long if it did not sit on a commercial throne?
15263Oh, how can we pamper our appetites upon luxuries drawn from reluctant fingers?
15263Oh, was it not dreadful?...
15263Oh, when will we have a government strong enough to make human life safe?
15263On addressing Mr. W. he held out the letter and inquired:"Are you the author of this letter, sir?"
15263On our way to the boarding- house, the gentleman said to me:''Is this your son with you?''
15263On the proclamation of General Fremont, the passages from her pen are worthy to be long remembered:"Well, what think you of the war?
15263Or who adhered more heroically to his convictions of duty in the face of deadly peril and certain suffering?
15263Or who combined more moral courage with exceeding tenderness of spirit?
15263Or who gave himself more unreservedly, or with greater disinterestedness, to the service of bleeding humanity?
15263Or who took more joyfully the spoiling of his goods as the penalty of his sympathy for the hunted fugitive?
15263Or would it not be advisable to send them there?
15263Or would your brother''s son, Peter or Levin, like to have the benefit of it?
15263Our neighbor asked,"How do you like her?"
15263Please answer as correctly as you can the following questions:""How old are you?"
15263Poor thing, was there anything in the future for her?
15263Rising up in his box, he reached out his hand, saying,"How do you do, gentlemen?"
15263Said a brother,"If you can not get your family, what will you do?
15263Say, have you an arm like God, That you his will oppose?
15263Shall I call it an edifice or an improvised meeting- house?
15263Shall we not wash your back and neck for you?
15263She stopped until we came to the gate; the tears were rolling from her eyes, and she exclaimed:''Ann Maria, is it you?''
15263Should we not, therefore, endeavor to let its history gladden the earth?
15263Some time since Breckinridge, in writing to Sumner, asks, if I rightly remember, What is the fate of a few negroes to me or mine?
15263Still, I am under ten thousand obligation to you for your kindness when shall I ever repay?
15263TO WHOM IN ALL THIS WIDE LAND OF FREEDOM SHALL SHE FLEE AND FIND SAFETY?
15263Tappan?"
15263The constable asked me if they were in my house?
15263The first words to the mother were:"Are you traveling?"
15263The last item in his charge against Wright, suggested certain questions:"How have you been used?"
15263The question was then asked the owner of the barn by one of the men, if he harbored runaway negroes in his barn?
15263The writer turned to him and inquired,"I suppose you are the person that the Dr. went to Washington after, are you not?"
15263There are two small boxes and two large ones; we have them all secure; what had better be done?
15263There may be, perhaps, those who ask what is this triumph of which I speak?
15263There was an affirmative reply, and E. inquired,"How does thee find it?"
15263This step looked exceedingly hard, but what else could the poor fellow do?
15263Tyler?"
15263Was it not rather strange that he did not want to return to his"kind- hearted old mistress?"
15263Was there ever a more perfect train of evidence exhibited to prove the identity of a person, than on the present occasion?
15263We confess that we began to wonder, and we asked a fine- looking man before us,"What is her color?
15263We had given you up; O, what will your aunt say?
15263Well, did you ever expect to see this day?
15263Were not these reflections enough to incapacitate the Doctor for the time being, for cool thought as to how he should best guard against the enemy?
15263What do abolitionists think of it?
15263What does the gentleman say further?
15263What does the"powder boy"think of it?
15263What is political action?
15263What is the news in the city?
15263What prompted James to leave such pleasant quarters?
15263What shall I do with them?
15263What, is the use of harping upon this subject Sunday after Sunday?
15263When will our first of August come?
15263Where could be found in history a more noble and daring struggle for Freedom?
15263Where is Southern Slavery now?
15263Which was correct, Bill or his master?
15263Who are His lambs?
15263Who can know unfailing inward energy except through this new birth?
15263Who could refrain from aiding on to freedom children honored in such a heroic parent?
15263Who has forgotten the imprisonment of Mrs. Douglass for this offense?
15263Who has not admired the sagacity with which his inquiries were dictated, and the tact and acumen with which he managed every part of his cause?
15263Who has not been struck with his expressive glances toward the judge, when a doubtful point arose in the investigation of the case?
15263Who would not commend such a mistress for the punctuality, if nothing more?
15263Who would not help these generous- hearted men, who are devoting their whole energies to the well- being of the crushed and downtrodden?
15263Who would want an office, if no opportunity should turn up whereby proof could be adduced of adequate qualifications to meet emergencies?
15263Why did you not send them more things?
15263Why do n''t they do so?
15263Why is it before you, taking your time day after day?
15263Why not, in time, become"merchants and princes,"in those countries?
15263Why should it not shine?
15263Why then did the Dr. bring you here?"
15263Why, let me ask, is not the full light allowed to shine on this case?
15263Will I not see him and you at the anniversary in New York?
15263Will that little boy of seven years have to travel on foot to Canada?
15263Will you act for him, as if you was in slavery yourself, and I sincerely believe that he will come out of that condition?
15263Will you answer my questions with some explicitness, and without delay?
15263Will you come North and live with your relatives?"
15263Will you please write me when convenient and tell me what you hear about those who I fear are suffering as the result of their kindness to me?
15263Will you please write to some careful person there?
15263Will you tell me how many you have sent over to Canada?
15263William smarted frequently; but what could he do?
15263William,''said I,''do you think we would give her up?''
15263Willson, now- a- days?
15263Willson?
15263With an oath he would say,''now do n''t you love me?''
15263Would it be well for me, entertaining such sentiments, to sit down and write an account of my sacrifices?
15263Would it not be the best way to get those in Norristown under your own care?
15263Would it not be well to make a habit, in the evening in particular, of you, who are marked men, going about in little companies?
15263Would not W. Goodell''s book be of use?
15263Would not a like lot of Cumberland coal always sell in Philadelphia?
15263Would the strong arm of a brother have been welcome?
15263Would you give up and go back and work at your trade( dress- making)?
15263Yet let us see how it was received by the most Christian(?)
15263You Dr. Fussell?
15263You have been brought to America, not emigrated to it, and who on earth has any possible right to send you away?
15263[ A] OR HIDES SHE IN SOME COLD CAVE, TO REST AND STARVE?
15263[ Illustration:] With her knowledge of the practical wickedness of the system, how could she be satisfied?
15263and what is thy opinion?
15263do you take a little sometimes?"
15263how deplorable their situation; where will they go to, when cold weather comes?
15263is this a Christian land, and are Christians thus forced to flee for their liberty?"
15263my son Isaac, is this you,& c.?"
15263or for the grammar school?
15263why should not the expatriated blacks go to free countries and grow produce for themselves and for everybody who requires it?
8462A cigar, Ruffin?
8462A little surprise for us, Colonel--"He refuses to surrender?
8462A message?
8462A piece of your ear?
8462Ai n''t Marse Robert comin''doun to his coffee, M''am?
8462Ai n''t we?
8462Ai n''t you skeered of him?
8462Always?
8462Am I?
8462An''den, what ye reckon dat fool nigger say ter me?
8462An''dis is you''school- mate at Wes''Pint, dey tells me about?
8462And I can not know this secret?
8462And do you know what that may mean?
8462And he could n''t find Lieutenant Stuart?
8462And if he has not, sir, who gave_ me_ the right to sit in judgment upon my superior officer and condemn him without trial? 8462 And it separates us?"
8462And not a negro has lifted his hand against his master?
8462And remember that we_ are_ brother and sister?
8462And say nothing that you''ll live to regret?
8462And these prophets of the coming mob of millions have furnished you the money to arm and equip this expedition?
8462And they back you in this attack?
8462And they did n''t even scratch my soldier man?
8462And what do you want me to do with it, Uncle Ben?
8462And what does the Marshal demand?
8462And what is his suggestion?
