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 |
---|---|
7937 | Among the unsolvable riddles which nature propounds to mankind, we may reckon the question, Who is Mother Carey, and where does she rear her chickens? |
7937 | And again, why is not her own strength so directed as to give the trade a death- blow at once? |
7937 | But how is an American cruiser to take hold of a vessel so circumstanced? |
7937 | But who has a right to trample on a woman''s breast? |
7937 | But, in this case, where would be the head- money and the emigrants? |
7937 | Can a man, vowed to the service of a Divine Master, think it much to practise similar self- denial? |
7937 | Had a man fallen overboard? |
7937 | How much better will their condition be, as apprentices in Trinidad or Jamaica, than as slaves in Cuba? |
7937 | How then can such a vessel be taken or molested, so long as the present treaties and laws continue in force? |
7937 | How, then, can it be made profitable in Liberia, where labor commands so high a price, and is often impossible to be procured? |
7937 | If sincere, why does she not, as she readily might, induce Spain, Portugal, and Brazil, to declare the traffic piratical? |
7937 | What can have been the motive of such a seclusion? |
7937 | Who should win it?--her guardian angel? |
7937 | or the gambling fiend? |
7937 | or, possibly, to live his own simple life, untrammelled by the irksome exterior of greatness? |
7937 | to do with warlike parade? |
7937 | was it in the personal character of the king, and did he shut himself up to meditate on high matters, or to revel in physical indulgence? |
12539 | --"About ten moon; how would you like to go with me, Alimami?" |
12539 | He replied with quickness,"I be very glad to see you, what service have you brought?" |
12539 | This ceremony is simply performed by touching the fingers, accompanied in the Timminy language by the usual obeisance of_ Currea_, or, how do you do? |
12539 | When conducted to his presence, he very emphatically enquired"if what I tell him be true?" |
12539 | you look that, massa?" |
12539 | |Are you afraid? |
12539 | |Currea|Lemmoó|I return you service,|Bá|Bá|or salute|||Are you well? |
12539 | |Dhya mésa? |
12539 | |Do you understand Soosee? |
12539 | |Dígenga Jolliff|How much did that cost? |
12539 | |E''wama ierekong|Sit down|Dokha|How do you do|E''mung keé? |
12539 | |Ebanta gei? |
12539 | |Egahama? |
12539 | |Eheo keefang? |
12539 | |Ehili mungkee? |
12539 | |Emung she ra falama? |
12539 | |Esigáma em fokhera|I have no money|Náfuli muna embe|How much do you want? |
12539 | |Esusee whi mema? |
12539 | |Gnay see mooa? |
12539 | |He is not yet gone|A mú siga sending|Stand still|Tife ira hara|Run|Gee fé|Leap, or Jump|Tubang fe|Have you slept well? |
12539 | |I am hungry|Kaame em shukuma|Eat|Dong|Let us go|Woem hasiga|Will you go with me? |
12539 | |Illil é móa? |
12539 | |Kahihfie|Yes|Ouaa|No|Dhiett|How do you do? |
12539 | |Ko nyaymaee? |
12539 | |Loung a houche|Can you speak Joliff? |
12539 | |Málungdundundifeemma|Here|Be|What is your name? |
12539 | |Niatar ladiar? |
12539 | |Too pay|Appay wa? |
12539 | |Tornado|Tuliakbegle|Which way are you going? |
12539 | |Very well|Dhya medal|Buy|Ghuyendé|Sell|Ghuyal|Take|Diapol|I will|Benguéna|I thank you|Guérum nalá|A bar of Iron|Baravin|What did you say? |
12539 | |Very well|Em melang hekeefang|Give me some rice? |
12539 | |Very well|Tai ó tai|Pay chin lin|What is your name? |
12539 | |Why do you do so? |
12539 | |Yeng yayma? |
5760 | And why the---didn''t you mention it? |
5760 | What habitation? |
5760 | You want to look him Nágo( house)? |
5760 | ( Chorus improvises all his requirements)( Solo)"How many dangers for the black girl?" |
5760 | ( Solo)''How many things gives the white man?'' |
5760 | ( Solo)''What must be done for the white man?" |
5760 | ( good morning), or"Oresa"( are you well)? |
5760 | 9), the English charts give the name of Point Pan to a large deep bight in which lies the harbour- bay"Porto de Garapo"( Garápa, sugar- cane juice? |
5760 | After an interval of fiery sun, with occasional rain torrents and discharges of electricity, begin the Enomo( Enun? |
5760 | And how can he know when the people themselves, even the princes and priests, are ignorant of it? |
5760 | And where was the blood? |
5760 | And why? |
5760 | But how can they look for it to be otherwise? |
5760 | But the glory had departed from Sánga- Tánga( Peel- White? |
5760 | But what could I do? |
5760 | But what was the result? |
5760 | His furthest point was 213 kilometres east of"San Quita"( Sankwita), a village sixty- one kilometres north(??) |
5760 | His furthest point was 213 kilometres east of"San Quita"( Sankwita), a village sixty- one kilometres north(??) |
5760 | I then asked the guide if my staying longer would be of any use? |
5760 | It must perforce draw public attention to the West Coast of Africa, and raise the question,"What shall we do with it?" |
5760 | M. Guirold, commanding a cruiser, was also sent to the estuary of the Rembo or Fernão Vaz, into which the Mpungule( N''poulounay of M. du Chaillu? |
5760 | Major de Ruvignes heard also of a tribe called Lachaize( Osheba?) |
5760 | Strip- White? |
5760 | The Lálá( Oshebas? |
5760 | The first is the"Impungu"( or pongo? |
5760 | The former or early rains( Nchangyá?) |
5760 | The missionary returning from Africa is often asked what is the religion of the people? |
5760 | Then why not drink port before the fever? |
5760 | They asked me if I thought mortal man would ever attempt to face such a thing as that? |
5760 | This sag in the coast is formed by Ninje( Nenge the island? |
5760 | What could that matter, when our Nimrod had an excellent weapon in his hand and a strong party to back him? |
5760 | What for I make more dash?" |
5760 | When elephants happen to come and feed where they are, they will fall on them, and so beat them with their clubbed fists( sticks?) |
5760 | Why should lofty Fernando Po and low- lying Corisco suffer so much, when Zanzibar Island, similarly situated, suffers so rarely? |
5760 | is the man to go hungry when he can trade off his sister''s brats?" |
5760 | ship no big rogue?" |
52444 | Man, what art thou? |
52444 | Why not keep Sangala''s woman on board? |
52444 | Yes,said I;"but when he gets old his face is black; and do you not see his nose, how flat it is, like yours?" |
52444 | ***** What do you think he did next? |
52444 | An animal-- a man- monkey-- with no hair on the top of his head? |
52444 | And what kind of skin do you think it was? |
52444 | But how? |
52444 | But what could the shark do against the powerful saw of his antagonist? |
52444 | But where was I to sit down? |
52444 | But why were they all there dancing and screeching around the idol? |
52444 | Could it be a leopard, or what? |
52444 | Did I not tell you the truth?" |
52444 | Do his eyes penetrate the grass which we can not see through? |
52444 | Had they smelt us? |
52444 | Have I not killed the elephant?" |
52444 | Have you ever heard of such a horrible superstition? |
52444 | Have you known what hunger is-- real craving hunger? |
52444 | He thought his costume was just the thing, and he looked loftily around, as if to say,"Am I not a fine- looking fellow?" |
52444 | How could one approach it without being seen? |
52444 | How was I to bring him to America? |
52444 | How was I to find my way in that vast African forest? |
52444 | I rubbed my eyes in a hurry-- what could be the matter? |
52444 | I said to Obindji,"Why do you ring your kendo?" |
52444 | I said,"Fasiko, you have one wife, what do you care for a leopard''s tail?" |
52444 | I was going farther and farther from the sea; if the savages were to leave me and run away in the forest, what would become of me? |
52444 | I wonder if you boys would like it? |
52444 | If so, is he ready to spring? |
52444 | If you had been in my place, boys, would you not have felt the same? |
52444 | In what was I to wash my face? |
52444 | Is he coming towards us-- crouching like a cat on the ground, and ready to spring upon us when near enough? |
52444 | It was a long way off, and how was I to get there through the dense jungle? |
52444 | Of course, you know what the equator is? |
52444 | Okabi, pointing to the head triumphantly, exclaimed,"See, Chaillie, is not the animal bald- headed? |
52444 | One might have asked himself,"Are they hippopotami or not?" |
52444 | Ought we not to be thankful that we were born in a civilized country? |
52444 | Quengueza was greatly delighted, and exclaimed,"What kind of ntangani( white man) is this? |
52444 | Ranpano kept whispering in my ears,"Why did you not keep Sangala''s wife on board?" |
52444 | Shall I be able to tame him? |
52444 | The thought passed through my mind: Is he watching us? |
52444 | Want chop?" |
52444 | Was I afraid? |
52444 | We wanted very much to kill it, for we had not killed anything yet; and what were we to have for our dinner and supper? |
52444 | We watched the hippopotamus intently, looking at each other as if to say,"Are you ready?" |
52444 | What could be the matter? |
52444 | What could it be? |
52444 | What could it be? |
52444 | What could it be? |
52444 | What could this mean? |
52444 | What do you suppose a palace to be in the Benito country? |
52444 | What do you suppose all this meant? |
52444 | What do you think these articles were? |
52444 | What feeling was it that excited me? |
52444 | What has become of the wild bull you were looking after so keenly? |
52444 | What have we yonder in the water? |
52444 | What was I to do? |
52444 | What was to be done? |
52444 | What was to be done? |
52444 | What was to become of us in the great forest? |
52444 | What were we to do but to kill him? |
52444 | What were we to do? |
52444 | What would prevent him from doing so if he chose? |
52444 | When he thought I must be hungry, he said,"Want chop? |
52444 | Where had he gone? |
52444 | Who among us does not relish a good dinner, I should like to know? |
52444 | Would they come near enough for me to get a shot at them? |
52444 | Would you believe it? |
52444 | Would you have left the gorillas alone? |
52444 | Would you have left the snakes alone? |
52444 | Would you have let the elephants go unmolested in the forest? |
52444 | Would you like to know how we captured turtles? |
52444 | Would you not have liked to make a meal of Aboko or of Chaillie?" |
52444 | You would like to know, I dare say, what these Africans mean by a wizard, or a witch? |
52444 | a bald- headed ape? |
52444 | had we made a noise that excited their suspicions? |
52444 | what is to become of us, if our guns miss fire, or if we only wound the huge beast? |
36324 | After all,said I to myself,"what am I?" |
36324 | Am I tipsy with plantain wine? 36324 Do I see aright when I see that his hair is long, and as black as that of the mondi? |
36324 | He then rose, and, accompanied by the people, returned to the village; and when Redjioua saw him he said,''How is it that Akenda Mbani has returned? 36324 How could King Olenda run off, when his great friend Quengueza sent him a moguizi?" |
36324 | How do you know,said another,"that the leopards asked the one without a tail''What is the matter?'' |
36324 | How is it,said I to the people,"that I have never seen a white gorilla?" |
36324 | What kind of people live in those mountains? |
36324 | Where are we? |
36324 | Where? |
36324 | Why did you not, Etia, kill the snake at once? |
36324 | After our breakfast of nuts and berries, the question naturally arose, Shall we go back to the strange village? |
36324 | Again I shouted,"Querlaouen, where are you?" |
36324 | Am I not the Man of the Woods? |
36324 | Am I not the master here? |
36324 | And, pointing to my clothes,"Why do you wear garments?" |
36324 | Are we going to be buried alive in the forest?" |
36324 | Are you ready to hear it?" |
36324 | As soon as I saw him, I cried out,"Where is friend Querlaouen?" |
36324 | But then, run away-- where? |
36324 | But what kind of an eagle? |
36324 | By the way, should I say bag? |
36324 | Do I not roam where I please?''" |
36324 | Do n''t you see bees round there? |
36324 | Do tell me, Okendjo, if I see aright, or is it a hallucination of my mind? |
36324 | Do tell me-- tell me quick, Okendjo, am I drunk?" |
36324 | Finally I fired a gun, and then another, and soon I heard the voices of my men shouting"Moguizi, where are you? |
36324 | Have I not before me the spirit who makes the guns, the beads, the brass rods, and the copper rings? |
36324 | Have you ever thought, when looking at the web of a spider, what an admirable piece of work it is, and how this thread is manufactured? |
36324 | He placed the leopard at my feet, saying,"Did I not tell you I had a fetich to kill leopards?" |
36324 | He would look at the fires before him, then at us, and then give a howl, as if was saying,"What have I before me?" |
36324 | How could our small shot reach the top of that tree, which was covered with red berries, upon which the monkeys were quietly feeding? |
36324 | How is it-- Mpomo was well a few days ago, and now Mpomo is dead?" |
36324 | I exclaimed;"and why have you cut off the head of your brother?" |
36324 | I look, and what do I see?--what do I see yonder up in the sky? |
36324 | I questioned Querlaouen,"Did Arondo ever marry?" |
36324 | I shouted with all the power of my voice,"You are not going to kill the beautiful and good Okandaga-- the pride and beauty of the village? |
36324 | I shouted, in English,"what does all this mean? |
36324 | IS IT TRUE? |
36324 | Ilogo, we ask thee, What shall we do to cure the king? |
36324 | Moguizi, where are you?" |
36324 | Moguizi, where are you?" |
36324 | My good friend Ranpano said,"Why do you wish to go back into the forest? |
36324 | One day I said to Olenda,"Olenda, have you ever been to the Nkoumou- Nabouali?" |
36324 | Remandji also said,"Did I not tell you I had a man who had a big fetich to kill leopards?" |
36324 | Remandji then said,"What becomes of all the people we sell, and that go down the river for you to take away? |
36324 | Shall the king die? |
36324 | She did not in the least mind what he said, but swam off down stream like a buoy, shouting continually,"Where is my bunch of plantains? |
36324 | Should we sleep in that forlorn- looking village or not? |
36324 | The king also sent word that I should be carried; for why should the moguizi walk if he is tired? |
36324 | The leopard had seen us, and was looking at us, as if to say,"Why do you disturb me in my sleep?" |
36324 | The leopard ran away to his companions, who, when they saw him, asked,''What is the matter?'' |
36324 | The people, not seeing him with me, asked after their king, Quengueza, crying out,"Our king went with you, why have you not brought him back? |
36324 | The question that arose in my mind was,"How did the king happen to be in the woods?" |
36324 | The village was deserted, darkness was coming on, and the question now was, What were we going to do? |
36324 | Then Gambo interrupted the story by saying,"The king knew very well that Akenda Mbani could not go twice to the same spot; why did he ask him to go?" |
36324 | Then the question arose, Did the birds follow the monkeys, or the monkeys the birds? |
36324 | Then what should I say to Quengueza? |
36324 | They looked at me as if they would have said,"What''s the matter with Chally, he looks so excited?" |
36324 | Was Querlaouen dead? |
36324 | Was he a white gorilla or not? |
36324 | Was my great and beloved African friend to die? |
36324 | Were they to spear me? |
36324 | Were they yellow wild boars, or black ones? |
36324 | What am I in this great forest?" |
36324 | What can these voices be, those of friends or enemies? |
36324 | What could all this mean? |
36324 | What could have brought these huge boulders on those mountains? |
36324 | What did it all mean? |
36324 | What did you see in the bush? |
36324 | What had he died for? |
36324 | What had that immense crowd come for? |
36324 | What will become of our elephants?" |
36324 | What would the Ashiras say if one of their number should be carried away by a wild beast? |
36324 | What would the people say? |
36324 | When I became composed again, I asked,"How did he die?" |
36324 | When he went with you he was well, why has he been sick?" |
36324 | When one of the Ashiras said to me, pointing to the mountain,"You see that mountain, Moguizi?" |
36324 | Where is the giant that could show such prodigious feet? |
36324 | Who knows? |
36324 | You are not dead, are you?" |
36324 | my friend Querlaouen, what has become of you? |
36324 | said the gorilla,''how do the woods belong to thee? |
36324 | shouted one man,"and then you would have had the ncheri for your dinner?" |
36324 | that his face is of a color I never saw? |
36324 | what did I see? |
36324 | what do I see? |
36324 | what do I see? |
36324 | when I see that his legs are black, and that he has no toes( I had boots on)? |
38870 | A rat,I said;"what do you mean?" |
38870 | Are n''t they, my friend? |
38870 | Do n''t you, my young friend? 38870 Do you get anything else but fever down there?" |
38870 | Do you remember poor C.? |
38870 | Had he brought me a present of yams? |
38870 | Have you got any tobacco? |
38870 | If he said that of Kruboys,say the old coasters,"how can he have known or understood anything?" |
38870 | Look here,said an anxious inquirer;"why are some of these rocks named after the Company''s ships?" |
38870 | Suppose you come, you no fit to talk? |
38870 | Well,I said,"how about the people amongst whom you now are? |
38870 | Well,I said,"is it a river of any size? |
38870 | Well,said I,"would you go if you could? |
38870 | What am I to do, sir? |
38870 | What do you think of that, doctor? |
38870 | What is the matter? |
38870 | What is the matter? |
38870 | Where do you call--? |
38870 | ''What, is he dead?'' |
38870 | Arrived at the gangway, his majesty, in the most natural way imaginable, notices for the first time(?) |
38870 | As I used to be sitting on deck every one who came across me would say,"Wet, is n''t it? |
38870 | As an instance of the form which native justice(?) |
38870 | At first sight it might be said,"Where is the link between self- preservation and missionary effort, and how comes it to work against the missions?" |
38870 | Besides this, what would his position be when there, if he could not get any white men there to trade with? |
38870 | But why call this humbug? |
38870 | For one Englishman killed by the West Indies West Africa will want ten; for every £1,000, £20,000--and all for what? |
38870 | Had I not seen how strong and long a shadow, be it of man or tree or of the great mountain itself, was in the early morning time? |
38870 | Have we quite run out of constructive ability in Statecraft? |
38870 | How can you fly, I should like to know, unless you have a jumping off place? |
38870 | How is it the''Yoruba Rock''and the''Gambia Rock?'' |
38870 | I had survived Sierra Leone, I had enjoyed it; why, therefore, not survive other places, and enjoy them? |
38870 | I have heard of one(?) |
38870 | I trust, My Friend, you remembered it, and killed the fatted calf on his return?" |
38870 | If this is so in our oldest colony, what reason have we to believe that in the others we are safer? |
38870 | If you were to- morrow to kill every native there, what use would the country be to you? |
38870 | Is it not possible to formulate some new plan to mark the age of Victoria? |
38870 | It is no use saying, Look at our Indian system, why not just introduce that into West Africa? |
38870 | It''s the way with most of them, is n''t it?" |
38870 | Might not the ancestors of this people have brought the art of working in brass with them from the far distant land of Canaan? |
38870 | Might not these brazen serpents be a remnant of some tradition handed down from the time of Moses? |
