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 |
---|---|
50495 | And where is that? |
50495 | And will you sign your name to it? |
50495 | And your friend? |
50495 | Are n''t you going out to- night? |
50495 | Are they, all right, do you think? |
50495 | But why worry? |
50495 | Can you not make me un franc? 50495 Dance?" |
50495 | Did you ever? 50495 Did you not see me draw it while looking at you?" |
50495 | Do I look like that? |
50495 | Do? |
50495 | Has not monsieur a cigarette? |
50495 | Shall we have some lait chaud and a croissant? |
50495 | The Boul''Mich''or Montmartre? |
50495 | Then you will take charge of his body? |
50495 | What are they saying? |
50495 | What do you want? |
50495 | What does he do? |
50495 | Where is he? |
50495 | Will you give it to me? |
50495 | Yes? 50495 You translate for me, wo n''t you?" |
50495 | Youarre Eengleesh? |
50495 | _ Comment, vous n''avez pas de noir?_he roared. |
50495 | _ Vous ferez mon portrait, n''est- ce- pas?_begged a dark- eyed beauty of Bishop, in a smooth, pleasant voice. |
50495 | _ Vous êtes Américain?_continued the master. |
50495 | Ah,_ les concierges!_ But what would Paris be without them? |
50495 | Américain?" |
50495 | And then, who could tell but what fame might unexpectedly crown them in the end? |
50495 | Are not these ancient walls the same that echoed the wit, badinage, and laughter of the masters? |
50495 | But he rallied and assured her that her love was reciprocated, for who, he asked, could resist so beautiful a face, so warm a heart? |
50495 | But here was the rub: Would Mr. Thompkins care to be so radically different here for one night-- just one night-- from what he was at home? |
50495 | But why should not it have been a glorious evening high up among the chimney- pots of old Paris? |
50495 | Could this really be the quiet Johnson of the Ecole, who but a week ago had been showing his mother and charming sister over Paris? |
50495 | En voulez- vous du bon lait bien chaud?_"She poured out four bowls of steaming milk, and gave us each a roll. |
50495 | Es eet not verra a beautiful night?" |
50495 | For what? |
50495 | Had monsieur a cigarette to spare? |
50495 | Her other name? |
50495 | How dare you insult the young poet who is now singing?" |
50495 | How many men have you sent hither to damnation with those beautiful eyes, those rosy, tempting lips? |
50495 | How much longer will this last? |
50495 | Is it possible for Paris to consume all of this in a day? |
50495 | Is not this the place in which greatness had budded and blossomed in the centuries gone? |
50495 | It closed by asking,"Could you call at the hotel this evening, say at seven?" |
50495 | Monsieur Beeshop, comment vas tu?_""_ Tiens! |
50495 | Où sont tes ailes?_"and other mocking jests greet her as she creeps among the tables. |
50495 | Payez- moi un bock?_ Yes?" |
50495 | Payez- moi un bock?_ Yes?" |
50495 | She spoke Engleesh, and demurely asked Bishop if"we will go to ze_ café_ ensemble, n''est- ce- pas?" |
50495 | The girl beside me said to me, in a low voice, without looking at me,--"_Monsieur est Anglais?_""No,"I answered. |
50495 | Then the brute swaggered up to us and demanded,--"What the devil do you want to drink, anyway? |
50495 | Then their appearance would be less and less regular, and they would finally disappear altogether-- whither? |
50495 | Was not that more than they could hope to earn by a whole day''s hard work? |
50495 | Was not this the great Aristide Bruant, the immortal of Montmartre? |
50495 | Was she not the queen of the models of Paris? |
50495 | What had she been? |
50495 | What was the gross, hard, eager world to them? |
50495 | Who was she? |
50495 | Why do you tremble? |
50495 | Why waste money on professional models? |
50495 | Would he not live on a lower floor if he were able? |
50495 | Yes, anything hot would be good, even milk; but where could we get it? |
50495 | You are finished, are n''t you? |
50495 | [ Illustration: 0141]"Ah, milord, how do you do? |
50495 | for did we not drink to the loved ones in a distant land, and were not our guests the prettiest among the pretty toilers of our court? |
50495 | protested another, stroking Bishop''s Valasquez beard; and then, archly and coaxingly,"_ Qu''est- ce que vous m''offrez, monsieur? |
35874 | Ah, I suppose you want something cheap an''ordinary for_ this_? |
35874 | But why do you call that the West- End? |
35874 | Could you use a little poem of mine? |
35874 | D''yer want to buy a diamond pin cheap? |
35874 | Did you see my picture safely delivered at the Royal Academy? |
35874 | Do you mean a club in Soho when you say West- End? |
35874 | Has he got a bill in his hand? |
35874 | Have you been to sit to Mr. Jones yet? |
35874 | How do you know there are such persons? |
35874 | How''s that? |
35874 | I say, is it true you were the only sober man last night? |
35874 | I say, you''re not going to sing an encore, are you? |
35874 | Mr._ George_ Jobson? |
35874 | Of the firm of Messrs. Jobson and Doodle? |
35874 | Only this]*****[ Illustration:_ Horse Dealer._"Did that little mare I sold you do for you, sir?" |
35874 | Shall I play to''clubs'', partner? |
35874 | Suppose, madam, we try a pose with just the_ least_ suggestion of-- er--_sauciness_?] |
35874 | Then you are growing rich, Horace? |
35874 | Uncle, what does 1, 3, 6, 8, after a man''s name, mean? |
35874 | Well, sir, what is it? |
35874 | What do you call that? |
35874 | What do you think of the picture? 35874 What is that?" |
35874 | What''s it made of? |
35874 | Where''s my cello? |
35874 | Who is it? |
35874 | Who''s that going out? |
35874 | Why are n''t you at work? |
35874 | Will yer want me ter tike my bun down?] |
35874 | Yes, aunt? |
35874 | Yes; he certainly_ is_ a beauty, is n''t he?] |
35874 | ( Time 3 p.m.).--_Hospitable Host._"Have c''gar, old f''lla?" |
35874 | ***** A NEEDLESS QUESTION.--"Do you want a loan?" |
35874 | ***** FROM OUR OWN IRREPRESSIBLE ONE(_ still dodging custody_).--_Q._ Why is a daily paper like a lamb? |
35874 | ***** RIDDLES BY A WRETCH.--_Q._ What is the difference between a surgeon and a wizard? |
35874 | ***** THE ENRAGED MUSICIAN.--(_A Duologue._)_ Composer._ Did you stay late at Lady Tittup''s? |
35874 | ***** THE UNITED EFFORT OF SIX ROYAL ACADEMICIANS.--What colour is it that contains several? |
35874 | ***** When is an author most likely to be sick of his own writing? |
35874 | ***** Why ought n''t a boot and shoemaker to be trusted? |
35874 | *****[ Illustration: A PROPHET IN HIS OWN COUNTRY_ Sylvia._"I wonder whether he''ll be a soldier or a sailor?" |
35874 | *****[ Illustration: AT THE ACADEMY_ Miss Jones._"How came you to think of the subject, Mr. de Brush?" |
35874 | *****[ Illustration: BROTHERS IN ART.--_New Arrival._"What should I charge for teaching ze pianoforte?" |
35874 | *****[ Illustration: HE KNEW HIS WORK_ Proprietor of Travelling Menagerie._"Are you used to looking after horses and other animals?" |
35874 | *****[ Illustration: IN THE CAUSE OF ART.--_Patron._"When are yer goin''to start my wife''s picture and mine? |
35874 | *****[ Illustration: IS THERE ROOM FOR MARY THERE? |
35874 | *****[ Illustration: TWO OLD MASTERS OF ARTS]***** ARTIST''S VADE MECUM_ Question._ Has the anxious parent been to see his child''s portrait? |
35874 | *****[ Illustration:_ Celebrated Minor Poet._"Ah, hostess, how''do? |
35874 | *****[ Illustration:_ Customer._--"Have you''How to be happy though married''?" |
35874 | *****[ Illustration:_ He._"Awfully jolly concert, was n''t it? |
35874 | *****[ Illustration:_ Jones._"Do you drink between meals?" |
35874 | *****[ Illustration:_ Jones._"How is it we see you so seldom at the club now?" |
35874 | *****[ Illustration:_ Scrumble._"Been to see the old masters?" |
35874 | *****[ Illustration:_ She._"And are all these lovely things about which you write imaginary?" |
35874 | *****_ Member of the Lyceum Club._ Have you read Tolstoi''s"Resurrection"? |
35874 | A juggins?" |
35874 | And have the other papers adopted it?" |
35874 | And may I ask what it was that first attracted you?" |
35874 | Anything else you''d like, dearie?" |
35874 | Are you much of a sportsman?" |
35874 | Be you a talkin''to Oi, zur?"] |
35874 | Bingles?" |
35874 | But you set that chap on the pivement alongside o''you an''me, to dror''arf a salmon an''a nempty''at, an''where''ud''e be?" |
35874 | But, you will say, supposing this ingenious device to fail? |
35874 | By the way, Monsieur le Marquis, have they introduced fencing into France yet?"] |
35874 | Ca n''t you fix it on the frame?" |
35874 | Can you stand by and see the children starve? |
35874 | Did you get my book I sent you yesterday?" |
35874 | Do n''t you keep books?" |
35874 | Do you know I am really a little_ frightened_ at the thought of meeting such a famous editor? |
35874 | Do you know who_ that_ is? |
35874 | Dost thou hold there still?" |
35874 | Eh?"] |
35874 | Ever dined at Dobbs''s?" |
35874 | H._"Ca n''t refuse a toothpick, then, old f''lla?"] |
35874 | H._"Cigarette then?" |
35874 | Hallo, old man, how are you? |
35874 | Have you read_ A Modern Heliogabolus_? |
35874 | How did you manage to get through it? |
35874 | How large is it?"] |
35874 | How soon do you expect them back?"] |
35874 | How?" |
35874 | I should like to know who you would consider a finished artist?" |
35874 | Is it not a fine Titian?" |
35874 | Is n''t it_ silly_ of me? |
35874 | Is that the name of Marie Corelli''s new book? |
35874 | Jobson?" |
35874 | O. T. M._"What steps would you take if a lion got loose?" |
35874 | Pictures? |
35874 | Supposing"Maria''s Marriage"to be universally"slated"? |
35874 | Tell me,_ who_ is your model?" |
35874 | That the best test of a picture is being able to live with it-- or live it down-- so why send it away from its most lenient critic? |
35874 | The principal question asked, upon insuring a man''s life, should be,"Do you sing a good song?" |
35874 | Thinking of art''s disasters, Still sinking to deeper abysses, I said,"From the Old Masters Why go to the new misses?" |
35874 | Was this your idea?" |
35874 | Well, why do n''t you tike it?"] |
35874 | What are the editors about, Whom one would think would edit out The shocking English and the style Which every page and line defile? |
35874 | What d''you take me for? |
35874 | What did the papers say?" |
35874 | What do I see? |
35874 | What do you want to see him for?" |
35874 | What do you want?" |
35874 | What does he collect? |
35874 | What is a"marine painter"? |
35874 | What is an"animal painter"? |
35874 | What offers, gentlemen?"] |
35874 | What tells you which word to use?" |
35874 | What word did you strike out?" |
35874 | What''s your latest composition? |
35874 | What? |
35874 | Where is it?" |
35874 | Who gave it her?" |
35874 | Wo n''t you buy one?" |
35874 | You play the flute, do n''t you?" |
35874 | [_ Exeunt severally._***** ART CLASS.--_Inspector._ What is a"landscape painter"? |
35874 | _ Amateur Flautist._"Are you sure the thing''s all right?" |
35874 | _ Bill Bashford._"Oh, is it? |
35874 | _ First Reveller._"Who was, then?" |
35874 | _ He._"A musician? |
35874 | _ Jones._"Which did you do last?" |
35874 | _ Mamma._"Would n''t you like him to be an artist, like papa?" |
35874 | _ Middlesex House, Park Lane, IV._ DEAR MR. SMITH,--Can you come and dine with us quite in a_ friendly_ way on Thursday at eight? |
35874 | _ Miss F._ All through? |
35874 | _ Q._ Are you well on with your Academy picture? |
35874 | _ Q._ Did he approve of it? |
35874 | _ Q._ Did he make any other suggestions? |
35874 | _ Q._ Have you secured the handsome model? |
35874 | _ Q._ How is it that a man born in Truro can never be an Irishman? |
35874 | _ Q._ Is he willing to pay anything extra for these additions? |
35874 | _ Q._ What are they? |
35874 | _ Q._ Why is America like the act of reflection? |
35874 | _ Q._ Why is my game cock like a bishop? |
35874 | _ Q._ Why is your pretty cousin like an alabaster vase? |
35874 | _ Second Painter._"Did she say anything about mine?" |
35874 | _ She._"_ Doorknob!_ Whom_ do_ you mean? |
35874 | _ Smith._ Raw day, eh? |
35874 | _ Wife._"What book is it?" |
35874 | did n''t it pay?!!"] |
35874 | how many pupils have you got?" |
35874 | she asked;"not feeling seedy, I hope?" |
38532 | A change? 38532 A past?" |
38532 | About what? |
38532 | Ah, ah,said the big City alderman;"you received my note, in which I announced my visit?" |
38532 | Ah, and who told you all these details? |
38532 | Ah, my dear de Lussac-- no news yet? |
38532 | Ah, why do you choose that one? |
38532 | Always that picture,said Dora to Lorimer;"my head is dazed; why do we not go to supper and put an end to this? |
38532 | Am I? |
38532 | And after six years of marriage you are still in the region of romance? 38532 And our English women, General?" |
38532 | And shall I tell you what I think? 38532 And so you have nothing?" |
38532 | And suppose I insist,said Philip, who was the first to break the silence,"and, what is more, suppose I expect you to do what I wish?" |
38532 | And those? |
38532 | And was the piece produced? |
38532 | And what will you call it? |
38532 | And when she is ugly? |
38532 | And when you are old, who will occupy the other side of the chimney corner? 38532 And,"said Lorimer,"how can a man love or respect a woman who buys him, and degrades him in his own eyes?" |
38532 | Another cup? |
38532 | Are you coming? |
38532 | Are you joking with me? 38532 Are you not rich enough yet? |
38532 | Are you off? |
38532 | Are you pleased with it? |
38532 | Are you speaking seriously? |
38532 | But do I not share all your honours? 38532 But what do you mean, my dear Hobbs?" |
38532 | But what shall I mix? |
38532 | But whose fault is it? |
38532 | But, my dear doctor, the room is too dark; I can not see; is it evening already? |
38532 | But,said Gabrielle,"why is Philip not here?" |
38532 | Come, come,said Dora tenderly,"tell me, have you any troubles, any little worry?" |
38532 | Daddy, daddy, what is the matter? |
38532 | Did she scold you? |
38532 | Did you ring, ma''am? |
38532 | Did you see any more of him after that? |
38532 | Do I look as if I were joking? 38532 Do n''t you think ours is a very romantic life?" |
38532 | Do tell me,Dora said to Lorimer,"who is that woman who puzzles me so? |
38532 | Do you hear, darling? 38532 Do you know half?" |
38532 | Do you think the Commission will soon arrive at a decision? |
38532 | Do you think you have what I want? 38532 Do you wish to see the house, ma''am?" |
38532 | Does he invite that man to his house to dine, and then miss a train, so that they may be thrown together_ en tête- à- tête_ for a whole evening? 38532 Does n''t she look bored, poor woman?" |
38532 | Does wrong become right by multiplication? |
38532 | Dora, for God''s sake, tell me, what does it mean? 38532 Dora, what are you saying? |
38532 | Dora, what has happened? 38532 Dora,"said he,"why keep up this farce any longer? |
38532 | Eva? |
38532 | For Miss Eva? 38532 For me? |
38532 | Framed or unframed? |
38532 | Has he forgotten his promise? 38532 Has your Excellency been long in London?" |
38532 | His shell fell on us like a bomb, eh? 38532 Hobbs, you do n''t happen to know who the people are that are living in our old house, I suppose?" |
38532 | How can a woman love or respect a man who allows himself to be purchased for a title of nobility? |
38532 | How can a woman of her age go about so outrageously uncovered? 38532 How can you say such things? |
38532 | How dare I? |
38532 | How do you find him to- day? |
38532 | How long is this ass going to stay here boring us, I wonder? |
38532 | How shall I ever be able to excuse myself to him? 38532 I allow two; have you a light?" |
38532 | I am so proud you approve of the shell-- then you will have it taken up by the Russian Government? 38532 I should think I did, sir; I clean the rooms, I do the cooking"..."And what about your wages?" |
38532 | If Mr. Lorimer does not come to see you, why do n''t you write and ask him to come? 38532 In the lump? |
38532 | Is he a painter? |
38532 | Is it really you who dare speak to me in that way? |
38532 | Is it true that mama was a little girl first? |