8462And who made you a judge o''life and death for my man and my sons? 8462 And why are you fighting us?"
8462And why not?
8462And yet you placed these pikes in the hands of negroes and gave them oil- soaked torches?
8462And you ask me to blot out the liberties of our people by a single act of usurpation?
8462And you did n''t see my dear old daddy anywhere?
8462And you escaped?
8462And you invade to rob and murder at will?
8462And you never expect to own one?
8462And you''ll marry me?
8462And, what do you think of it?
8462Any horses, bridles, or saddles?
8462Any signs of the Abolitionists on the hills at dawn?
8462Are n''t they just grand?
8462Are there any more men in this house?
8462Are they all kin?
8462Are you ready?
8462Armed them?
8462But I can not realize this to me-- from Abraham Lincoln?
8462But ai n''t dey got nuttin ter eat fer dem dat''s here?
8462But how did you get into my lines-- I thought I was surrounded?
8462But how''m I goin''to get away, sir?
8462But is n''t it awful when they''re separated?
8462But is not the South to- day in taking her stand for the rights of the State asserting a principle as vital as the Union itself? 8462 But why should they suppress_ such_ news?
8462But why try to take it all on our shoulders, dearest? 8462 But you believe in the institution?"
8462But you might consider a proclamation looking to peace under this plan-- if you were in a position of supreme power?
8462By what law?
8462Ca n''t you cross it?
8462Can we,the calm voice went on,"as Christian soldiers, choose such a course?
8462Colonel Lee?
8462Colonel Washington is now their prisoner?
8462Damn''em all-- why are they here anyhow?
8462Dare me?
8462Did n''t you come to see him?
8462Did you ever own one?
8462Did you have_ anything_ to do with the killing of those men?
8462Did you take any hand in the troubles at Lawrence?
8462Do n''t like your bed?
8462Do n''t you like it?
8462Does n''t she make heroes of law breakers?
8462Eat?
8462Even though you deluge the world in blood?
8462Fame? 8462 For God''s sake, why?"
8462For a month?
8462For heaven''s sake, Phil, why do n''t you sleep?
8462From blacks as well as whites?
8462From whom could you expect it?
8462General Gordon-- you have cut through?
8462General Lee,he began,"will you hear me for just one moment?"
8462Got enough?
8462Had you thought of moving West into one of the new Territories just opening?
8462Has he read it?
8462Have n''t I seen you before, my friend?
8462Have we also placed our feet on the path of oblivion? 8462 Have you any arms?"
8462Have you ever done the Free State Party any harm?
8462Have you ever helped a Southern settler to enter the Territory of Kansas?
8462Have you ever intended to do that party any harm?
8462He did n''t try to shoot you on sight, did he?
8462He is here?
8462He refuses to yield without a fight?
8462He''s coming?
8462He_ is_ a fine-- boy-- isn''t he, Colonel?
8462Hear dat, folks--?
8462Hear what?
8462His offer?
8462Hostages?
8462How can I make you understand, dear baby? 8462 How can I, my friend?"
8462How can I?
8462How can it?
8462How can you ask me to go over the head of my Chief with such an order?
8462How dare you enter this house unannounced, sir?
8462How do you know I play?
8462How do you know I sing?
8462How is you dis mornin'', Marse Custis?
8462How many men were under your command when you entered?
8462How many men were with him?
8462How much could you realize from the sale of your things?
8462How old are you, Sam?
8462How soon can I see him?
8462How''d you know I had a banjo?
8462How, sir?
8462How?
8462How?
8462How?
8462I am addressing the Captain in command?
8462I can tell you what I would do, Madame, in your place--"What?
8462I love a banjo-- don''t you?
8462I suppose you wish the honor of leading the troops in taking these men out of the Engine House?
8462I suppose, Colonel, you could n''t possibly let me lead the assault on the Engine House, could you?
8462I''se a full member now, ai n''t I?
8462If you get these guns and the money you desire, will you invade Missouri or any slave territory?
8462In a newspaper interview?
8462Inflammation has set in, Major--"My God, is there no hope?
8462Is it a joke?
8462Is it as bad as that, boy?
8462Is n''t it enough?
8462Is n''t it expensive?
8462Is that all the hope you can give me?
8462Is there no reverence for law left in this country?
8462Is there?
8462Is yer gwine ter write one fer my young Marse Robbie?
8462It''s funny how a horse knows a horseman instinctively-- isn''t it, Phil?
8462It''s not over, then?
8462It''s nothing low or dishonorable?
8462It_ is_ over, is n''t it, dear?
8462John-- John--"What''s matter?
8462Lordy, Marse Rooney,Sam pleaded,"doan we all pay you fur our schoolin''?"
8462May I ask how many people you know in the North who feel that way toward the South?
8462May I be present at your conference?
8462May I see the order of the President, sir?
8462Maybe-- who knows?
8462Me who?
8462Miss Mary, what is this I''m eating?
8462Mr. Davis refuses to listen to this proposal?
8462My coming from Richmond is no doubt a surprise?
8462Never?
8462No sign of Lieutenant Stuart yet, Ben?
8462No sign of a slave uprising, of course?
8462No--"What you scared of him for?
8462No?
8462Nor you?
8462Nuttin tall, sah?
8462Oh, John, where''d you get the ducks?
8462Oh, dear little girl, ca n''t you see how I''ve been fighting this thing for months-- how I''ve tried to keep away from you and could n''t?
8462Oh, dear, oh, dear, what have they done? 8462 One of those girls hooked you?"
8462Our losses in the two days?
8462Ruffin-- you here?
8462Scared of what?
8462See anything funny''bout de top o''dat year, sah?
8462Shall I announce to him it once the vote of Congress conferring on him the supreme power?
8462Stunned you?
8462Suppose all took the same orders? 8462 Terms?"
8462That man''s been here all summer planning this attack?
8462The Lord of Hosts in a Vision--"What are you going to do?
8462The bridges leading into Harper''s Ferry guarded?
8462The coffee and sandwiches ready, Ben?
8462The faith of his officers in him remains absolutely unshaken?
8462The farm is lost beyond hope?
8462The infamous resolution demanding that Kansas be made a white man''s country and no negro, bond or free, shall ever be allowed to enter it?
8462The invaders have robbed houses as reported?
8462The leader is old John Brown?
8462The marines have the Arsenal completely surrounded?
8462The militia are ready for duty?
8462The raiders took you by force?
8462Then I ca n''t help you any more, Sam?
8462Then what are you here for?
8462Then you do n''t believe the negro to be your brother and your equal-- do you?
8462Then you''ll both follow and keep out of my way until we have finished the work and then come back with me?
8462There was none?
8462There''ll be another fight soon?
8462There''s no hope?
8462This battle was desperate?
8462This is your final decision?
8462This means but one thing, then--"Well, sir?
8462To see me?
8462To- night?
8462Troops are on the Capitol Hill?
8462Upon what terms?
8462Upstairs?
8462Wait, Mother--"We''re trying to find the way to Mr. Wilkinson''s-- can you tell us?
8462We have n''t charted it in our survey?
8462We''re goin''fishin''--"Honest?
8462We''ve got something to say to you, Father, before we take out Wilkinson--"Well?
8462Well, Lieutenant?
8462Well, Robbie, what''s your handsome little friend''s name?
8462Well, Senator, how goes it in Richmond?
8462Well, did n''t ye?
8462Well?
8462Well?
8462What are they gathering under that shed for?
8462What are they goin''to do with their guns and swords? 8462 What are you doing here to- night?"
8462What are you doing living here among these Southern settlers?
8462What are you going to do?
8462What are you going to do?
8462What can I do for you, Johnnie?
8462What dat yer writin''so hard, Gin''l Taylor?
8462What did you say?
8462What did you say?
8462What do you mean when you say that you hate the institution of Slavery?