38870 | Now why must each of you decide Your heart and purse to open wide? |
38870 | Now, here we come to a very interesting question: What is witchcraft in itself? |
38870 | Now, you will say, Wherefore should the general public in England interest itself in this matter? |
38870 | One of the Agents would look at the Captain during a meal- time, and say,"You remember J., Captain?" |
38870 | Or, in other words, will you give me all the support I need if I undertake to go?" |
38870 | She is continually saying:"English possessions on that Coast pay, why should not mine?" |
38870 | The Ju- Ju priest was clothed(?) |
38870 | The cook was summoned, and asked by Her Britannic Majesty''s representative"Where that smell came from?" |
38870 | The question was--"Had I any proof that this man was one of the thieves, or in any way connected with the affair?" |
38870 | Then, as for the domestic finance, why expect officers and lawyers, doctors and gentlemen from clubland to manage fiscal matters? |
38870 | Was it because you thought some one else could do it better? |
38870 | We meet in this school, however, with a serious problem-- namely, what does become of dead chiefs? |
38870 | Well, you see this is the wet season on the Coast"--or,"Damp, is n''t it? |
38870 | What are the causes that lead these people to work against the missions? |
38870 | What did all this wonderful catch bring about? |
38870 | What did you catch it for?" |
38870 | What does it matter to him whether the section of the human race he strives to save be black, white, or yellow? |
38870 | What else remains? |
38870 | When he returned his captain asked him, saying,"Pills, are they all mad on board that vessel or merely drunk as usual?" |
38870 | Why did n''t he fly? |
38870 | Without slaves, wives, and funds, how can the dead soul you care for speak with the weight of testimony of men as to its resting place or position? |
38870 | Would it not be a good place to open up a new business?" |
38870 | Yet how many of these earnest people could one guarantee to have completely cast out all their belief in Ju- Juism? |
38870 | You be big man, suppose pusson sick?" |
38870 | You fit for come?" |
38870 | You remember D----?" |
38870 | ["]: added closing quote p. 42 You remember D----? |
38870 | are they to be condemned to single blessedness for the remainder of their days? |
38870 | are you willing To subscribe another shilling? |
38870 | do n''t you?" |
38870 | hang it all, you do n''t mean to say they''ve been wrecked here? |
38870 | he said;"has anything happened?" |
38870 | she''ll say;"no rubber? |
38870 | they believe in very nearly the same Ju- Jus that your own people do, what do they say about you?" |
38870 | what price paraffin?" |
12667 | And can you fight with two hundred Brass people? |
12667 | And what are you come to see? |
12667 | And where do they lead to? |
12667 | God forbid,exclaimed he,"but how can you compare our faiths? |
12667 | How many of you Bonny people are there? |
12667 | Is he such a man? |
12667 | Rais Khaleel,said he,"what would your sultan do to Min Ali, if he was to go to England? |
12667 | What are Protestants? |
12667 | What do you do then for servants? |
12667 | What do you think of it? |
12667 | What does he do,said he,"when one of his wives has a child? |
12667 | What is his name? |
12667 | What the d--- l have I to do with the widow? |
12667 | What: has the great bashaw caffre friends? |
12667 | Where is your Jew servant? |
12667 | Why did you not talk to him,said the servant,"about the dangers of the road?" |
12667 | Why,as Richard Lander says,"did they entrap us in this manner? |
12667 | Would you force us to become Christians? |
12667 | You are a Christian, Abdallah? |
12667 | & c., and smiling, asked with great naivete, whether I had not learned, during the last two months, a little more Arabic? |
12667 | ''If I can not afford to keep myself,''said the man,''how can I feed horses?'' |
12667 | ( Captain Lyon''s travelling name,) How is he? |
12667 | ( How do you do?) |
12667 | Among the negro slaves at Wadinoon was a woman, who said she came from a place called Kanno,( Cano?) |
12667 | Another asked him if his horse was sick? |
12667 | Are not your eyes dimmed with straining to the north, where all your thoughts must ever be? |
12667 | At last, however, came the fatal question,--"Is he moslem?" |
12667 | At this the governor smiled, and again asked,"would you Christians allow us to come and see your country?" |
12667 | Believe me, I blush at the reflection of a crime so hideous and un- English like as this?" |
12667 | But my brother says you will never become Moslem-- won''t you, to please Abdi Zeleel''s sister? |
12667 | But, said Clapperton, on leaving him, it is necessary for me to visit those places, or else how can the English get here? |
12667 | Do you believe in such things?" |
12667 | Else why this double dealing, this deceit, this chicanery, these hollow professions? |
12667 | Have you forgotten the man who brought you milk at Karrankalla? |
12667 | He first denied that he had any, notwithstanding the bowls were scarcely ten paces behind him, and then asked, what they had got to pay for it? |
12667 | He was well acquainted with the major''s travelling name, for the moment he entered, he said laughing,"How do you do, Abdallah? |
12667 | How great will be their astonishment?" |
12667 | How have you passed the heat of the day? |
12667 | How is your health? |
12667 | If the chance of war had placed me in your situation, and you in mine, how would you have treated me?'' |
12667 | In battle, who spreads terror around him like the buffalo in his rage? |
12667 | Is he liberal? |
12667 | Is his heart large? |
12667 | Lander had seen this done before, and on asking Boy the reason why he was throwing away the provisions thus, he asked,"Did you not hear the fetish?" |
12667 | One of the people, who was apparently a person of consequence, called out lustily,"Holloa, white men, you French, you English?" |
12667 | Tahr, their chief, having closely examined our traveller, as to the motives of his journey, said,"And have you been three years from your home? |
12667 | The first who ruled over them, that is the seven provinces of Houssa, was, as it is stated, Amenah, daughter of the prince of Zag Zag,( Zeg Zeg?) |
12667 | The next day Hameda''s mother, named Moghtari, came to him, and asked him how he dared to lift his hand against a Moor? |
12667 | These operations they accompanied with loud praises of Barca Gana, calling out,"Who is in battle like the rolling of thunder? |
12667 | They delivered their letter from the bashaw, and after he had read it, he inquired,"What was our object in coming?" |
12667 | They salute one another by laying the hand on the breast, making a bow, and inquiring,_ Kona lafia? |
12667 | To the great surprise of Major Denham, striking his breast, he exclaimed,"I am Hateeta, Are you a countryman of Said? |
12667 | Was this the tract of the Romans merely into the interior, or did they come to the valley for dates? |
12667 | What would our neighbours, what would our friends-- our foes say to this? |
12667 | When in the midst of them, perceiving tears falling fast down his cheeks, they asked him why he wept so? |
12667 | Where shall Fezzan now look for her protector? |
12667 | Who could not understand the meaning of all this? |
12667 | Who shall now be safe? |
12667 | Who shall now be safe?" |
12667 | Who will succeed him when he dies?" |
12667 | Why did you not inquire of him about what you wish for? |
12667 | Why have they led us about as though we had been blind, only to place us in the very lap of what they imagine to be danger? |
12667 | Will you come and see me at Hadyja on your return?" |
12667 | Would he kill me, or would he keep me there a prisoner? |
12667 | You people of the gadado,( or atego,& c.) why do you not hasten to the wall?" |
12667 | You seem very melancholy; do you want money?'' |
12667 | _ Gulba kablr,_ does he give presents to his people?" |
12667 | _ Salem Ali Frederick!_ How many wives have they?" |
12667 | allah!_ and on discovering the guns, instantly exclaimed,"Where is the powder?" |
12667 | and are you come to make war? |
12667 | but the God made us all, though not all handsome like Mussulmans, so who could tell?" |
12667 | do you call the name of God dirty water?" |
12667 | exclaimed Min Ali,"I should take him something; but what could I give him? |
12667 | he exclaimed,"and do you ever pray?" |
12667 | ki ka ky kee-- Fo fo da rana:_ How do you do? |
12667 | nor"Why do not the gadado''s people go up?" |
12667 | that she shut her doors upon them and plundered them? |
12667 | what is his name?" |
5891 | A relief? |
5891 | Do you get much rubber round here? |
5891 | Get up, you lazy scamps,is the next exclamation, followed almost immediately by the question,"Why has not this man been buried?" |
5891 | Hatsi soko:--"Who are you?" |
5891 | Have you any tobacco? |
5891 | Hi, hi, do n''t you hear? 5891 How are we going to get through that way?" |
5891 | How long does a palaver usually take to talk round here? |
5891 | Ke Soko?'' |
5891 | N''est- ce pas? |
5891 | No got one, ma? |
5891 | Was I a wife of them Move white man,they inquired--"or them other white man?" |
5891 | What for good him ting for We country, Cappy? 5891 What for good him ting, Cappy?" |
5891 | What if I ca n''t help it? |
5891 | What''s the news? |
5891 | What? |
5891 | What? |
5891 | Where be your husband, ma? |
5891 | Where them Black Man Misery? |
5891 | Where them Black boy live? |
5891 | Where them Smiles? |
5891 | Where''s John Holt''s factory? |
5891 | Where''s the Agent? |
5891 | Why not take the native in the rear, Mademoiselle,said he,"and convert the native gods?" |
5891 | Why you no got one? |
5891 | Why? |
5891 | Why? |
5891 | Yes, do you not see that until it shows there is nothing but forest, forest, forest, and that still stretch of river? 5891 You be Christian, ma?" |
5891 | You kill? |
5891 | You no sabe him clock you done sell me? |
5891 | All of us save one, need I say that one was myself? |
5891 | But repose is not long allowed to that active spirit; he sees something in the water-- what? |
5891 | Captain Verdier exceedingly pleasant and constantly saying"N''est- ce pas?" |
5891 | Cook does not feel these forest charms, and gives me notice after an hour''s experience of mountain forest- belt work; what cook would not? |
5891 | Did you know poor B---? |
5891 | Does any one who knows them feel inclined to tell me that those old palm- oil chiefs have not learnt a thing or two during their lives? |
5891 | Drawbacks, you say? |
5891 | Exit from saloon-- silence-- then:"You sabe five o''clock? |
5891 | Exit-- silence-- then:"You sabe half- past five o''clock? |
5891 | Fearing my two Agents would fight and damage each other, so that neither would be any good for me, I firmly said,"Have you got any rum?" |
5891 | For an hour and a half thought I, Why did I come to Africa, or why, having come, did I not know when I was well off and stay in Glass? |
5891 | He did not answer, and his father said,''Do you wish me to kill a goat?'' |
5891 | He did not answer; his father said,''Do you wish me to give you new wives?'' |
5891 | How can a fish possess land?" |
5891 | How in the world is any one going to take a bath in a house with no doors, and only very sketchy wooden window- shutters? |
5891 | How would you feel? |
5891 | I said,"Why in the world do you throw away in the bush the bodies of your dead slaves? |
5891 | I said,"Why not stay for bush?" |
5891 | I wonder what they will be like when we are up in their home; up atop of that precious wall? |
5891 | I wonder whether the rocks or the trees were there first? |
5891 | Is it? |
5891 | Kefalla soon arrives upon the scene full of argument,"You no sabe this be Sunday, Ma?" |
5891 | Obanjo who had all the time suspected me of having trade motives, artfully said,"What for you come across from Ogowe? |
5891 | Of course the first question was, Why was I there? |
5891 | One important point that you must remember is that the African is logically right in his answer to such a question as"You have not cleaned this lamp?" |
5891 | Surely you have not forgotten your old friend?" |
5891 | The Governor is thus liable to be cut off at any moment in the middle of a conversation with Clarence, and the amount of"Hellos""Are you there s?" |
5891 | The only question is: Do I individually come under this class? |
5891 | The sun which rises and sets, the moon which changes, the tides which come and go:--what do they care? |
5891 | Then came the inquiry,"If a man is not a thief?" |
5891 | Then his father said,''Do you want me to build you a fetish hut?'' |
5891 | Then orders to avoid the night air are still more difficult to obey-- may I ask how you are to do without air from 6.30 P.M. to 6.30 A.M.? |
5891 | Then you say where''s my trade?" |
5891 | This last is evidently a very heavy accusation, but Kefalla says,"What can a man buy with money better than them thing he like best?" |
5891 | This used to be the sort of thing--"Where them Nettlerash lib?" |
5891 | Understand? |
5891 | We did not receive him even civilly; I burst out laughing, and the boys went off in a roar, and we shouted at him,"Where them chop?" |
5891 | Well, we always have been, and they will say it anyhow; and where after all is the harm in it? |
5891 | Well, yes, but where are there not drawbacks? |
5891 | Whatever can this be? |
5891 | When white man blow dat ting and pussin sleep he kin tap wah make dem bwoy carn do so? |
5891 | Where on earth am I to go? |
5891 | Who cares for hotels now? |
5891 | Why do you not make it with something finer?" |
5891 | Would you take the sardines or the pocket- handkerchiefs? |
5891 | You may say, Why not bring home these things in their raw state? |
5891 | You white men will say,"Why go on believing in him then?" |
5891 | but where''s Agonjo? |
5891 | or that a well- matured bush trader has not? |
5891 | or what other air there is but night air, heavy with malarious exhalations, available then? |
5891 | very good as far as it goes, but where is your real estate? |
5761 | Bonderrois a corruption of the Lusitanianized imbundeiro, the calabash, or adansonia( digitata? |
5761 | Facit autem et hic Nigritem Paludem( Lake Dibbie or Debu, north- east of Sego and Sansanding?) |
5761 | They die each time,said the interpreters, as the canoemen, with loud shouts of"Vai ou nao Vai? |
5761 | We are all cousins; why shall one be treated better than the other? |
5761 | Why should not I, a king like Nessudikira, receive a � dash''equal to his? |
5761 | et Thala montes( the range near the western coast on the parallel of Cabo Blanco?). |
5761 | ( Is this the road?) |
5761 | ( What''s your name?) |
5761 | (? |
5761 | (? |
5761 | (?) |
5761 | (?) |
5761 | (?) |
5761 | (?) |
5761 | (?) |
5761 | (?). |
5761 | ), D.C. Ditto, Annabom(?) |
5761 | ), L. Congo( not laid in) Zygia fastigiata(?) |
5761 | ), Uhanja or Uhenje( Nyanza? |
5761 | ), he asks,"May not the name Giris or Gir be connected with Djidi?" |
5761 | ), or from A- Kilunda, of Kilunda(?) |
5761 | Abrus precatorius(?) |
5761 | Achyranthes argentea(? |
5761 | Again:"Et Nigir fluvius jungens et ipse Mandrum"( Mandara, south of Lake Chad?) |
5761 | Andropogon, an Sorghum(?) |
5761 | Aneilema adhærens(?) |
5761 | Asystasia Coromandeliana(?) |
5761 | Between Ambriz and Bembe, on the Lunguila( Lufula?) |
5761 | Blumea(?) |
5761 | Borreria ramisparsa(? |
5761 | But upon the second,"Is the world ready for its abolition?" |
5761 | But why should they face west? |
5761 | Canna Indica(?) |
5761 | Capsicum an C. frutescens(?) |
5761 | Cassia occidentalis, L. Ditto( not laid in) Cassia mimosoides(? |
5761 | Celosia trigyna(? |
5761 | Chloris Varbata(? |
5761 | Chrysanthellum Sengalense(? |
5761 | Citrus Aurantium(?) |
5761 | Clerodendron multiflorum(? |
5761 | Clius(?) |
5761 | Cnestis(?) |
5761 | Cnestis(?) |
5761 | Combretum spinosum(?) |
5761 | Commolyna(?) |
5761 | Coronocarpus(?) |
5761 | Cynoctonum(?) |
5761 | Desmodium Gargeticum(? |
5761 | Desmodium Mauritianum(? |
5761 | Dichrostachys nutans(?) |
5761 | Dicliptera verticillaris(? |
5761 | Diospyros(?) |
5761 | For instance, if you ask,"What do you call this thing?" |
5761 | Glycine labialis(?) |
5761 | Gnaphalium an luteo- album(?) |
5761 | Heliotropium strigosum(? |
5761 | How do these agree with September 11? |
5761 | Ipomæa sessiliflora(?) |
5761 | It is interpreted"Answer,"hence our"Echo Point"(? |
5761 | Jussieua linifolia(?) |
5761 | Leptochloa sp(?) |
5761 | Lippia an L. Adoensis? |
5761 | Manihot utilissima(?) |
5761 | Melothria triangularis(? |
5761 | Melothria(?) |
5761 | Merolla says that wild men and women( gorillas?) |
5761 | Milletia or Lonchocarpus(?) |
5761 | Milletia(?) |
5761 | Milletia(?) |
5761 | Mimosa asperata(? |
5761 | Modeeca tamnifolia(? |
5761 | Moschoesma polystachya(?) |
5761 | Must I receive a blow, and, notwithstanding, be thought to have done wrong?" |
5761 | Octodon(?) |
5761 | Ocymum an O. gratissimum(?) |
5761 | Oscar Rock, its western( down stream) neighbour, had shared the fate of"Soonga lem Paccula,"( Zunga chya Makula?) |
5761 | Otomeria Guineensis(? |
5761 | Panicum an Oplismenus(?) |
5761 | Ph � nix(?) |
5761 | Phyllanthus pentandrus(?) |
5761 | Phytolacca an P. Abyssinica(?) |
5761 | Quisqualis ebracteata(?) |
5761 | Ricinus communis(?) |
5761 | Seda an S. humilis(?) |
5761 | Spathodea lævis(?) |
5761 | Spermacoce Ruelliæ(? |
5761 | Spondias dubia? |
5761 | The Barbela again anastomoses with the Luba(?) |
5761 | The first is,"Does the change benefit the negro?" |
5761 | The first sensation came from the pillars of an unfinished house--"Care colonne, che fate quà? |
5761 | The neighbours of the Mundonoros are the Mubangos, the Muyanji( Muyanzi? |
5761 | The translation"despair"for"bitterness"( of the fish?) |
5761 | The waters continue to be sweet and fall into a lake variously called Mouro or Moura( Moráve or Marávi? |
5761 | To the question"Quid muliere levius?" |
5761 | Triumfetta rhomboidea(?) |
5761 | Vernonia an V. pandurata(?) |
5761 | Vernonia an V. pauciflora(?) |
5761 | Walthenia(?) |
5761 | What can we make of this geographical Proteus? |
5761 | When homeward bound, he met the Mwani- Sonho, and visited the Mwani- Congo, who lived at Ambasse Congo( São Salvador), distant 50 leagues(?). |
5761 | When the chiefs and princes were so treated, what could the subjects expect? |
5761 | Why should south latitude 6 °, the parallel of Zanzibar, be so fatal to the Briton? |
5761 | and"Jina lako nani?" |
5761 | do you not stand more in awe of a temporal than an eternal curse?" |
5761 | flagellatus(?) |
5761 | the paraphrase to be intelligible would be,"The white man calls this thing so- and- so; what does the Fiote call this thing?" |
21070 | And did you succeed in getting everybody ashore safely? |
21070 | And pray, Ama, what is the nature of these Customs under your father''s beneficent rule? |
21070 | And supposin''I refuse? |
21070 | And was it from him, sir, that you also obtained the information upon the strength of which you determined upon this expedition? |
21070 | And who may you be, my friend, that you find it necessary to ask such a question? 21070 And, if it comes to that, why are the others firing, down by the boats?" |
21070 | Are we going to have a hurricane? |
21070 | Are we quite ready to go to sea, Mr Hoskins? |
21070 | Are you coward enough to revenge yourself upon a mere lad like myself? 21070 But what about the barracoon which you destroyed to- day, sir?" |
21070 | But whither are you taking me? 21070 Can not I always remain with you?" |
21070 | Cut adrift? |
21070 | D''ye see that, Mr Fortescue? |
21070 | Dark mass? |
21070 | Feeling bad, old chap? |