38532 | Is n''t it funny though?--Where is daddy? |
38532 | Is that man gone? |
38532 | Is there a woman with a past in it? |
38532 | Let him be what he likes; what on earth does it matter to me? |
38532 | Let me go; you hurt me,cried Dora, distracted with indignation;"how dare you treat me so?" |
38532 | Look here, Hobbs,said the doctor,"how does Mrs. Grantham manage to get a living here? |
38532 | Mama, are n''t you coming out for a walk with us? |
38532 | Mama, mama, are we not going to be happy any more? |
38532 | Mama, what is the matter? |
38532 | Must I go through with this? |
38532 | My dear Mrs. Grantham-- Mr. Lorimer, how do you do? |
38532 | No milk, I think-- a little rum and some lemon,_ à la Russe_? |
38532 | No, it is true I have not, but what is there that I can say to him? 38532 No,"she said;"what is it?" |
38532 | Now, then, who is that horrible creature painted and dyed, with eyes half out of her head and an eternal sickly smile on her face? |
38532 | Of me? |
38532 | Oh, my dear friend,rejoined Lorimer,"you must not overdo anything, if it comes to that-- you allow a cigarette?" |
38532 | Oh, that is your reason, eh? 38532 Oh, what shall we do with her, Hobbs, if she is so naughty?" |
38532 | Oh, why, ma''am? |
38532 | Once for all, is it possible that you do not see the rôle that your husband is playing? 38532 Once more, what is it you would have me to do?" |
38532 | Out of countenance? 38532 Philip was always a good shot-- he himself was not hurt?" |
38532 | Philip, how can you? 38532 Philip, where are you?" |
38532 | Philip,said she,"what are you thinking of?" |
38532 | Quite a little girl, and then as tall as that-- and that-- and that? |
38532 | Really!--and for how much? |
38532 | Really,replied Mrs. W. G. van der Leyd Smythe,"when was that?" |
38532 | Really? |
38532 | Sabaroff? 38532 Shall I?" |
38532 | She does not know who it is that is living there, of course? |
38532 | Still in love, I see,_ cher ami, hein_? 38532 Tear up this letter? |
38532 | Thanks,said the patron of arts..."I came"..."To arrange for a portrait?" |
38532 | Then we are going to be happier than ever? |
38532 | Then what kind of man shall you marry? |
38532 | Then why do you come here, old fellow? |
38532 | Then you would like to see the studio first, perhaps? |
38532 | They have come again, eh? |
38532 | This General Sabaroff, why is he so often here? 38532 To St. John''s Wood?" |
38532 | To nurse sick people and take care of the poor who are suffering? |
38532 | Very romantic? 38532 Well, and how goes the portrait?" |
38532 | Well, and how much is your rent? |
38532 | Well, doctor,said she,"is it over?" |
38532 | Well, my dear Hobbs, and how are things going by this time? |
38532 | Well, my dear doctor,said Lorimer,"we have had an afternoon''s work, but it has been successful, eh?" |
38532 | Well, then, you had a mama, too, that''s grandma, is n''t it? 38532 Well, what is it?" |
38532 | Well, what''s your news? |
38532 | Well? |
38532 | What did he say? |
38532 | What did you do? |
38532 | What do you mean to say? 38532 What do you mean?" |
38532 | What do you mean? |
38532 | What do you think of my new acquaintances? |
38532 | What do you want me to do? |
38532 | What does he say about her? |
38532 | What famous picture? |
38532 | What have you discovered, dear friend? |
38532 | What is my little wife thinking of so deeply that she does not notice the sound of her husband''s footsteps? |
38532 | What is this? |
38532 | What is your definition of happiness? |
38532 | What letter is that? |
38532 | What will be my thanks? 38532 When do you wish to take possession, madam?" |
38532 | When you were seventeen? |
38532 | Where has he been? |
38532 | Where have you been and where have you come from? |
38532 | Where in the name of fortune have I put my manuscript? |
38532 | Where is Philip? 38532 Where is he?" |
38532 | Where? 38532 Who is gone?" |
38532 | Why do I look at you? |
38532 | Why do I look at you? |
38532 | Why do you say that? |
38532 | Why more? 38532 Why move? |
38532 | Why not? |
38532 | Why then, why do n''t you? |
38532 | Why, old fellow, what on earth is the matter with you? |
38532 | Why? |
38532 | Will your Excellency offer your arm to my wife? |
38532 | Yes, but at what cost? 38532 Yes, is n''t he? |
38532 | Yes,said Philip,"and how we made the dinner shorter, so as to be able to afford the price of two seats in that upper circle?" |
38532 | Yes; who sends them? |
38532 | You are not offended with me? |
38532 | You do n''t say so,said Lorimer, amazed;"an old uncle about to depart this life?" |
38532 | You want me to ask that man to come and see me as a friend, after what I have told you? |
38532 | You wonder how I dare? 38532 _ Hein!_ Georges, do n''t you think I knock''em with my songs?" |
38532 | Again, what does it all mean? |
38532 | And after that?" |
38532 | And how I cooked all the meals, and how you never enjoyed them better? |
38532 | And this is my reward? |
38532 | And what is yours?" |
38532 | And why should n''t I? |
38532 | And why? |
38532 | And yet, why do I say_ will kill her_, when it is just this living souvenir that keeps her alive-- that will keep her alive, perhaps? |
38532 | And, by the way, do you know that you have made over a thousand pounds this year, and that we have kept very nearly half of it? |
38532 | And, remarking that Dora had brought in a handful of pansies, he added--"More pansies?" |
38532 | Are the flowers for Philip or for me? |
38532 | Are you fond of storms yourself?" |
38532 | Are you glad?" |
38532 | Are you indeed so blind? |
38532 | Are you satisfied, or shall I call him back to offer him the rest?" |
38532 | As for this portrait, I''ll throw it in the fire or pitch it out of the window, do you hear?" |
38532 | Besides, had she not in firm clear tones given her promise to love, honour, and obey him? |
38532 | Besides, where is it now, that beautiful house where I was brought up? |
38532 | But ca n''t you see I loathe the life I lead? |
38532 | But he? |
38532 | But where can daddy be? |
38532 | But why do you stare so, Hobbs? |
38532 | But, what if he should not have forgotten her, if he still loves her? |
38532 | Ca n''t you see, man, I''m in such a fever of impatience, that I ca n''t hold a brush, my hand is trembling so? |
38532 | Can you conceive such a thing? |
38532 | Can you suggest something?" |
38532 | Did you ask her here to- night?" |
38532 | Did you ever hear such cheek? |
38532 | Do you believe me when I tell you that I felt as if I recognised some of our own dining- room furniture through the window? |
38532 | Do you know that by obstinately refusing to listen to reason, a woman cuts herself off from friendly sympathy? |
38532 | Do you know what she did once? |
38532 | Do you remember, for instance, how we enjoyed the play when, once a month, obscure, unknown to everybody, we went to the upper circle? |
38532 | Do you remember-- ah, I do!--how for many weeks you put away ten shillings a week so as to be able to buy it for me on my birthday? |
38532 | Do you see this little ring?" |
38532 | Do you think it is only men who feel? |
38532 | Does he miss the train when he knows that his wife will be alone with that man for a whole evening? |
38532 | Does one offer rich wine to a weary traveller, and, when he has taken but one sip from the cup, dash it from his lips and bid him begone? |
38532 | Dora went pale; she put the packet aside, and was going to tear up the letter when Lorimer interrupted--"What are you going to do?" |
38532 | Dora will be down in a minute... only, dear boy, do not mention the shell, will you? |
38532 | Dora, what have you to say in reply?" |
38532 | Everyone has his fads here on earth, has he not? |
38532 | First of all, what do you mean by all his obligations towards his wife? |
38532 | For me? |
38532 | Grantham?" |
38532 | Had there been a romance in his life, before she had known him? |
38532 | Have n''t I already told you how glad I was that you came in time to sit down with us? |
38532 | Have we not musicians by the score, who have had to resort to Italian_ noms de guerre_, to get a hearing in this country? |
38532 | Have you a new piece on hand? |
38532 | Have you answered his letters?" |
38532 | He never explained all that to you? |
38532 | How can one be silent and make music?" |
38532 | How can you turn a cold face to such a husband as yours for such a man as this?" |
38532 | How could I be happier than I am?" |
38532 | How do you mean?" |
38532 | How does she keep you and herself? |
38532 | How many men have succeeded in keeping on virtue''s path altogether? |
38532 | I am fairly satisfied with it,"said Philip;"it is like her, is it not? |
38532 | I missed the nine o''clock train and there was an accident... but what is the use of trying to explain anything to you in your present state? |
38532 | I never can remember names-- what is his name again?" |
38532 | I suppose you still have the spare thirty- six by fifty to fill up, eh?" |
38532 | If I am not right, what is the meaning of all this that I see around us?" |
38532 | If we have not the income to keep a house like this, why do we live in it? |
38532 | Is it an accident... or a diabolical plot? |
38532 | Is it not droll? |
38532 | Is n''t it enough for a woman to know that she is loved, by the substantial proofs of affection that are given her?" |
38532 | Is she worse?" |
38532 | Is that kind of thing a natural consequence of the complete absorption?" |
38532 | Is that your absorption, too? |
38532 | It makes me so miserable to see what is going on in this house-- tell me, what does it all mean? |
38532 | Just fancy?" |
38532 | Just to please me, would you mind taking this palette and these brushes, and seating yourself in front of that easel?" |
38532 | Look at me well,"he said, seizing her arm;"do I look like a man who can be so lightly played with?" |
38532 | Look here, I have a little business in the neighbourhood, my time is my own; may I come at four o''clock to ask you for a cup of tea?" |
38532 | Mr. Lorimer is gone, I suppose?" |
38532 | No, I have drunk the bitter draught, I have gone through the mire of degradation; and now, is the nightmare ended? |
38532 | Now, do n''t you think I''m right?" |
38532 | Now, do you know the holiday of my life that I shall never forget?" |
38532 | Now, had you not?" |
38532 | Now, what have you got that would fill them?" |
38532 | Now, what is the matter?" |
38532 | Now, what is your definition of happiness?" |
38532 | Now, why? |
38532 | Of whom had they been speaking? |
38532 | Oh, Gerald, do look at that imposing- looking matron; who is she?" |
38532 | Oh, I see, you work too?" |
38532 | Oh, you wo n''t let him do it, you wo n''t, will you? |
38532 | On my fingers? |
38532 | Or does he, too, believe that he was encouraged by me? |
38532 | Perhaps I am a little puritanical; but what can you expect? |
38532 | Perhaps I should have told you this before, but when I have been on the point of doing so, I always said to myself,''What is the use?'' |
38532 | Philip was probably seeking to solve this problem: How can I make eight thousand pounds a year with a capital of hardly forty thousand pounds? |
38532 | Philip, if it should be so, you wo n''t throw me into the society of this man, will you? |
38532 | Professions, which ninety- nine times out of a hundred bring in little besides disappointments, disillusions, a miserable pittance, and often despair? |
38532 | Shall I introduce her to you?" |
38532 | Shall I sign? |
38532 | Some pictures that you have finished lately? |
38532 | Speak, speak, what is it?" |
38532 | Taking her hands in his own, he said--"Well, darling, how do you feel? |
38532 | The General is gone, of course?" |
38532 | The General is interested in my shell-- I am convinced that Russia will offer me a fortune for it; but why do you look at me in that way?" |
38532 | The very air chokes me-- where is Philip now? |
38532 | Their past life had been an unbroken chain of happy days; what did the future hold in store? |
38532 | Then she would resume:"Eva? |
38532 | Then, looking at Dora, who seemed agitated, he added--"What do you mean?" |
38532 | There is nothing here, is there? |
38532 | To- day he is the Russian Minister of War-- it is quite possible, even probable; but then? |
38532 | Two people supposed to be sensible, billing and cooing over a package of old flowers, after being married, let me see-- how long?" |
38532 | Upon this a servant came rapidly downstairs, and Philip stopped him in the hall to ask--"Where are you going?" |
38532 | Was Dora completely mad, or was this some marvellous and mysterious metamorphosis? |
38532 | Was it any wonder that I went half mad and ran into all kind of excesses? |
38532 | Was n''t it lovely? |
38532 | Was she pretty, like you?" |
38532 | Was there ever such a goosikins?" |
38532 | We have an idea in our heads, and you shall help us by and by to put it into execution; so, for the present, not one word, you hear?" |
38532 | Well, did n''t we do it after all? |
38532 | Well, what then? |
38532 | Well?" |
38532 | What can it be all about?" |
38532 | What could have happened since? |
38532 | What could it possibly be? |
38532 | What did the time of day matter to her now? |
38532 | What do you say to the offer?" |
38532 | What do you think I am made of? |
38532 | What has become of those happy days when we loved each other so much, and when you thought only of your art? |
38532 | What has been happening here to put you in such a state?" |
38532 | What has happened that he is not here? |
38532 | What if it be the Colonel Sabaroff that I met eight years ago at Monte Carlo? |
38532 | What is he doing? |
38532 | What is she doing? |
38532 | What is that frantic applause for?... |
38532 | What is the matter? |
38532 | What is to be my reward?" |
38532 | What more can I wish for? |
38532 | What more do you ask?" |
38532 | What to do? |
38532 | What was it? |
38532 | When I am in the bill at_ Les ambassadeurs_, the place is always full of English-- my songs are_ canaille_, are n''t they? |
38532 | When I said just now,''What''s your news?'' |
38532 | Where is my share? |
38532 | Where is the danger? |
38532 | Where is the father who would advise his son to work at art, music, or literature for a livelihood? |
38532 | Where is the head of the family who would not dread for his sons these often illiberal professions? |
38532 | Who sent it? |
38532 | Why did they refuse my shell? |
38532 | Why do you call your husband? |
38532 | Why do you look at me in that strange fashion?" |
38532 | Why do you look at me like that?" |
38532 | Why had Philip mentioned the story of the pansies to Monsieur de Lussac? |
38532 | Why had Philip shown him the packet? |
38532 | Why should I?" |
38532 | Why should she not conquer her antipathy for him and make use of a little diplomacy to render me a service? |
38532 | Why should we live beyond our means? |
38532 | Will you allow a bachelor, an intimate friend of your husband''s, to congratulate you with all his heart? |
38532 | Will you listen a few moments?" |
38532 | Will you, please, go up at once, ma''am?" |
38532 | Would she sell the canvas? |
38532 | Would they take right or left? |
38532 | Would you believe it? |
38532 | Yes, that is the point things have come to; now, do you hear what I say? |
38532 | You are not going to remain here and let me go without you, surely?" |
38532 | You understand, do n''t you? |
38532 | You will help me, wo n''t you?" |
38532 | You wo n''t ask me to make him welcome here?" |
38532 | Your husband is an artist, I suppose, ma''am?" |
38532 | am I mad? |
38532 | are n''t you glad you''re not a little girl any longer?" |
38532 | exclaimed Philip, his eyes shining with joy--"shall I be rich? |
38532 | he cried,"what have I done? |
38532 | open the letter for me, will you?" |
38532 | said Dora, startled,"and what happened then?" |
38532 | said Dora,"and do you also remember how you were once turned out of the kitchen for kissing the cook? |
38532 | said Dora;"have I slept a long while? |
38532 | said de Lussac;"is it the price of laxity hidden in the emblem of chastity? |
38532 | she said;"gone?" |
38532 | was it of her? |