8462What do you mean?
8462What do you think I''m coming down here every night for, anyhow?
8462What do you think of doing?
8462What do you think of doing?
8462What do you think we ought to do, Colonel Lee?
8462What for?
8462What has she been crying about?
8462What have I done to make you angry?
8462What is it, Mahala?
8462What is it, Senator?
8462What is it, my dear?
8462What is it?
8462What is it?
8462What is it?
8462What is it?
8462What is your advice?
8462What line of business?
8462What will you sing?
8462What would Washington do if he stood in my place to- day?
8462What would he do?
8462What would you have me do?
8462What ye take hit up fer den?
8462What ye want me ter do?
8462What yer doin''here?
8462What''ll Colonel Sumner say, sir?
8462What''s dat?
8462What''s de matter, ma''m? 8462 What''s my ole marster dat set me free gwine ter do?"
8462What''s that?
8462What''s the matter, John dear?
8462What''s the matter, then?
8462What''s the matter?
8462What''s the matter?
8462What, sir?
8462What?
8462What?
8462What_ can_ I do, Colonel?
8462When do we eat?
8462Where are they takin''him?
8462Where is Dutch Henry Sherman?
8462Where''s Marse Robert?
8462Which of you is the heavier?
8462Which way is General Gordon?
8462Who are you?
8462Who else? 8462 Who gave you the authority to issue orders of life and death?"
8462Who gave you the right to confiscate the property of others in any cause?
8462Who is that?
8462Who knows? 8462 Who sent you?"
8462Who''s dar?
8462Who, me?
8462Who? 8462 Who?"
8462Why did I marry a soldier- man?
8462Why did n''t you join me at first?
8462Why did you rush into this Territory among the first to cross the border?
8462Why do n''t he come-- why do n''t he come?
8462Why does n''t Gordon report?
8462Why not?
8462Why should it be the darkest hour, Robert? 8462 Why so pensive?"
8462Why the devil did n''t he come with us?
8462Why, are n''t you old Osawatomie Brown of Kansas, whom I once held there as my prisoner?
8462Why, the duck season is n''t on yet, is it?
8462Why, why ca n''t we hear from Richmond? 8462 Why-- why-- why?"
8462Why?
8462Will you back me?
8462Will you behave yourself?
8462Will you call your reporter now to take my views?
8462Will you issue as Commanding General an order for an armistice to arrange the joint invasion of Mexico?
8462Will you let go of me, sir?
8462Will you sit here and see this vile thing done?
8462Will you, Colonel Lee?
8462Will you, sir?
8462With an armed force of twenty- two you have invaded the South to free three million slaves?
8462Wo n''t you begin?
8462Wo n''t you play for me, Miss Flora?
8462Would you mind telling me why you have invaded Virginia?
8462Ye ca n''t learn a old dog new tricks-- can they, Jack?
8462Ye did n''t know dat Marse Robert done gimme five hundred dollars in gol''--did ye?
8462Yer know what dat is, Marse Custis?
8462Yer lak dat suit I had on, sah?
8462Yer say dat book''s history?
8462You are John Brown of Osawatomie, Kansas?
8462You are a Southern white man?
8462You are all right, sir?
8462You are in command of the invaders who have killed four citizens of Harper''s Ferry and seized the United States Arsenal?
8462You are opposed to the Free Soil Party?
8462You are pro- Slavery?
8462You are telling me the truth?
8462You brought''em to me, John?
8462You come from Longstreet?
8462You do n''t mind, sir?
8462You do n''t think you might change your mind about Liberia?
8462You do not believe in owning slaves?
8462You gave every man strict orders to fire no guns or revolver unless necessary-- didn''t you?
8462You had a lawyer?
8462You have been disappointed in not getting it from either?
8462You have important news?
8462You have n''t met my daughter, Lieutenant?
8462You have not done this already?
8462You here, Sam?
8462You keep them when they''re old, lazy and worthless?
8462You know perhaps that I sent him a few days ago a scurrilous attack on the South by a Yankee woman-- a new novel?
8462You make your own cloth?
8462You mean take it on myself to go over the head of Mr. Davis, and issue this order without his knowledge?
8462You mean the overseer''s place?
8462You ring for me, Missy?
8462You swear it?
8462You talk to me of Negro Slavery in the South? 8462 You tell me of the white master''s lust down South?
8462You think this best?
8462You threw him into the water?
8462You were disappointed, I take it, particularly in the conduct of the blacks?
8462You will not betray me to my enemies?
8462You will not proclaim an armistice, then?
8462You will surrender?
8462You will violate a flag of truce?
8462You''d like your papa to come back home from the war and stay with you always, would n''t you, dear?
8462You''ll give him the most careful hearing, Robert?
8462You''ll guarantee immunity?
8462You''ll let me tell you all that''s in my heart, my brother?
8462You''ll pardon my asking it, old boy, but are these black folks married?
8462You''ll stay all day?
8462You''re sure?
8462You''ve lost your home?
8462You''ve never learned a trade?
8462You''ve-- you''ve heard this awful news from Richmond?
8462You-- are-- married-- then?
8462Your father lives on the farm just outside our gate, does n''t he?
8462Your men are ready for action?
8462Your share of the collection?
8462Yours?
8462''_"How can he prevent social and political equality once these black men are clothed with the dignity of the uniform of a Nation?
8462A boy shouted:"For the Lord''s sake, did you take him with all that freight?"
8462A paroxysm of pain gripped him and he asked the doctor:"Can I survive the night?"
8462A sob caught her voice and then it rose in fierce rebellion:"Where was God when he fell?
8462A stable boy climbed the fence and called:"Do n''t ye want yer hosses, Marse Custis?"
8462And so we end where we began-- unless we can get help from you, General Lee--""Well?"
8462And the handsomest little beggar I ever saw-- who is he?"
8462And this is your wife and little girl?"
8462Any sign of their reserves?"
8462Been cut to pieces so many times and changed commanders so much I dunno who the hell I belong to--""How''d you get here?"
8462Before the familiarity of a handshake or word of welcome he asked:"What news, Lieutenant?"
8462Blair?"
8462But how am I goin''to get there with a wife and five children?"
8462But if we set them all free to- morrow, and you had to compete with their labor, you could n''t live down to their standard of wages, could you?"
8462But to what end if he deprives him of food?
8462Ca n''t you see them?
8462Call the boys down--""Do n''t wake the boys up fer nothin--""Is yer gun loaded?"
8462Can I stand by as her loyal son and see this invasion begun?
8462Can we enter at once into our conference?"
8462Can you make up your mind to face the loneliness and build your home under your own vine and fig tree?
8462Could these forces yet be controlled or were they already beyond control?
8462Cut a man''s tongue out because he dares to say who he''s goin''to vote for next election?"
8462Did Washington allow the ties of blood to swerve him from his duty?
8462Did his prophetic soul pierce the future?
8462Do n''t you know that I love you?"
8462Do they stop, too?"
8462Do you accept my decision, sir?"
8462Do you hear me?"
8462Do you remember the names of Lovejoy and Torrey?
8462Do you think a girl can pass his bead eyes and not pay for the job the price he sees fit to demand?
8462Does ye want a cup?
8462Doyle?"
8462Doyle?"
8462Fame?
8462Frederick asked Oliver tremblingly:"What do you think of this thing?"
8462Gordon?"
8462HOW ARE THE MIGHTY FALLEN?
8462Had they killed or captured him?
8462Has He forgotten me?"
8462Has Virginia left the Union?"
8462Has the negro moved upward?
8462Have any of you seen the branded hand?
8462Have n''t we got three of the finest boys the Lord ever give a mother?
8462He began to wonder if she were blonde or brunette, short or tall, petite or full, blue eyes or brown?