21070 | He lib for die now; what he want to tell me lie for? 21070 He promised you that, did he? |
21070 | Hear anything? |
21070 | Hear that, Silas? 21070 How did you discover that the ship was adrift? |
21070 | How far away is she? |
21070 | How shall I deal with you? 21070 I presoom, sir, it''s another boat job, eh? |
21070 | I say, is n''t this heat awful? 21070 I suppose it is not, by any chance, the craft which we are after, which has slipped out of the river in the darkness, eh?" |
21070 | It is thirsty work sitting there and grilling in the sun, is it not, lads? |
21070 | Jack,I called feebly,"you might bring me a drink presently, when you have finished with Nugent, will you? |
21070 | Like them? |
21070 | Might not that be the place from which those fellows draw their supplies of slaves? |
21070 | No mistake about that, eh? 21070 Oh, come, I say, Leroy, you surely do n''t mean to insinuate that you doubt my word, do you?" |
21070 | Oh, indeed,I replied, still affecting drowsiness;"what for? |
21070 | Sar, you lib for carry dem quinine powder dat dem doctor sarve out dis morning? |
21070 | That you, Mr Futtock? |
21070 | The ship, sir? |
21070 | Then what is going to happen? |
21070 | Then who is to say that I shall not be still included in the batch? |
21070 | There, do n''t ye see it, Mr Nugent, stretchin''athwart the back of the spit? 21070 Too far off for identification purposes, eh, Mr Fortescue?" |
21070 | Waal,exclaimed the Yankee skipper, when I at length refolded and handed the papers back to him,"are ye satisfied, stranger?" |
21070 | Well, Mr Fortescue, what do you make of her? |
21070 | Well, Tommy,I said,"what was old Marline blazing away at? |
21070 | Well, d''ye see anything? |
21070 | Well, doc.,he exclaimed cheerily,"how have things been going with you to- day?" |
21070 | What does this mean, monsieur? |
21070 | What is the cause of it? 21070 What the dickens should I know about her? |
21070 | What''s the matter with poor Nugent? |
21070 | When did he tell you this, Cupid? |
21070 | Where are Mr Fortescue and Mr Copplestone? |
21070 | Where away? |
21070 | Where do you wish to go, Dick? |
21070 | Whereabout is he, and how far off, do you reckon? |
21070 | Whereabout is she, Dixon? |
21070 | Who goes there? |
21070 | Why, you surely do n''t mean to say that Murdoch has been bowled over, too, do you? |
21070 | _ Cut adrift_? 21070 _ I_?" |
21070 | _ Must_ we part, Dick? |
21070 | And how was I to cure him? |
21070 | And just see if you can find us a biscuit or two and some butter, will ye, you black angel? |
21070 | And then what was to become of poor Ama, my gentle and loving companion? |
21070 | And then what were we to do? |
21070 | And what d''ye want, anyway, now that yew''re here, and be hanged to ye?" |
21070 | And what has become of all the wind? |
21070 | And what of the_ Dolphin_ and her crew? |
21070 | And where is Senor Morillo? |
21070 | And why? |
21070 | And yew''ll have to find her afore yew can fight for her, wo n''t yew, sonny? |
21070 | And you want a bath, do you? |
21070 | And-- I suppose-- that I may take it for granted that--""That you will make one of the` pleasure- party''?" |
21070 | And-- talking of sharks-- have you noticed how often we have seen the beggars following us since we have been in this ship? |
21070 | Besides, do you think_ I_ would allow any one to hurt you? |
21070 | Besides, if you should happen to be killed, what would become of us poor midshipmen?" |
21070 | But I suppose a fellow is not obliged to watch them, is he? |
21070 | But I take it that you did not come aboard here to discuss that matter with me?" |
21070 | But what about yourself? |
21070 | But what right have they to dictate to other nations, to say you shall do this, and shall not do that? |
21070 | But where do you propose to take me, Ama?" |
21070 | But where on earth have you sprung from? |
21070 | But whither were we bound; of what tribe or nation were the negroes who manned the canoe; and how had I come to be among them? |
21070 | But why_ here_ particularly? |
21070 | But will you not step in out of the sun?" |
21070 | But, tell me, Ama, where do the victims come from, and how many of them are usually sacrificed?" |
21070 | Considering whether you should attempt to swim across to the_ Gadfly_?" |
21070 | Could you distinguish the features of any of the people in the boat?" |
21070 | D''ye see anything of her?" |
21070 | D''ye see that there flag up there? |
21070 | D''ye see them handsome barkers of mine?" |
21070 | Did he tell you where the cauffle was coming from, and which way?" |
21070 | Did you catch the words? |
21070 | Did you feel her cables parting?" |
21070 | Did you get that hurt in the fight with the English?" |
21070 | Do you believe that the fellow is telling the truth, Cupid?" |
21070 | Do you care to increase my obligation to you by stating why your captain has such a-- prejudice, shall we call it, against British naval officers?" |
21070 | Do you see her, sir?" |
21070 | Do you think you will be able to find the gig, Cupid?" |
21070 | Does it not appear so to you?" |
21070 | Have you any idea?" |
21070 | He no want debbil to come after him and say,` Hi, you M''Pandala, why you tell dem white men lie about slabe cauffle comin''down to de coas''? |
21070 | How are we to ascertain the precise moment at which to expect the arrival of the slave- dealers? |
21070 | How are you feeling, Nugent? |
21070 | How have things gone with you, and where are the others?" |
21070 | How the mischief could you possibly be cut adrift from where you were anchored; and by whom? |
21070 | How was I to undeceive her; how make her understand the absolute impossibility of such a thing? |
21070 | I exclaimed excitedly to Favart, pointing at the same moment across the water--"do you see that cloud of dust yonder? |
21070 | I have taken it upon myself to turn out Monsieur Fortescue to see whether he can tell us anything about her?" |
21070 | I s''pose the mercury bag have n''t sprung a leak, by no chance, have it? |
21070 | I say, I suppose we have n''t made a mistake in our reckoning, and run down on to the Line unbeknownst, have we?" |
21070 | I suppose we ought to go fully armed?" |
21070 | If so, what was to be my ultimate fate? |
21070 | If this were the case, what, I asked myself, was she likely to be? |
21070 | Is he too ill, think you, to talk business? |
21070 | Is it permissible to inquire how you, a British officer, come to be adrift, quite alone, in a boat, in the middle of the Atlantic?" |
21070 | Is it that the place is so strongly fortified that they are confident of our inability to take it? |
21070 | Is the glass droppin''at all?" |
21070 | Is the stranger far enough out of the river to enable her to get clear away, think ye?" |
21070 | Is there anything wrong?" |
21070 | Is there such a thing knocking about anywhere here in the tent, I wonder?" |
21070 | Just step aft to the skylight, Mr Fortescue, and see what the time is, will ye? |
21070 | Neither of us said anything, however, until Marcel took the glass from his eye, when, seeing Leroy, he said:"What d''ye think of her, monsieur? |
21070 | No, I do n''t quite see--""Do you not, sir?" |
21070 | Now what are the other boats about that they have not seen her? |
21070 | Now, if yew was only lucky enough to fall in with_ her_, stranger, I guess she''d be a prize worth havin'', eh?" |
21070 | Now, the question is, What are we to do with regard to our unknown friend out yonder? |
21070 | Now, the question is: What is to be done with you? |
21070 | Or is there something else at the back of it all, of which we have not yet got an inkling?" |
21070 | Pray, monsieur, where did you come from; and are there any more of you?" |
21070 | Savvey? |
21070 | So that affair came off all right, eh? |
21070 | So, if you won''come in an''have a drink, take your ugly- lookin''mug out o''the daylight, d''ye hear?" |
21070 | Supposin''I was to report this outrage to my Gover''ment, what d''ye suppose would happen? |
21070 | Surely Mr Purchase can not have shifted his berth, for any reason? |
21070 | Surely that can not be the craft that we are after? |
21070 | Tell me, now, how long hast thou been like this?" |
21070 | Then how could you let us know when to expect the beggars?" |
21070 | Then, suddenly changing his tune, as he followed me out on deck and saw me glance round, he remarked:"Purty ship, ai n''t she? |
21070 | Then, turning to me, he demanded:"Who''s been makin''a fool of ye this time, stranger?" |
21070 | To the gate? |
21070 | Well, what do you want us to do?" |
21070 | Well, you know, you''ve got to prove what you say afore you can do anything, have n''t ye?" |
21070 | Were they, or were they not, imaginary? |
21070 | Wha''d''you mean, anyway, by comin''here and disturbin''gen''lemen when they''re busy? |
21070 | What about striking two bells, sir? |
21070 | What are your hurts?" |
21070 | What d''ye mean, Mr Fortescue?" |
21070 | What did you think of doing when the time comes for us to part?" |
21070 | What have you been doing over the side? |
21070 | What is your own opinion?" |
21070 | What more could any reasonable individual desire? |
21070 | What right have yew to shoot at a ship flyin''the galorious Stars and Stripes? |
21070 | What sort of a craft is she; and how far off?" |
21070 | What was about to happen? |
21070 | What was the row with Nugent?" |
21070 | What''s the matter?" |
21070 | When is the cauffle expected to arrive?" |
21070 | Where are you, I say? |
21070 | Where are you, Mr Perry?" |
21070 | Where is the carpenter? |
21070 | Who and what is he?" |
21070 | Who are they that they should presume to thrust their opinions down the throats of other people? |
21070 | Why d''ye ask the question, sir? |
21070 | Will you swear that, or will you die?" |
21070 | Will you take me with you; or must I go back to face a cruel and lingering death?" |
21070 | Yet what was to become of her? |
21070 | You are sure you will not come down? |
21070 | You heard that bell?" |
21070 | You see the force of my argument, I am sure, Monsieur Favart?" |
21070 | You surely do not intend to insinuate that any one of the ship''s company--?" |
21070 | did you hear_ that_, then, sir?" |
21070 | exclaimed Ama,"do you hear that, Dick? |
21070 | exclaimed the skipper, stopping short and staring at me as though he had seen a ghost--"is it possible? |
21070 | he called;"what is it?" |
21070 | is that Fortescue? |
21070 | reiterated Nugent;"what dark mass d''ye mean? |
21070 | remarked I, trying to look as though I knew all about it;"and of what did thy breakfast consist?" |
21070 | what has happened that I see nobody about? |
21070 | what has happened to the barometer?" |
21070 | where are you? |
21070 | who is it? |
21070 | why was the spray from the surf flying so much higher in one particular spot than elsewhere? |
35545 | A king? 35545 A man or a woman?" |
35545 | Afraid of what? |
35545 | Afraid? |
35545 | All this sounds like a lie,said Sanders thoughtfully,"for how may a crop fail in the Akasava country, yet be more than sufficient in Isisi? |
35545 | And it comes from the bite of a tsetse fly? |
35545 | And now, Miss Calbraith,he said, at dinner that night,"what do you expect to do with Peter?" |
35545 | And of armies,said the king,"have you ever seen an army such as mine?" |
35545 | And so,said Sanders,"you got nothing?" |
35545 | And what are these, white man? |
35545 | And what do you need of me and my people? |
35545 | And what is wrong with the treatment of the native? |
35545 | And what of me, lord? |
35545 | And what of the chief of the Akasava? |
35545 | And what,said Sanders, in the Lulungo dialect,"what mongrel talk do you call this?" |
35545 | And who is Daihili? |
35545 | And you would burn and slay? |
35545 | And you? |
35545 | And you? |
35545 | Are n''t you wonderfully surprised? |
35545 | Are the beggars rising? |
35545 | As for you,said Sanders to the woman,"you drop your damned bush- mesmerism, or I''ll treat you in the same way--_alaki_?" |
35545 | Ask him,he said finally,"why he calls this the road to what- d''ye- call- it?" |
35545 | Burning the city and slaying the chief, and scattering the people who hide in the forest? |
35545 | But excuse me,he said,"where-- how----Hang it all, where am I to put up?" |
35545 | But look here, old feller-- about that money? |
35545 | But of white kings,persisted the chief;"is there a white king in the world whose word when it goes forth causes men to tremble?" |
35545 | But who told you that you had sleeping sickness? |
35545 | But you do n''t expect to learn anything from these people? |
35545 | By saying to yourself when a man calls for justice:''If I were this man how should I desire the king''s justice?'' |
35545 | Dash him? |
35545 | Did she give you a smooth ride? |
35545 | Did you shoot at me? |
35545 | Do n''t you know that Lo Benguela is in rebellion? 35545 Does he beat the people?" |
35545 | Eh, what''s that? |
35545 | Eh? |
35545 | Ei- fo, Kalaba? 35545 Etabo?" |
35545 | Forty English pounds? |
35545 | From which fact I gather that he is the unfortunate husband of that attractive nigger lady you were charming just now when I arrived? |
35545 | Have I an escort of babies? |
35545 | Having made thieves, could you make men of these people? |
35545 | Here? |
35545 | How are you feeling? |
35545 | How came this bad ju- ju to your land? |
35545 | How came this drug to you? 35545 How carried he the drug?" |
35545 | How do they call you, my man? |
35545 | How do you know this? |
35545 | How do? |
35545 | How does he curse you? |
35545 | How many men have you got? |
35545 | How many? |
35545 | I gather that you are a sort of correspondent of a newspaper? |
35545 | I myself smoke it, suffering no ill. How was I to know that it would make him sleep? |
35545 | I''fasi,he said,"tell me, what do they do in your country to- day?" |
35545 | I''ve got a free hand to nip rebellion in the bud,Sanders reflected moodily;"and the chances point to rebellion----What do you say? |
35545 | If you knew where there was silver, why did you steal bells, which are of brass and of no particular value? |
35545 | In the blessed service? |
35545 | In what particular section of the devil department have I been busy? |
35545 | Is he a good man? |
35545 | Is not your country four days by river and three days by land? |
35545 | Is that a riddle? |
35545 | Is the light we kindle too bright, master? |
35545 | Is the world so full of people that you come to disturb my loneliness? |
35545 | Is this true? |
35545 | Land wire working? |
35545 | Lataki,said Sanders carelessly,"knowing the ways of white men, tell me how a master might do his servant honour?" |
35545 | Leopards? |
35545 | Lord king,said the oldest of his councillors,"what if Sandi puts you to the chain- gang?" |
35545 | Lord, how comes rain or wind? |
35545 | Lord, is he gone, too? |
35545 | Lord, it said very clearly, speaking through the mouth of an old man, M''fabaka of Begeli----"M''fabaka of Begeli? |
35545 | Lord, we desire to put off our journey in your honour, for if we go, how shall we gather in palaver? |
35545 | Lord, where is Lijingii? |
35545 | Lord,he said,"who shall escape the never- sleeping eye of Sandi? |
35545 | Lord,he whined,"why this shame?" |
35545 | Lord,said a councillor in awe,"did you know the Great One?" |
35545 | M''Fasa,said Sanders,"why did you kill your husband?" |
35545 | M''Lino,he said to her, halting suddenly before her,"how many men have you killed in your life?" |
35545 | Master, do you think I am a magician? |
35545 | Master, how may I do without councillors, since I am a young boy? |
35545 | Master,said the Houssa,"who ties monkeys to trees with ropes?" |
35545 | Master,she said,"if any was wronged by O''Sako''s death, was it not I, his wife? |
35545 | Me-- love me? 35545 Might I ask,"said Sanders,"what your little game is?" |
35545 | My boy,he said kindly,"how do people call you?" |
35545 | My dear chap, it''s awfully kind of you to have come-- by the way, I suppose you_ are_ a doctor? |
35545 | Now, king,he said hurriedly,"I sold this woman, my daughter; how might I know her mind? |
35545 | Of him I have heard,he said;"he was a great king and an eater- up of nations-- who else?" |
35545 | Oh, I know all about you-- didn''t I tell you I was the Commissioner? 35545 Okali,"he said, coming to the point,"why did you poison your wife?" |
35545 | Old man,he said,"how many years have you to live?" |
35545 | Puck- a- puck-- you hear''um? |
35545 | Rum place to find you, eh? |
35545 | Sato- Koto,he said on the second day,"do you know the village of Ikan?" |
35545 | Secret societies? |
35545 | Sixteen thousand? |
35545 | Stop it, d''ye hear? 35545 Tebeki,"said Sanders,"what of O''Sako and his village?" |
35545 | Tell me, white man,he said;"in your travels have you ever seen so great a king as I?" |
35545 | Tell me,he said,"where did you bury Tembeli, the son of Sekambano?" |
35545 | The girl? |
35545 | The king? |
35545 | There is steam in the_ pucapuc_? |
35545 | They are friends of yours? |
35545 | Things-- like what? |
35545 | To- night? |
35545 | Toys for my women, or presents for my little chiefs? |
35545 | Truly you are a great spy,scoffed Sanders;"and how came you to the chiefs and headmen? |
35545 | Well, I did think----"That I''d fall on your neck and welcome you? |
35545 | Well? |
35545 | Well? |
35545 | What about river rights? |
35545 | What about these women? |
35545 | What are you going to do with him? 35545 What base- born slave dog are you?" |
35545 | What comes to me, lord? |
35545 | What do you say? |
35545 | What do you see there? |
35545 | What do you seek? |
35545 | What else did you find? |
35545 | What else? |
35545 | What have you there? |
35545 | What is your name? |
35545 | What is your wish, white man? |
35545 | What man are you? |
35545 | What manner of king? |
35545 | What of Tagondo, my friend? |
35545 | What of the king? |
35545 | What said the ju- ju? |
35545 | What say you? |
35545 | What says the father? |
35545 | What seek ye, chief? |
35545 | What shame is this? |
35545 | What story is this of the Ochori? |
35545 | What will happen, master? |
35545 | What will you do with my man? |
35545 | What will you give um? |
35545 | What''s the palaver? |
35545 | What''s the racket? |
35545 | When came he last? |
35545 | When did he die? |
35545 | When was this? |
35545 | Where did you pick up the''Kenneth McDolan''? |
35545 | Where do the young men go in their strength? |
35545 | Where go you with this body? |
35545 | Where is he now? |
35545 | Where is he to be found? |
35545 | Where is he? |
35545 | Where is the girl? |
35545 | Where is your chief? |
35545 | Where? |
35545 | Where? |
35545 | Wherefore? |
35545 | Which man? |
35545 | Who are you? |
35545 | Who could thieve? |
35545 | Who is chief of you? |
35545 | Who is the chief here? |
35545 | Who told you to kill me? |
35545 | Who was the victim? |
35545 | Why did you give it to him? |
35545 | Why did you not send for me? |
35545 | Why do you not take them yourself? |
35545 | Why does the king remain in his city when I come? 35545 Why for they make''em cursed noise, eh?" |
35545 | Why must I send for you? |
35545 | Why, Atty,said Mainward, with a smile,"what on earth are you doing here?" |
35545 | Why? |
35545 | Why? |
35545 | Why? |
35545 | Why? |
35545 | Will you take my advice? |
35545 | Woman, where do you go? |
35545 | Woman,said the messenger,"the greatest of kings desires you, will you come?" |
35545 | Would you have the heathen remain in darkness? |
35545 | You are the dancing girl? 35545 You did n''t expect a sort of Louis Quinze, did you?" |
35545 | You heard, master? |
35545 | You take um medicine, master? |
35545 | You wo n''t forget to take the tabloid? |
35545 | You''re one of those Forest of Happy Dreams Johnnies; what''s that? 35545 *****And what do you make of all this?" |