38532 | what did you say?" |
38532 | what matters it? |
38532 | what now? |
38532 | what''s this?" |
38532 | where are we going?" |
18445 | A blonde? 18445 A pretty question-- what is her name?" |
18445 | A rope dancer? |
18445 | Ah, but where does this animal come from? |
18445 | Ah, naughty girl,said the artist, sadly tapping his hand lightly on his mistress''breast,"what have you got inside here?" |
18445 | Ai n''t he too good? |
18445 | All the same,said Sidonie,"what does she want with Seraphin when she is in love with Marcel? |
18445 | Allow me,rejoined Schaunard, thrusting his plate under his nose,"what part do you call that?" |
18445 | An important one? |
18445 | And does he know your present situation? |
18445 | And madame? |
18445 | And my chapter on ventilators? |
18445 | And my wages? |
18445 | And my word, then? |
18445 | And that,added Schaunard, pointing to the star- adorned petticoat that was lying on a chair,"it is not an adornment of mine, perhaps? |
18445 | And that? |
18445 | And the coin? |
18445 | And the lover of whom she is so fond? |
18445 | And the rent? |
18445 | And then? |
18445 | And these? |
18445 | And what do you think of that modest leg of salt marsh mutton? |
18445 | And what is his road in literature? |
18445 | And who is this new idol? 18445 And you,"asked Marcel,"do you still love him?" |
18445 | And,asked Mimi,"what did he do on leaving the room we had occupied, what did he say on abandoning the room in which he had loved me so?" |
18445 | Anything there? |
18445 | Are they Monsieur Rodolphe''s too? |
18445 | Are you a pupil of Vernet''s? |
18445 | Are you angry, Rodolphe, that I have come here? |
18445 | Are you coming to bed? |
18445 | Are you crazy? |
18445 | Are you going out so? |
18445 | Are you really a Turk? |
18445 | Away, what would you with me? |
18445 | But are you sure that the gentleman can make very melancholy verses? |
18445 | But how did you get into such a state in so short a time? |
18445 | But look, will you? |
18445 | But otherwise,said Colline,"literature apart, what is your opinion of him?" |
18445 | But since when? |
18445 | But the bird, the bird? |
18445 | But what for? |
18445 | But what have you been doing since I wrote to you? |
18445 | But what means--"But I assure you--"Oh, what can be this mystery? |
18445 | But what proves that you are in love with one another? 18445 But what would you think of me if I let you go, knowing where you are going to? |
18445 | But where shall we go? |
18445 | But whither? |
18445 | But why do you want money? |
18445 | But why not at once? |
18445 | But why wo n''t you come in? |
18445 | But will you come back? |
18445 | But you yourself,said Marcel,"whence came you on the wings of this four- wheeler?" |
18445 | But your furniture? |
18445 | But,added Marcel and Rodolphe together,"where do you hope to draw this amount of capital from?" |
18445 | But,asked Barbemuche,"for what reasons could they refuse to admit me among them?" |
18445 | But,resumed Schaunard, whose voice betrayed a commencement of alarm,"do you hear that?" |
18445 | But,said Marcel, going up to his friend,"are you quite sure, certain sure, that we have no money left anywhere hereabout? |
18445 | But,said Marcel,"if you move, shall you take your furniture with you?" |
18445 | Buy what? |
18445 | By the way, Monsieur Marcel, you do not know why I have called on you? |
18445 | By the way,asked Marcel,"what did you want?" |
18445 | Can a man want three hats when he had but one head? |
18445 | Can he be sending already to ask for his money again? |
18445 | Can not you tail on to your analysis a little, or rather a long criticism of the piece, eh? |
18445 | Can there be no more? 18445 Can you ask? |
18445 | Candidly now,said Musette to Marcel,"where were you going just now?" |
18445 | Come, are you coming Schaunard? |
18445 | Did he treat you well? |
18445 | Did you see? |
18445 | Do I love him? |
18445 | Do I remember? |
18445 | Do you accept this serious offer? |
18445 | Do you know what I should like, Monsieur Rodolphe? 18445 Do you live far off?" |
18445 | Do you make it a cabinet question? |
18445 | Do you mind going there, Schaunard? 18445 Do you really think that I put myself out about him?" |
18445 | Do you remember last year''s? |
18445 | Do you think I care for public opinion? 18445 Do you want to know my opinion? |
18445 | Do you want to lock yourself in? |
18445 | Do your remember_ Romeo and Juliet_? |
18445 | Does that shock custom? |
18445 | Eh? 18445 Eh? |
18445 | Excuse me, one more question,said the landlord,"What is your profession?" |
18445 | Excuse me, sir,continued the landlord, with a bow to the young man now left alone with him,"to whom have I the honour of speaking?" |
18445 | Find what? |
18445 | Five hundred, half a thousand; did you never see one before? |
18445 | For sure? |
18445 | For the sake of art? |
18445 | For what? |
18445 | For what? |
18445 | For whom? |
18445 | Furnished lodging? |
18445 | Good fellow,repeated Marcel,"is not that a term of ridicule?" |
18445 | Good heavens, what am I about? 18445 Good, but why defend yourself? |
18445 | Guillotine who? 18445 Happy,"replied Lazare,"what do you call happy? |
18445 | Has anything happened which will oblige us to put it off? |
18445 | Have I not a right,asked the Englishman,"to bathe in my rooms?" |
18445 | Have I read him? 18445 Have you been playing tricks on the viscount, then?" |
18445 | Have you change for five hundred francs? |
18445 | Have you got a bell in your pocket, for it to jingle as loud as that? |
18445 | Have you lost your senses? |
18445 | Have you often found such accommodating people as myself? |
18445 | Have you thought of what I told you this morning? 18445 He is grieving, that is certain, but what am I to do? |
18445 | He shall not have any coffee, eh, madame? |
18445 | How are you all? |
18445 | How can they refuse it, without all the vermilion of my Red Sea mounting to their cheeks, and covering them with the blush of shame? |
18445 | How did it come there? |
18445 | How do I know? |
18445 | How do you wish to have your portrait taken? |
18445 | How is that? |
18445 | How is this? |
18445 | How large do you wish it to be? |
18445 | How long has it been the fashion to breakfast two days running? |
18445 | How long is it since I have heard the story of the Battle of Studzianka? |
18445 | How much did you make out of your last benefit? |
18445 | How much will it be? |
18445 | How so? |
18445 | How? 18445 How? |
18445 | Humph-- and you, do you still love him? |
18445 | I am an artist,she replied, then added,"My dear sir and neighbor, will you do me the honor to dine and spend the evening with me?" |
18445 | I imprison my liberty in the bonds of matrimony? 18445 I say,"said Rodolphe,"what are you driving at? |
18445 | If it is so completely finished,said Marcel, who had read through Rodolphe''s verses,"why do you write verses about her?" |
18445 | If it were Musette who had returned, what would you do? |
18445 | If she is so fond of him, what is the use of Seraphin, almost a lad, and who had never had a mistress? |
18445 | If we looked under the furniture, in the stuffing of the arm chairs? 18445 If we were to liquify the explanation?" |
18445 | In print? |
18445 | Is it a respectable place? |
18445 | Is it not a miracle? |
18445 | Is my room ready? |
18445 | Is n''t it Paul and Virginia? |
18445 | Is she pretty? |
18445 | Is she pretty? |
18445 | Is that the manuscript of your work? |
18445 | Is this Monsieur Bernard''s? |
18445 | Is your tenant not going to make room for me soon? |
18445 | It is general pay- day then? |
18445 | It is like that that you passed the night? |
18445 | It is possible,said Mimi,"he was so worn out by the night before, but the next day?" |
18445 | It is very fine,said Colline,"but could you also explain to me the mysteries of this splendid outer covering that rendered you unrecognizable? |
18445 | Money down? |
18445 | Monsieur Schaunard? |
18445 | Most willingly, but how? 18445 Mourning?" |
18445 | Murat, who used to work in a cellar, eh? 18445 My dear Monsieur Marcel,"said she,"are you a true knight?" |
18445 | No matter, how many lines do your opinions fill? |
18445 | On what terms are you? |
18445 | Poor Musette, she was very pretty though, and she loved me dearly, is it not so, little bouquet? 18445 Really and truly?" |
18445 | Really,said the poet,"are you in love again already?" |
18445 | Seen whom? |
18445 | Shall we work tonight? |
18445 | Thanks, we do not take the same size, only you would greatly oblige me by the loan of--"Twenty nine sous to buy a pair? 18445 Then will you deprive me of the pleasure of being agreeable to you?" |
18445 | Then,observed Rodolphe,"this gentleman is quite right, and we are in his place?" |
18445 | Then,said Marcel uneasily,"you still mean to move?" |
18445 | Think I do n''t know it? |
18445 | To go to the masked ball? |
18445 | To kill Tybalt with? |
18445 | Wages? 18445 We will open to him the vistas of literature; but do you think he will consent?" |
18445 | Well then,said the philosopher pointing to the rope ladder,"what is that?" |
18445 | Well what else have I been saying for an hour past? |
18445 | Well, afterwards? |
18445 | Well, are you satisfied now? |
18445 | Well, have you got a hundred francs to lend me? |
18445 | Well, my dear Louise, when and where shall I see you again? |
18445 | Well, philosopher,said the latter,"what do you think of this?" |
18445 | Well, to put a case-- you understand? |
18445 | Well, what more? |
18445 | Well, what of it? |
18445 | Well, what then? |
18445 | Well,asked Marcel of the girl when they were alone together,"what took place last night?" |
18445 | Well,asked Marcel,"did you succeed?" |
18445 | Well,quoth the delegate,"when do we begin? |
18445 | Well,said Juliet,"this is the moment to go into the balcony and bid one another despairing farewells-- what do you think of it?" |
18445 | Well? |
18445 | Well? |
18445 | Well? |
18445 | Well? |
18445 | Well? |
18445 | Were you at the Odeon Theater last night? |
18445 | What are his hopes? |
18445 | What are those? |
18445 | What are you doing here? |
18445 | What are you driving at? |
18445 | What are you driving at? |
18445 | What are you up to? |
18445 | What are you up to? |
18445 | What are you waiting for? |
18445 | What did he say? 18445 What do I mean to do?" |
18445 | What do I owe you? |
18445 | What do you mean to do with that garden? |
18445 | What do you mean? |
18445 | What do you mean? |
18445 | What do you mean? |
18445 | What do you mean? |
18445 | What do you think of my first chapter? |
18445 | What do you want to do? |
18445 | What do you want, Durand? |
18445 | What do you want, gentlemen? |
18445 | What do you want? 18445 What does he mean by his Venetian glass?" |
18445 | What does that matter to me? 18445 What has become of you?" |
18445 | What have you been drinking? |
18445 | What is he harping about Thursday? |
18445 | What is he playing off his politeness on me for? |
18445 | What is his condition in the world? 18445 What is his profession?" |
18445 | What is it? |
18445 | What is it? |
18445 | What is the matter with you? |
18445 | What is the matter? |
18445 | What is the matter? |
18445 | What is the matter? |
18445 | What is the matter? |
18445 | What is the matter? |
18445 | What is the matter? |
18445 | What is the matter? |
18445 | What is the matter? |
18445 | What is the social position of your principal? |
18445 | What is to be done then? |
18445 | What is to be done? 18445 What matters the autumn leaves?" |
18445 | What shall we do with it? |
18445 | What shall we have? |
18445 | What sort of man is Alexis? |
18445 | What the deuce are you doing here? |
18445 | What the deuce brings you here and at this time of night? |
18445 | What the deuce have we been up to? |
18445 | What would you have? |
18445 | What would you? |
18445 | What''s the document? |
18445 | What''s the matter with you? |
18445 | What, did you not know? 18445 What, do you think of going?" |
18445 | What, you are not yet thirty, and are already thinking of doing your Russia? |
18445 | What,replied the dresser,"you do not know? |
18445 | What,said he,"is it St. Cupid''s Day and can not I take a step without running up against people in love? |
18445 | What? 18445 What?" |
18445 | What? |
18445 | What? |
18445 | What? |
18445 | What? |
18445 | Where are you going so late in this region? |
18445 | Where are you going, sir? |
18445 | Where are you going? |
18445 | Where could I go to? |
18445 | Where did you find the money? |
18445 | Where is Musette? |
18445 | Where is young Seraphin? |
18445 | Where shall we dine today? |
18445 | Where the deuce has all the money gone? |
18445 | Which is better; to allow oneself always to be deceived through believing, or never to believe for fear of always being deceived? |
18445 | Who else would have seen it? 18445 Who is Laura?" |
18445 | Who is that gentleman? |
18445 | Who is the victim? |
18445 | Who is there? |
18445 | Who is this Ali Baba? |
18445 | Who knows? |
18445 | Who the deuce can it be at this time of night? |
18445 | Whom is this piece by? |
18445 | Why be in such a hurry? 18445 Why did n''t you tell me before? |
18445 | Why did you not come sooner? |
18445 | Why do n''t you borrow the sum of the lady herself? |
18445 | Why do n''t you go and tell her yourself? |
18445 | Why not? |
18445 | Why so? |
18445 | Why so? |
18445 | Why, why should you go? 18445 Why?" |
18445 | Why? |
18445 | Why? |
18445 | Why? |
18445 | Why? |
18445 | Why? |
18445 | Will she stay there? |
18445 | Will there be any ladies? |
18445 | Will there be some women? |
18445 | Will those scoundrels never be quiet? |
18445 | Will you allow me to call on you? |
18445 | Will you be so good as to tell me what you think of the love scene? |
18445 | With Rodolphe? |
18445 | With whom and with what? |
18445 | Wo n''t the fire light? |
18445 | Wo n''t you say good night? |
18445 | Would it be impolite, Monsieur Schaunard, to inquire your new address? |
18445 | Would not you like to keep Christmas Eve? |
18445 | Would you believe it,said the uncle,"that I have been forced to borrow money from my shopman to meet a bill?" |
18445 | Would you like me to come with you a bit? |
18445 | Yes, by the way,said the porter,"whom do you want?" |
18445 | Yes,said Marcel,"what does he play on?" |
18445 | You are no longer a viscountess, then? |
18445 | You are sure? |
18445 | You are the household, are you not? |
18445 | You are working-- verses? |
18445 | You do n''t know anyone who would do that for me cheap? 18445 You got Marcel''s letter all right?" |
18445 | You have no gloves, shall I lend you mine? |
18445 | You have seen the new piece, then? |
18445 | You know the gentleman? |
18445 | You think so? |
18445 | You understand music? |
18445 | You were saying that business was not flourishing? |
18445 | You will not refuse another glass? |
18445 | _What are those sundries?" |
18445 | ''"_"What did we buy that was useful? |
18445 | ''To be or not to be?'' |
18445 | ''What matter the bottle, so long as we draw intoxication from it?''" |
18445 | ''Why do you want to take that off?'' |
18445 | ***** One evening, when she was humming in a low tone to herself, Vicomte Paul said to Mimi,"What are you singing, dear?" |
18445 | A poor pun, eh? |
18445 | Again, I ask, was I not right in my prophecies; and would you believe me now, if I tell you that you will not stop at this? |
18445 | Am I asking you for money?" |
18445 | Am I not soon going to be in possession of my lodging? |
18445 | Am I to believe the rumors that are current, and that this misfortune has broken down to such a degree your robust philosophy? |
18445 | And are not the independence, the freedom of mannerism of which we boast so loudly, very mediocre advantages? |
18445 | And he added carelessly,"Do we breakfast today?" |
18445 | And how could he repulse her, this charming creature who came to him armed with all the seductions of a beauty at its dawn? |
18445 | And the chapter on stoves-- where are you in that?" |
18445 | And then for whose sake was she false to him? |
18445 | And these, again,"he continued, recognizing his slippers on Marcel''s feet,"are not those my papouches, the gift of a beloved hand? |