8462He grasped Phil''s arm and whispered:"Is n''t my mother the most beautiful woman you ever saw?"
8462He mounted the platform and spoke to the Chairman:"Mr. Smith, may I say just a word to this meeting?"
8462He rose from his seat, walked to the window, looked out, flushed and slowly said:"You-- you-- cannot mean this--?"
8462He waited an instant for an answer and, getting none, asked:"Do you surrender?"
8462He wondered if she could be engaged to the fellow she went riding with?
8462How can I beat the slave at a trade?
8462How could she live?
8462How had these men gotten here?
8462How many guns in your command?"
8462How much more should he expect of the Blacks?
8462I ai n''t been a very good boy here lately--""No?"
8462I ask you the question, is not the command of a State that of a mother to a child?
8462I can not persuade you?"
8462I hope you''re better?"
8462I mean that we must anticipate--""The wisdom of God?"
8462I said to myself-- what''s the use?
8462I''ve caused them trouble enough-- God knows--""When are they going?"
8462ILLUSTRATION:"YOU''D LIKE YOUR PAPA TO COME BACK HOME FROM THE WAR?"]
8462If I enter a guerrilla struggle, what will be the result?
8462If under the law, Virginia is right, is it not my duty to defend her?
8462If you surrender do you know what will happen?"
8462In the record of man has a negro ever dreamed this dream?
8462Is He dead?
8462Is dey er fight?"
8462Is it not my duty now to use it for their healing, and not their ruin?"
8462Is n''t this all very, very sudden, to be so serious?"
8462It''s the morning of life and why should n''t we be like this?"
8462Jason squared himself and demanded:"Did you kill those men?"
8462John Brown at once returned and began his catechism:"You are Wilkinson, the Member of the Legislature?"
8462Me?"
8462My sole aim in the invasion of the South is to free the slave--""At any cost?"
8462Now will you swear to me again to obey my orders?"
8462Or the man who defends the law and the rights of his fathers under it?"
8462Rush the house double quick and pay no attention to his barking--""If he bites?"
8462Shall I call him,""A reporter from a daily paper with a circulation of fifteen thousand?"
8462Shall I fetch him out, too?"
8462She drew close and asked in passionate tenderness:"Have you counted the cost?
8462She seized Mary''s hand, and asked tensely:"What do you think, dear?
8462She spoke with deep seriousness:"I wish you would n''t talk so much, John--""And why not?"
8462Should John Brown be canonized for the same infamy?
8462Surrender?
8462The Confederate Congress has sent me to offer him the Dictatorship--""You do n''t mean it?"
8462The boy looked at the solemn face of the prisoner and chaffed:"And why have ye got that load on your own back, man?"
8462The frightful cost which you and yours must pay if you dare defend Virginia?"
8462The man who defies the Constitution and the laws of the Union?
8462The old, tremulous question she could n''t keep back:"You did n''t see my daddy, did you, dear?"
8462The question is how to approach him?"
8462The question was could any leadership count if the mob, not the man, became our real ruler?
8462The storm has broken now--""What are you going to do?"
8462The woman asked:"Who''s that?"
8462Their full import did not dawn on him until John Brown, Jr., leaned close and whispered:"Did you hear that?"
8462They''ll ask for peace, wo n''t they?"
8462This time to his brother:"Ca n''t you stop it, Oliver?"
8462We''re in for a long, desperate fight--""And I''ve been so happy thinking you''d come home--""Your home will be with me, wo n''t it?"
8462Whar is he?"
8462What am I goin''to do?"
8462What can we do for you?"
8462What chance has a poor white man got agin''em?
8462What could be its secret?
8462What division are you from?"
8462What do you think of it?"
8462What had happened?
8462What had he to do with this eternal call of the human heart to love and be loved?
8462What has come over us in the South, Ruffin?
8462What have they accomplished in these years of blood and tears?
8462What have they done?"
8462What have we got to do?"
8462What have you or I, or our people, to do with the madmen who are driving the South over the brink of this precipice?"
8462What is it?"
8462What is my duty?"
8462What is that to me, now?
8462What is the ancestral soul of the negro?
8462What is the result?
8462What mattered the shadow that was slowly moving across the sunlit earth?
8462What on earth could be keeping her?
8462What right had you to put this curse upon me?
8462What was wrong here?
8462What will you do?"
8462What would happen if he should turn to these men and tell them to fight the cavalry of the United States?
8462When they reached the house she turned to the old man with Southern courtesy:"Wo n''t you come in, sir, and rest a few minutes?"
8462When they turned aside she piped again:"Wo n''t ye come in?"
8462Where is God to- night?
8462Where were the prisoners they were to manacle?
8462Who is the traitor, my dear?
8462Why are you crying over the poor negro?
8462Why could n''t ye be still?
8462Why did n''t they stop this a year ago?
8462Why did the war crowd on the streets and in the ranks burst into song as they marched to kill their fellow men?
8462Why did they ever begin it?
8462Why do n''t a Buxton or a Wilberforce complain of the White Slavery at home?
8462Why had n''t victory come?
8462Why had they not answered with a shout of triumph?
8462Why must brother kill his brother?
8462Why must they send my father to kill the father of my babies?
8462Why must they send my husband to kill my father?
8462Why not?"
8462Why should her lover- husband and her fine old daddy fight each other?
8462Why should we try to know anything else anyhow?"
8462Why?
8462Will ye jine us?"
8462Will ye promise me, sah?"
8462Will you hear him?"
8462Will you hear it and go?"
8462Will you help me?"
8462Will you help us?"
8462Will you kindly announce me?"
8462Will you submit?"
8462With quick eagerness he asked:"What''s that?"
8462Wo n''t you come in and make it your headquarters?"
8462Wo n''t you come in, Colonel?"
8462Would future generations agree with the men who had met in his own town and denounced his deed as cruel, gruesome and revolting?
8462Would she accept the President''s command and send her quota of troops to fight her sisters of the South, or would she withdraw from the Union?
8462Would she, too, turn and curse him?
8462You do n''t think I''d let him be such a pig if I could help him, do you?"
8462You have called an informal council as I requested?"
8462You have not yet learned his name?"
8462You here in civilian clothes?"
8462You know my sister, Mrs. Marshall of Baltimore?"
8462You know that would pull you, Colonel-- now would n''t it?"
8462You see them five rows of flat turnips and the ruttabaggers beside''em?
8462You sent to town to see if an Extra had been issued?"
8462You understand?"
8462You understand?"
8462You will go with me-- do you hear?"
8462You''re feeling yourself again?"
31406''And do you think,''said he,''that I am to be bound by the last words of a man too far gone to know his own mind in the matter?'' 31406 ''But what is the use of roast meat, if we are to be roasted too?''
31406''Follow-- where?'' 31406 ''For yourself, you black rascal?''
31406''Member de lickins? 31406 ''Sert you?
31406''Then why did n''t he give it to you before, instead of requiring me to make such a sacrifice? 31406 ''Who is your master?''
31406A gentleman? 31406 A shave?"
31406Able, child? 31406 About the schoolmaster?
31406Ai n''t to home, none of''em, hey?
31406Ai n''t wanted, Cudjo? 31406 All ready?"
31406All right so far, Pepperill?
31406All safe?
31406All?
31406Amuse me? 31406 And Pomp?"
31406And are you so very weary of the cave?
31406And did he not promise to do so?
31406And did you give it me?
31406And do you know there''s a secret passage from this cellar into the cellar under Jim''s shop? 31406 And do you maintain that you did not go willingly?"
31406And do you remember a conversation you had with Lysander under a bridge?
31406And how you that day took a journey to be away from us in our trouble?
31406And if I comply?
31406And if I had n''t took ye in season, you''d have returned to your base- born mire, would n''t you?
31406And my daughter?
31406And my dead child up yonder?