35545 | *****"How go the investigations?" |
35545 | *****"Lord, did I not speak the truth?" |
35545 | A love philtre?" |
35545 | Aloud he asked:"How often does Sandi come to you?" |
35545 | And how did they greet you? |
35545 | But tell me this-- do you speak the language-- Swaheli, Bomongo, Fingi?" |
35545 | Did I ever tell you about the lion I shot in Uganda?" |
35545 | Did n''t you see the post?" |
35545 | Did you tell him to come out and meet me?" |
35545 | Do you mean it?" |
35545 | Do you understand?" |
35545 | How can I say I saw nothing?" |
35545 | How did these beggars know?" |
35545 | How many evil ones have you slain to- day? |
35545 | How might I know that she would die?" |
35545 | How shall a father control when a husband fails?" |
35545 | How will you deal with me?" |
35545 | I suppose you know that?" |
35545 | I thought----""You thought I''d put you up?" |
35545 | I''ll come along to- morrow with a tip- top invalid chair for you-- is it a bet?" |
35545 | If you had wanted to commit suicide, why come to Africa to do it? |
35545 | Is that blessed anchor up yet, Mr. Simmons? |
35545 | Is that clear?" |
35545 | It had not, of course( he winced again at the bad memory), but suppose it had? |
35545 | It has been necessary for years-- but why this sudden activity?" |
35545 | Now suppose"Fairy Lane"had won the Wokingham Stakes? |
35545 | Page 145,"before the other?" |
35545 | Sanders spluttered in his wrath;"Afraid? |
35545 | Shall I kick him off?" |
35545 | Shall we make a report and wait for reinforcements, or shall we chance our luck?" |
35545 | So wise he was( who knew of the formula he applied to each case? |
35545 | Something like a panic awoke in Sanders''heart-- had the mischief been done? |
35545 | Tell him we know all about the forest, and ask him about the elephants, where their playground is?" |
35545 | Then:"Did they catch the chief of the Akasava?" |
35545 | There came in these far- off days(''95?) |
35545 | What Devil Man?" |
35545 | What are you called by your people?" |
35545 | What do you say to this?" |
35545 | What do you seek?" |
35545 | What do you want?" |
35545 | What is he afraid of?" |
35545 | What is your name?" |
35545 | When was it that the last had come? |
35545 | Where are these atrocities supposed to have taken place?" |
35545 | Where did you get that cloak?" |
35545 | White to white, and kin to kin, do n''t you know? |
35545 | Who shall guide them back to their women? |
35545 | Who was this king in revolt? |
35545 | Will you come?" |
35545 | Would he have mastered Ethel? |
35545 | Would you like to question them?" |
35545 | he mumbled childishly;"into the land of small devils? |
35545 | he said sternly,"is it thus you speak of God- men, and of white men at that?" |
35545 | said Cuthbert noisily;"and, look here, Flagstaff, ask him where the rubber is, see? |
35545 | said Sanders in English; then,"What manner of ghost were these?" |
35545 | said the old king;"what rich presents do you bring, that you call me many days''journey?" |
35545 | secret spy of Sandi''? |
35545 | she quavered,"what will you do with our god?" |
35545 | we thought you many miles away, but like the owl----""Where do you go?" |
23498 | Ah, rapids, you mean, I suppose? |
23498 | An inch? 23498 An inch?" |
23498 | And are the people still alive, then? |
23498 | And now, sir, shall I go and get you the togs? 23498 And where are we to pick you up?" |
23498 | And, pray, Senor Lobo, do you happen to know the date of this festival? |
23498 | Anegada? |
23498 | Another yet, senor? |
23498 | Are you quite satisfied that the men remained fully on the alert all the time? |
23498 | Are you_ quite_ sure? |
23498 | Besides what? |
23498 | But I suppose every precaution will be taken to catch the rascals unawares? |
23498 | But should you fail to overtake yonder craft, you will lose a good deal of ground, will you not? |
23498 | By the way, it is curious, but I could almost fancy her deeper in the water than she was; does it not strike you so? |
23498 | Certainly, senor; why not? |
23498 | Deeper in the water? |
23498 | Do n''t know how to handle her? 23498 Do you mean to say that you took part in the fight?" |
23498 | Do you think that she has seen us yet? |
23498 | Do you_ dare_ me to fire? |
23498 | Driven off? 23498 Eh? |
23498 | Fwhat is it that''s happenin''at all, thin? 23498 Had you any difficulty in plugging the holes?" |
23498 | Have you finished? |
23498 | Have you finished? |
23498 | Have you gained anything on her since you bore up in chase? |
23498 | I grant all that you say,admitted I,"but if she has nothing incriminating on board her, what then? |
23498 | I? |
23498 | Indeed? 23498 Is he so very formidable a personage, then?" |
23498 | Is that_ all_? |
23498 | Now, Jose,exclaimed Mendouca,"that ends the matter; do you hear? |
23498 | Now, Senor Lobo, I presume you are acquainted with this chief, Matadi, are you not? 23498 Now, what would the blagguard be most likely to do when he had safely launched his raft? |
23498 | Oh,said I,"that is your idea, is it? |
23498 | Only ten days longer? |
23498 | Possibly you are contemplating the formation of an expedition for their rescue, as soon as you have effected your escape from me? |
23498 | Say you so, man? |
23498 | So you were in the fight, and saw our captain, eh, Pedro? 23498 Surely it ca n''t be our old friend the barque that has drifted within view of us again during the darkness?" |
23498 | Surely you do not mean to tell me that_ you_ are responsible for the massacre of those two boats''crews? |
23498 | Surely, my good fellow, you do not mean to say that you imagine me-- a naval officer-- to have joined this crew of thieves and murderers? |
23498 | The dip of paddles, eh? |
23498 | The ripples? |
23498 | The_ Sapphire''s_ boats? |
23498 | The_ Sapphire''s_ boats? |
23498 | Then I presume,said he, with a sneer,"you still believe in the existence of God, and His power to work His will here on earth?" |
23498 | Then we may rely upon you to send us off the fresh meat and vegetables early this afternoon? |
23498 | Vat chip dis is, eh? |
23498 | Well, Mr Young,exclaimed the captain as he stepped in on deck,"what is the meaning of this?" |
23498 | Well,he said, as he rejoined me,"have you not yet been able to satisfy yourself as to the character of that brig?" |
23498 | What are you about to do, men? 23498 What did I say to you this morning? |
23498 | What did you say? |
23498 | What does the glass say? |
23498 | What is it, Mr Dugdale? 23498 What is the night like?" |
23498 | What is your name, my lad? |
23498 | What schooner is that? |
23498 | What was the plot? 23498 What, already?" |
23498 | Wheel, there, how''s her head? |
23498 | Where away, Roberts? |
23498 | Where away, sir? |
23498 | Where is that? |
23498 | Why not? |
23498 | Why? |
23498 | Will you step below and take a glass of wine with Lieutenant Young and myself? |
23498 | Will you swear to me that you are honestly of opinion that yon brig is_ not_ a man- o''-war? |
23498 | Will you? |
23498 | You are the Portuguese consul here, I suppose? |
23498 | _ What_? |
23498 | _ You_? |
23498 | And I am sure that we shall be friends-- you and I-- shall we not? |
23498 | And do you suppose that a brig with lines like that was built for the purpose of carrying palm- oil? |
23498 | And if it was hot on deck, what must it have been down in the crowded hold? |
23498 | And if there is no God, whence do we derive our conception of duty? |
23498 | And now that we have arranged this little matter, shall I dismiss your boat?" |
23498 | And now, Pedro, can you tell me how your father proposes to dispose of_ me_?" |
23498 | And pray who is that man on the sofa?" |
23498 | And pray, Mr Bates-- if the question be not indiscreet-- what is the nature of the expedition upon which we are to engage this afternoon?" |
23498 | And what do you suppose will be your fate if you murder that retreating boat''s crew? |
23498 | And what do you think of the weather? |
23498 | And would not your death then be just as much my act as though I were to shoot you through the head this moment?" |
23498 | And, if so, how was I to act? |
23498 | Are all hands aboard this dashin''rover of the same kidney as yourself?" |
23498 | Are the pirates gone yet?" |
23498 | Are we not assured that He is the personification and quintessence of Justice, and Love, and Mercy? |
23498 | Are you not satisfied with your present berth then, Simpson?" |
23498 | At this Ryan started to his feet and, hailing through the skylight, asked--"What is the matter, Mr Pierrepoint; have you lost sight of the light?" |
23498 | But do you suppose it would not be murder to put you ashore, as you suggest, at the first land that we reach? |
23498 | But even although she may have seen us, I do not believe that we are recognised, as yet; indeed, how should we be? |
23498 | But how was a man to know that the squall was going to hold off so long, and then burst at the most unfortunate moment possible?" |
23498 | But what in the world can it be? |
23498 | But where is the barque? |
23498 | But who is to undertake the supervision of such work? |
23498 | But why do you take such a profound interest in them?" |
23498 | By the way, where are my clothes, Pedro? |
23498 | By this infernal mishap I am a loser to the extent of over thirty thousand dollars, and all for what? |
23498 | Can you tell me what became of him?" |
23498 | Carpenter, are your axes ready in case we should be obliged to cut anything away?" |
23498 | Compelled to retreat?" |
23498 | D''ye mean to tell me that such a hull as that would ever be employed in the humdrum trade of carrying palm- oil? |
23498 | Did you ever set your eyes upon a more beautiful hull than that? |
23498 | Did_ you_ see the land, Mr Dugdale? |
23498 | Do ye notice, Harry, me bhoy, how it''s modherated the little huzzy''s paces? |
23498 | Do you know that while you were speaking you were actually tottering upon the very brink of the grave? |
23498 | Do you really believe in the existence of the Being you call God? |
23498 | Do you suppose that the captain of yonder brig will be content to take the beating off of his boats as a final settlement of this night''s doings? |
23498 | Do you think I am insensible of the immeasurable gulf that separates me from what I might have been? |
23498 | Do you think I should call the captain?" |
23498 | Do you think it is too late to recall the boats?" |
23498 | Do you think that, because I carry my fate lightly and gaily, I do not feel keenly the depth to which I have fallen? |
23498 | Do you think you can do it without making much noise?" |
23498 | Enjoyed it? |
23498 | For what is our conception of God? |
23498 | Has she taken in much water?" |
23498 | Has the barque hove in sight?" |
23498 | Have they no eyes in their heads to see what is brewing? |
23498 | He raised the trumpet to his lips, and began--"Who in the name of---?" |
23498 | He sprang on to the slide that Young had just vacated, took a long look at the land, and then, turning to the helmsman, demanded,"How''s her head?" |
23498 | How far off did you judge the boat to be when you saw her?" |
23498 | How is the glass_ now_? |
23498 | How long have you been on the West African station, senor?" |
23498 | I have news and to spare for you, so shall I lower a boat, or will you? |
23498 | I hope dat de capitan and officers of de beautiful_ Barracouta_ are all well? |
23498 | I hope you are none the worse for your boat adventure, Mr Young, in the attack upon that same pirate last week? |
23498 | I hope you were not greatly disturbed last night by the noise of getting the ship under weigh?" |
23498 | I hope your accommodation is to your liking?" |
23498 | I s''pose that whatever we do might as well be done at once?" |
23498 | I say, Pierrepoint, are you told off for the boats?" |
23498 | I suppose we are out of sight of land by this time?" |
23498 | I tapped again, and said--"Will you open the door, please? |
23498 | I thought you were going to stay below until I called you?" |
23498 | I turned to one of the men who was standing near me and asked, in the most natural manner in the world,"What did he say?" |
23498 | If that means anything it means, I presume, that you are a pirate as well as a slaver?" |
23498 | Is it merely a thunder- squall that has been brewing all this time, or what is it? |
23498 | Is there any wind?" |
23498 | Just look at her,"he went on, turning again to me,"is n''t she a beauty? |
23498 | Let me see, where was I? |
23498 | Man, have you no regard for_ yourself_? |
23498 | Mr Pierrepoint, d''ye see that light?" |
23498 | Now then, lads, what is the best news there with that gun?" |
23498 | Now, as to this Matadi, who is he, and what is he?" |
23498 | Now, do you quite understand the position?" |
23498 | Now, it is no great thing that I am asking of you_ in return for your life_; will you do it?" |
23498 | Now-- ah, there is another little breath of wind, I felt it distinctly that time!--should he fail to find us, what course will he pursue? |
23498 | Now-- let me consider-- there is one thing more to be done before we leave; what is it? |
23498 | Of what use do you suppose a dirk would be in a hand- to- hand fight with a great burly Spaniard? |
23498 | Oh, is that you, Bartlett? |
23498 | Or can not you quite make up your mind as to her character?" |
23498 | Or, as my forebodings whispered to me, had the absence of myself and others been already discovered, and was the brigantine returning in search of us? |
23498 | Pray, who are you, sir? |
23498 | Senor Dugdale, do you value your life?" |
23498 | Shall we be able to save them?" |
23498 | She is about six miles away, and is stripped to her close- reefed topsails--""Did you see that ship out there on our port- quarter, sir?" |
23498 | So I turned to him and inquired--"Is there anything particular that you wish to say to me, Simpson?" |
23498 | So; am I hurting you?" |
23498 | Still no response; but from the next cabin there now issued a man''s voice, inquiring--"Do I hear some one out there proclaiming himself_ a friend_?" |
23498 | Surely I knew that low, long, shapely hull; those lofty, slightly- raking masts; those spacious topsails? |
23498 | That''s your sort, Styles, bring him along here; is he still alive, do you think? |
23498 | The most important factor in the problem before us is: How will yonder ship be dealt with when the_ Francesca''s_ people have done with her? |
23498 | The question is: How is it to be done without the knowledge of any of the_ Francesca''s_ people?" |
23498 | The question now was: Where was the barque? |
23498 | The swell seems to have risen a bit since I turned in, has n''t it?" |
23498 | Then I heard the skipper hailing, apparently from the forecastle--"Is that Mr Ryan''s voice that I hear, aft there?" |
23498 | Then you have never been to the West Indies?" |
23498 | Well, what news, Mr Gowland?" |
23498 | What did it mean? |
23498 | What did she look like?" |
23498 | What do you think, Dugdale? |
23498 | What do you want wid him, senor?" |
23498 | What is that Spanish brig taking in?" |
23498 | What need is there for hesitation in the matter? |
23498 | What of it?" |
23498 | What schooner is that?" |
23498 | What ship is that?" |
23498 | What was I to do? |
23498 | What was it like?" |
23498 | What was now to be done? |
23498 | What''s the matter now, youngster? |
23498 | What_ is_ conscience? |
23498 | Where are they? |
23498 | Where is the boatswain? |
23498 | Where was I? |
23498 | Who are you, and what do you want?" |
23498 | Why do you ask?" |
23498 | Why-- bless me!--it is Mr Dugdale, is n''t it? |
23498 | Would she ship her cargo here in the very spot that would be first visited by every man- o''-war that enters the river? |
23498 | You are one of the new hands, shipped from the_ Bangalore_, are you not? |
23498 | You are surely not beginning to funk, are you?" |
23498 | You have probably had dealings with him, eh? |
23498 | You were led to undertake it upon the representations made and the information given by Lobo, the Portuguese trader of Banana Point, were n''t you? |
23498 | _ Now_, will you tell us what you know about those unfortunate missing men?" |
23498 | and how did you find your way on board the_ Bangalore_? |
23498 | and how was Lobo concerned in it? |
23498 | demanded Mendouca fiercely;"why should I be more gentle to my countrymen than they have been to me? |
23498 | did the man suppose that he had not offended me already? |
23498 | did you see that, sir? |
23498 | do you see the star I mean?" |
23498 | exclaimed Pedro,"do you not know Anegada? |
23498 | has it dropped anything since you last looked at it?" |
23498 | he exclaimed in English,"where the deuce did you come from, and how long have you been on deck?" |
23498 | he exclaimed, as he peered at me in the faint light of the lantern,"who are you, and what is the matter here? |
23498 | in what way, pray?" |
23498 | is it a collision? |
23498 | or is it a case of sthrandin''? |
23498 | or, rather, what is the picture of Him that our ghostly advisers and teachers have drawn of Him? |
23498 | so it''s_ you_, thin, is it, Misther Dugdale? |
23498 | thought I,"so he has returned to his right mind, has he? |
23498 | what brig is that?" |
23498 | what is that you say?" |
23498 | what''s that, hot coffee? |
23498 | would you? |
58947 | ''How ever did you find your way, Willie?'' 58947 ''Well,''I said,''people hire out bicycles and pianos for rent, do n''t they? |
58947 | ''What ails the dog?'' 58947 ''What doctor?''" |
58947 | ''What on earth is that?'' 58947 ''What way is there?'' |
58947 | ''What''s his name?'' 58947 ''What''s that for?'' |
58947 | ''What''s the matter, Jip?'' 58947 ''Who is your master?'' |
58947 | A Quiffeno- what- us? |
58947 | Ai n''t''e the poetical porker? 58947 And did you ever see such large ones? |
58947 | And have you seen many accidents-- ships in trouble? |
58947 | And what on earth is an invalid? |
58947 | And where might No- Man''s- Land be? |
58947 | And why do n''t the ladies in the country wear them, too? |
58947 | Anything new in London? |
58947 | Are you the owner of that Noah''s Ark down there? |
58947 | But how do you know all this,asked the Doctor,"if nobody has ever been there to see if it''s true or not?" |
58947 | But how do you know where the storms are? |
58947 | But how do you tell oysters of that kind from the others? |
58947 | But that takes a long time, does n''t it? |
58947 | But the storms, what do you do in them to keep yourselves safe? |
58947 | But what shall I write to him about? |
58947 | But where are the rest of your people? |
58947 | But where did they come from? |
58947 | But where''s its head? |
58947 | But why did they pick you to bring the message? |
58947 | But why? |
58947 | By the way, were you able to tell me what they are? 58947 By the way, what really became of her?" |
58947 | Can it be a whale? 58947 Could n''t you use the houses of Fantippo?" |
58947 | Did King Mashtu do you any harm? |
58947 | Did anyone ever see a man who could find so many objections to getting rich? 58947 Did n''t I give the order to cease firing?" |
58947 | Do any other animals live here? |
58947 | Do n''t you think I''m busy enough already? 58947 Do no people at all live in these parts?" |
58947 | Do you happen to know what kind of animal this bone belongs to? |
58947 | Do you hear that? 58947 Do you realize what that pearl means to us? |
58947 | Everything all right now, Doctor? |
58947 | He looks just the same as we saw him the night we arrived,said Dab- Dab--"you remember? |
58947 | How dare you speak to me like that? 58947 How did you find them?" |
58947 | How do they do it? |
58947 | How do you do it? |
58947 | How do you mean? |
58947 | How does the garden look, Cheapside? |
58947 | How far off the rocks is the ship now? |