18445 | And what is his name?" |
18445 | And you, Marcel?" |
18445 | And you,"he continued, laughing,"would you like to be sixty?" |
18445 | And you?" |
18445 | Another head? |
18445 | Are we not all here?" |
18445 | Are you ready?" |
18445 | Are you really a good one?" |
18445 | At the conclusion of the second chapter, the poet interrupted his host:"Do n''t you feel your throat a little dry?" |
18445 | Besides, was not Mimi clever enough to prove to him at need that he was mistaken? |
18445 | But in that case why is he not black?" |
18445 | But what then?" |
18445 | Can not you still be my friend, because you have been something else? |
18445 | Can you not also satisfy the void of my heart, which has been so long empty?" |
18445 | Come, now, how shall I manage to accord it? |
18445 | Did Carolus make you pay?" |
18445 | Did I hire a room here and pay you a deposit to bind the bargain? |
18445 | Did he speak to you about me?" |
18445 | Did she transmit it to you?" |
18445 | Do we not owe passive obedience to these ladies? |
18445 | Do you forget that this is the twentieth, and at this time of the month their wardrobe is up to the very top of the spout?" |
18445 | Do you keep a dancer?" |
18445 | Do you presume to speak to me with your cap on?" |
18445 | Do you remember, young lady, you who now walk hand- in- hand, and who, up to two days back, had never seen one another? |
18445 | Do you think I am carrying away my furniture in a handkerchief?" |
18445 | Do you think it is really true that he no longer loves me at all?" |
18445 | Do you understand?" |
18445 | Do you understand?" |
18445 | Does Allah lend your plans no helping hand? |
18445 | Does not that prove that she loved me better than you?" |
18445 | Eh?" |
18445 | Every stroke diffused itself through the room in mocking sounds which seemed to say to the unlucky Schaunard,"Are you ready?" |
18445 | Fancy, he wanted to make me learn orthography; what the deuce should I have done with it? |
18445 | Follow my idea?" |
18445 | For a moment I really thought that he was going to die in my arms, or that, at least, he would go mad, as he almost did once before, you remember? |
18445 | For after all, what is the use of all your papers that no one can understand? |
18445 | For, after all, is it a life we lead? |
18445 | Four square meals of my childhood, what has become of you?" |
18445 | Had this philosophical article burst upon the gaze of astonished Europe? |
18445 | Hang it; what am I to do?" |
18445 | Have you brought me any money?" |
18445 | Have you read Shakespeare?" |
18445 | Have you really got something to do?" |
18445 | How can you call a passion, which brings a man to the condition in which Jacques is at this moment, happiness? |
18445 | How is she? |
18445 | How is this chasm to be filled?" |
18445 | How many pages like that are wanted for the skirt?" |
18445 | How much do I owe, Adele?" |
18445 | How much does your friendship for me amount to?" |
18445 | How refuse his hand to this little white one, delicately veined with blue, that was held out to him full of caresses? |
18445 | How say,"Get you gone,"to these eighteen years, the presence of which already filled the home with a perfume of youth and gaiety? |
18445 | How shall I fill up these twelve eternities?" |
18445 | I am at the town hall, am I not? |
18445 | I am the father of a family, am I not? |
18445 | I go to the cafe for a game at dominoes? |
18445 | If he had suffered deeply on account of her, was not this suffering the expiation of the immense joys she had bestowed upon him? |
18445 | In gold?" |
18445 | Indeed, what will happen if we continue this monotonous and idle vagabondage? |
18445 | Is a palace not sufficient security for the rent of a garret?" |
18445 | Is it long since you saw him, Marcel and is it true that he is much altered?" |
18445 | Is that good style?" |
18445 | Is there anyone who wants to be buried?" |
18445 | Is there anything new in the world except virtue?" |
18445 | Is there no other place in the vicinity where you could step in without being hindered by any mathematical difficulties?" |
18445 | Is there not anything else saleable here? |
18445 | Is there nothing sacred for you, atheist that you are?" |
18445 | Is this the eighth of April? |
18445 | Jacques rose, and said, looking fixedly at him,"it is over, is it not-- there is no longer any hope?" |
18445 | Like a personage in a tragedy, he ejaculated:"Can I believe my eyes?" |
18445 | Little white hands with the blue veins, little white hands to whom I had affianced my lips, have you too received my last kiss?" |
18445 | Mademoiselle Marie, so you are no longer in mourning?" |
18445 | Monsieur Schaunard,"cried he, blocking up the artist''s way,"do n''t you remember that this is the eighth of April?" |
18445 | Monsieur Schaunard?" |
18445 | Musette read a challenge in this sentence, and quickly replied,"And it will not perhaps be the last, eh?" |
18445 | Now do you see it?" |
18445 | On seeing her master in such a state, she set up a shriek, and asked,"what are they doing to him?" |
18445 | On the other hand, by wearing this veil up, it was it that risked escaping notice, and in that case, what was the good of having it? |
18445 | Play the traitor to whom?" |
18445 | Pretty brown curly head that has slept so long on this spot, will you never come back to sleep here again? |
18445 | Rodolphe saw him coming, and at once recognized him; as indeed, who would not who had once seen him? |
18445 | Rodolphe waiting for a cab? |
18445 | She only asked one thing-- whether he kissed her hands as often as he used to kiss her own? |
18445 | Speak sir,"she continued, raising her head towards the young man,"what do you wish?" |
18445 | Suppose we went into the country on the Boulevards?" |
18445 | That calm, that tranquillity which he had hoped for on separating from his mistress, had he found them again after her departure? |
18445 | That is what we all are-- monstrous egoists-- who love love for love''s sake-- you understand me? |
18445 | That makes altogether---?" |
18445 | Then Musette would look at him laughingly, and say--"What would you have, my dear fellow? |
18445 | To the Grand Turk? |
18445 | True liberty consists of being able to dispense with the aid of others, and to exist by oneself, and have we got to that? |
18445 | Volumes of poetry with a portrait of the author in spectacles? |
18445 | Was it not the ordinary vengeance of human fate which forbids absolute happiness as an impiety? |
18445 | Was my love killed on learning that Mimi was to die?" |
18445 | We shall be ready, shall we not, ladies?" |
18445 | We were like some wretched copy of a masterpiece? |
18445 | Well, and the muff? |
18445 | Were not the Bourbons right to guillotine him, since he had played the traitor?" |
18445 | What a blow it must have been to his heart no longer to find me there on coming home, eh?" |
18445 | What am I to wear?" |
18445 | What are the police about?" |
18445 | What books are they? |
18445 | What can it have been?" |
18445 | What cataclysm had then taken place in his existence? |
18445 | What could I be thinking of? |
18445 | What did he do with them?" |
18445 | What did you want a glass for? |
18445 | What do I see? |
18445 | What do you do with so much money? |
18445 | What do you mean by this and that? |
18445 | What do you say to my project, philosopher?" |
18445 | What do you sleep on?" |
18445 | What do you think about it, philosopher?" |
18445 | What do you think of this one, eh? |
18445 | What does he live on, and where does he live? |
18445 | What for?" |
18445 | What has given me the pleasure of this visit?" |
18445 | What has happened to us?" |
18445 | What is all that to me? |
18445 | What is he doing? |
18445 | What is it?" |
18445 | What is there to be wondered at in that?" |
18445 | What is there to prove that you were not waiting for her?" |
18445 | What must she think of my absence? |
18445 | What they call a cataclysm-- you understand?" |
18445 | What times we had up there; do you remember? |
18445 | What will become of you? |
18445 | What will madame say?" |
18445 | What will my life be like within these four walls?" |
18445 | What would you have done in my place?" |
18445 | What would you have, reader? |
18445 | What, indeed, had he gained by their rupture? |
18445 | What, it is the 15th of April? |
18445 | When did you see her last?" |
18445 | When the dresser returned he took him by the hand and said these words:"My friend, suppose that the letter I wrote to you a week ago was true?" |
18445 | Where am I to find them? |
18445 | Where and when did you make her acquaintance?" |
18445 | Where are you going to dine this evening?" |
18445 | Where are you going?" |
18445 | Where do you suppose it could come from?" |
18445 | Where is it?" |
18445 | Who are you?" |
18445 | Who can affirm that intelligence absolutely ends where insensibility begins? |
18445 | Who can say that the passions fade away and die exactly at the last beat of the heart which they have agitated? |
18445 | Who can tell? |
18445 | Who''s to pay for it?" |
18445 | Why and wherefore this lecture?" |
18445 | Why sits this pallor on your noble brow? |
18445 | Will you allow me to offer you some box tickets? |
18445 | Will you allow me to seize the present one?" |
18445 | Will you be good enough, sir, to help me to look for it? |
18445 | Will you come with me? |
18445 | Will you dissect it?" |
18445 | Will you order the dinner?" |
18445 | Will you stay to dinner?" |
18445 | Will you take the trouble to come downstairs?" |
18445 | Wo n''t it be fun?" |
18445 | Yes or no?" |
18445 | You are going?" |
18445 | You can, can you not? |
18445 | You have become rich, then?" |
18445 | You have not seen her again?" |
18445 | You know the tall fellow who laughs in my face when I take him his bill?" |
18445 | You must have gone round by the Pyrenees?" |
18445 | You understand astronomy?" |
18445 | _ Another Reader_: And Mademoiselle Francine, where about is she, then? |
18445 | asked the artist,"can not you guess? |
18445 | cried the stranger,"what do I see? |
18445 | cried the widow,"do they talk about him in the papers? |
18445 | exclaimed Colline,"what did he take my greatcoat for?" |
18445 | exclaimed Musette,"why should you say that to me? |
18445 | exclaimed Phemie, dazzled on seeing her lover so elegantly got up,"where did you find that jacket?" |
18445 | exclaimed Rodolphe,"who has blown the candle out?" |
18445 | exclaimed the porter on seeing his former tenant,"Monsieur Schaunard, how did you come here?" |
18445 | it''s you, is it?" |
18445 | my friend Rodolphe, what has happened to change you thus? |
18445 | quoth Schaunard,"have you any more sauce there?" |
18445 | said Colline in a tone of raillery,"what can one be waiting for when one is twenty, when there are stars in the sky and songs in the air?" |
18445 | said Colline, and he began to recite:"Wilt thou begone? |
18445 | said Rodolphe uneasy,"you are going to wear''Methuselah''?" |
18445 | said Rodolphe,"do n''t you hear? |
18445 | said Rodolphe,"who is this animated sonnet loitering here? |
18445 | said Rodolphe,"you are going into society in a colored shirt?" |
18445 | said he to himself when he got into the street,"what shall I do? |
18445 | said the other, and she added,"and you, is your benefit soon coming on?" |
18445 | shouted Rodolphe,"do n''t you see, you wretch, that he is talking of''tin''? |
18445 | so I am not the Monsieur Schaunard to whom formal notice to quit is given at a cost of five francs? |
18445 | so you want to show me the door?" |
18445 | what is it?" |
18445 | what? |
18445 | where did you get that sermon? |
18445 | you''ve used up one faggot already?" |
4520 | ''” “ What by that? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | --and I said,''Chi? |
4520 | A fair man? |
4520 | A maudlin crying to be loved, which makes your knees all go rickety. ” “ Think that''s it? ” said Jim. |
4520 | A red light? ” “ Oh, that''s only the pit- bank on fire, ” said Robert, who had followed her. |
4520 | A rug for your knees? |
4520 | Ah, my dear fellow, what is life but a search for a friend? |
4520 | All right? |
4520 | Almost angered him? |
4520 | Am I not right? ” “ Quite. |
4520 | And I may be no other to her-- ” “ Then why not let it be so, and be satisfied? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | And I thought to myself: have I lost my cloak? |
4520 | And Tanny is all right, you say? |
4520 | And did she? |
4520 | And if I can fall in love-- But it''s becoming so damned hard-- ” “ What, to fall in love? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | And if I do n''t choose to let you see me crying, that does n''t prove I''ve never had a bad half hour, does it? |
4520 | And is n''t it a great deal of honour for one man? |
4520 | And it does make a difference, does n''t it, Tanny dear? ” “ A great difference, ” said Tanny. |
4520 | And it does n''t matter, not to anybody but myself. ” “ What becomes of anybody, anyhow? |
4520 | And it is n''t natural, quite, to break it.--Do you know what I mean? ” She paused a moment. |
4520 | And she likes him too, does n''t she? ” said Tanny. |
4520 | And so-- you see-- everything goes-- ” “ But you will begin again? ” “ Yes. |
4520 | And supposing I am as you say-- are you any different? ” “ No, I''m not very different. |
4520 | And that if I enter into an undertaking, it will be successful. ” “ And your life has been always successful? ” “ Yes-- almost always. |
4520 | And then shot him dead. ” “ Was he dead? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | And then what? |
4520 | And was it not his privilege? |
4520 | And what did you think of it? ” “ Very fine. ” “ I think it is. |
4520 | And what have they learnt?--Why did so many of them have presentiments, as he called it? |
4520 | And what''s the bonum publicum but a mob power? |
4520 | And when will you be moving in? ” said Francis. |
4520 | And why? |
4520 | And will you practise with me, so that I can accompany you? ” said Manfredi eagerly. |
4520 | And wo n''t you let me take the accompaniment? |
4520 | And you are in the Nardini just across there, are you? |
4520 | And you can tell me if it is foolish to you.--Shall I tell you? |
4520 | And you have a family in England? |
4520 | Any relation of Robert? ” “ Oh, yes! |
4520 | Anybody? ” “ Rather! ” came the deep voice of Clariss. |
4520 | Are n''t you better off without him? ” “ I am. |
4520 | Are n''t you yourself seeking? ” “ Oh, that''s another matter, ” put in Argyle. |
4520 | Are n''t you? |
4520 | Are you all of you? ” “ Absolutely wild, ” said Lilly laconically. |
4520 | Are you all right? ” she said. |
4520 | Are you as keen on innocence as Manfredi is? ” “ Innocence? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Are you as keen on innocence as Manfredi is? ” “ Innocence? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Are you going to play without music? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Are you quite all right here? |
4520 | Are you quite comfortable? |
4520 | Are you sure you have everything? |
4520 | At what time? |
4520 | At what time? ” “ Any time, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Bach? |
4520 | Because the Germans are the only people who could make a war like this-- and I do n''t think they''ll ever do it again, do you? |
4520 | Been going to the dogs, eh? ” “ Or the bitches, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Beethoven inspires that in me, too. ” “ He makes you feel that all will be well with you at last? ” “ Yes, he does. |
4520 | Better-- better-- ” “ Good-- you say? |
4520 | Bring it, will you? |
4520 | But I keep myself from realising, do n''t you know? |
4520 | But I often wonder what will become of me. ” “ In what way? ” She was almost affronted. |
4520 | But I was n''t really. ” “ Then you expected him? ” “ No. |
4520 | But I''d rather meet her abroad than here-- and get on a different footing. ” “ Why? ” “ Oh, I do n''t know. |
4520 | But ah, what is it, you know? |
4520 | But as one must frown at something, why not at the bowler hat? |