31406And my faithful servant?
31406And now, what is to be done? 31406 And our friends!--Carl!--have you heard from them?"
31406And that is petter as being hung?
31406And the property?
31406And they have no suspicions?
31406And vat shall you do?
31406And we must conceal him?
31406And what can we do?
31406And what did he reply?
31406And what is to become of me?
31406And what?
31406And where but here?
31406And where is Aunt Deb?
31406And ye knows whar she ar?
31406And you will use it if necessary?
31406And you would have us submit to them?
31406And you?
31406And you?
31406Any one hurt?
31406Anything?
31406Are they well? 31406 Are ye sartin ob dat, massa?
31406Are you asleep?
31406Are you going again?
31406Are you lost? 31406 Are you ready?"
31406Are you sure the man is dead?
31406Are you sure?
31406Are you well, my child?
31406Bold?
31406But all this happened before I came to Tennessee, did it not? 31406 But how came you here?
31406But how came_ she_ here?
31406But how can I resolve to send a guest from my house in this way? 31406 But how do you know, my son,----""How do I know he''s there?
31406But how?
31406But is Mr. Villars safe?
31406But is n''t she a Grace? 31406 But suppose I can show you that you are wrong, and that even by your own laws we are not, and can not be, property?"
31406But whar''s the schoolmaster?
31406But what comes o''de rock?
31406But what had they done to him?
31406But what had you done to merit such cruelty?
31406But what''s he so dead set agin''the master fur?
31406But why do you prefer to be away when the fun is going on?
31406Ca n''t eat, sar? 31406 Ca n''t you see for yourself?"
31406Can you change these rocks under our feet with empty words?
31406Can you show me that spot, Toby?
31406Captain,they replied,"if you not know, how should we know?
31406Carl what?
31406Carl, what''s this?
31406Carl, why do n''t you come too?
31406Condition?
31406Could n''t you find nowhere else to go to? 31406 Could n''t you move the horse?"
31406Danger?
31406Dat ar? 31406 Dat so, Pomp?"
31406Dat? 31406 Daughter, are you here?"
31406De gemman?
31406Dead?
31406Dead?
31406Deslow,laughed Stackridge, himself not ill pleased with Pomp''s arguments,"what do you say to that?"
31406Did I tremble, did I shrink when you carried me through the fire? 31406 Did n''t somebody knock me on the head?"
31406Did n''t we trust you? 31406 Did n''t you hear me tell ye to stop?"
31406Did somepody say somepody is a willain?
31406Did you meet any person on the road, travelling north?
31406Did you not bring my daughter with you?
31406Did you say_ shtop_?
31406Do you believe Deslow will be delivered up?
31406Do you hear anything?
31406Do you know how to use it?
31406Do you know that name? 31406 Do you know this ravine?"
31406Do you remember the night my father was arrested?
31406Do you see any landmarks yet?
31406Do you think it was not a bitter cup for me? 31406 Do you?"
31406Does old Pete visit you since?
31406Does that suit you?
31406Don''ye see? 31406 Dreadful?
31406Fear so? 31406 Find him?"
31406For me, Miss Villars?
31406Gentlemen, will you fight? 31406 Go in?"
31406Gone out, to- night? 31406 Good idee?"
31406Got him?
31406Has he killed him?
31406Has the colonel orders to make the arrests?
31406Have n''t I just got avay from Stackridge? 31406 Have n''t I told you not to_ wake him_?"
31406Have some?
31406Have you anything to confess?
31406Have you had any more trouble since Pomp left you?
31406Have you let Toby go?
31406Have you plenty of arms?
31406Have you two been together long?
31406He wishes to speak with me? 31406 Her?
31406Hey? 31406 Hey?
31406Hey?
31406Him?
31406His name?
31406How are you getting on, boys?
31406How came we property, sir?
31406How came you here, sir?
31406How came you here?
31406How corrupted, my friend?
31406How dare you come back without her?
31406How did I leave them?
31406How do I know you are shmart? 31406 How do you know I am?"
31406How far is it now to your ravine?
31406How is he?--much injured?
31406How large was this spot, this island?
31406How long,she added immediately,"do you imagine we shall have to stay here?"
31406How many friends have you with you?
31406How many slaves do you own?
31406How old is he?
31406How old is she?
31406How shall we get news to you? 31406 How so?"
31406How''s it my fault, I''d like to know?
31406How?
31406I a deserter? 31406 I believe you partly promised it to me, did n''t you?
31406I can read for one; and as for the rest, what good would it do''em to be edecated? 31406 I fancy you do n''t know very well where you are, sir,"said the negro, with a smile;"and you do n''t know me either, do you?"
31406I suppose Toby has told you the news? 31406 I think-- you are my preserver-- are you not?"
31406If you are so independent in your movements, why have you never escaped to the north?
31406If you will disgrace yourself, how can I help it?
31406Is he in the willage?
31406Is it for me?''
31406Is it true what that man is saying?
31406Is it you, Daniel, who are to bear witness against me?
31406Is it you, Hapgood?
31406Is it you, Mr. Stackridge? 31406 Is it you, Penn?
31406Is it you, massa?
31406Is justice done?
31406Is justice done?
31406Is no guns here?
31406Is not that what you would have said to me if you had found me in your power after making me such a promise? 31406 Is that so?"
31406Is the passage behind the spot where Mr. Villars is sitting?
31406Is this so? 31406 Keep your liquor up there, do ye?"
31406Killed?
31406Kin uh do any ting fur ye, sar?
31406Leafe a little trop for me, vill you?
31406Lysander, how are ye? 31406 Many there?"
31406Mine? 31406 Minny- fish?
31406Must I die?
31406My poor boy, you seem to be in trouble; can I help you?
31406My wife-- my two daughters: what will become of them?
31406None missing?
31406Nor for me?
31406Not Mass''Penn? 31406 Not even to save your life?"
31406Not much skin dar, hey? 31406 Not unless Toby lied to me!--Did he?"
31406Nothing for my father?
31406Notwithstanding your oath that you would not tell?
31406Now what''s the use, Sal? 31406 Now what?"
31406Now will you behave, my girl? 31406 Now you vill tell?"
31406Now, Pepperill,said Sprowl,"can you move ahead and make no mistake?"
31406Now, where''s yer tar- and- feathering party?
31406O, must we pass on?
31406O, what shall we do, father?
31406On our''count? 31406 One of your tantrums?"
31406Penn, is it you?
31406Penn-- has anything happened to Penn?
31406Pepperill-- Dan Pepperill; ye know me, do n''t ye, Stackridge?
31406Ropes?
31406Sal, is it you? 31406 Sal,"--in a low voice, looking up at her, and showing his manacled hands,--"are you pleased to see me in this condition?"
31406See the bodies anywhere?
31406Shall I go, too?
31406Shall we go through these woods?
31406Shore? 31406 Sile,"interrupted Dan, earnestly,"what''ge mean I''m to do?
31406Sir, who are you?
31406Soon?
31406Suppose? 31406 Take holt, why do n''t you?"
31406The devil, Toby? 31406 The frog, Toby?"
31406The man in the rawine? 31406 Then what is the grievance you complain of?"
31406Then why do you stop here?
31406Then you wo n''t enlist?
31406Think he''s heerd us?
31406Thought you''d come and meet us half way, did ye?
31406To throw on her?
31406Toby, what are we to do?
31406Toby, who is that?
31406Toby, you black devil, where have you been?
31406Toby? 31406 Vas that shpeaking?"
31406Vat did you say?
31406Vat for you dodge? 31406 Vat is it?"
31406Vat is vanting?
31406Vill nothing happen?
31406Virginia, that man is thy worst enemy? 31406 Vot sort of Tutchmen vos they?"
31406Vot vinder?
31406Vould you really be pleased to have me?