58947 | How far would it be from here? |
58947 | How is the old horse in the stable? |
58947 | How much further have we got to go? |
58947 | How was it that you were the one chosen to bring the message? |
58947 | How was it used? 58947 How would you go about it?" |
58947 | In introducing one well- bred pig to another should you say''Miss Virginia Ham,_ meet_"Mr. Frank Footer,''or''Get acquainted?'' |
58947 | Indeed? |
58947 | Is it a good story? |
58947 | Jimmie Bones, the slaver? |
58947 | Jolly place, ai n''t it? |
58947 | Like a medal, eh? |
58947 | Now,said the Doctor, closing the window,"what can I do for you?" |
58947 | Oh, by the way, Doctor,said the leader, turning back a moment,"did you ever hear of a man called Christopher Columbus?" |
58947 | Oh, that reminds me----"Of a story? |
58947 | Oh, was that it? |
58947 | Oh,said the Doctor,"who is that?" |
58947 | Oh,said the Skimmer,"is that the trouble? |
58947 | Pardon me, but is there much more of you outside still? |
58947 | Pearls? 58947 Pigeons-- trained canaries, or something?" |
58947 | Stove''s gone out? |
58947 | Tell me,called John Dolittle, in canary language,"where are the matches? |
58947 | That was a queer- looking customer, was n''t he? |
58947 | The pearls gone? 58947 The white mouse would roll them down the hole""''Do you realize what that pearl means to us?''" |
58947 | We are really on the shores of it already, then? |
58947 | Well, but what shall I tell you a story about? |
58947 | Well, for what parts of the world do you want to know the weather, Doctor? |
58947 | Well, it''s an animal of some kind, is n''t it? |
58947 | Well, where is it written from? |
58947 | Well, would n''t you like to keep them, then? |
58947 | Well,said John Dolittle,"what kind of a ship was it?" |
58947 | Were there many rats in the woodshed, Cheapside? |
58947 | What ails the man? |
58947 | What are you going to say to Wilkins, Doctor? |
58947 | What can I do for you? |
58947 | What can have happened? 58947 What chance have we of that?" |
58947 | What did I tell you? |
58947 | What do you make that address out to be-- at the top of the page there? |
58947 | What do you mean-- birds? |
58947 | What do_ you_ want? |
58947 | What is it, Doctor? |
58947 | What is it? 58947 What is it?" |
58947 | What is that tune you are humming? |
58947 | What is there more beautiful in life than the heart of a young lettuce in the Spring? |
58947 | What made you steal the pearls? |
58947 | What was here before the Flood then? |
58947 | What''s a sanitarium? |
58947 | What''s a strike? |
58947 | What''s all this about? |
58947 | What''s that for? |
58947 | What''s that? |
58947 | What''s that? |
58947 | What''s that? |
58947 | What''s the matter? |
58947 | Whazhat? |
58947 | Where are the oyster beds around here? |
58947 | Where are they bound for, Speedy? |
58947 | Where is Wilkins? |
58947 | Where is that? |
58947 | Who could hit anything two miles away in this rotten light? |
58947 | Who is Cheapside? |
58947 | Who sent you those? |
58947 | Who''s it from, Doctor? |
58947 | Who?----What? |
58947 | Why did you do it? |
58947 | Why do n''t you play_ Hunt- the- Slipper_? |
58947 | Why do you call it the Secret Lake? |
58947 | Why have you come so far from the land? 58947 Why is it so dark? |
58947 | Why should I take them away from them? |
58947 | Why? |
58947 | Why? |
58947 | Why? |
58947 | Would it be too much to ask you? |
58947 | Would you mind putting a cover over my cage? 58947 _ Where?_"cried Jip. |
58947 | ''House on fire or something?'' |
58947 | ''Is he in these parts now?'' |
58947 | ''Ot? |
58947 | ''What was that, a spook?'' |
58947 | ''Would you like me to re- draw all your pictures for you? |
58947 | ''You would n''t expect any self- respecting person to keep company with a_ blue_ mouse, would you?'' |
58947 | A climate? |
58947 | Ai n''t you got no puddles round here for a bird to take a bath in?" |
58947 | And an invalid-- well, an invalid is a person who is always-- er, more or less-- ill.""But what kind of work is invalids''work?" |
58947 | And what is the result?" |
58947 | And, after all, Africa is a nice country, now, is n''t it?" |
58947 | And, anyway, are n''t you ever going back to Puddleby?" |
58947 | And, now,''ow about the Christmas boxes, Doctor? |
58947 | And, would you believe it? |
58947 | Are n''t they handsome?" |
58947 | Are you any good at imitations? |
58947 | Bacon?" |
58947 | But I says to''i m, I says,''What d''yer take me for, an omnibus?'' |
58947 | But no one minds rats living in a dyeing shed, see? |
58947 | But the Fantippans were honestly pleased to see us, were n''t they? |
58947 | But the officer who was second in command whispered in the Captain''s ear:"Why not take the old fellow along and let him try, Sir? |
58947 | But where is he now? |
58947 | But why did n''t Speedy bring the message himself?" |
58947 | But why did you swim under water?" |
58947 | But, after all, if you want to be a good seaman the sea is the thing that counts, is n''t it? |
58947 | But, tell me, do you make much money at this game?'' |
58947 | But, tell me, why do you come here into the dyeing shed?'' |
58947 | By the way, how would my old ship do? |
58947 | Can he fill the people''s stomachs? |
58947 | Can you bark like a dog?'' |
58947 | Can you tell me,"he asked the cormorant,"how to get pearls?" |
58947 | Cats can always find their way home, ca n''t they, Willie? |
58947 | D''yer know what''e reminds me of? |
58947 | Dab- Dab, would you please try to find her for me? |
58947 | Did he not put the Amazons to flight with a magic mouse that lives in his pocket? |
58947 | Did n''t Gub- Gub say he had one for us?" |
58947 | Did you ever build your nest in my stable in Puddleby?" |
58947 | Did you have a pleasant journey?" |
58947 | Did you see any dragons there?" |
58947 | Did you send that letter to our cousin?" |
58947 | Did you want me for something?" |
58947 | Do n''t I know''em in the city parks-- with their mincin''ways that the folks call''cute''? |
58947 | Do n''t I know, when for long enough I lived in it? |
58947 | Do n''t you know that you are in great danger if a storm should come up?" |
58947 | Do you mind if I keep it, Jip? |
58947 | Do you think we could ever find some way by which birds could write letters?" |
58947 | Do you think you can help us?" |
58947 | Do you usually leave your craft in the charge of a pig, with orders to go to sleep? |
58947 | Does it take long to tell?" |
58947 | Does your head hurt much?" |
58947 | Does''e think the Doctor''s goin''to''ang that on''is watch- chain?" |
58947 | Gulls do n''t, as a rule, bother much about people or what happens to ships, do they?" |
58947 | Have n''t you white men done me enough harm?" |
58947 | Have you got any more of it?" |
58947 | He passed me with his nose turned up in the air in such a cheeky manner that I said to him, I said:''What makes you so stuck up?'' |
58947 | How are you?'' |
58947 | I have n''t slept into the night, have I?" |
58947 | I wonder who could have done it?" |
58947 | If Nyam- Nyam could get pearls on the Harmattan Rocks, why could n''t he? |
58947 | If you own the ship, why are n''t you on her? |
58947 | Is n''t the dark awful?'' |
58947 | Is n''t there a regular island in the lake, where you could make your home-- if you''re determined not to leave the Junganyika country?" |
58947 | Is there anything I can get you?" |
58947 | Is this the right place?" |
58947 | It would n''t be too much to ask them to bring a single Brussels sprout apiece, would it? |
58947 | It''s an awful big city, is n''t it?" |
58947 | Listen, Your Majesty, would you mind lending me a canoe and some paddlers? |
58947 | Matches!_ Where are the matches?" |
58947 | Mudface?" |
58947 | Now you''ve got the post office going properly, why do n''t you hand it over to the King''s postmen to run and give yourself a rest? |
58947 | Now, how would it be if you swallows did the letter carrying?" |
58947 | Of course, you understand we are not complaining, do n''t you? |
58947 | Oh, and would you mind asking Dab- Dab, as you go out, to clear away the breakfast things? |
58947 | PART IV_ CHAPTER I_ PARCEL POST One day Gub- Gub came to the Doctor and said:"Doctor, why do n''t you start a parcel post?" |
58947 | Quaint place you''ave''ere-- sort of a barge?" |
58947 | Shall I have the letter boxes in the middle of the door, or would you like them on one side?" |
58947 | So, why ca n''t you and I rent out bones for dogs to chew? |
58947 | Tell''i m to make it short and sweet-- just to give us the outline of his troubles, like, see? |
58947 | That does n''t speak very well for their intelligence, does it? |
58947 | Think the shipping laws are made for a joke? |
58947 | Think you can do that?'' |
58947 | Turtle, ai n''t''e? |
58947 | Was I not spurned by my lady love and jeered at by my friends? |
58947 | Was it lighted earlier in the evening?" |
58947 | What can I do for you?''" |
58947 | What can I do for you?''"] |
58947 | What can he do by going to war? |
58947 | What do Golden Jays eat?" |
58947 | What do you call this''ere? |
58947 | What do you do yourself in that kind of weather-- I mean, you ca n''t see any more in the fog than the sailors can, can you?" |
58947 | What do you mean?" |
58947 | What do you say to that?" |
58947 | What do you say?" |
58947 | What do you think of it?" |
58947 | What do you think?" |
58947 | What do you think?" |
58947 | What do you want a parcel post for?" |
58947 | What have you come here for, Doctor?" |
58947 | What is''ome without a door knocker, I''d like to know? |
58947 | What kind of a sailor are you? |
58947 | What mails have we got going out to- morrow?" |
58947 | What was that you said?" |
58947 | What were you making all that racket over there for just now? |
58947 | What''s the matter?" |
58947 | What''s the name of it?" |
58947 | What''s the name of the story, Doctor?" |
58947 | Whatever shall we do? |
58947 | Where are the matches kept?" |
58947 | Where did you get this bone, Jip?" |
58947 | Where have you been?" |
58947 | Where is he?" |
58947 | Who do they belong to, then?" |
58947 | Who knows? |
58947 | Who knows? |
58947 | Who the dickens is this that sent them to me, anyhow?" |
58947 | Who would''ave thought you''d come to this?" |
58947 | Why did the tide rise and fall-- and could it be stopped? |
58947 | Why do n''t you have windows in your prisons? |
58947 | Why do n''t you lead them out of the woods? |
58947 | Wo n''t you come in and join us?" |
58947 | Would it be proper for me to ask the guests to bring turnips to my wedding, instead of flowers? |
58947 | Would you be so good as to run around behind my back and gnaw this beastly rope? |
58947 | Would you mind,"the Doctor asked, turning to the cormorant,"getting me a few oysters of this kind to look at?" |
58947 | Would you please tell me what they are? |
58947 | You are Quiffenodochi, are you not?" |
58947 | You can show me how to get to him?" |
58947 | You do n''t mean to say you''ve lived all your life in the African jungle without seeing any adventures? |
58947 | You''re sure you feel all right?" |
58947 | [ Illustration:"''Do you realize what that pearl means to us?''"] |
58947 | [ Illustration:"''How dare you speak to me like that?''"] |
58947 | [ Illustration:"''What was that?''"] |
58947 | [ Illustration:"''Where have you been?''"] |
58947 | [ Illustration:"''_ Fire!_''said Speedy"]"What in thunder''s this?" |
58947 | [ Illustration:"He had fallen into the soup"]"''Where am I?'' |
58947 | [ Illustration:"The Doctor took an armchair beside the kitchen stove"]"What''s that?" |
58947 | _ CHAPTER V_ THE WHITE MOUSE''S STORY"Who''s turn is it to give us a story now?" |
58947 | _ We forgot to bring matches!_""Well, what have you_ done_ with the matches, Doctor?" |
58947 | muttered the Doctor, paddling harder than ever,"I wonder what can have happened?" |
58947 | said the Doctor,"to get me some souvenir from the city below the lake?" |
25803 | ''Why, you silly old ass,''I said,''how are you going to grub''em?'' 25803 A base line, dear old officer?" |
25803 | A base line? |
25803 | A child? |
25803 | A herd of wild elephants walking on your chest? |
25803 | A sort of itching of the right arm-- an almost overpowerin''inclination to touch your hat to poor old Bones? |
25803 | A soul, dear ma''am? |
25803 | Ali, you remember my leopard? |
25803 | An''where''s the wall? 25803 And did he?" |
25803 | And did you see any of its contents? |
25803 | And is n''t that the island? |
25803 | And now you can not hear me, lord? |
25803 | And was it malaria? |
25803 | And yet----? |
25803 | And you... you''re a jolly good soldier, Hamilton-- how do you feel about it all? |
25803 | Any news from the N''gombi? |
25803 | Anything wrong? |
25803 | Are you a good swimmer? |
25803 | Are you feeling faint? |
25803 | Are you going to camp here, or are you coming in? |
25803 | Are you sure it was me, dear old officer? |
25803 | Are you sure, dear old chap? |
25803 | As I''m the only person with the key of the regimental cash- box, I suppose you mean----? |
25803 | At the full of the moon, before the rains, did I not ask you if the channel was clear, and did you not say it was like the street of your village? |
25803 | Bones,said Hamilton,"where the dickens have you been?" |
25803 | Bosambo, I put four in each, as you told me, and if my lord Tibbetti misses them, what shall I say? |
25803 | But did you shoot it? |
25803 | But did you track him to his lair? |
25803 | But how-- how did you catch him? |
25803 | But suppose you want to know something? |
25803 | But what has Bosambo done? |
25803 | But what has this to do with your inquiry into the origin of the candy tree? |
25803 | But who shall feed these men, Bosambo? |
25803 | But why do you let him call you Mug? |
25803 | But you do n''t worry about the threats of the people you have punished? |
25803 | By force? |
25803 | Called_ me_? |
25803 | Come along and meet my sister-- hullo, what the devil''s that? |
25803 | Confound you, what are you staring at? 25803 Corklan, where is your still?" |
25803 | Dash it, you are n''t off your head, too, are you? |
25803 | Dash my whiskers,he said, in his annoyance,"did n''t I tell you that I was taking the honourable lady for a trip? |
25803 | Dear old friend,he murmured brokenly,"accidents... error of judgment... the greatest tragedy of my life....""What''s the matter with you?" |
25803 | Did Bones behave? |
25803 | Did Bones shoot the leopard? |
25803 | Did I kill him, Ali? |
25803 | Did I shoot at that leopard,Bones went on deliberately,"an''was he found next mornin''cold an''dead, with a smile on his naughty old face?" |
25803 | Did I shoot it, dear old Ham? |
25803 | Did I, dear old-- Did I, sir? |
25803 | Did I-- what? |
25803 | Did you open this box by any chance? |
25803 | Did you? |
25803 | Do I understand, sir,he said,"that my leave is granted?" |
25803 | Do n''t you know this room has two windows? 25803 Do n''t you sometimes feel the need of a doctor here?" |
25803 | Do you know what decimal 1986 signifies? |
25803 | Do you know what that is? |
25803 | Do you know, Pat? |
25803 | Do you mean to tell me I dreamt it? |
25803 | Do you mean to tell me that Bones has kept his guilty secret all this time? |
25803 | Do you mean to tell me that you''re a Nonconformist? |
25803 | Do you mean to tell me, jolly old Ham, that I forgot to put a door into my room? |
25803 | Do you mean to tell me,gasped the girl,"that you_ frightened_ the leopard to death?" |
25803 | Do you realize that we have had no news from him since he left? |
25803 | Do you seriously believe that you mesmerized that humbug? |
25803 | Do you think Bones will be able to do all you want? |
25803 | Do you think I''m afraid of catching anything? 25803 Either Bones has gone mad,"said Hamilton,"or----""Or----?" |
25803 | Eradicated...? |
25803 | Excuse me, dear old sir,he said,"have I the honour of addressin''the Secretary of State for War?" |
25803 | Expect an invasion? |
25803 | Fitz? |
25803 | For what is one life more or less,asked Sanders,"a suffering smaller or greater by the side of my millions and their good?" |
25803 | Forward, Mr. Bones-- what can we do for you this morning? |
25803 | Go back? 25803 Good Lord, what do you want a disguise for?" |
25803 | Goodness gracious heavens, Bosambo,he gasped,"you do n''t think I''ve poisoned him?" |
25803 | Hachures? 25803 Hachures?" |
25803 | Has n''t Sanders got a Government steamer? |
25803 | Have I done well by all men? |
25803 | Have I not governed the land so that punishment comes swiftly to those who break the law? 25803 Have n''t you a soul, Bones?" |
25803 | Have you been drinking, Bones? |
25803 | Have you ever mesmerized anybody? |
25803 | Have you got everything now? |
25803 | Have you got the board to lay the cloth and the paper to cover it, and the chocolates and the cold tea? |
25803 | Have you got your hot- water bottle and your hair- curlers? |
25803 | Have you noticed anything strange about Bones? |
25803 | Have_ I_ ragged Bones? |
25803 | Hey? |
25803 | Hey? |
25803 | Ho, Mustaf,he said, in his queer coast Arabic,"where shall I look for my lord Tibbetti?" |
25803 | How did you do, Bones? |
25803 | How do you suppose you''re going to get out of the country? |
25803 | How is your head, Bones? |
25803 | How may the waters of the river be acceptable? |
25803 | How say you, Bosambo-- what man of the Kulumbini folk will hold these people in check? |
25803 | I beg your pardon? |
25803 | I presume he is in the palace? |
25803 | I suppose you know you''re exceeding your duty? |
25803 | I''d guess the date-- but what''s the use? |
25803 | I''d have gone into the Church only I had n''t enough-- enough----"Brains? |
25803 | I''m sure the country will suit her,he said,"this part of the country at any rate-- but what will Bones say?" |
25803 | Immunity? |
25803 | In all your long an''painful experience, dear old friend an''co- worker, have you ever seen anything like it? 25803 In what branch of science are you dabbling?" |
25803 | Is n''t he naughty? |
25803 | Is n''t it-- isn''t it simply extraordinary? |
25803 | Is n''t that wonderful? |
25803 | Is n''t there a steamer I can have? |
25803 | Is that Omar or Shakespeare? |
25803 | Is that you, Bones? |
25803 | It isn''t-- dangerous? |
25803 | It was n''t nice, was it? |
25803 | Joy- ride? |
25803 | Leave, Bones? 25803 Leave?" |
25803 | Let me see, what is''do da''? |
25803 | Listen, black man,said Bosambo, and lapsed into his English;"hark um, you dam''black nigger-- what for you speak um so?" |
25803 | Look here, dear old Ham,wheedled Bones"ca n''t you pretend you asked me what a Vertical Interval was?" |
25803 | Lord King,said S''gono,"are there no M''gimi amongst us who have passed from the camp and have their women and their children? |
25803 | Lord,said S''gono,"is my word nothing? |
25803 | Lord,said S''kobi, a fat man and easily puzzled,"what shall be the answer to this strange riddle you set me?" |
25803 | Lord,said Wafa cheerfully,"what good comes to me if I speak?" |
25803 | Lord,said the woman, speaking slowly,"you shall go back to Sandi and say,''I have not seen the woman D''rona''--for, lord, is this not truth?" |
25803 | Lord? |
25803 | M''lama,he said gently, in the river dialect,"what shall Sandi say to this evil that you do?" |
25803 | Master, do we go back to- night to seek Ko- boru? |
25803 | May I come and see him? |
25803 | No, silly ass... shadings... direction of water-- am I right, sir? |
25803 | Not as violent a feud as O''ka and I have, I hope? |
25803 | Not trypnosomes? |
25803 | Now, Bones,said Patricia, appearing on the scene,"have you got the sandwiches?" |
25803 | Now, how am I going up? |
25803 | Now, what does this mean? |
25803 | O Ko- boru,hailed Sanders,"why do you come?" |