4520 | But did you go up, now, to the belvedere? ” “ To the top-- where the vines are? |
4520 | But did you go up, now, to the belvedere? ” “ To the top-- where the vines are? |
4520 | But do n''t you give private recitals, too? ” “ No, I never have. ” “ Oh! ” cried Francis, catching his breath. |
4520 | But do you think I might? ” “ Oh, yes. |
4520 | But here you are in bed like a woman who''s had a baby.--You''re all right, are you? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | But in the heart--? |
4520 | But it drives us, and eats away the life-- and yet we love each other, and we must not separate-- Do you know what I mean? |
4520 | But my God-- what do you think of it? ” “ Seems pretty mean, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | But my LIFE seems alone, for some reason-- ” “ Have n''t you got relations? ” he said. |
4520 | But then what does a white mouse like that need? |
4520 | But there''s nothing doing for me in France.--When do you go back into the country, both of you? ” “ Friday, ” said Lilly. |
4520 | But they hardly count over here. ” “ Why do n''t you get married? ” he said. |
4520 | But was he HURT--? ” “ I do n''t know. |
4520 | But what could be better? |
4520 | But what did you FEEL about it, privately? ” “ I did n''t feel much. |
4520 | But what do you call the common good? ” replied the little doctor, with childish pertinence. |
4520 | But what if you have n''t got much education, to speak of? ” “ You can always get it, ” she said patronizing. |
4520 | But what is that for a life? ” cried the Marchese, with a hollow mockery. |
4520 | But what is the something? ” “ I do n''t know. |
4520 | But what was it you played? ” Aaron told him. |
4520 | But what was the good? |
4520 | But where ELSE? |
4520 | But where is it, when it comes to? |
4520 | But whether to go and live with him? |
4520 | But why console him? |
4520 | But why, why? |
4520 | But why? |
4520 | But will you try? ” “ Yes, I''ll try. ” “ Manfredi is just bringing the cocktails. |
4520 | But you and Tanny; why, there''s the world, and there''s Lilly: that''s how I put it, my boy. ” “ All right, Argyle.--Hoflichkeiten. ” “ What? |
4520 | Ca n''t stand that fellow, can you? |
4520 | Ca n''t you pull yourself together? ” But Aaron only became more gloomily withheld, retracting from life. |
4520 | Ca n''t you rouse him up? ” “ I think it depresses him partly that his bowels wo n''t work. |
4520 | Can I have it with soda? |
4520 | Can the heart ever beat quite alone? |
4520 | Can you find it satisfactory? ” “ Is it even true? ” said the Major. |
4520 | Can you find it satisfactory? ” “ Is it even true? ” said the Major. |
4520 | Can you help me out, Mr. Sisson? |
4520 | Chi sono chi vengono? |
4520 | Chi?'' |
4520 | Chianti? |
4520 | Coffee will no doubt be served. ” “ Will you take my arm, Sir? ” said the well- nourished Arthur. |
4520 | Come at half- past six, as today, will you? |
4520 | Could any race be anything but despicable, with such an antecedent? |
4520 | Could he have expected so much, in one life- time? |
4520 | Damn them all, why do n''t I leave them alone? |
4520 | Did he know many people? |
4520 | Did he need consolation? |
4520 | Did he scorn fortunes and fortune- making? |
4520 | Did he want to be Anthony to Cleopatra? |
4520 | Did n''t we hear that Lilly was in Germany? ” “ Yes, in Munich, being psychoanalysed, I believe it was. ” Aaron looked rather blank. |
4520 | Did you ever see anything like it? ” “ No. |
4520 | Do I speak the truth? ” “ Yes. |
4520 | Do n''t break it, will you? ” Marjory was shaking the bell against her ear. |
4520 | Do n''t you agree, Aaron? |
4520 | Do n''t you find it rather hot? ” “ Is there another bottle of beer there? ” said Jim, without moving, too settled even to stir an eye- lid. |
4520 | Do n''t you find it rather hot? ” “ Is there another bottle of beer there? ” said Jim, without moving, too settled even to stir an eye- lid. |
4520 | Do n''t you hate them? ” “ I do n''t like them. |
4520 | Do n''t you know? ” “ No, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Do n''t you remember? |
4520 | Do n''t you think it all works out rather stupid and unsatisfying? ” “ Ah, but a civil war would be different. |
4520 | Do n''t you think so? ” “ Oh, quite, ” said Angus, whose observations had got no further than the black cloth of the back of Aaron''s jacket. |
4520 | Do n''t you think that is very probable? ” “ I have no idea, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Do n''t you think we might hear him again? |
4520 | Do n''t you try to earn all you can? ” “ Ay, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Do n''t you? |
4520 | Do they want him? ” A faint smile came on her husband''s face. |
4520 | Do you believe it--? ” “ Yes, ” said Levison unwillingly. |
4520 | Do you feel the same? ” “ No, not that way, worse luck. |
4520 | Do you hear me? ” “ Miss Smitham''s coming in. |
4520 | Do you know what I mean? ” “ I do n''t know, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Do you know what Josephine Ford confessed to me? |
4520 | Do you know, I think that''s the very best drink in the tropics: sweet white wine, with soda? |
4520 | Do you like being in the country? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Do you mean us in this box, or the crew outside there? ” he jerked his head towards the auditorium. |
4520 | Do you mind that I call you Aaron? ” “ Not at all. |
4520 | Do you take this as my gospel? ” “ I take it you are speaking seriously. ” Here Lilly broke into that peculiar, gay, whimsical smile. |
4520 | Do you think a cuckoo in Africa and a cuckoo in Essex is one AND the same bird? |
4520 | Do you think it would hurt Robert? ” She screwed up her eyes, looking at Tanny. |
4520 | Do you think you''d prefer orange in yours? ” “ Ill have mine as you have yours. ” “ I do n''t take orange in mine. |
4520 | Do you understand me at all in what I say? |
4520 | Do you want a God you can strive to and attain, through love, and live happy ever after, countless millions of eternities, immortality and all that? |
4520 | Do you want to know anybody here, or do n''t you? |
4520 | Do you? ” replied Julia. |
4520 | Do-- and try me. ” “ And you will tell me what you feel? ” “ Yes. ” Aaron went out to his overcoat. |
4520 | Does it? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron briefly. |
4520 | Eh? |
4520 | Eh? |
4520 | Eh? ” asked Jim. |
4520 | Else perhaps, where should I be? |
4520 | English moneys, eh? |
4520 | Enlighten us. ” “ Nowhere, I suppose. ” “ But is that satisfactory? |
4520 | Enough light will come in from here. ” “ Sure? ” said Manfredi. |
4520 | Every time. ” “ Then what''s to be done? ” “ Nothing, as far as I can see. |
4520 | Except that-- ” “ You do n''t care about anything? |
4520 | Fancy yourself snug in bed, do n''t you? |
4520 | Get up now, we''re going indoors. ” “ What do you reckon stars are? ” he persisted. |
4520 | Goodbye! ” “ You''ll come to Rackham? ” said Jim, leaning out of the train. |
4520 | Had he not gained it? |
4520 | Half past eight? ” “ Thank you very much. ” “ Then at half past eight the man will bring it in. |
4520 | Has a wild creature ever absolute trust? |
4520 | Has your experience been different, or the same? ” “ What was yours? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | Has your experience been different, or the same? ” “ What was yours? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | Have another cushion? |
4520 | Have n''t I loved you for twelve years, and worked and slaved for you and tried to keep you right? |
4520 | Have n''t I loved you? |
4520 | Have n''t I, Juley? ” “ Yes, ” said Julia, vaguely and wispily. |
4520 | Have you drunk your tea? |
4520 | Have you found it like that? |
4520 | Have you got a divine urge, or need? ” “ How do I know? ” laughed Aaron. |
4520 | Have you got a divine urge, or need? ” “ How do I know? ” laughed Aaron. |
4520 | Have you some engagement in Venice? ” “ No, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | He made out that the woman was asking him for his name--“Meester--? |
4520 | He wanted to say “ Friday then? ” “ Yes, I''d rather you went Thursday, ” repeated Lilly. |
4520 | He was breaking loose from one connection after another; and what for? |
4520 | Her own soul will wish to yield itself. ” “ Woman yield--? ” Aaron re- echoed. |
4520 | How can he be so alone? ” said the Marchese. |
4520 | How had he got his job? |
4520 | How is it to be? ” “ I do n''t vitally care either about money or my work or-- ” Lilly faltered. |
4520 | How is the cocktail, Nan? ” “ Yes, ” she said. |
4520 | How old are you? ” “ Thirty- three. ” “ You might almost be any age.--I do n''t know why I do n''t get married. |
4520 | How old? ” “ Oldest eight-- youngest nine months-- ” “ So small! ” sang Julia, with real tenderness now-- Aaron dropped his head. |
4520 | How should they? |
4520 | I am not to be badgered any more. ” “ Am I badgering you? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | I believe you''ve got the flu. ” “ Think I have? ” said Aaron frightened. |
4520 | I could kill him for it. ” “ Were you ever happy together? ” “ We were all right at first. |
4520 | I do n''t know. ” “ Too emotional? |
4520 | I enjoyed Beecham''s operas so much. ” “ Which do you like best? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | I feel I''ve come out of myself. ” “ Yes, it is a wonderful sight-- a wonderful sight-- But you have not been INTO the town? ” “ Yes. |
4520 | I feel that I myself have a special kind of fate, that will always look after me. ” “ And you can trust to it? ” “ Yes, I can. |
4520 | I felt myself go-- as if the bile broke inside me, and I was sick. ” “ Josephine seduced you? ” laughed Lilly. |
4520 | I have not been able to get over it all day. ” “ What was it? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | I hope you do n''t object to our catechism? ” “ No. |
4520 | I know she is not happy, I know I am not-- ” “ Why should you be? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | I know you do n''t believe it. ” “ What do I believe then? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | I left her as I shall leave the earth when I die-- because it has to be. ” “ Do you know what I think it is, Mr. Sisson? ” put in Lady Franks. |
4520 | I like her so much. ” “ And him? ” “ Mr. |
4520 | I like the WE, do n''t you? |
4520 | I loathe the slimy creepy personal intimacy.--''Don''t you think, Mr. Bricknell, that it''s lovely to be able to talk quite simply to somebody? |
4520 | I mean does it interest you? ” “ What-- the flute? ” “ No-- music altogether-- ” “ Music altogether--! |
4520 | I mean does it interest you? ” “ What-- the flute? ” “ No-- music altogether-- ” “ Music altogether--! |
4520 | I mean, does something drive you from inside? ” “ I ca n''t just rest, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | I never expected the mountains. ” “ You never expected the mountains? |
4520 | I only want to be left alone. ” “ Not to have anything to do with anybody? ” she queried ironically. |
4520 | I say, wo n''t you play for us one of these Saturdays? |
4520 | I should have been all right if I had n''t given in to her-- ” “ To whom? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | I think it does not. ” “ And will it ever again? ” “ Perhaps never. ” “ And then what? ” “ Then? |
4520 | I think it does not. ” “ And will it ever again? ” “ Perhaps never. ” “ And then what? ” “ Then? |
4520 | I think it does not. ” “ And will it ever again? ” “ Perhaps never. ” “ And then what? ” “ Then? |
4520 | I thought I''d better come and see, so that we can fetch you at lunch time.--You''ve got a seat? |
4520 | I told you there were two urges-- two great life- urges, did n''t I? |
4520 | I want to get a new tune out of myself. ” “ Had enough of this? ” “ Yes. ” A flush of anger came on Aaron''s face. |
4520 | I want to walk past most of it. ” “ Can you tell us where to? |
4520 | I went away. ” “ What from? ” “ From it all. ” “ From the woman in particular? ” “ Oh, yes. |
4520 | I went away. ” “ What from? ” “ From it all. ” “ From the woman in particular? ” “ Oh, yes. |
4520 | I will read it out to you later. ” “ Are n''t you satisfied? |
4520 | I''d be ashamed if I were you. ” “ Would you? ” said Jim. |
4520 | I''m a shady bird, in all senses of the word, in all senses of the word.--Now are you comfortable? |
4520 | I''m dying. ” “ What of? |
4520 | I''m not sure. ” “ You do n''t look forward to the Saturday mornings? ” he asked. |
4520 | I''m thankful we have none. ” “ Why? ” “ I ca n''t quite say. |
4520 | I''ve got TWO aunts called Tabitha: if not more. ” “ They are n''t of any vital importance to you, are they? ” said Levison. |
4520 | I, too, shall have to learn to play it. ” “ And run the risk of spoiling the shape of your mouth-- like Alcibiades. ” “ Is there a risk? |
4520 | I--? ” she exclaimed. |
4520 | IS he? ” sang Julia. |
4520 | If you do n''t breathe in, you suffocate. ” “ What about breathing out? ” said Robert. |
4520 | In God''s name, why? |
4520 | In the morning he must move: where? |
4520 | Incredibly old, like little boys who know too much-- aren''t they? |
4520 | Is he in love with her? |
4520 | Is it a God you''re after? |
4520 | Is it that you want to love, or to be obeyed? ” “ A bit of both. ” “ All right-- a bit of both. |
4520 | Is it the love urge? ” “ I do n''t know, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Is my life given me for nothing but to get children, and work to bring them up? |
4520 | Is n''t it awfully unkind to them? ” She rose in her eagerness. |
4520 | Is n''t it his duty to do what he can for himself? |
4520 | Is n''t it so, Sybil? ” “ Yes, I think so, ” said Sybil. |
4520 | Is n''t it strange? |
4520 | Is n''t it wonderful? ” said Lady Franks. |
4520 | Is n''t the result the same? ” “ It matters. |
4520 | Is that all right?--Yes, come just before twelve.--When?--Tomorrow? |
4520 | Is that the nature of love? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | Is that your intention? ” “ That I could n''t say, ” said the Marchesa, smoking, smoking. |
4520 | Is there any harm in it? |
4520 | Is there anything I could get you? |
4520 | Is this your little dodge? ” Again Aaron looked at Lilly with that odd double look of mockery and unwillingness to give himself away. |
4520 | It came naturally, though.--But why did you come, Aaron? |
4520 | It is such fine music. ” “ I find_ Ivan_ artificial. ” “ Do you? |
4520 | It makes me feel so sick. ” “ What-- do you want discords?--dissonances? ” “ No-- they are nearly as bad. |
4520 | It''ll just go on and on-- Does n''t it make you feel you''d go mad? ” He looked at her and shook his head. |
4520 | It''s all much too new and complicated for me.--But perhaps you know Italy? ” “ No, I do n''t, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | It''s no good her foisting her rights on to me. ” “ Is n''t that pure selfishness? ” “ It may be. |
4520 | It''s what does n''t go down. ” “ And how much is that? ” she asked, eying him. |
4520 | Lack of life? ” “ That''s about it, my young cock. |
4520 | League of Nations? ” “ Damn all leagues. |
4520 | Let them die of the bee- disease. ” “ Not only that, ” persisted Levison, “ but what is your alternative? |
4520 | Like to see the ball kept rolling. ” “ What have you been doing lately? ” “ Been staying a few days with my wife. ” “ No, really! |
4520 | Lilly has gone away? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Lungs are all right so far. ” “ How long shall I have to be in bed? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Major, where are you wandering off to? |
4520 | Manfredi lives for it, almost. ” “ For that and nothing else? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | Marriage is a self- conscious egoistic state, it seems to me. ” “ You''ve got no children? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | May we ask what you bought? ” This he did not like. |
4520 | May we ask you another question, Mr. Sisson? |
4520 | May we hear you some time? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron, non- committal. |
4520 | May we look at it? ” Josephine now turned the handle of the French windows, and stepped out. |