31406Vy not? 31406 Was it you that rapped before?"
31406Was it you?
31406Was n''t it the schoolmaster?
31406Was the secret known to many?
31406Water?
31406Well, Dutchy,--for the first time deigning to consult Carl,--"this route is taking us to the cave, too, ai n''t it?"
31406Well, and if I reject your generous offer?
31406Well, how are you getting on, sir?
31406Well, how many negroes has your friend?
31406Well, of the eleven, how many own slaves?
31406Well, what do you want of me?
31406Well, what luck, you lying scoundrel?
31406Well, what more?
31406Well, where did they take you?
31406Well?
31406Wha''fur?
31406Wha''sh''ll we do?
31406Wha-- wha-- what de debil you want hyar?
31406Whar''s that Dutch boy?
31406What am I to pay for?
31406What are you bowing and grinning at me for? 31406 What are you going to do to that helpless, blind old man?"
31406What becomes of the sugar that dissolves in your coffee?
31406What business he got hyar?
31406What dar?
31406What dat to me, if him die, or whar him die?
31406What dat ye call dis nigger?
31406What dat?
31406What did Gad pitch into me fur?
31406What did he see, Virginia?
31406What did you do with them?
31406What did you mean by''barbarous system''?
31406What did you pitch into me fur?
31406What did you push and jump on to me fur?
31406What do you demand of me?
31406What do you mean by''our people''?
31406What do you mean to do?
31406What do you mean, Cudjo?
31406What do you mean, you d-- d deserter?
31406What do you think of that back, sir?
31406What do you think, Pomp?
31406What do you want of Mis''Stackridge?
31406What do you want?
31406What does anybody care for me?
31406What does he want of it?
31406What for do you do this, Carl?
31406What good der tanks do to we?
31406What has happened to Carl?
31406What has happened to Penn?
31406What has happened?
31406What have ye been doing to the schoolmaster? 31406 What have you got in your hand?"
31406What have you hung over the window, Toby?
31406What is it about your boarder? 31406 What is it, Carl?"
31406What is it?
31406What is it?
31406What is the trouble?
31406What is this on it? 31406 What luck?"
31406What make de cave, anyhow?
31406What makes ye look so down- in- the- mouth, Dutchy? 31406 What makes you think so, Pomp?"
31406What me done? 31406 What men are they?"
31406What more? 31406 What news from my dear girl?--from my two dear girls?"
31406What news?
31406What next, you scoundrel?
31406What rights could n''t you have under the government left to us by Washington?
31406What smoke is that?
31406What soldiers?--Who is this?
31406What sort of a chap was with him? 31406 What sort of a person?"
31406What sort of books_ do_ you like?
31406What then are we to do?
31406What to do?
31406What was in the kittle?
31406What was you thar at the winder fur?
31406What will you say then when I tell you I have been in Bythewood''s house, since I left him? 31406 What''s going on?"
31406What''s that to me?
31406What''s that, you Dutchman?
31406What''s that?
31406What''s the Dutchman done?
31406What''s the matter, Toby?
31406What''s the matter?
31406What''s the odds, so long as they''re men of the true sperrit?
31406What''s the trouble, Carl?
31406What''s use ob all dis trouble on his''count?
31406What''s wantin'', sar?
31406What''s wanting, Carl?
31406What''s your business in town, stranger?
31406What, marm?
31406What, then, is the worst?
31406What, then, must they think?
31406What?
31406What?
31406When did he go?
31406Where am I, then?
31406Where am I?
31406Where are you bound?
31406Where bound?
31406Where did you come from? 31406 Where did you get it?"
31406Where is Aunt Deb?
31406Where is Carl to- night, Toby?
31406Where is Carl? 31406 Where is Salina?
31406Where is Virginia?
31406Where is he?
31406Where is he?
31406Where is the fellow?
31406Where is the master?
31406Where shall I go and borry to- day?
31406Where you from?
31406Where your husband?
31406Where''s Hapgood? 31406 Where''s Sile?
31406Where? 31406 Where?"
31406Which of us goes down into the ravine?
31406Which?
31406Who dar?
31406Who eber knowed you''s sech a powerful smart chil''?
31406Who is it?
31406Who is with you?
31406Who told you to speak?
31406Who warned you?
31406Who will be disappointed?
31406Who''s the fish this time?
31406Who''s there?
31406Who''s_ me_?
31406Who-- what is it?
31406Who? 31406 Who?
31406Why did they take you prisoner?
31406Why do n''t you hurry up this business?
31406Why do n''t you kill and eat him?
31406Why do n''t you speak?
31406Why forbid him?
31406Why go down there at all?
31406Why not send for him?
31406Why should n''t a cullud pusson hab de right to be honest, well as white folks? 31406 Why should we blacks have anything to do with this quarrel?"
31406Why, what is the matter? 31406 Why, what''s the matter, Toby?"
31406Will Salina come too?
31406Will no one save me? 31406 Will you give me a safe conduct?"
31406Will you stay here, or go with us?
31406Would I be any better off there? 31406 Would n''t take the pistol?
31406Would you like some cheese?
31406Would you like to hear something of my story?
31406Would you see her die?
31406Ye pooty sick, sar?
31406You are the fellow that enlisted to save the schoolmaster''s neck, ai n''t you?
31406You de lady of de house?
31406You have heard from them, then?
31406You know they druv me to it, do n''t ye? 31406 You let Cudjo do what him pleases?"
31406You mean to say, if you are licked, then you wo n''t tell?
31406You offer yourself as a substitute, eh, if I will spare his life?
31406You promise to take me to the cave?
31406You put on the tar?
31406You saw her!--where?
31406You see them little saplings?
31406You see vair the rock comes down? 31406 You take it?"
31406You tell now? 31406 You try your chance wid Cudjo agin, miss?"
31406You understand?
31406You vill take me prisoner?
31406You''re partic''larly interested in the young man, hey?
31406You, Miss Jinny? 31406 You?
31406You? 31406 Your heart is a- burnin'', ai n''t it?"
31406''Fraid your friends will get scorched?"
31406''How so?''
31406''Josh,''says he,''what ye doin''thar?
31406''Member my gal ye got away?
31406( she gazed at him affectionately),"you ai n''t in no great danger, be you?"
31406Ai n''t dar nuffin ol''Toby can be a doin''fur ye, jes''to pass away de time?"
31406All ready?"
31406And Pomp-- where all this time was Pomp?
31406And Virginia?
31406And Virginia?
31406And do you remember I vas putting some supper in my pocket ven you took me to show you the cave?
31406And how was his escape from the state to be effected?
31406And if I am unloved, whose fault is it but my own?
31406And if there should be a little fighting to do, will you help do it?"
31406And some pushes just under it?
31406And was not that a human form moving dimly between him and the sky?
31406And whar''s old Aunt Deb?"
31406And what should we leave it for?"
31406And what was this he saw on awaking?
31406And what''s the use of getting away from it, even if we could?
31406And you know, do n''t you, how Pete came by his licking?"
31406Any thing else I can do for ye?"
31406Any whiskey in the house, widder?"
31406Anybody in the house?"
31406Are we going to make a stand here, and see if the loyal part of old Tennessee will rise up and sustain us?
31406Are you hurt?"
31406As he gazed, he became extremely alarmed for the safety of Stackridge and his friends: and where all this time was Carl?
31406Assuredly, they must have fled from it before this time; but whither had they gone?
31406At length Captain Grudd came to him, and taking him aside, said,--"Well, professor, what do you think of the situation?"
31406Betray his good old master to these ruffians?
31406Blood?"
31406Break his promise to Virginia, his oath to Cudjo and Pomp?
31406But I suppose you know so little how you came here that you would find some difficulty in tracing your way to us again?"
31406But Sprowl is to watch, and be ready to shoot me down?"