25803 | O man,said Bones, glaring at the offender through his eyeglass,"what evil ju- ju sent you to stop my fine ship?" |
25803 | Our end? |
25803 | Pardon the question-- did you feel a curious and unaccountable inclination to raise your right hand and salute me? |
25803 | Sanders about? |
25803 | Shall we be attacked? |
25803 | Shall we have dinner or take a taxi? |
25803 | Shall we men dig and sow for such as these? |
25803 | She''s torn up her clothes? |
25803 | Shut up talking to yourself,growled Hamilton,"and tell me what is meant by''Orienting a Map''?" |
25803 | Sir and captain,he said stiffly,"do you suggest I am a jolly old impostor? |
25803 | Sir,said Ali, shaking his head,"who can forget?" |
25803 | Sir,said the exasperated Bones,"how the dooce did you get here?" |
25803 | So I can go to- night, can I? |
25803 | So,he said, with dangerous calm,"all this staring and gaping of yours means that, does it? |
25803 | Surely,he asked irritably,"Bones is n''t sickening for measles again?" |
25803 | Tell me now,said Sanders in his even tone,"can such a man as you die? |
25803 | Tell me, how long will this river be full? |
25803 | The----? |
25803 | Then they''ve got Bones? |
25803 | Then,said Bones wrathfully,"why the dickens do I think I have?" |
25803 | Therefore, if you let me go, who shall be the worse for it? |
25803 | This is good talk: shall Karata live or shall he die? 25803 To whom?" |
25803 | Wafa? |
25803 | We leave you, Herr Commissioner, in good friendship, we trust? |
25803 | Well, how am I going to get up? |
25803 | Were n''t you doing anything with the Bomongo verbs? |
25803 | What about swimmin''to shore with a line? |
25803 | What about your end? |
25803 | What are these stories of miracles? |
25803 | What are we doing to- day, Bones? |
25803 | What are you doing this morning? |
25803 | What are you here,he asked--"a clerk or something?" |
25803 | What are you saying-- will he let us go? |
25803 | What did Fitz say? |
25803 | What did I say? |
25803 | What do you think it was, dear old Patricia miss? |
25803 | What does he say? |
25803 | What does he say? |
25803 | What for? |
25803 | What has poor little making- up- company- accounts done? |
25803 | What have you been saying to Bones? |
25803 | What is happening, dear old officer? |
25803 | What is happening? |
25803 | What is it? |
25803 | What is it? |
25803 | What is meant by''Orienting a Map''? |
25803 | What is that? |
25803 | What is the matter with Bones? |
25803 | What is the rest of his baggage like? |
25803 | What is the trouble? |
25803 | What is there to do to- day? |
25803 | What is too bad, dear? |
25803 | What is wrong, Baptisa? |
25803 | What made you think that? |
25803 | What on earth are they finding to talk about? |
25803 | What on earth is he doing? |
25803 | What other illusions do they suffer from? |
25803 | What shall I say, sir? |
25803 | What sort of conveyance would you like, sir? |
25803 | What the devil are you doing? |
25803 | What the dickens are you goggling at? |
25803 | What the dickens are you looking at? |
25803 | What the dickens does it matter what Bones says? |
25803 | What was Bones saying when he talked to that horrible man? 25803 What was I to do? |
25803 | What will he say when I kick him? |
25803 | What you write to Pinto may be interesting enough to print,said Dr. Sarabesta violently,"but what shall I write to London? |
25803 | What''s the idea? |
25803 | What''s wrong? |
25803 | What? |
25803 | Where does the news come from, sir? |
25803 | Where is Bones? |
25803 | Where is Tibbetti? |
25803 | Where is he? |
25803 | Which one-- Bones or Bucongo? |
25803 | Which way do you go, Muchini? |
25803 | Who else could I be referring to? |
25803 | Who says a joy- ride to the upper waters of the Isisi? |
25803 | Who''s going to carry my bag? |
25803 | Why did n''t you say so before? |
25803 | Why do I what? |
25803 | Why do you? |
25803 | Why not? |
25803 | Why the dickens should n''t I have a sister? |
25803 | Why''good- bye,''dear old Hamilton''s sister? |
25803 | Will it be a dangerous trip? |
25803 | Will there be any fighting? |
25803 | Will you allow me to produce scientific an''expert evidence? |
25803 | Would it be indiscreet to ask what your visitors wanted? |
25803 | Yet if I send them away,said the king,"how shall I protect this land against the warriors of the Akasava and the evil men of the swamp? |
25803 | You ca n''t open them, can you? |
25803 | You called me? |
25803 | You did n''t by chance discover anything about the missing cultures, Bones? |
25803 | You do n''t echo that wish? |
25803 | You got the wireless to work? |
25803 | You have heard of Soemmering''s process? |
25803 | You have n''t a sister, surely, dear old officer? |
25803 | Your King and your country,he said,"pay you seven and eightpence per diem----""Oh,"said Bones, a light dawning,"you mean_ work_?" |
25803 | _ Now_ are you ready? |
25803 | Also of the Ochori, who are four days''march across good ground?" |
25803 | And are not we M''joro folk men? |
25803 | And then, after a little pause:"Will you be hung or shot?" |
25803 | And where does the passage lead to?" |
25803 | And who are these?" |
25803 | And would it not be good service for a woman of my house to die in your hut?" |
25803 | And, if a man does not believe, how may you believe him? |
25803 | Are n''t you well?" |
25803 | But how did you get into your room?" |
25803 | But what is your trouble with Bones?" |
25803 | By the way, how did you get this letter?" |
25803 | Did I not say that I would raise spears more wonderful than the M''gimi? |
25803 | Did n''t I issue explicit an''particular instructions about grub?" |
25803 | Did n''t I tell you, you jolly old slacker, to have everything ready by daybreak? |
25803 | Do you think he is ill?" |
25803 | Does the leopard fight the lion or the lion the leopard? |
25803 | Feelin''better, sir?" |
25803 | For does not the river saying run:"The last measure of a full granary is a measure of blood"? |
25803 | For what other man would foresee with his wonderful eye that rains would come? |
25803 | Go up and ask the Bomongo, drop in on the Isisi, speak to the Akasava, an''what will they say? |
25803 | Ham, dear old feller, do you remember when I was brought down from the Machengombi River? |
25803 | How on earth is he going to feed them, Bones?" |
25803 | How''s that, umpire?" |
25803 | I''ll tell you a precious secret-- not a word to anybody-- honest?" |
25803 | May not these take the spear again? |
25803 | Not so much as a mustard plaster-- what was I to do, dear old Miss Hamilton?" |
25803 | Now who of these is right?" |
25803 | Now, what about conveyance, hey?" |
25803 | O Abiboo"--he spoke over his shoulder to the sergeant of Houssas--"tell me, how many of the magic white stones of Bonesi did you put in their drink?" |
25803 | Sanders?" |
25803 | Sanders?" |
25803 | Sanders?" |
25803 | Tell me, preacher, if this is the truth?" |
25803 | Tell me, shall my people serve my King, or shall they serve another?" |
25803 | That''s a rippin''little bit of persiflage, Miss Hamilton?" |
25803 | Therefore, who shall attack us since we have kinsmen of all amongst us?" |
25803 | They led the man away, and the girl, who had been a spectator, asked anxiously:"What is wrong, Bones?" |
25803 | Trying to mesmerize me?" |
25803 | Was he saying nice things?" |
25803 | What am I?" |
25803 | What are''Hachures''?" |
25803 | What man gave me this?" |
25803 | What the dickens do you want leave for?" |
25803 | What though Bones''s"hostile craft"was a dilapidated canoe, manned by one aged and bewildered man of the Isisi engaged in spearing fish? |
25803 | What though Cape M''Gooboori was the village of that name and the"calm sea"was no more than the placid bosom of the Great River? |
25803 | What was the general idea of the house, anyway?" |
25803 | What was the illness, Bones?" |
25803 | What would you do?" |
25803 | What would you do?" |
25803 | What would you go back for?" |
25803 | Where is Bones? |
25803 | Where is Bones?" |
25803 | Who denies this?" |
25803 | Who found''em?" |
25803 | Who rules this land?" |
25803 | Whose men are you?" |
25803 | Why the dickens are you making a mystery of the thing?" |
25803 | Why?" |
25803 | Would you like to hear our gramophone?" |
25803 | Yet, S''kobi, do not the Akasava and the Isisi, the N''gombi and the Lower River folk take their spears against me? |
25803 | You do n''t suggest,"said Hamilton, with ominous dignity,"that I would defraud the public by lying as to the qualities of a deficient character?" |
25803 | You know what I am, dear old officer, in moments of crisis?" |
25803 | he gasped,"do you want to set Portugal ablaze?" |
25803 | said Sanders impatiently,"what happened after all this dashing?" |
38670 | Absurd, is n''t it? 38670 And does that young girl know anything about them?" |
38670 | And you? |
38670 | Angry? |
38670 | Anybody speaking English aboard of you? 38670 Are you coming?" |
38670 | Are you contemplating blowing her up? |
38670 | Are you going to sleep down there? 38670 Are you still on top there?" |
38670 | As usual, no comprenny? 38670 But how did that affect his wife?" |
38670 | But if she does n''t possess them? |
38670 | But the gum? |
38670 | But why did Mr. Austin go near him? |
38670 | Ca n''t we go out a little? |
38670 | Ca n''t you hear engines? |
38670 | Could n''t you get there in the_ Estremedura_ before the West- coast boat sailed? |
38670 | Did he find it necessary to touch him? |
38670 | Did you come across any niggers, sir? |
38670 | Did you expect to find them open? |
38670 | Do I know the lady, who is, presumably, in earnest, too? 38670 Do n''t you know that it is rather a serious thing to delay a Spanish mailboat?" |
38670 | Do n''t you think it''s rather a pity you-- are-- the_ Estremedura_''s sobrecargo? |
38670 | Do n''t you think that one should always have faith in one''s prescriptions and act upon it? |
38670 | Do you know whereabouts on the West- coast the Delgado Island lies? |
38670 | Do you realise what it is you propose to do? |
38670 | Do you recognise the symptoms? |
38670 | Do you think you could? 38670 Does he know Miss Gascoyne is on board?" |
38670 | Does he often lose his temper in that fashion? |
38670 | Does it matter in the least whether I am pleased or not? |
38670 | Does n''t Don Erminio take his comida in the saloon? |
38670 | Does that matter? |
38670 | Even than sailing round the Canaries and painting little pictures? |
38670 | George, is n''t that big fellow in the uniform yonder the one we saw the other night at the opera? |
38670 | Had n''t you better ask him what can be done? |
38670 | Had n''t you better go back to bed? |
38670 | Had n''t you better keep inside the wheelhouse until we start the mill? |
38670 | Had n''t you better leave that out? |
38670 | Had n''t you better turn over, and see if there''s any more of it? |
38670 | Have you any special reason for asking for it? |
38670 | Have you decided yet what you will do with it? |
38670 | Have you forgotten that Miss Gascoyne expects you to marry her? |
38670 | Have you found the gum? |
38670 | Have you got the pump going yet? |
38670 | Have you opened up any of the gum yet? |
38670 | He has no more than that? |
38670 | How are we to give it you when we have n''t found a bag of it? |
38670 | How d''you know those medicines arn''t all gorn? |
38670 | How did she take it? |
38670 | How did you ever come to be here, Jefferson? |
38670 | How long do you propose to allow yourself? |
38670 | I fancy this case has lost its special interest to you? |
38670 | I have been in this world a weary while, and would ye pull the wool over my eyes? 38670 I presume you know what he is referring to?" |
38670 | I presume you would not care to earn Muriel''s undying gratitude by being a trifle more definite? |
38670 | I suppose it would n''t suit you to go on with us, and look for a better place to get ashore to- morrow? |
38670 | I suppose it''s nothing dangerous? |
38670 | I suppose it''s sometimes brutal, but that is man''s work, is n''t it? |
38670 | I suppose there is nothing else? |
38670 | I suppose you are glad you did not go with Jefferson? 38670 I suppose you know why I have come to Laguna to- day?" |
38670 | I suppose, since you swam off, you have n''t the book about you? |
38670 | I think you told me you were acquainted with the artist, Miss Brown? |
38670 | I wonder if I might offer you a glass of wine, sir, or perhaps you smoke? |
38670 | I wonder if Mr. Jefferson often gives his friends invitations of that kind? |
38670 | I wonder if that message meets with your approval, sir? |
38670 | I wonder if you have any objections to showing me that note? |
38670 | I wonder what made you say that? |
38670 | I wonder what you are thinking? |
38670 | I wonder why? |
38670 | I wonder,he said, reflectively,"if you ever felt like that before?" |
38670 | I wonder,said Coulston, ignoring him,"if you would mind my offering to buy the three?" |
38670 | If we borrowed the canoe yonder you could find your way to her? |
38670 | If we do n''t find the gum before they come, what then? |
38670 | If ye do not know, how could ye expect me to? 38670 If you knew why did n''t you get it for yourself?" |
38670 | In that case it must have cost you something to send him to Africa? |
38670 | Is it right to abuse the ignorant people''s credulity like that? |
38670 | Is it worth while? |
38670 | Is n''t it sad that such a country should be steeped in superstition? |
38670 | Is n''t it very childish to throw-- good food into the sea? |
38670 | Is n''t that a little hard upon the man? |
38670 | Is that you, Bill? |
38670 | Is that, under the circumstances, very astonishing? |
38670 | Is the desire to relieve a fellow creature''s suffering a weakness? |
38670 | Is there anybody here, who speaks English? |
38670 | It has my full approbation, though, considering the cable company''s charges, is n''t it a trifle loquacious? |
38670 | May I ask upon what? |
38670 | May I ask who you are? |
38670 | Miss Brown, will you please hand that letter to your father? |
38670 | Miss Gascoyne is, no doubt, distressed? 38670 Mr. Prescott''s history of the Spanish occupation of Mexico-- you will, no doubt, be astonished at that?" |
38670 | My dear,he said,"how shall I implore you to consider?" |
38670 | No doubt you overheard what he said to me? |
38670 | No? |
38670 | No? |
38670 | Now,he said,"why ca n''t I get what I want done?" |
38670 | Of course, it is a little cruel; but, after all, it appeals to rather more than the lower passions and lust of slaughter, do n''t you think? |
38670 | Of course, you would not sell it him? |
38670 | Of what? |
38670 | Put that in your mouth? |
38670 | S''pose I done tell you where him lib? |
38670 | See that? |
38670 | Señor Austin no savvy, you comprenny? |
38670 | Shall I go down and look? |
38670 | She has been giving ye sailing instructions? |
38670 | So he meant to go back all the time? |
38670 | So long as it is unattainable, what would be the good? 38670 So you are going back?" |
38670 | So you have come? |
38670 | Soon? |
38670 | Still, I suppose you have decided that it must be done? |
38670 | Still, I wonder if, now you have heard the story, one could ask your views? |
38670 | Still, did n''t you feel that you were presumptuous? |
38670 | Still, do n''t you think there was a little reason in what she said? |
38670 | Still, is n''t that a trifle unreasonable? 38670 Still, since you considered yourself warranted in approving of my dress, what are you doing in that jacket on a mail run?" |
38670 | Still, the question is, can they stand it long? |
38670 | Still, though I know the thing is n''t, fortunately, what you thought it was, the first question is, how are you? |
38670 | Still, what are ye grinning in yon fashion for? |
38670 | Suppose there was such a man, what would you do for him? |
38670 | Thank you kindly, miss, but which one am I to look after special? 38670 That is one of the advantages of being a practical person; but had n''t you better get the drawings out?" |
38670 | That is the Colonel Sarramento? |
38670 | That means it is irrevocable now? 38670 That must be the African boat, but I suppose there is no use expecting any news?" |
38670 | That must be the African boat? |
38670 | That you, Don Erminio? 38670 That, presumably, means somebody has used you badly? |
38670 | The next thing is, how the devil are you going to get them up? 38670 Them headman he done say-- what the debbil you lib for here for?" |
38670 | Then I wonder what motive really influenced you? |
38670 | Then how do you fancy I''m going to give you half the gum without his knowing? |
38670 | Then the quarter share-- that offer stands good-- didn''t bring you? 38670 Then what am I to do when we have difficulties to contend with?" |
38670 | Then you do n''t know how I treated him? |
38670 | Then you have a knowledge of medicine? |
38670 | Then you have given up all idea of making money now? |
38670 | Then you think they might have wanted to find one? |
38670 | Then you''re counting on the present season being a normal one? |
38670 | Then you''re one of the---- fools who bought the_ Cumbria_? |
38670 | They''re worth-- how do I know? 38670 To take a risk I''m responsible for? |
38670 | Was it me or Mr. Austin ye came to see? |
38670 | Well, what is it, Bill? |
38670 | Well,he said sharply,"what the---- are you wanting?" |
38670 | Well,he said,"what the devil has that to do with you?" |
38670 | Well,said Jefferson quietly,"you are pleased with him?" |
38670 | Well,said the newcomer,"I s''pose you know what he-- has-- got?" |
38670 | Well? |
38670 | Well? |
38670 | Well? |
38670 | What are you doing? |
38670 | What are you going to do? |
38670 | What are you going to try it on? |
38670 | What can she have done with it? |
38670 | What d''they want to live here for when they can fly? |
38670 | What d''you make of that? |
38670 | What d''you want? 38670 What d''you want?" |
38670 | What did a certain gunboat''s men do when they found themselves quite unexpectedly in front of the African headman''s battery? |
38670 | What did they leave him there for when there''s a creek just outside the door, and where are the rest of them? 38670 What do you mean by under the circumstances?" |
38670 | What do you mean? |
38670 | What do you mean? |
38670 | What do you mean? |
38670 | What do you think? |
38670 | What do you want to go back to Africa for? |
38670 | What five pounds? |
38670 | What in the name of wonder have they been turning that sand over for? |
38670 | What is he saying? |
38670 | What money? |
38670 | What the devil do you want? |
38670 | What was he watching you for? |
38670 | What would he gain by that? |
38670 | What''s her head to the westwards for? |
38670 | What''s the matter with these engines? |
38670 | What''s the oil for? |
38670 | What''s wrong with takin''him, too; or all of us goin'', for that matter? |
38670 | Whatever is Mrs. Hatherly going to Fuerteventura for? |
38670 | When he found he could n''t run as fast as the bull could what was he to do? |
38670 | When was he to go? |
38670 | Where are you putting the oil you take out of her? |
38670 | Where is he? |
38670 | Where is she now? |
38670 | Where you lib for, Funnel- paint? |
38670 | Where''s that rake you made? |
38670 | Where''s the Frenchman who chartered the_ Cumbria_? |
38670 | Where''s the green limes? |
38670 | Which is a contingency you naturally wished to avoid? 38670 Which niggers?" |
38670 | Who knows? |
38670 | Why did you go out to Africa? |
38670 | Why should Miss Brown have the slightest wish that I should go to Africa? |
38670 | Why should you suppose that? |
38670 | Why? |
38670 | Will you be kind enough to pass me that pad and pencil? |
38670 | Will you please tell them to send him in? |
38670 | Without coming to shake hands with us? |