4520 | Meester--? ” she kept saying, with a note of interrogation. |
4520 | Miserable tea, but nobody has sent me any from England-- ” “ And you will go on till you die, Argyle? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | Mr. Lilly? ” he asked. |
4520 | Much best make rather a favour of it, than sort of ask them to hire you.--Don''t you agree? |
4520 | Music risky? |
4520 | My mother left me a bit over a thousand when she died. ” “ You do n''t mind what I say, do you? ” said Josephine. |
4520 | My wife''s gone to Norway. ” “ For good? ” “ No, ” laughed Lilly. |
4520 | No-- well, then-- would you like a bath now, or--? ” It was evident the Franks had dispensed much hospitality: much of it charitable. |
4520 | Not by ANY means. ” “ Are you not seeking any more, Lilly? ” asked the Marchese. |
4520 | Not good moneys? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron, rather indignantly. |
4520 | Not he, otherwise whence this homage for the old man with much money? |
4520 | Not later than Thursday. ” “ You''re looking forward to going? ” The question was half bitter. |
4520 | Nothing beyond this hell-- only death or love-- languishing-- ” “ What could they have seen, anyhow? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Now we try to speak of that which we have in our centre of our hearts. ” “ And what have we there? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | Now, in life, there are only two great dynamic urges-- do you believe me--? ” “ How do I know? ” laughed Aaron. |
4520 | Now, in life, there are only two great dynamic urges-- do you believe me--? ” “ How do I know? ” laughed Aaron. |
4520 | Of me and your children? |
4520 | Of soul? |
4520 | Oh, God''s love, are n''t we fools! ” “ No-- why? ” cried Josephine, amused but resentful. |
4520 | Oh, ROBBIE, is n''t it all right, is n''t it just all right? ” She tailed off into her hurried, wild, repeated laugh. |
4520 | Oh, have n''t I? |
4520 | Oh, yes-- quite at home. ” “ Do you like it as well as anywhere? ” he asked. |
4520 | Oh-- er-- how''s your wife? |
4520 | On what grounds? |
4520 | Once outside the door, the husband asked: “ How shall we go home, dear? |
4520 | One can never be SURE of Providence. ” “ What can you be sure of, then? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | One franc? ” asked the driver. |
4520 | Only when it came he would n''t be there. ” “ Would you? ” “ Yes, indeed I would. |
4520 | Only while it stands I do want central heating and a good cook. ” “ May I come to dinner? ” said Jim. |
4520 | Or do you give the centre of your spirit to your work? |
4520 | Or perhaps you''d like to go home? |
4520 | Or was her fear only a delightful game of cat and mouse? |
4520 | Or was the fear genuine, and the delight the greater: a sort of sacrilege? |
4520 | Or white wine? |
4520 | Other things as well. ” “ But you do n''t like it much any more? ” “ I do n''t know. |
4520 | Paradisal enough for you, is it? ” “ The devil looking over Lincoln, ” said Lilly laughing, glancing up into Argyle''s face. |
4520 | Paris for the most part. ” “ Never America? ” “ No, never America. |
4520 | Plop!--Can the heart beat quite alone, alone in all the atmosphere, all the space of the universe? |
4520 | Plop!--Quite alone in all the space? ” A slow smile came over the Italian''s face. |
4520 | Poor old Algy.--Did I lay it on him tonight, or did I miss him? ” “ I think you got him, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Pray, why not? |
4520 | Rivets, and we ca n''t get them out. ” “ And where should we be if we could? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Self, self, self-- that''s all it is with them-- and ignorance. ” “ You''d rather have self without ignorance? ” he said, smiling finely. |
4520 | Shall YOU be any different in yourself, in another place? |
4520 | Shall we leave it at that, now? ” “ Yes, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Shall we? ” She rose from the table. |
4520 | Shall you? ” “ Candles! ” he repeated, putting the piccolo to his mouth and blowing a few piercing, preparatory notes. |
4520 | She the woman, the mother of his children, how should she ever even think to yield? |
4520 | She''s made up her mind she loves me, and she''s not going to let me off. ” “ Did you never love her? ” said Josephine. |
4520 | Sir William Franks? |
4520 | Six- pence a box. ” “ Got any holders? ” “ Holders? |
4520 | Six- pence a box. ” “ Got any holders? ” “ Holders? |
4520 | So what''s the good of talking about advantages? |
4520 | So you found our city impressive? ” “ Very! |
4520 | So you hope to earn your keep here? |
4520 | Tanny and I have been very much alone in various countries: but that''s two, not one. ” “ You miss her then? ” “ Yes, of course. |
4520 | Thank goodness my experience of a man has been different. ” “ We ca n''t all be alike, can we? |
4520 | That is a great pleasure. ” “ So I think.--Does your wife like it, too? ” “ Very much, indeed! |
4520 | That is n''t saying he''s a fool, neither. ” “ And what better is them that''s got education? ” put in another man. |
4520 | That''s a day to live for, what? ” “ Ha! |
4520 | That''s what I should have been if I had had my way. ” “ What instrument? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | The Germans were false, we were false, everybody was false. ” “ And not you? ” asked Aaron shrewishly. |
4520 | The deaf Jewish Rosen was smiling down his nose and saying: “ What was that last? |
4520 | The piano? ” “ Yes-- the pianoforte. |
4520 | The spirit may move him in quite an opposite direction to the market-- then where is Lilly? |
4520 | Then he said smiling: “ So I''d better sit tight on my soul, till it hatches, had I? ” “ Oh, yes. |
4520 | Then he said to Aaron: “ Were you coming to see me, Sisson? |
4520 | They are very exclusive still, the Venetian_ noblesse_? ” said Miss Wade. |
4520 | They ought to have allowed us six times the quantity-- there''s plenty of sugar, why did n''t they? |
4520 | They were Guelfs, why not remain it? |
4520 | They''ll do a lot of cavilling. ” “ But wo n''t they ACT? ” cried Josephine. |
4520 | Tomorrow morning? |
4520 | Too much feeling for you? ” “ Yes, perhaps. |
4520 | Towards Rome? ” “ I came to meet Lilly, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Tram or carriage--? ” It was evident he was economical. |
4520 | Wahrhaftiger Kerl bin ich.--When am I going to see Tanny? |
4520 | Was he going to agree? |
4520 | Was it because he was one of her own race, and she, as it were, crept right home to him? |
4520 | Was it illusion, or was it genuine? |
4520 | Was n''t it extraordinary? |
4520 | Was not hers the divine will and the divine right? |
4520 | Was there? |
4520 | We are dilettanti, I suppose. ” “ No-- what is your instrument? |
4520 | We looked at most, I believe. ” “ And what do you remember best? ” “ I remember Botticelli''s Venus on the Shell. ” “ Yes! |
4520 | We''ll be like this again? ” she whispered. |
4520 | We''re all as right as ninepence-- what? |
4520 | We''re all right, are n''t we? ” he said loudly, turning to the stranger with a grin that showed his pointed teeth. |
4520 | We''re the only sober couple in the bunch-- what? ” cried Jim. |
4520 | We''ve got to accept the power motive, accept it in deep responsibility, do you understand me? |
4520 | Well now, and what next? |
4520 | Well now, it''ll be all right if I come up for a minute? |
4520 | Well, how are you? |
4520 | Well, then, what next? |
4520 | Well, well, might do worse.--Is it all right? ” Lilly eyed the suit. |
4520 | Well-- shall we join the ladies? |
4520 | What a nice name! ” “ No better than yours, is it? ” “ Mine! |
4520 | What about him? |
4520 | What are you thinking? ” “ Nothing. |
4520 | What did he clutch the castle- keys so tight for? |
4520 | What did they see when they looked at him? |
4520 | What did you say the address was? |
4520 | What did you say? ” said Francis, leaning forward. |
4520 | What difference did it make, anyhow? |
4520 | What do you care whether you see anybody again or not? |
4520 | What do you make of this this- or- nothing business? |
4520 | What do you say to whiskey and soda, Colonel? ” “ Why, delighted, Sir William, ” said the Colonel, bouncing up. |
4520 | What do you say, Major? ” “ She has all the airs of one, Sir William, ” said the Major, with the wistful grimness of his age and culture. |
4520 | What do you think of him? ” “ He seems sharp, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | What do you want to poke yourself and prod yourself into love, for? ” “ Because I''m DEAD without it. |
4520 | What do you want with more than one master? |
4520 | What do you want? ” “ Why, I keep saying I want to get married and feel sure of something. |
4520 | What does any man? |
4520 | What does he scheme for?--What does he contrive for? |
4520 | What else do you give? |
4520 | What else is there to it? ” Aaron sounded testy. |
4520 | What exactly brought you? ” “ Accident, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | What have n''t they to fight for? ” cried Josephine fiercely. |
4520 | What have you come for? ” “ To look at YOU, ” he said sarcastically. |
4520 | What if I do? |
4520 | What is TO CHEAP? ” “ Cheep! |
4520 | What is it a woman who allows me, and who has no answer? |
4520 | What is it? ” “ To make more money for the firm-- and so make his own chance of a rise better. ” The landlady was baffled for some moments. |
4520 | What is there to care about? ” said the Colonel. |
4520 | What liqueurs have you got? ” demanded Angus abruptly. |
4520 | What makes a child be born out of its mother to the pain and trouble of both of them? |
4520 | What pictures did you look at? ” “ I was with Dekker. |
4520 | What should he do? |
4520 | What should you say, Jimmy? ” she turned to one of the men. |
4520 | What sort of urge is your urge? |
4520 | What time is it, Manfredi? ” “ Half past six. |
4520 | What was it in her face that puzzled him? |
4520 | What was it? |
4520 | What was she going to ask of him? |
4520 | What was there in the female will so diabolical, he asked himself, that it could press like a flat sheet of iron against a man all the time? |
4520 | What was there instead? |
4520 | What were the shots? ” Aaron asked him. |
4520 | What will this beauty be? ” With finicky fingers she removed the newspaper. |
4520 | What would the world be like if everybody lived that way? ” “ Other people can please themselves, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | What''s a soul, to them--? ” “ What is it to you, is perhaps the more pertinent question, ” said Algy, flapping his eyelids like some crazy owl. |
4520 | What''s his education for? |
4520 | What''s the good of running after life, when we''ve got it in us, if nobody prevents us and obstructs us? ” Aaron felt very queer. |
4520 | What''s the objection? ” asked Struthers. |
4520 | What''s this?--What''s this? |
4520 | What''s your drink? ” “ Mine-- whiskey, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | What? |
4520 | What? |
4520 | What? |
4520 | What? |
4520 | What? ” “ Yes, I think he''s rather nice, ” said Tanny. |
4520 | What_ did_ she mean? |
4520 | Whe''to? |
4520 | When are you coming to dine with me? ” “ After you''ve dined with us-- say the day after tomorrow. ” “ Right you are. |
4520 | When shall we make it? ” he asked. |
4520 | When they had gone, he asked: “ Where is Manfredi? ” “ He will come in soon. |
4520 | When will they learn wisdom? ” “ But what do you call wisdom? ” asked Sherardy, the Hindu. |
4520 | When will they learn wisdom? ” “ But what do you call wisdom? ” asked Sherardy, the Hindu. |
4520 | Where are you going? ” “ Malta. ” “ Malta! |
4520 | Where d''you want to go? ” he heard the hearty tones of the policeman. |
4520 | Where did he live? |
4520 | Where should we be without it? ” Lilly started, went stiff and hostile. |
4520 | Where would their money be otherwise? |
4520 | Where you go? |
4520 | Where''s that--? ” “ Oh, it''s on the map. ” There was a little lull. |
4520 | Where? ” cried Julia. |
4520 | Who have you got sitting up with her? |
4520 | Who was she, what was she? |
4520 | Who? ” they cried. |
4520 | Why break every tie? |
4520 | Why ca n''t they submit to a bit of healthy individual authority? |
4520 | Why ca n''t you gather yourself there? ” “ At the tail? ” “ Yes. |
4520 | Why ca n''t you gather yourself there? ” “ At the tail? ” “ Yes. |
4520 | Why do n''t you be more like the Japanese you talk about? |
4520 | Why do you ask? ” “ I was n''t thinking. ” “ But what do you mean? |
4520 | Why do you ask? ” “ I was n''t thinking. ” “ But what do you mean? |
4520 | Why do you want so badly to be loved? ” “ Because I like it, damn you, ” barked Jim. |
4520 | Why give yourself away, anyhow? |
4520 | Why go forward into more nothingness, away from all that he knew, all he was accustomed to and all he belonged to? |
4520 | Why has n''t this man been taken to the Clearing Station?'' |
4520 | Why have you come back to me? |
4520 | Why is it, do you think, that English people abroad go so very QUEER-- so ultra- English-- INCREDIBLE!--and at the same time so perfectly impossible? |
4520 | Why is it? ” “ Shall I say what I think? |
4520 | Why is it? ” “ Shall I say what I think? |
4520 | Why not come with us to Florence? ” said Francis. |
4520 | Why not flower again? |
4520 | Why not remain an infant? ” “ Be damned and blasted to women and all their importances, ” cried Aaron. |
4520 | Why not try and love somebody? ” Jim eyed her narrowly. |
4520 | Why not? |
4520 | Why not? |
4520 | Why not? ” “ If it''s going to, it will, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Why should I know? ” “ But we must know: especially when other people will be hurt, ” said she. |
4520 | Why should I? |
4520 | Why should I? |
4520 | Why should it? |
4520 | Why should n''t he want to move? |
4520 | Why should you hesitate? ” “ All right, then, ” said Aaron, not without some feeling of constraint. |
4520 | Why were their haunches so prominent? |
4520 | Why when we were in London-- when we were at lunch one morning it suddenly struck me, have n''t I left my fur cloak somewhere? |
4520 | Why, is he in Venice? |
4520 | Why, ten francs a day, you know, pension-- if you stay-- How long will you stay? ” “ At least a month, I expect. ” “ A month! |
4520 | Why? |
4520 | Why? |
4520 | Why? |
4520 | Why? |
4520 | Why? ” They stepped down in the darkness from their perch. |
4520 | Why? ” “ Looking at them even. |
4520 | Why? ” “ You seem to. ” “ Do I? |
4520 | Why? ” “ You seem to. ” “ Do I? |
4520 | Will he never heed? |
4520 | Will he never understand? ” he thought. |
4520 | Will that suit you? |
4520 | Will you come tomorrow? ” Aaron said he would on Monday. |
4520 | Will you do it for us now, and let us see what it is like?'' |
4520 | Will you play? ” “ I should love to, ” replied the husband. |
4520 | Will you sit? ” “ Can I have a room? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Will you sit? ” “ Can I have a room? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Will you smoke? |
4520 | Will you? ” “ I thought you hated accompaniments. ” “ Oh, no-- not just unison. |
4520 | Wine? |
4520 | Wo n''t they be awfully bothered? |
4520 | Wo n''t they fight for that? ” Aaron sat smiling, slowly shaking his head. |
4520 | Wo n''t you give us hope that it might be so? ” “ I''ve no idea, either, ” said she. |
4520 | Wo n''t you smoke? ” The strange, naked, remote- seeming voice! |
4520 | Wonderful person, to be able to do it. ” “ Where has he gone? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | Would you have us make money? |
4520 | Would you like to play for us some time, do you think? ” “ Do you want me to? |
4520 | Would you like to play for us some time, do you think? ” “ Do you want me to? |
4520 | Would you? ” Aaron lay still, and did not answer. |
4520 | Yes, ten francs a day. ” “ For everything? ” “ Everything. |
4520 | Yes, that. ” “ And you could n''t go back? ” Aaron shook his head. |
4520 | Yes, you can. ” “ What terms? ” “ Terms! |
4520 | Yes-- well!-- Well-- now, why are you going away? ” “ For a change, ” said Lilly. |