31406But am I equal to it?
31406But could he abandon his friends?
31406But had he not the morning before given way to a natural impulse, when he seized a club, firmly resolved to oppose force with force?
31406But he rallied quickly, and said,--"He cure Massa Hapgood?
31406But how was he to avoid participating in scenes of violence if he remained in Tennessee?
31406But how was it possible to comply with his demand?
31406But how?
31406But if he could not, why had he remained absent all day?
31406But if you starve and beat them?
31406But just then Ropes shouted at him,--"What ye at thar, Pepperill?
31406But now she began to question within herself,"What would Penn think?"
31406But tell me-- will you not?--how you came to inhabit this dreadful place?"
31406But the corporal?
31406But until I attain to these, may I not use such weapons as I have?"
31406But what next could she do?
31406But what''s the matter with his hands, sergeant?"
31406But where were the giants?
31406But where were they?
31406Ca n''t you loose the rope a little?
31406Can I do anything for you?"
31406Can I, under all circumstances, live up to it?
31406Can you deny it?"
31406Can you find the way?"
31406Can you, Virginia?"
31406Carl was in despair at this mode of treatment, for it rendered escape impossible,--and what would become of Virginia?
31406Carl''s heart gave a great bound; but he answered with an air of indifference,--"To- night?"
31406Dare you?"
31406Dat ar wan''t you, hey?"
31406Did he look like a Union- shrieker?"
31406Did n''t I say,''Is it you?''
31406Did n''t he corrupt you?"
31406Did n''t he, Dan?"
31406Did ye see him, missis?"
31406Did you ever, in whispering some secret trifle, some all- important, heavenly nothing, just brush the dearest little ear in the world with your lips?
31406Did you not promise your dying brother in your presence to give me my freedom?
31406Do n''t ye know nuffin''?"
31406Do n''t you know me, Wirginie?"
31406Do n''t you know?"
31406Do n''t you see?
31406Do n''t you, Dan?"
31406Do they know where I am?"
31406Do you ask what made me?
31406Do you know whose property this is?"
31406Do you remember how I vas kept quiet ven I vas_ your_ prisoner?
31406Do you think it was taking too much from one who would have robbed me of my soul?"
31406Do you understand?"
31406Do you understand?"
31406Do you, Minny- fish?"
31406Does not the color of a negro''s skin, even in your free states, render him an object of suspicion and hatred?
31406Does the word sound pleasant to your ears?
31406Each gun with its echoes, in those cavernous solitudes, thundered like a whole park of artillery: what, then, was the effect of the volley?
31406For dem''ar white trash, what ye s''pose day knows''bout takin''keer ob a sick gemman like him?
31406For do you know what will happen?
31406For was he not the husband of Salina?
31406Good joke, ai n''t it?"
31406Got his hands tied?
31406Got the schoolmaster fast?"
31406Had Pomp been able to find them?
31406Had Toby forgotten the strain on_ his_ wrists, and the anguish of the thumbs, when this same cruel Lysander had him strung up?
31406Had he really died, and was this unearthly place a vestibule of the infernal regions?
31406Had she been a slave, with a different complexion, although perhaps quite as white, would it have been any the less shameful?
31406Had she recognized her son''s voice?
31406Hapgood?"
31406Has he gone on some errand of yours?"
31406Has n''t Carl come yet?"
31406Has the rule of a hard master seemed grievous to you?
31406Have n''t we come through fire, following you?
31406Have you anything?
31406Have you got your bearings yet, Carl?"
31406Have you lived in this cave ever since?"
31406Have you prayers to make?
31406Have you sighted your man?"
31406He let me down when I was hung up on the rail, and helped me home; and so I says to myself, says I,''Why should n''t I do as much by him?''
31406He resolved to try it: indeed, all unarmed as he was, what else could he do?
31406Holding the branch with one hand, and gesticulating violently with the other, he exclaimed,--"Who is boss here?
31406How came you here?"
31406How can I depend even upon your oath?
31406How could he confront, with his sensitive spirit, those merciless, coarse men?
31406How could he warn her?
31406How does it happen?"
31406How long have you lived here?"
31406How many can read and write?
31406How many men here have any education?
31406How to circumvent the designs of these men?
31406How''s them Dutchmen?"
31406How, now?
31406I can not hope to change it?"
31406I have committed no crime against your laws; if I have, why not let the laws punish me?"
31406I trust no serious harm has been done, my dear Virginia?"
31406I was just starting out to look for them.--Who comes there?"
31406I''ll have the truth out of him, or I''ll have his life?"
31406I''ve tried that, and what did I get for it?"
31406If he, then, is an enemy, what hope is there?
31406Is it cold?
31406Is it damp?
31406Is it gloomy?
31406Is it love that unites such, or is it only the yearning for love?
31406Is it sunrise yet?"
31406Is n''t she loveliness itself?"
31406Is there fatality in a name?"
31406Is there no law, no justice, but the power of the strongest?
31406It was some time before he could reply to Penn''s impetuous demand-- what had brought him up thither?
31406It will be better for the poor maddened wretch himself to prevent him; do n''t you think so, Penn?"
31406It''s the Dutchman, ai n''t it?
31406Jest look arter my family a little, wo n''t ye?
31406Meanwhile Mr. Villars had called Toby to him, and said, in a low voice,--"Is all right with your prisoner?"
31406No?
31406Not that village loafer, who used to go about the streets dressed so shabbily?
31406Now can you see to take aim?"
31406Now you see that rock?"
31406Now, how is it, Pomp?"
31406Now, if he preaks his part of the pargain, vy should n''t I preak mine?"
31406Now, what do you know to the contrary?"
31406Once more alone with this villain, would not some interesting thing occur?
31406Or might they not all have become entangled in the intricacies of the wilderness until encompassed by the fire and destroyed?
31406Or shall we pity it, rather?
31406Penn gave her a look full of electric tenderness, which seemed to say,"Have not I been with you?
31406Penn interrupted the loose and confused narrative-- Virginia: had he_ seen_ her?
31406Pepperill?"
31406Pepperill?"
31406Remain, hoping that he would yet fulfil his promise?
31406Ropes?"
31406Rough streaks along dar, hey?
31406Say dat ar agin, will ye?"
31406Shall I show you?
31406Shall an old Virginian think less of the honor of his house than an Arab?"
31406Shall we condemn the weakness?
31406Shall we take this old man to our den?"
31406She had been there a dozen times; but could she find it in the night?
31406Since the way is opened for us to live together again, why ca n''t you make up your mind to it, let bygones be bygones, and begin life over again?
31406Sprowl,''says he,''do n''t be scared; it''s only me; wo n''t ye let me in?''
31406Sprowl?"
31406Stackridge?"
31406Stackridge?"
31406Stackridge?''
31406Strike a light, and get me some supper, ca n''t you?"
31406Suddenly a voice hailed them:--"Who goes there?"
31406Suddenly he paused: had he heard the words of command whispered?
31406That is not an unreasonable request?"
31406The bright young brow contracted:"Not coming here?"
31406The fatal leap of the terrified horse with his rider is known; but how came Gad on the horse?
31406The grin on the old man''s face was a ghastly one, and his eyes rolled as he stammered forth,--"Miss Jinny-- ye seen Miss Jinny?"
31406The master is out, then?
31406Then Carl stopped again, and said,--"You see that tree?"
31406Then Lysander put the question: Was he prepared to tell all he knew about the fugitives and the cave?
31406Then will you side with your avowed enemies, or with those who are already fighting in your cause without knowing it?"
31406There must be sunshine, and birds, and brooks,--human nature, life, suffering, aspiration, and----""And love?"
31406This is the happiest day I''ve seen----""Ah, what''s happened to- day?"
31406To ask my forgiveness?
31406Toby, why do n''t you bring that bootjack?"