38670 | Would anything that you could say change what has happened? |
38670 | Would n''t everybody be content in such a case? |
38670 | Would n''t the chance of winning £5,000, which was what Jefferson estimated my share would be, appear a sufficient reason? |
38670 | Would you make it four pounds? |
38670 | Would you wish to live if you looked like that, or do you want the rest of us to find out what he went through? 38670 Ye are going out to Africa, too?" |
38670 | Ye made excuses for yourself and Jefferson? |
38670 | Ye will go back when ye get the money? |
38670 | You are an invalid, too? |
38670 | You are going back with Mr. Austin to the_ Cumbria_? |
38670 | You are quite sure of that? |
38670 | You are still sure about the gum yourself? |
38670 | You are sure the gum was really put into her? |
38670 | You are well acquainted with him? |
38670 | You ca n''t quite figure how I came to understand a thing of that kind? 38670 You did not feel that in Las Palmas?" |
38670 | You do n''t know? |
38670 | You had, presumably, a reason? 38670 You have been reading?" |
38670 | You like success? |
38670 | You mean that you like a man to be daring? |
38670 | You meant me to stay? |
38670 | You savvy how I blow up them headman''s house? 38670 You t''ink black man one dam fool?" |
38670 | You think he meant to come on board? |
38670 | You told Miss Gascoyne that? |
38670 | You venture to approve of this get- up? |
38670 | You were anxious that he should go? |
38670 | You were coming down to look for us? |
38670 | You will not mind my going? |
38670 | You would insist on getting them all done, even if you knew it would cost you something? |
38670 | You''re going to see this thing out with me on a quarter share? |
38670 | You''re not coming? |
38670 | You? |
38670 | Your people would let you have the money? |
38670 | ''Who the devil are you poisoning?'' |
38670 | All I want to know is, how you''re going to do it?" |
38670 | Am I to sit down while the black scum take her from me?" |
38670 | Am I to understand that somebody gave you five pounds to look after me?" |
38670 | Are you going down to look for them?" |
38670 | Are you going to dig the gum up before you heave in cargo?" |
38670 | Are you there, Wall- eye? |
38670 | Austin?" |
38670 | Austin?" |
38670 | Austin?" |
38670 | Austin?" |
38670 | Austin?" |
38670 | Austin?" |
38670 | Austin?" |
38670 | Austin?" |
38670 | Brown?" |
38670 | Brown?" |
38670 | But whatever is he doing there?" |
38670 | Ca n''t you fancy that she wanted him to find out that he had the grit of the boldest of them, and could do something worth while, too? |
38670 | Ca n''t you have a burst tube or something of the kind?" |
38670 | Ca n''t you hear inside there?" |
38670 | Ca n''t you send up another cask?" |
38670 | Can ye no smell a crank- pin burning?" |
38670 | Could there be anything base or mean in a nature capable of devotion of that description?" |
38670 | Did you come down to look on or give us a hand?" |
38670 | Did you tell Jacinta what you have told us?" |
38670 | Do n''t you think so, Captain Farquhar?" |
38670 | Do you know that I told Muriel half an hour ago you would go?" |
38670 | Do you suppose they are going to let her out again, as she is, if we once go in there?" |
38670 | FOR JACINTA[ Illustration:"DON''T YOU KNOW THAT IT IS RATHER A SERIOUS THING TO DELAY A SPANISH MAIL- BOAT?" |
38670 | Had n''t you better make sure of them?" |
38670 | Had n''t you better put it on quick?" |
38670 | Has she to give up everything and come down to me? |
38670 | Hatherly?" |
38670 | Hatherly?" |
38670 | Hatherly?" |
38670 | Have you the money?" |
38670 | How d''you come to let her go with a run?" |
38670 | How d''you start on it, Tom?" |
38670 | How did you happen to come along?" |
38670 | How long has the restraining influence been at work on you?" |
38670 | How was I to know? |
38670 | How''re you goin''to get''em?" |
38670 | I suppose Jefferson told you that he expects to get a good deal for the_ Cumbria_ and her cargo?" |
38670 | I suppose you are going off to her?" |
38670 | I suppose you have not seen Mr. Jefferson during the last half hour?" |
38670 | I suppose you kept the Correo buttons?" |
38670 | I suppose you told her there is nowhere she can stay? |
38670 | I will telephone them if that would suit you?" |
38670 | I wonder if there is one among all the men I have ever met who would-- under any circumstances-- do as much for me?" |
38670 | I wonder if you could get me a tartana?" |
38670 | I wonder if you have any objections to telling us the rest of it in confidence?" |
38670 | I wonder if you know that Jefferson has been left a fortune, or, at least, part of one?" |
38670 | I wonder,"and he smiled genially,"if it would be as much to the purpose if I said that he had just been left eight thousand pounds?" |
38670 | I''ll palaver with them other white man by then, savvy?" |
38670 | In the first place, what are you coaling grain tramps for when somebody has left you a fortune?" |
38670 | Is n''t he here?" |
38670 | Is n''t that sufficient? |
38670 | Is that the_ Cumbria_ yonder?" |
38670 | Is there anything I can do for you?" |
38670 | Jefferson''s?" |
38670 | Jefferson?" |
38670 | Jefferson?" |
38670 | Macallister, will you put that portrait back again?" |
38670 | Macallister?" |
38670 | May I ask what that stuff is yonder?" |
38670 | May I come back as your father''s partner?" |
38670 | Mr. Austin put him into his canoe?" |
38670 | Mr. Macallister will permit me?" |
38670 | Now, you are going to think very little of me after that?" |
38670 | Oh, howling-- is that how you slew a puncheon? |
38670 | Only, if he comes back, you will, I suppose, know your mind?" |
38670 | Perhaps you noticed it?" |
38670 | Que hay?" |
38670 | S''pose you done tell him you no go catch them book?" |
38670 | Says he,''How could ye expect me to idealise a man with a mouth like yon?''" |
38670 | Shall we move a little nearer and see what he is doing?" |
38670 | She believed in me; but do you think I''m going to tell-- you-- how it hurt her?" |
38670 | Since you have known this for some time, why have you stayed away so long?" |
38670 | Still, I would like to ask if any of the men on board that steamer is a friend of yours?" |
38670 | Still, do you know, I am rather pleased with you? |
38670 | Still, have you figured how he is to be gotten into the canoe? |
38670 | Still, if you do n''t want to do anything, why ca n''t you keep still?" |
38670 | Still, what do they put up in quills?" |
38670 | Supposing he is cured-- what then?" |
38670 | That being so, why did you go?" |
38670 | The pump was running well, but there remained the momentous question, was it lowering the water? |
38670 | The question is, what you''re going to do with him? |
38670 | The question, however, is how you are going to set it right?" |
38670 | There are also, I think, Englishmen with some capacity for idealisation-- but had n''t you better go on?" |
38670 | They must think differently, but does that matter so very much, after all? |
38670 | Well, am I to be trampled on whenever it happens that the other man is bigger than I?" |
38670 | Well, what are you wanting, Bill?" |
38670 | Well, what-- are-- you stopping for?" |
38670 | What I want to know is, what all that water was doing in her?" |
38670 | What are you after, outside there?" |
38670 | What are you wandering up and down the deck for?" |
38670 | What could he have done that he has n''t done? |
38670 | What d''you mean to do?" |
38670 | What do you suffer from?" |
38670 | What do you want?" |
38670 | What has become of the niggers?" |
38670 | What have they to do with it?" |
38670 | What sent-- him-- there?" |
38670 | What would ye expect of an Englishman? |
38670 | What would you? |
38670 | When are you going?" |
38670 | Where d''you get that oil from?" |
38670 | Where has he gone?" |
38670 | Where the blazes are you going to get cold water from?" |
38670 | Where''s that interpreter? |
38670 | Who is likely to meddle with it here?" |
38670 | Why did n''t you cable?" |
38670 | Why did n''t you come to me?" |
38670 | Why did you go?" |
38670 | Why not? |
38670 | Why should any man touch his hat to me? |
38670 | Why you stay here?'' |
38670 | Would n''t you consider Miss Gascoyne was worth taking a big risk for?" |
38670 | Would you take a refined and cultured girl and drag her through all the hard places men of my kind make money in up and down the world? |
38670 | Ye are still wondering why ye went to Africa?" |
38670 | You brought the giant powder?" |
38670 | You do n''t suppose it is n''t a relief to me? |
38670 | You hear me? |
38670 | You mean staying with it now?" |
38670 | You probably have?" |
38670 | You said-- if he were alive?" |
38670 | You see, if you drop out, how''s Bill an''me to get the bonus you promised us?" |
38670 | You want to know just why she really sent you?" |
38670 | You will not think me ungracious if I say that just now I am especially sorry I have not more money of my own?" |
38670 | You will, no doubt, excuse me?" |
38670 | You''re not feelin''well to- day?" |
38670 | said Jacinta,"so this is the famous Finca de La Empreza Financial?" |
38670 | said Jacinta,"you knew he might die there, and you could let him go?" |
38670 | she said,"you have forgotten what I said to you, and you are really well again?" |
38670 | she said,"you mean he will either be better, or that no doctor could cure him then?" |
58900 | And, where is Kuba? |
58900 | Boho, eh? |
58900 | But, Your Majesty,asked Telinga,"is it required that the barrel must be drank at one draught? |
58900 | But,he asked,"for what reason did she die?" |
58900 | But,said Leopard,"what then makes your belly so big?" |
58900 | Did you not throw away your knife? 58900 I have no strength; but as to your fight, was it seeking only me?" |
58900 | ( actually) Ntori lies to me?" |
58900 | 53 9 Who is King of Birds? |
58900 | A child of the Doctor spoke to Mbwa, and asked,"What have you come to do?" |
58900 | A voice replied,"Who are you?" |
58900 | Adder laughed, and said,"What can you do? |
58900 | Adder replied,"When we drank the Test, did I not swear the truth that if I met with your children, I would swallow them?" |
58900 | After he had entered his house, his chief wife said to him,"Where have you been all this long while since the morning?" |
58900 | Again Antelope raced on as far as from there to a rocky point by the sea named Ilale- ja- moto; and then he called,"Wherever is Kudu?" |
58900 | Again Tortoise asked the woman,"This other skin?" |
58900 | Again he asked,"Where is Kudu?" |
58900 | Again looking around, he said,"Where is Kudu?" |
58900 | Again, they asked,"Why then are you about to kill us?" |
58900 | All those my children who have died here, is it possible that it is my Father( of Spirits) who takes them? |
58900 | Also, Leopard said, in regard to his wife''s wish,"Where shall I find Mbâmâ?" |
58900 | And Chicken said,"Yes, where is he?" |
58900 | And Gazelle said,"Did you not say that whoever had the most bones would prove himself the murderer? |
58900 | And Leopard said,"While we go to the snares, who shall remain to take care of this house?" |
58900 | And Tortoise inquired,"What did Vyâdu do?" |
58900 | And he asked Boa,"What do you here eat? |
58900 | And he asked,"Ngozo, how do you talk? |
58900 | And he asked,"Where will you hide?" |
58900 | And he said to Dog,"My friend Mbwa, how many days before you shall come to my place?" |
58900 | And she asked him,"What is the matter?" |
58900 | And that I can cause Nyati and Ngubu to rot? |
58900 | And that''remainder,''shall I give it to It?" |
58900 | And the Bird asked,"Who are you?" |
58900 | And the Man asked,"Where then is Cockroach?" |
58900 | And the son, who by this time had grown to be almost a young man, said to her,"Mother, why do you allow the birds to eat? |
58900 | And the towns- people shouted after him,"Is that so? |
58900 | And these five days that we have gone, you and I together, and you obeyed my voice, who has died?" |
58900 | And they inquired of her,"Who is it who has married you?" |
58900 | And who are you?" |
58900 | And you must cry out''Who killed my Uncle? |
58900 | And your wife and my wife; also which is the elder?" |
58900 | And, Kudu, where are you going?" |
58900 | Angângwe asked,"When you thus in the forest eat your inkula- nuts, you each one eat them by his own strength and skill?" |
58900 | Antelope asked,"Where is your medicine that you said you use?" |
58900 | Antelope cried out,"What are you killing me for?" |
58900 | Are they eaten?" |
58900 | Are you in trouble?" |
58900 | Are you not, Njâgu?" |
58900 | As I see it, they, having no mouths, how can they eat?" |
58900 | As he did so, out jumped something from among the bushes; and the child asked,"Who are you?" |
58900 | As he had not yet told her of his being cured, she cried out in surprise,"What is this? |
58900 | As they did so, they reproached him,"Why did you kill our daughter, whom you came to marry?" |
58900 | At this, Leopard felt very much grieved; and he inquired of his women,"The wife of Kudu is here in this company?" |
58900 | Boa asked to Tortoise,"But, could you catch me Nje?" |
58900 | Bokeli asked him,"Where are you going to?" |
58900 | But Boa replied,"We do not give each other in the town; shall we give each other on the journey?" |
58900 | But Tortoise said,"You have doubted me? |
58900 | But the older people said to him,"You hear what Iheli says,''Who has not married''?" |
58900 | But what kind have you, Mwe Njegâ?" |
58900 | But you, where are you going?" |
58900 | But, Gazelle said,"I? |
58900 | But, Gazelle said,"I? |
58900 | But, Leopard asked,"This Kudu, where is he?" |
58900 | But, do you know the heart of Ntori, how it is inside? |
58900 | But, for what does he fear me? |
58900 | But, from where do you take its meat?" |
58900 | But, of these three things,--flight, speech, and strength, we ask you, which is the greatest?" |
58900 | But, what can you do with Iheli? |
58900 | But, when he was gone, he despised the Gourd, and said to himself,"What can this water- jar do for me? |
58900 | But, when you went by yourselves to eat nuts, did not Hunter kill you? |
58900 | Can you endure if one of these fruits should fall down on you? |
58900 | Crocodile asked Tortoise,"You made this Thing?" |
58900 | Did you bring two knives?" |
58900 | Did you want only me?" |
58900 | Do n''t you know what he is saying?" |
58900 | Do n''t you see them?" |
58900 | Do you consent that we are Mwera?" |
58900 | Do you know who own this Tree? |
58900 | Do you think he will die of this weakness?" |
58900 | Do you think that they disappear without a reason? |
58900 | Do you throw the good parts, to the ground, and the worthless husks onto the plate?" |
58900 | Do you travel with two?" |
58900 | Does Kudu race?" |
58900 | Does a Ghost come in the daytime? |
58900 | Dog asked,"True?" |
58900 | Elephant being astonished said,"On your oath?" |
58900 | Finding Leopard there, Gorilla said,"What is this?" |
58900 | For what reason have you thus spoken?" |
58900 | For, Njâ is ahead in the way?" |
58900 | For, whom do you call''Mwera''?" |
58900 | Gazelle asked,"Who owns this tree?" |
58900 | Gazelle insisted,"Uncle, as to these others whom you have invited to go with you, and not the rather me, your relative?" |
58900 | Gazelle replied,"But, what are you doing? |
58900 | Gazelle went back to the town of Beasts, and they asked him,"Where is he with whom you went on your journey?" |
58900 | Genet asked him,"Where is Etanda?" |
58900 | Genet inquired,"And where is Chicken?" |
58900 | Had I not sent Kabala with you, what would have become of you?" |
58900 | Had you two knives?" |
58900 | Has Njambo struck you about the affair of the marriage? |
58900 | Has anything displeased you?" |
58900 | Have they grown again?" |
58900 | Have you nothing to eat?" |
58900 | Have you two knives?" |
58900 | He also went down southward, clear on till he came to Lolabe; and standing at the foot of a tree, he said,"Is not this you?" |
58900 | He asked her,"What''s the matter, Ivenga?" |
58900 | He asked them,"Where is my friend?" |
58900 | He asked,"Where is chum Njâ?" |
58900 | He assented,"Eh? |
58900 | He called to his mother,"Where is Ilâmbe?" |
58900 | He came and stood under the tree up which Leopard was hidden; and he said,"Is not this you?" |
58900 | He came, and was asked,"And how do you talk?" |
58900 | He demanded,"Who brought you here?" |
58900 | He exclaimed,"Truly, now, what is this joke of the tree?" |
58900 | He exclaimed,"What trouble? |
58900 | He found there a dwarf child of a Human Being; and, in anger, he said,"You are the one who has caused me to send away the beasts? |
58900 | He inquired,"Who is he?" |
58900 | He jumped up saying,"What is this?" |
58900 | He reached Leopard, and said,"Is not this you?" |
58900 | He replied,"How shall I call for a canoe, while I see no people?" |
58900 | He replied,"Is it that you want me to give it to you?" |
58900 | He replied,"What will fire- wood do for you?" |
58900 | He responded,"I wo n''t reach my end, eh? |
58900 | He returned to the merchant, and asked,"That fruit you wish, may it be obtained in any way, even if one does not climb the tree?" |
58900 | He returned to the town; and, as he went, he walked anxiously saying to himself,"Who has done this thing?" |
58900 | He said over Civet''s body,"Did I not say to you,''Begin no new matter on the way?'' |
58900 | He said to her,"Did I not tell you? |
58900 | He said to his mother,"What shall we do with the Kâ Tribe?" |
58900 | He said to them,"For what are you killing each other?" |
58900 | He said to them,"What shall we do, because Njâ has taken away the wife of Kudu?" |
58900 | He said,"This thing which has been done to me, now, what is it?" |
58900 | He saw nothing but what seemed a log, and exclaimed,"How shall I embark in a log, while there is neither paddle, nor a person for a crew?" |
58900 | He snatched up his machete and axe, saying,"What is it?" |
58900 | He thought to himself,"Why do these animals make this noise, and keep looking down at the foot of this big tree?" |
58900 | He, only half- awake, grumbled,"What do you call me for? |
58900 | Her mother objected,"You? |
58900 | Hippopotamus asked Elephant about a new boast that Tortoise had been making,"Have you, or have you not heard?" |
58900 | His brothers exclaimed,"Where does Mbwa kill all those animals?" |
58900 | His mother asked him,"Where are you going with the mekima?" |
58900 | Horse said to Ilâmbe,"Did I not tell you? |
58900 | How can it be done?" |
58900 | How can we get you down? |
58900 | How do you feel, Mwera?" |
58900 | How do you feel? |
58900 | How is this that all the birds have come so soon to destroy it?" |
58900 | How shall I catch him?" |
58900 | How shall I do it?" |
58900 | How shall we get out? |
58900 | How then shall we know whether it is fit to be eaten?" |
58900 | Hunter said in his heart,"These Hogs, I see them often, but why have I not been able to kill them?" |
58900 | I have eaten nothing here; what should disturb my heart?" |
58900 | I want to ask him,''Why do you fear me?'' |
58900 | I''m afraid that Uhingi will see me, where shall I go?" |
58900 | If they seize me, who am Kudu, what shall I do? |
58900 | If your father had not sent me with you, what would have become of you? |
58900 | Igwana asked them,"Really? |
58900 | In return, Lemur asked him,"What has so lengthened your mouth to a snout?" |
58900 | Is it not I?" |
58900 | Is it possible that you are he who is''Bwinge''? |
58900 | Is it so that they have teeth? |
58900 | Is not this a brother of Bokeli?" |
58900 | Is that a good thing?" |
58900 | Is that you? |
58900 | It asked,"How is it there?" |
58900 | It is true that you said them?" |
58900 | It will rot in how many days?" |