4520 | Yes-- what did he believe in, besides money? |
4520 | Yes? |
4520 | Yes? ” Aaron promised-- and then he found himself in the street. |
4520 | Yes? ” said the doctor. |
4520 | Yet I find_ Kovantchina_, which is all mass music practically, gives me more satisfaction than any other opera. ” “ Do you really? |
4520 | Yet what could be more conspicuous than this elegant pair, picking their way through the cabbage- leaves? |
4520 | You are? |
4520 | You ca n''t really be alone. ” “ No matter how many mistakes you''ve made-- you ca n''t really be alone--? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | You come straight from England? ” Sir William held out his hand courteously and benevolently, smiling an old man''s smile of hospitality. |
4520 | You do n''t want me to say things, do you? ” he said. |
4520 | You know that you have got an urge, do n''t you? ” “ Yes-- ” rather unwillingly Aaron admitted it. |
4520 | You talk, and you make a man believe you''ve got something he has n''t got? |
4520 | You thought her a pretty woman, yes? ” “ No-- not particularly pretty. |
4520 | You wo n''t believe you''re right in the way of traffic, will you now, in Covent Garden Market? |
4520 | You wo n''t go down? |
4520 | You yourself have no definite goal? ” “ No. ” “ Ah! |
4520 | You''d find it rather domestic. ” “ Where do you live? ” “ Rather far out now-- Amersham. ” “ Amersham? |
4520 | You''d find it rather domestic. ” “ Where do you live? ” “ Rather far out now-- Amersham. ” “ Amersham? |
4520 | You''d like a wash? ” But Jim had already opened his bag, taken off his coat, and put on an old one. |
4520 | You''ll be the same there as you are here. ” “ How am I here? ” “ Why, you''re all the time grinding yourself against something inside you. |
4520 | You''ll come in, wo n''t you? ” Aaron nodded rather stupidly and testily. |
4520 | You''re a comic. ” “ Am I though? ” said Jim. |
4520 | You''re a married man, are n''t you? ” The sardonic look of the stranger rested on the subaltern. |
4520 | You''re awfully lucky, you know, to be able to pour yourself down your flute. ” “ You think I go down easy? ” he laughed. |
4520 | You''re quite sure now? |
4520 | You''ve got a love- urge that urges you to God; have you? |
4520 | You''ve got a permanent job? ” asked Josephine. |
4520 | _ Egoisme a deux_-- ” “ What''s that mean? ” “_ Egoisme a deux_? |
4520 | _ Egoisme a deux_-- ” “ What''s that mean? ” “_ Egoisme a deux_? |
4520 | _ Siamo nel paradiso_, remember. ” “ But why should we drink your whiskey? |
4520 | “ A little Bovril? ” The same faint shake. |
4520 | “ A man ca n''t live, ” said the Italian, “ without an object. ” “ Well-- and that object? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ A whiskey and soda, Lilly? |
4520 | “ Act? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Ah, my dear fellow, are you still so young and callow that you cherish the illusion of fair play? ” said Argyle. |
4520 | “ All right, I think. ” “ But you''ve been back to them? ” cried Josephine in dismay. |
4520 | “ Always seeking a friend-- and always a new one? ” “ If I lose the friend I''ve got. |
4520 | “ Am I? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Am I? ” she smiled. |
4520 | “ And I''ll come to you.--Shall I come in fifteen minutes? ” She looked at him with strange, slow dark eyes. |
4520 | “ And can you find two men to stick together, without feeling criminal, and without cringing, and without betraying one another? |
4520 | “ And do you send her money? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ And me? ” “ You''ll have to live without a rod, meanwhile. ” To which pleasant remark Aaron made no reply. |
4520 | “ And never finding? ” said Lilly, laughing. |
4520 | “ And so the war hardly affected you? |
4520 | “ And so, Mr. Sisson, you have no definite purpose in coming to Italy? ” “ No, none, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ And stay how long? ” “ Oh-- as long as it lasts, ” said Robert again. |
4520 | “ And then what? ” “ Nay, ” interrupted Aaron. |
4520 | “ And what are they going to do about Job Arthur Freer? |
4520 | “ And what are you going to do in Florence? ” asked Argyle. |
4520 | “ And what good will Malta do you? ” he asked, envious. |
4520 | “ And what''s your way out? ” Aaron asked him. |
4520 | “ And where are you bound, Mr. Sisson? |
4520 | “ And where? ” Again she was silent for some moments, as if struggling with herself. |
4520 | “ And who SHOULD have the money, indeed, if not your wives? |
4520 | “ And who knows what you''ve been doing all these months? ” she wept. |
4520 | “ And whom shall I submit to? ” he said. |
4520 | “ And will you sing? ” he answered. |
4520 | “ And yours, Lilly? ” asked the Marchese anxiously. |
4520 | “ Anyhow, ” he said at length, “ you''ll come, wo n''t you? |
4520 | “ Anything you wanted? ” repeated Robert, military, rather peremptory. |
4520 | “ Are n''t we perfectly satisfied and in bliss with the wonderful women who honour us as wives? ” “ Ah, yes, yes! ” said the Marchese. |
4520 | “ Are we to let t''other side run off wi''th''bone, then, while we sit on our stunts an''yowl for it? ” asked Brewitt. |
4520 | “ Are you a miner? ” Robert asked,_ de haute en bas_. |
4520 | “ Are you a socialist? ” asked Levison. |
4520 | “ Are you going out, Father? ” she said. |
4520 | “ Are you here by yourself? ” asked the sick man. |
4520 | “ Are you? ” persisted the child, balancing on one foot. |
4520 | “ Ay, an''what''s the purpose of his life? ” insisted Aaron Sisson. |
4520 | “ Ay, what? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Being yourself-- what does it mean? ” “ To me, everything. ” “ And to most folks, nothing. |
4520 | “ Beldover? ” inquired Robert. |
4520 | “ Besides, Aaron, ” said Lilly, drinking his last sip of wine, “ what do you care whether you see me again or not? |
4520 | “ But DO you want to be with Scott, out and out, or DON''T you? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ But I do n''t know why you talk about him. ” “ Is he inexperienced, Josephine dear? |
4520 | “ But I''m not personal at all, am I, Mr. Bricknell? ” said Tanny. |
4520 | “ But ca n''t there be a balancing of wills? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ But do you think I might--? ” said Francis moodily. |
4520 | “ But do you think it''s true what he says? |
4520 | “ But does it matter? ” said Lilly slowly, “ in which of you the desire initiates? |
4520 | “ But does it matter? ” said Lilly slowly, “ in which of you the desire initiates? |
4520 | “ But for how long will you settle down--? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ But have you anything to take you to Venice? |
4520 | “ But how can I live in Italy? ” he said. |
4520 | “ But is n''t it? ” she persisted. |
4520 | “ But people always turn up. ” “ And then next year, what will you do? ” “ Who knows? |
4520 | “ But people always turn up. ” “ And then next year, what will you do? ” “ Who knows? |
4520 | “ But that''s not really how you take it? ” she said. |
4520 | “ But was n''t it an extraordinary affair? ” “ Very, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ But we can be friends, ca n''t we? ” he said. |
4520 | “ But what can have brought you to such a disastrous decision? ” “ I ca n''t say, ” she replied, with a little laugh. |
4520 | “ But what difference does it make, ” said Aaron Sisson, “ whether they govern themselves or not? |
4520 | “ But what do you really think will happen to the world? ” Lilly asked Jim, amid much talk. |
4520 | “ But what''s the good of going to Malta? |
4520 | “ But where is YOUR SEAT? ” cried Francis, peering into the packed and jammed compartments of the third class. |
4520 | “ But why ca n''t man accept it as the natural order of things? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ But why not? |
4520 | “ But why should it? |
4520 | “ But why? |
4520 | “ But why? |
4520 | “ But why? ” said Josephine. |
4520 | “ But wo n''t you come and have coffee with us at our table? ” said Francis. |
4520 | “ But you do n''t want to get away from EVERYTHING, do you? |
4520 | “ But you must earn money, must n''t you? ” said she. |
4520 | “ But you''ll let us do that again, wo n''t you? ” said she. |
4520 | “ But you''re going home to them, are n''t you? ” said Josephine, in whose eyes the tears had already risen. |
4520 | “ But, Josephine, ” said Robert, “ do n''t you think we''ve had enough of that sort of thing in the war? |
4520 | “ Ca n''t you break it? ” “ Yes, if you hit it with a hammer, ” he said. |
4520 | “ Ca n''t you rouse his spirit? |
4520 | “ Ca n''t you settle down to something?--to a job, for instance? ” “ I''ve not found the job I could settle down to, yet, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Can I come up and have a chat? ” “ I''ve got that man who''s had flu. |
4520 | “ Can I have a room? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Christmas- tree candles, and toffee. ” “ For the little children? |
4520 | “ Cigarette, Julia? ” said Robert to his wife. |
4520 | “ DO you agree, Mr. Sisson? ” said the Marchesa. |
4520 | “ Did YOU leave the parlour door open? ” she asked of Millicent, suspiciously. |
4520 | “ Did you ever intend to marry Jim Bricknell? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ Did you ever keep count? ” Tanny persisted. |
4520 | “ Did you indeed? |
4520 | “ Did you see the row yesterday? ” asked Levison. |
4520 | “ Did you want anything? ” Robert enquired once more. |
4520 | “ Did you want anything? ” asked Robert, from behind the light. |
4520 | “ Do n''t I? |
4520 | “ Do n''t you agree? ” He turned wolfishly to Clariss. |
4520 | “ Do they?--Don''t you think it''s nice of them? ” she said, gently removing her hand from his. |
4520 | “ Do you believe in them less than I do, Aaron? ” he asked slowly. |
4520 | “ Do you feel ill, Sisson? ” he said sharply. |
4520 | “ Do you feel quite well? ” Josephine asked him. |
4520 | “ Do you find it a tight squeeze, then? ” she said, turning to Aaron once more. |
4520 | “ Do you find it so? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Do you find this room very cold? ” she asked of Aaron. |
4520 | “ Do you hate the normal British as much as I do? ” she asked him. |
4520 | “ Do you know how vilely you''ve treated me? ” she said, staring across the space at him. |
4520 | “ Do you love playing? ” she asked him. |
4520 | “ Do you mean that, Aaron? ” he said, looking into Aaron''s face with a hard, inflexible look. |
4520 | “ Do you mean to say you do n''t MEAN what you''ve been saying? ” said Levison, now really looking angry. |
4520 | “ Do you recognise anyone in the orchestra? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ Do you see anybody we know, Josephine? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ Do you see signs of the old maid coming out in me? |
4520 | “ Do you seek nothing? ” “ We married men who have n''t left our wives, are we supposed to seek anything? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Do you seek nothing? ” “ We married men who have n''t left our wives, are we supposed to seek anything? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Do you think so, my dear? ” said the old man, with his eternal smile: the curious smile of old people when they are dead. |
4520 | “ Do you think so? ” he answered. |
4520 | “ Do you think you''re wise now, ” he said, “ to sit in that sun? ” “ In November? ” laughed Lilly. |
4520 | “ Do you think you''re wise now, ” he said, “ to sit in that sun? ” “ In November? ” laughed Lilly. |
4520 | “ Do you think, Lilly, that we''re the world? ” said Robert ironically. |
4520 | “ Do you want to be believed? ” “ No, I do n''t care a straw. |
4520 | “ Do you, Aaron? ” “ I do n''t WANT to, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Do you? ” said Lady Franks. |
4520 | “ Does a man care? ” “ He might. ” “ Then he''s no man. ” “ Thanks again, old fellow. ” “ Welcome, ” said Lilly, grimacing. |
4520 | “ Does he seek another woman? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Does it? ” asked Lilly of the Marchese. |
4520 | “ Does n''t SHE love you? ” said Aaron to Jim amused, indicating Josephine. |
4520 | “ Does n''t it go more here? ” “ No no, no no, not at all. |
4520 | “ Eh--? ” and Jim stooped, grinning at the smaller man. |
4520 | “ Eh? |
4520 | “ Eh? |
4520 | “ Eh? ” Aaron looked up. |
4520 | “ Eh? ” “ Are you going out? ” She twisted nervously. |
4520 | “ Eh? ” “ Are you going out? ” She twisted nervously. |
4520 | “ Enough of what? ” she said. |
4520 | “ Er-- what bed do you propose to put him in? ” asked Robert rather officer- like. |
4520 | “ Father, shall you set the Christmas Tree? ” they cried. |
4520 | “ Give him time. ” “ Is he also afraid-- like Alcibiades? ” “ Are you, Aaron? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Give him time. ” “ Is he also afraid-- like Alcibiades? ” “ Are you, Aaron? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Glad to see you-- well, everything all right? |
4520 | “ Go up there? ” said Aaron, pointing. |
4520 | “ Have a drink, Josephine? ” said Robert. |
4520 | “ Have another? ” said Jim, who was attending fixedly, with curious absorption, to the stranger. |
4520 | “ Have n''t I? |
4520 | “ Have n''t you got the music? ” She rose, not answering, and found him a little book. |
4520 | “ Have one? ” Aaron shook his head, and Jim did not press him. |
4520 | “ Have you got any Christmas- tree candles? ” he asked as he entered the shop. |
4520 | “ Have you noticed it? ” “ No, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Have you really broken your engagement with Jim? ” shrilled Tanny in a high voice, as the train roared. |
4520 | “ Have you? ” He lifted his head and looked at her. |
4520 | “ He wants Julia to go down and stay. ” “ Is she going? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Help him up to my room, will you? ” he said to the constable. |
4520 | “ How are you, darling? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ How are your wife and children? ” she asked spitefully. |
4520 | “ How do I look, eh? |
4520 | “ How do you come here? ” “ I play the flute, ” he answered, as he shook hands. |
4520 | “ How do you do? |
4520 | “ How do you like Lilly? |
4520 | “ How do you like being in London? ” “ I like London, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ How is everybody? ” asked Tanny. |
4520 | “ How is the night? ” she said, as if to change the whole feeling in the room. |
4520 | “ How long ha''you been married? |
4520 | “ How lovely for you!--And when will you go to Norway, Tanny? ” “ In about a month, ” said Tanny. |
4520 | “ How many children have you? ” sang Julia from her distance. |
4520 | “ How many do you want? ” he said. |
4520 | “ How many do you want? ” “ A dozen. ” “ Ca n''t let you have a dozen. |
4520 | “ How much? ” said Aaron to the driver. |
4520 | “ How old are you? ” “ I''m twenty- five. |
4520 | “ How shall you escape it? ” said Levison. |
4520 | “ How strange!--Why is it burning now? ” “ It always burns, unfortunately-- it is most consistent at it. |
4520 | “ How''s that? ” “ Why, because, in a way the people of India have an easier time even than the people of England. |
4520 | “ How, act? ” “ Why, defy the government, and take things in their own hands, ” said Josephine. |
4520 | “ How--? ” she said, with a sudden grunting, unhappy laugh. |
4520 | “ How? ” “ You can live by your writing-- but I''ve got to have a job. ” “ Is that all? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ How? ” “ You can live by your writing-- but I''ve got to have a job. ” “ Is that all? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ I could n''t make it out, could you? ” “ Oh, ” cried Francis. |
4520 | “ I do n''t even want to believe in them. ” “ But in yourself? ” Lilly was almost wistful-- and Aaron uneasy. |
4520 | “ I do n''t know why I cry. ” “ You can cry for nothing, ca n''t you? ” he said. |
4520 | “ I hope personification is right.--Ought to be_ allegory_ or something else? ” This from Clariss to Robert. |
4520 | “ I say, do you hear the bells? ” said Robert, poking his head into the room. |