31406Too late?
31406Turn agin''him?"
31406Vill you leave her to die?
31406Villars----?"
31406Villars?"
31406Villars?"
31406Vot shall I do?
31406Was Lysander going alone with him to the mountains?
31406Was ever a hero of romance in such a dismal plight?
31406Was his cry heard?
31406Was it any satisfaction for him to feel that he was thus avenged?
31406Was it not all a dream?
31406Was it not assuming a terrible responsibility to send this rampant sinner to his long account?
31406Was it on the rocks over their heads?
31406Was it some animal, or only a phantom of his feverish brain?
31406Was it supposed that the good old practice of applying torture to enforce confession had long since been done away with?
31406Was it the beauty of the earth and sky that made him shiver with so sudden and sweet a thrill?
31406Was she shocked by this cold, atrocious spirit of calculation?
31406Was this murder he had committed?
31406Wha''ye totin''on him fur?"
31406What are you doing with that nigger?"
31406What are you here for?
31406What chance is there for a man like me?"
31406What could that something be?
31406What do you mean?"
31406What do you say, youngster?
31406What had become of him?
31406What had she fled to the mountain for?
31406What have you got those bracelets on for?"
31406What hinders you?"
31406What if you''d seen dat back when''twas fust cut up?
31406What is going to become of us, if relief does n''t arrive soon?
31406What is the matter?"
31406What is there to be said which he did not say?"
31406What makes you think so?"
31406What right had Mrs. Stackridge to be absent when she came to borrow?
31406What satisfaction can there be in taking the life of so degraded and abject a creature?"
31406What shall I do?
31406What shall I say to them for you?"
31406What should he do?
31406What should she do?
31406What then?
31406What was he trying to lift and drag along the ground?
31406What was the man doing there?
31406What was to be done?
31406What we want to know is, will you join us?
31406What will folks say?"
31406What will you do?"
31406What would the world say?
31406What ye want o''Cudjo?"
31406What you doin''dar?
31406What''s going on?"
31406What''s in this box?
31406What, then, was left him but to perish here, alone, uncared for, unconsoled by a word of love from any human being?
31406What, then, would be his fate?
31406Where am I, anyhow?"
31406Where had he been during those hours of oblivion?
31406Where is Salina?"
31406Where is Toby?"
31406Where is your husband?
31406Where''s Pepperill?"
31406Where''s Sile Ropes?"
31406Where''s your schoolmaster?
31406Whether they will ever be happily united on earth, who can say?
31406Which Toby?
31406Which do you prefer-- the death of a traitor, or the glorious career of a soldier in the confederate army?"
31406Who brought in this fellow?"
31406Who can it be?"
31406Who gib ol''Toby his freedom, an''den''pose to pay him wages?
31406Who had committed the barbarous act?
31406Who ye goin''to mind?
31406Why ai n''t ye to work?''
31406Why did he not leave the body?
31406Why did n''t you tell me before?"
31406Why do n''t ye bring along that ar brush?"
31406Why do you come to torture me now?"
31406Why do you desert us now?"
31406Why do you follow to persecute us?
31406Why is it I feel such trust that Virginia will be provided for?
31406Why should we care which side destroys the other?"
31406Why was she sitting there, wasting the time in tears and reproaches?
31406Will no one speak for my life?"
31406Will you come?"
31406Will you favor us with a song, Virginia?"
31406Will you go back to the rebels, or make a push with us for the free states?
31406Will you write?
31406With those stones?
31406With what, you wonder?
31406Wo bin ich, mutter?_"But the words were not strange to Carl; neither was the voice strange.
31406Wo n''t he hear?"
31406Wonder if Mis''Stackridge and the childern have gone to the mountains too?
31406Would I wish to see my country submit?
31406Would he be retained a prisoner, like the rest, or delivered over to the mob that sought his life?
31406Would it be safe to move him, Toby?"
31406Would the schoolmaster join them?
31406Would you take a look at it?"
31406Yet the choice was between his life and Penn''s; and had not Pomp done well?
31406You are alive and vell now, ai n''t you?"
31406You feel pretty sound in your witals, do n''t you?
31406You hate a man that you''ve befriended, and that''s turned traitor agin''ye, worse''n you hate an open inemy, do n''t ye?
31406You might almost, I think, decide the question of a man''s Christianity by his answer to this:''What is your feeling towards the negro?''
31406You offer yourself to be whipped in this old nigger''s place?"
31406You promised Captain Sprowl, did you not, that you would conduct him to the cave?"
31406You remember what that was?
31406You think, maybe, the discussion vould not be greatly to your adwantage?"
31406You understand?"
31406You vill not tell?
31406_ THE OLD CLERGYMAN''S NIGHTGOWN HAS AN ADVENTURE._ Where, then, all this time, was Penn?
31406ai n''t it almost too bad?
31406ai n''t it the schoolmaster?"
31406and Carl?
31406and am I nothing to you?"
31406and the snug little Villars property, did he not covet it?
31406and then what would you do?"
31406and vasn''t I running to find you as vast as ever a vellow could?
31406are you crazy?"
31406are you sure?"
31406but being only a"nigger,"what else could you expect of him?
31406cavalry?"
31406could n''t you find''em?
31406cried Lysander, recoiling into the arms of his men;"what the devil do you mean?"
31406cried the old clergyman, with an energy that startled them,"what are you about to do?"
31406dat you, Cudjo?"
31406dat you?
31406dat you?"
31406did I promise to say all you wished?"
31406did he not?"
31406did n''t him take Massa Hapgood and make him well?
31406do n''t ye know Cudjo?
31406do n''t ye know?"
31406do n''t you''member Toby?
31406forsake Virginia and her father when the toils of villany were tightening around them?
31406g''e know Cudjo?
31406git mad, why do n''t ye?"
31406he answered, in the same language,"is it you?"
31406he called, searching among the prisoners;"is Medad Stackridge here?"
31406how came you here?"
31406how did he come hyar?"
31406is it you?
31406is it you?"
31406laughed Cudjo, getting down on his knees over the opossum;"how ye make dat out, by?"
31406leave Stackridge and his compatriots to their fate, when it might be in his power to forewarn and save them?
31406not Mass''Hapgood?"
31406not mobbed?"
31406or are we going to fight our way over the mountains, and never come back till a Union army comes with us to set things a little to rights here?"
31406or de mornin''arter?
31406or in caverns beneath their feet?
31406or not?"
31406or was he impressed by the awful mystery and silence?
31406or was it the lovely presence at his side, in whom was incarnated, for him, all the beauty, all the light, all the joy of the universe?
31406or, in listening to the syllables of divine nonsense, feel the warm breath and light touch of the magnetic thrilling mouth?
31406roared Lysander,"why do n''t you bring that bootjack?"
31406said Carl,"how came you here?"
31406said Silas, turning angrily on the recumbent figure,"what are you stretching your lazy bones thar fur?
31406said he,''do you think I was in earnest?''
31406said the agitated girl;"are you able?"
31406she called,"where are you?
31406that old traitor, or me?
31406the Quaker will fight?"
31406tink we''s go trough dat fire like we done trough tudder?"
31406vot for you choke a fellow so?"
31406what are you about?"
31406what are you doing here?"
31406what are you going to do with that old man?"
31406what are you staring for?
31406what can Pomp do?
31406what did he see?
31406what did you say to him through the winder?"
31406what for?"
31406what of her?"
31406what?"
31406where have you been?"
31406who?"
31406why did n''t I know you?"
31406why do n''t you?
31406why in hell you shtop?''
31406why not?"
31406will you accept my life as an atonement for all I have done amiss?
31406ye hain''t been foolin''us, have ye?"
31406you deny the fact?"
31406you persist?''
31406you threaten, you villain?''
31406you will?"
31406you?