58900 | Just then, Dog happened to meet the child in the street, and asked him,"Who gave you this fruit, child of Kudu?" |
58900 | Leopard asked him,"Can you catch me Mbâmâ?" |
58900 | Leopard asked,"Are you able to see Ngando for me? |
58900 | Leopard asked,"This Kudu, who is he? |
58900 | Leopard asked,"Truly?" |
58900 | Leopard asked,"What news? |
58900 | Leopard asked,"Where have you been?" |
58900 | Leopard asked,"Where is he?" |
58900 | Leopard asked,"Who is your uncle?" |
58900 | Leopard asked,"Why? |
58900 | Leopard exclaimed,"What are you doing? |
58900 | Leopard hearing the clanking, exclaimed,"With a chain, Iheli?" |
58900 | Leopard inquires,"What kind of meat are you eating?" |
58900 | Leopard said to his visitor,"What''s the news?" |
58900 | Leopard said,"True?" |
58900 | Leopard took hold of the child''s hand to see what meat he was eating, and said to him,"Your father has no gun; where does he get all this meat?" |
58900 | Leopard waited for him; and then said,"Having no fire, how shall we cook those green bebwehavu?" |
58900 | Leopard went away in wrath saying,"Do you prove it on me? |
58900 | Leopard, having arrived and wondering about the Spear, asked Tortoise,"Is it not so that this is the Spear of Etanda?" |
58900 | Leopard, on the path, heard his voice, and replied,"My child, is that so? |
58900 | Man asked,"And where is Chicken?" |
58900 | Man asked,"And where is Genet?" |
58900 | Man asked,"And where is Leopard?" |
58900 | Manima said,"What''s that?" |
58900 | May I accompany you?" |
58900 | May I not, between each mouthful, take a very short rest out in the grass?" |
58900 | Mwe Njegâ?" |
58900 | My friend, what is your journey for?" |
58900 | Njambi asked him,"How do you speak? |
58900 | Njambi asked him,"What is your speech? |
58900 | Njambi listened to this long speech; and then inquired,"Have you finished?" |
58900 | Njegâ is dead? |
58900 | Njegâ, he was a great person: but did he not tell you any sign by which it might be known, according to custom, that he was really dead?" |
58900 | Of what are you afraid?" |
58900 | Of what are you afraid?" |
58900 | Off at his town, the wife of Tortoise asked Dog,"Where is my husband?" |
58900 | On emerging from the water, the men said to the one who had informed on Ilâmbe,"Did you not tell us that this was a woman? |
58900 | On his arrival at his house, his wife said to him,"Why did you delay so long?" |
58900 | On the third day, Leopard came again to the water, and cried out to Crab,"Have your claws sprouted? |
58900 | One day, they were discussing together on the question,"Who is King of the Birds?" |
58900 | People wondered, saying,"What is this? |
58900 | Persons Ngando( Crocodile) Sinyani( Birds) Sinyama( Beasts) NOTE An Argument in Evolution-- When and How does Life begin? |
58900 | Porcupine, alarmed, asked Wild- Rat,"What is it?" |
58900 | Rat answered,"No? |
58900 | Rat asked her,"But, Njegâ died of what disease? |
58900 | Rat asked the wife,"What is this matter? |
58900 | Rat asked,"Do you know me?" |
58900 | Rat heard the swish of the water, and called out,"Who is splashing water there? |
58900 | Rat says,"You go alone? |
58900 | Really, food? |
58900 | Really?" |
58900 | Red Antelope wondered a little, but he consented saying,"Yes, but what is that to me?" |
58900 | Said Elephant,"Of what use? |
58900 | Said Gazelle,"I? |
58900 | Said he in astonishment,"I?" |
58900 | Said he,"If I sleep here, what is there for me to sit on?" |
58900 | Shall I die with hunger?" |
58900 | Shall I do it?" |
58900 | She answered,"Is it not Njâ?" |
58900 | She asked,"What trouble?" |
58900 | She came; and he asked her,"How do you talk? |
58900 | She could not believe it, and argued,"Why should he destroy them?" |
58900 | She objected,"But, father, why do you not give me the finer one, and not the weak one?" |
58900 | She replied,"Is n''t it Njâ?" |
58900 | She replied,"Why do the birds thus destroy the corn? |
58900 | She said to herself,"Ilâmbe, wife of my son, does she talk with Kabala as if it was a person?" |
58900 | She saw only the piles of egg- shells; and she wondered,"Where are the little ones?" |
58900 | Shrew asked him,"What has made your eyes so big?" |
58900 | Sitting, he meditated,"What is this? |
58900 | So Ear said to Mosquito,"Why do you leave your skin so rough? |
58900 | So Leopard says to Crab,"Now, as you are so helpless, what must I do for you?" |
58900 | So Leopard went to the wizard Ra- Marânge, whom as soon as he saw him, exclaimed,"What are you come for? |
58900 | So, at night, on retiring, she began to ask him,"But why? |
58900 | So, he went there; and he, in pretence, exclaimed,"What thing can so suddenly have killed Friend- Creator his Mbodi there? |
58900 | Soon, also, Leopard came out of his house; and, going to the house of Tortoise, he inquired,"Kudu is in the house?" |
58900 | Squirrel asked him, feeling sure of his guilt,"But, where then are my children? |
58900 | Still the prompt reply to Antelope''s call,"Kudu, where are you?" |
58900 | TALE 11 WHICH IS THE FATTEST? |
58900 | TALE 2 WHICH IS THE BETTER HUNTER, AN EAGLE OR A LEOPARD? |
58900 | TALE 21 IS THE BAT A BIRD OR A BEAST? |
58900 | TALE 8 WHO ARE CROCODILE''S RELATIVES? |
58900 | TALE 9 WHAT CAUSED THEIR DEATHS? |
58900 | TALE 9 WHO IS KING OF BIRDS? |
58900 | Telinga replied,"Your Majesty, did not you send word to all the Tribes that any one might compete?" |
58900 | That woman, have you married her?" |
58900 | The Antelopes asked him,"What''s your name?" |
58900 | The King asked,"Then, where will you prefer to live?" |
58900 | The King said to him,"You are keeping food, while all the Tribes are dying of hunger? |
58900 | The Man wondered, and said to himself,"What Thing is it that is named''Bwinge''?" |
58900 | The Men in the entrance- room, observing the pot on the fire, asked the woman,"While we were away, did you leave a kettle on the fire- place?" |
58900 | The Prophet saluted him,"What have you come for?" |
58900 | The Tortoise said,"Do you want him? |
58900 | The anxious tribes of All- the- Beasts had come down to the beach to meet him, and were asking,"What is the name? |
58900 | The child asked him,"Is not this Kudu?" |
58900 | The children of Leopard asked them,"Why?" |
58900 | The distant members of that Tribe,( not knowing and not having heard what that Drum had been doing) twitted him,"Is it for a dance?" |
58900 | The father asked,"Do you love him truly?" |
58900 | The leg of Wild- Goat protested,"I?" |
58900 | The man Ekwamekwa, full of boasting, said,"Is it possible there is no man in the town?" |
58900 | The merchant asked,"But what did you do to it?" |
58900 | The mother Palm- tree helplessly replied,"What can I do?" |
58900 | The mother again asked,"What do you want?" |
58900 | The mother, hearing, asked,"Why do you cry?" |
58900 | The next time that Dove and Leopard met, Leopard demanded,"What is this you have done to me? |
58900 | The old woman exclaimed,"What sort of a person is this who eats in this way?" |
58900 | The others said to the girls,"What are you doing? |
58900 | The people justified themselves, saying,"But, what else could we do? |
58900 | The people there said,"What is it; for the crying?" |
58900 | The reply was"Ntori; and who are you?" |
58900 | The town''s- people asked them,"What''s the matter?" |
58900 | The towns- people said to her,"What did he do?" |
58900 | The wife began to weep, saying to herself,"What will be his manner of eating?" |
58900 | The wife came; and, of her, Njambi asked,"And, what do you say?" |
58900 | The wife of Eagle came, and Njambi said to her,"You are the wife of Ngwanyâni, how do you talk?" |
58900 | The woman said to him,"What is it that brought you here? |
58900 | Their claim was disputed, others asking,"On what ground do you claim relationship? |
58900 | Then Adder asked,"You, Ihendi, and I, Pe; which is the elder? |
58900 | Then Fly said to Adder, in anger,"Know you not that it is I who cause even Njâku, with his big tusks, to rot? |
58900 | Then Gazelle drew the bundle of Ants out of his bag, and said to himself,"Is this person, really dead? |
58900 | Then Leopard asked,"Where is Etanda?" |
58900 | Then Leopard asked,"Where then is Uhingi?" |
58900 | Then Leopard( who had not seen him) came to the house of Dog; he asked the women,"Where is Mbwa?" |
58900 | Then Njambi said to Cock,"For what reason do you not allow your wife to say,''Kâ- kâ- re- kââ?''" |
58900 | Then Tortoise again asked,"This other skin is of what animal?" |
58900 | Then Tortoise asked him,"What is''stomach ache''?" |
58900 | Then Tortoise asked,"And that skin?" |
58900 | Then Tortoise asked,"But, where are you going?" |
58900 | Then arrived Chicken, and he, observing a spear lying on the ground, asked Tortoise,"Is not this Etanda''s Spear?" |
58900 | Then he asked Tortoise,"Where did you get the meat which I saw with your child?" |
58900 | Then he asked them,"Who is dead? |
58900 | Then he called out to Crocodile"Do you want to hear the little crocodiles talk?" |
58900 | Then he called out,"Who are these? |
58900 | Then he exclaimed,"I''ve come here in hunger; and does my coco- nut fall into the water to be lost?" |
58900 | Then he laughed aloud,"Ke, ke, ke--"Leopard asked,"Ra- Marânge, for what reason do you laugh?" |
58900 | Then he looked around and said,"Where is Kudu?" |
58900 | Then he said to Elephant,"I did call you, just now,''Mwera''; but, you, Njâgu, why do you condemn me? |
58900 | Then he said to his wife,"What shall I do? |
58900 | Then said Rat,"If that is so, why do n''t you come close here, and attend to your duty? |
58900 | Then the Partridges asked him,"What is your name?" |
58900 | Then the Partridges said,"If that is so, why are you about to kill us?" |
58900 | Then the Tortoise children shouted boastfully,"We are those who are accustomed to kill people''s fathers, and hang up their skins, eh?" |
58900 | Then they asked Tortoise,"As to our father, up to this day, what has happened to him?" |
58900 | There Elephant asked him,"Why do you cry as you go? |
58900 | There, the relatives of Rat asked him,"Where is the little one you took to escort you?" |
58900 | They asked her,"Who has married you?" |
58900 | They asked him,"Where is the woman?" |
58900 | They asked him,"Where then did you get this food which we saw your children eating?" |
58900 | They inquired,"Food?" |
58900 | They inquired,"He died of what disease?" |
58900 | They roughly shook him, and he, half- conscious, asked,"What do you want here?" |
58900 | They said,"What shall we do here?" |
58900 | They said,"What? |
58900 | They saw?" |
58900 | This Person inquired,"Where are you going to?" |
58900 | This person, how did he die?" |
58900 | Those of the Tribes who first arrived at the spring, searched, inquiring,"Where is It? |
58900 | To Tortoise, Rat said,"Whose wine- tree is this?" |
58900 | To him Leopard said,"Who owns this palm- tree?" |
58900 | Tooth asked,"Where are you going?" |
58900 | Tooth asked,"Where are you going?" |
58900 | Tortoise again asked,"And this other?" |
58900 | Tortoise answered them,"Why are you asking me this? |
58900 | Tortoise answered,"I have come to inquire of you, as to you and me, which is the elder?" |
58900 | Tortoise asked Njambo,"What will you do with the log?" |
58900 | Tortoise asked her,"This skin there looks like what?" |
58900 | Tortoise asked her,"What is the matter?" |
58900 | Tortoise asked,"Do you want him? |
58900 | Tortoise asked,"Njâbu, what did he do?" |
58900 | Tortoise asked,"What do you mean by''stomach- ache?''" |
58900 | Tortoise asked,"What have I done to the King? |
58900 | Tortoise asked,"You, Man, what skin is this?" |
58900 | Tortoise assented,"Yes, do you want him?" |
58900 | Tortoise did not at once reply; and Man asked again,"Where is Leopard?" |
58900 | Tortoise heard; and he asked Igwana,"Do you hear how Crocodile is calling to you? |
58900 | Tortoise inquired,"What did Uhingi do?" |
58900 | Tortoise inquired,"What other kind of food?" |
58900 | Tortoise then asked,"Then, why should I die?" |
58900 | Tortoise told him to climb; adding,"What are you afraid of?" |
58900 | Tortoise wondered,"This thing which is destroying my children, what is it?" |
58900 | Totode asked him,"Are you able to go to the town of Doctor Nja- ya- melema- mya- bato? |
58900 | Voices asked,"Who art thou?" |
58900 | Was it not you who said you caught no Beast? |
58900 | Were they equal? |
58900 | What are you doing? |
58900 | What can I do?" |
58900 | What do you catch me for?" |
58900 | What do you fear?" |
58900 | What have I done?" |
58900 | What have I eaten? |
58900 | What have you been doing?" |
58900 | What have you come here to do? |
58900 | What have you done in the forest? |
58900 | What is it?" |
58900 | What is it?" |
58900 | What is this fine meat?" |
58900 | What is this?" |
58900 | What is your manner of talking?" |
58900 | What is your way of speaking?" |
58900 | What makes it so big?" |
58900 | What makes your body so big?" |
58900 | What shall I do?" |
58900 | What shall I do?" |
58900 | What shall we Beasts do?" |
58900 | What shall we do?" |
58900 | What then is the reason?" |
58900 | What''s the matter? |
58900 | What, also, can you do against Ekaga? |
58900 | When Antelope saw him, Goat and his mother hid themselves; and Antelope asked Leopard,"What is your anger? |
58900 | When Genet came, he, seeing the spear, asked,"Is it not so that this is Etanda''s Spear?" |
58900 | When I went, what did my family ask of you? |
58900 | When Leopard again saw Rat a short distance before him, he calls out,"Who are you?" |
58900 | When Leopard returned home, Red Antelope''s people asked,"Where is Ehibo?" |
58900 | When Tortoise showed her the meat, she asked him,"Where did you get all this meat?" |
58900 | When he arrived at his town, the other people asked him,"Where''s the woman?" |
58900 | When he arrived there, Elephant demanded,"What''s the matter?" |
58900 | When he returned, and came to his town, and found that his wife, Palm- tree''s child, was not there, he asked,"My wife; is she dead?" |
58900 | When he went from here, who sent for him?" |
58900 | When others, coming to the funeral, from other towns, asked the children,"Who was the person who counseled you such advice as that?" |
58900 | When she entered the room, Tortoise asked her,"Do you love me?" |
58900 | When the Man had come, and he saw the Spear of Cockroach, he inquired,"Is it not so that this is Cockroach''s wonderful Spear?" |
58900 | When the people of his town asked him, as in the case of Rat,"Where is the friend you took with you?" |
58900 | When they all had arrived at Njambi''s Town, he asked,"What is the affair on which you have come?" |
58900 | When they had come clear on to the town, Angângwe asked,"What news, from where you come?" |
58900 | When they seize me, you will come and take me from them? |
58900 | When told of his wife''s wish, Boa said,"What shall I do? |
58900 | When we arranged for this journey, what did I say in the town?" |
58900 | Where are all your servants that you brought with you? |
58900 | Where are the other ten?" |
58900 | Where did you discover them?" |
58900 | Where do they come from?" |
58900 | Where have you been?" |
58900 | Where have you come from?" |
58900 | Where indeed is Ntori? |
58900 | Where is It? |
58900 | Where is It?" |
58900 | Where is Mbâmâ?" |
58900 | Where shall I find Mangwata?" |
58900 | Where shall I go? |
58900 | Where shall I go? |
58900 | Where shall it be?" |
58900 | Whereupon Tortoise exclaimed,"Is it possible that it was the Ihenga vine that I mistook?" |
58900 | Who called you, you with your loud howling? |
58900 | Who can catch goats and sheep on a hot day like this? |
58900 | Who has been at it?" |
58900 | Who has not married?" |
58900 | Who is dabbling in this water?" |
58900 | Who showed you the way to come here?" |
58900 | Why are you angry with my nephew?" |
58900 | Why did you not leave even one of them? |
58900 | Why do n''t you do something?" |
58900 | Why do you ask questions?" |
58900 | Why do you beat him? |
58900 | Why do you go?" |
58900 | Why is this?" |
58900 | Why then should you kill us?" |
58900 | Why? |
58900 | Why?" |
58900 | Why?" |
58900 | Wild Goat sympathisingly inquired,"What shall I do to help you?" |
58900 | Would you say that it was not it that killed Mbodi? |
58900 | You and I living in the same town, ca n''t you let me know what happens?" |
58900 | You are here, but where is the other?" |
58900 | You do n''t rise to salute me? |
58900 | You mock others, that Hunter kills them?" |
58900 | You think that, because you are of great expanse of flesh, you can surpass Ekaga, just because I am small? |
58900 | You who have no teeth, what makes you say I must not eat? |
58900 | You, all the Beasts, what are you to eat? |
58900 | and, Why Chickens live with Mankind 54 10"Njiwo Died of Sleep:"A Proverb 58 11 Which is the Fattest:--Manatus, Hog, or Oyster? |
58900 | are you there?" |
58900 | as to this meat- hunger, what shall we do? |
58900 | do you eat such as that?" |
58900 | eh?" |
58900 | have you been at my house?" |
58900 | have you brought nuts for me who was left in Town?" |
58900 | have you deceived me? |
58900 | have you heard the news? |
58900 | have you your claws grown now?" |
58900 | how can it carry water?" |
58900 | how shall I know to test speed with Kudu? |
58900 | is he really dead?" |
58900 | is it possible that this Hova knows the affairs of the Spirits?" |
58900 | is it possible that you eat such good things here? |
58900 | is it still there?" |
58900 | is that the way you do?" |
58900 | now, what is this?" |
58900 | only this little food for me?" |
58900 | really; why did you leave the other people?" |
58900 | they despise me, do they?" |
58900 | those who sing, where are they?" |
58900 | what animal is this?" |
58900 | what are you doing? |
58900 | what are you doing?" |
58900 | what did you go to my bed for? |
58900 | what do these mean? |
58900 | what do you think you have caught hold of?" |
58900 | what do you want to do to me?" |
58900 | what do you want?" |
58900 | what does he say?" |
58900 | what has happened to it? |
58900 | what have you done to your leg?" |
58900 | what have you got?" |
58900 | what have your affairs to do with me? |
58900 | what is it for?" |
58900 | what is it?" |
58900 | what is that?" |
58900 | what is the cause of your journey?" |
58900 | what is the reason of all this?" |
58900 | what is this?" |
58900 | what shall I do? |
58900 | what shall I do? |
58900 | what shall I do?" |
58900 | what sort of a word is this that Pe has spoken about so to me? |
58900 | what will you do? |
58900 | when Akândâ was cooked, you gave your guests only plantains; were you so inhospitable as to give them also no meat or fish?" |
58900 | when you left me here in the ikenga, where did you go to, the while that the women were cooking the food?" |
58900 | when you left me sitting here alone, where did you go to?" |
58900 | where are you?" |
58900 | where are you?" |
58900 | where are you?" |
58900 | where are you?'' |
58900 | where did you get this meat?" |
58900 | where do you come from in such haste?" |
58900 | wherefore the crying, and your carrying the infant?" |
58900 | whither goest thou?" |
58900 | who is wounded?" |
58900 | who killed my uncle?'' |
58900 | who owns this tree?" |
58900 | who owns this tree?" |
58900 | whom do you call''Mwera''?" |
58900 | why do you put me to shame? |
58900 | why is it that you are silent and do not speak? |
58900 | you do n''t say,''Kâ- kâ- re- kââ,''like your husband?" |
58900 | you kill another person? |
58900 | you said I was a woman?" |
58900 | you see that tall tree far away? |
58900 | you shoot your horse, and did not care for it?'' |
58900 | you think so?" |
58900 | you, Ntori, have I seized you?" |
58900 | you, the savior, will you be the one to kill me?" |
58900 | your wife says,''Ko- do- ko?''" |