4520 | “ I say, ” said Robert suddenly, from the rear--“anybody have a drink? |
4520 | “ I suddenly saw that if there was a man in England who could save me, it was you. ” “ Save you from what? ” asked Lilly, rather abashed. |
4520 | “ I suppose so. ” “ And why? ” she cried. |
4520 | “ I think I''ll retire. ” “ Will you? ” said Julia, also rising. |
4520 | “ I think they''re anything but angels. ” “ Do you though? |
4520 | “ I went to the Uffizi. ” “ To the Uffizi? |
4520 | “ I wish I were in the country, do n''t you? |
4520 | “ I wonder what he''s doing here. ” “ Do n''t you think we might ASK him? ” said Francis, in a vehement whisper. |
4520 | “ I wonder what will become of him-- ” “--Of the one who climbed for the flag, you mean? |
4520 | “ I''m not so late, am I? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | “ I''ve been awfully bored. ” “ Have you? ” grinned Jim. |
4520 | “ I''ve got it now in my overcoat pocket, ” he said, “ if you like. ” “ Have you? |
4520 | “ I''ve nothing to lose. ” “ And were you surprised, Lilly, to find your friend here? ” asked Del Torre. |
4520 | “ If childhood is more important than manhood, then why live to be a man at all? |
4520 | “ If it is a good government, doctor, how can it be so bad for the people? ” said the landlady. |
4520 | “ Is Mr. Lilly here? |
4520 | “ Is it pretty much the same out there in India? ” he asked of the doctor, suddenly. |
4520 | “ Is it that man Aaron Sisson? ” asked Robert. |
4520 | “ Is it true for you? ” “ Nearly, ” said Aaron, looking into the quiet, half- amused, yet frightening eyes of the other man. |
4520 | “ Is it very heavy? ” asked Millicent. |
4520 | “ Is music your line as well, then? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | “ Is n''t it nasty? ” she said. |
4520 | “ Is n''t there a lift in this establishment? ” he said, as he groped his way up the stone stairs. |
4520 | “ Is n''t there something we could do to while the time away? ” Everybody suddenly laughed-- it sounded so remote and absurd. |
4520 | “ Is that your flute? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | “ It IS he? ” said Josephine quietly, meeting Jim''s eye. |
4520 | “ It IS the chap-- What? ” he exclaimed excitedly, looking round at his friends. |
4520 | “ It was, was n''t it? ” she said, turning a wondering, glowing face to him. |
4520 | “ It''ll do tomorrow morning, wo n''t it? ” he asked rather mocking. |
4520 | “ It''s what chickens say when they''re poking their little noses into new adventures-- naughty ones. ” “ Are chickens naughty? |
4520 | “ Jolly-- eh? ” said Jim. |
4520 | “ Keb? |
4520 | “ Leave a message for you, Sir? ” Lilly wrote his address on a card, then changed his mind. |
4520 | “ Let''s, everybody-- let''s. ” “ Shall we really? ” asked Robert. |
4520 | “ Like me to tuck the sheets round you, should n''t you? |
4520 | “ Look, Father, do n''t you love it! ” “ Love it? ” he re- echoed, ironical over the word love. |
4520 | “ Look, Mother, is n''t it a beauty? ” “ Mind the ring does n''t come out, ” said her mother. |
4520 | “ Make haste and get better, and we''ll go. ” “ Where? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ May I stay till Monday morning? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ May he not be Guest? ” he asked, fatherly. |
4520 | “ Me? |
4520 | “ Me? |
4520 | “ Me? |
4520 | “ Me? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Me? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Me? ” said Sisson. |
4520 | “ Mind if I stay till Saturday? ” There was a pause. |
4520 | “ Must it be bloody, Josephine? ” said Robert. |
4520 | “ My dear fellow, the only hope of salvation for the world lies in the re- institution of slavery. ” “ What kind of slavery? ” asked Levison. |
4520 | “ My hat and coat? ” he said to Lilly. |
4520 | “ No, I like to have it in my bedroom. ” “ You do n''t eat bread in the night? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ No, I want none of that. ” “ Then--? ” But now she sat gazing on him with wide, heavy, incomprehensible eyes. |
4520 | “ No-- I do n''t mind it. ” “ Do you feel at home in Florence? ” Aaron asked her. |
4520 | “ No-- where''s the loaf? ” And he cut himself about half of it. |
4520 | “ Not asleep? |
4520 | “ Not good, eh? |
4520 | “ Not that you loved any other woman? ” “ God save me from it. ” “ You just left off loving? ” “ Not even that. |
4520 | “ Not that you loved any other woman? ” “ God save me from it. ” “ You just left off loving? ” “ Not even that. |
4520 | “ Now Marchesa-- might we hope for a song? ” “ No-- I do n''t sing any more, ” came the slow, contralto reply. |
4520 | “ Now then--_siamo nel paradiso_, eh? |
4520 | “ Now? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Now? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Of what? |
4520 | “ Oh, what would you? |
4520 | “ Or what, then? ” “ Or anything. |
4520 | “ Please do take another-- but perhaps you do n''t like mushrooms? ” Aaron quite liked mushrooms, and helped himself to the_ entree_. |
4520 | “ Robert is so happy with all the good things-- aren''t you dear? ” she sang, breaking into a hurried laugh. |
4520 | “ Shall I go away? ” he said at length. |
4520 | “ Shall I? ” she said. |
4520 | “ Shall we be lovers? ” came his voice once more, with the faintest touch of irony. |
4520 | “ Shall we be lovers? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Shall we go into the sala and have real music? |
4520 | “ Shall we illuminate one of the fir- trees by the lawn? ” “ Yes! |
4520 | “ Shall we listen to it for a minute? ” She led him across the grass past the shrubs to the big tree in the centre. |
4520 | “ She does n''t love me. ” “ Is that true? ” asked Robert hastily, of Josephine. |
4520 | “ Sir William Franks? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ So you feel you have no country of your own? ” “ I have Italy. |
4520 | “ Stay all night? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Tell me, ” said Francis, “ will you have your coffee black, or with milk? ” He was determined to restore a tone of sobriety. |
4520 | “ Thank goodness the Italians are better than they used to be. ” “ Are they better than they used to be? ” “ Oh, much. |
4520 | “ That goes much lower down-- about here. ” “ Are you sure? ” said Lady Franks. |
4520 | “ That man''s sitting in it. ” “ Which? ” cried Francis, indignant. |
4520 | “ That''s how it looks on the face of it, is n''t it? ” he said. |
4520 | “ That''s the chap. ” “ Who? |
4520 | “ The nearest? ” said the policeman. |
4520 | “ Then it''s no engagement? ” said Robert. |
4520 | “ Then upon what grounds did you abandon your family? |
4520 | “ Then what''s the use of going somewhere else? |
4520 | “ Then who would be the masters?--the professional classes, doctors and lawyers and so on? ” “ What? |
4520 | “ Then who would be the masters?--the professional classes, doctors and lawyers and so on? ” “ What? |
4520 | “ Then will you come and have dinner with us--? ” Francis fixed up the time and the place-- a small restaurant at the other end of the town. |
4520 | “ Then wo n''t you come on-- let me see-- on Wednesday? |
4520 | “ There now, is n''t it handsome? |
4520 | “ They''re old-- older than the Old Man of the Seas, sometimes, are n''t they? |
4520 | “ Think they have? ” he laughed. |
4520 | “ Three. ” “ Girls or boys? ” “ Girls. ” “ All girls? |
4520 | “ Three. ” “ Girls or boys? ” “ Girls. ” “ All girls? |
4520 | “ To see her people? |
4520 | “ To whom? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ We are sure to run across one another. ” “ When are you going? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | “ We might begin to be ourselves, anyhow. ” “ And what does that mean? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ We''re so happy in a land of plenty, AREN''T WE DEAR? ” “ Do you mean I''m greedy, Julia? ” said Robert. |
4520 | “ We''re so happy in a land of plenty, AREN''T WE DEAR? ” “ Do you mean I''m greedy, Julia? ” said Robert. |
4520 | “ We''ve got one! ” “ Afore I have my dinner? ” he answered amiably. |
4520 | “ Well now, what do you base your opinion on? ” Mr. French gave various bases for his opinion. |
4520 | “ Well then, what is it? |
4520 | “ Well, and how have you spent your morning? ” asked the host. |
4520 | “ Well, and what have you been doing with yourself? ” said he. |
4520 | “ Well, then, Angus-- suppose we do that, then?--When shall we start? ” Angus was the nervous insister. |
4520 | “ Well, then, ” said Francis, “ you will be in to lunch here, wo n''t you? |
4520 | “ Well, then? |
4520 | “ Well, who AM I to think of? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ Well, ” he said, “ you''ve got men and nations, and you''ve got the machines of war-- so how are you going to get out of it? |
4520 | “ Well, ” said Argyle, “ what have you been doing with yourself, eh? |
4520 | “ Well, ” said the little Hindu doctor, “ and how are things going now, with the men? ” “ The same as ever, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Well-- shall I say? |
4520 | “ Were you on your way home? ” asked Robert, huffy. |
4520 | “ What SHOULD I drink? ” said Aaron, whose acquaintance with wines was not very large. |
4520 | “ What about it, then? ” asked Aaron. |
4520 | “ What about the bridegroom, Algy, my boy? |
4520 | “ What about the wife and kiddies? |
4520 | “ What about the wife? ” said Robert-- the young lieutenant. |
4520 | “ What am I going to do this winter, do you think? ” Aaron asked. |
4520 | “ What am I to put it in? ” he queried. |
4520 | “ What are you bothering about? ” he said. |
4520 | “ What are you doing today? ” Aaron was not doing anything in particular. |
4520 | “ What are you going to do about your move on? ” “ Me! ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ What becomes of me? |
4520 | “ What ca n''t you? ” “ Choose. |
4520 | “ What did you do yesterday? ” “ Yesterday? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ What did you do yesterday? ” “ Yesterday? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ What do I call the common good? ” repeated the landlady. |
4520 | “ What do I call wisdom? ” repeated the landlady. |
4520 | “ What do YOU care for? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | “ What do YOU think, Josephine? ” asked Lilly. |
4520 | “ What do the words mean? ” he asked her. |
4520 | “ What do you make of the miners? ” said Jim, suddenly taking a new line. |
4520 | “ What do you make of''em, eh? ” he said. |
4520 | “ What do you reckon stars are? ” asked the sepulchral voice of Jim. |
4520 | “ What do you want to do? ” “ Nay, that''s what I want to know. ” “ Do you want anything? |
4520 | “ What do you want to do? ” “ Nay, that''s what I want to know. ” “ Do you want anything? |
4520 | “ What do you want to know for? ” He made no other answer, and turned again to the music. |
4520 | “ What do you want to see in me? ” he asked, with a smile, looking steadily back again. |
4520 | “ What does he do? ” “ Writes-- stories and plays. ” “ And makes it pay? ” “ Hardly at all.--They want us to go. |
4520 | “ What does he do? ” “ Writes-- stories and plays. ” “ And makes it pay? ” “ Hardly at all.--They want us to go. |
4520 | “ What else could I tell them? |
4520 | “ What gives you such a belly- ache for love, Jim? ” said Lilly, “ or for being loved? |
4520 | “ What gives you such a belly- ache for love, Jim? ” said Lilly, “ or for being loved? |
4520 | “ What have I been able to say to the children-- what have I been able to tell them? ” “ What HAVE you told them? ” he asked coldly. |
4520 | “ What have I been able to say to the children-- what have I been able to tell them? ” “ What HAVE you told them? ” he asked coldly. |
4520 | “ What have they to fight for? ” “ Why, everything! |
4520 | “ What have you come for? ” she cried again, with a voice full of hate. |
4520 | “ What have you come here for? ” His soul went black as he looked at her. |
4520 | “ What have you had enough of? |
4520 | “ What have you to do this morning? ” she asked him. |
4520 | “ What is cheap, please? |
4520 | “ What is it on the clock? ” The taxi was paid, the two men went upstairs. |
4520 | “ What is it? ” cried Julia. |
4520 | “ What is it? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ What is it? ” he said, to a rather sniffy messenger boy. |
4520 | “ What is that light burning? |
4520 | “ What is the difference then between you and me, Lilly? ” he said. |
4520 | “ What is there to say? ” ejaculated Lilly rapidly, with a spoonful of breath which he managed to compress and control into speech. |
4520 | “ What is there to talk about? ” “ Usually there''s so much, ” she said sarcastically. |
4520 | “ What makes you think so? ” “ Circumstances, ” replied Aaron sourly. |
4520 | “ What sort? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ What the hell do you take that beastly personal tone for? ” cried Lilly at Tanny, as the three sat under a leafless great beech- tree. |
4520 | “ What time is Manfredi coming back? ” said he. |
4520 | “ What train? ” said Arthur. |
4520 | “ What was it? |
4520 | “ What was it? ” It was the socialists. |
4520 | “ What was the interesting topic? ” he said cuttingly. |
4520 | “ What were they on about today, then? ” she said. |
4520 | “ What will Robert do? ” “ Have a shot at Josephine, apparently. ” “ Really? |
4520 | “ What will Robert do? ” “ Have a shot at Josephine, apparently. ” “ Really? |
4520 | “ What would you like to drink? |
4520 | “ What you give-- he? |
4520 | “ What''re you laughing at? ” repeated Aaron. |
4520 | “ What''s amiss? ” said Aaron Sisson, breaking this spell. |
4520 | “ What''s her name? ” “ Mrs. |
4520 | “ What''s that?--What would be romantic? ” said Jim as he lurched up and caught hold of Cyril Scott''s arm. |
4520 | “ What''s the good of that? ” he said irritably. |
4520 | “ What''s the matter with the fellow? ” he said. |
4520 | “ What''s tomorrow? ” said Jim. |
4520 | “ What, do n''t you think they''re wonderful? ” “ No. |
4520 | “ What? |
4520 | “ What? |
4520 | “ What? |
4520 | “ What? ” said Aaron, looking up. |
4520 | “ What? ” “ Afraid of spoiling your beauty by screwing your mouth to the flute? ” “ I look a fool, do I, when I''m playing? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ What? ” “ Afraid of spoiling your beauty by screwing your mouth to the flute? ” “ I look a fool, do I, when I''m playing? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ What? ” “ Afraid of spoiling your beauty by screwing your mouth to the flute? ” “ I look a fool, do I, when I''m playing? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ When are you going? ” he asked irritably, looking up at Lilly, whose face hovered in that green shadow above, and worried him. |
4520 | “ When did I make that start, then? ” “ At some unmentionably young age. |
4520 | “ When did you come to Florence? ” There was a little explanation. |
4520 | “ Where are you going to have it? ” he called. |
4520 | “ Where from? ” “ Watch Ireland, and watch Japan-- they''re the two poles of the world, ” said Jim. |
4520 | “ Where is Scott to- night? ” asked Struthers. |
4520 | “ Where is n''t it? |
4520 | “ Where is there a doctor? ” he added, on reflection. |
4520 | “ Where shall I come to you? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Where shall I say? ” Lilly produced the map, and they decided on time and station at which Lois coming out of London, should meet Jim. |
4520 | “ Where to? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Where were YOU all the time during the war? ” “ I was doing my job, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Where''s the beer? ” he asked, in deep tones, smiling full into Josephine''s face, as if she were going to produce it by some sleight of hand. |
4520 | “ Where''s the wine list? |
4520 | “ Where? |
4520 | “ Which room? ” said the policeman, dubious. |
4520 | “ Who knows all the vile things you''ve been doing? |
4520 | “ Who threw the bomb? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Who''s your husband? |
4520 | “ Who--? |
4520 | “ Who? ” said Tanny. |
4520 | “ Who? ” “ Those two who were here this evening. ” “ Miss Wade and Mr. |
4520 | “ Why I left her? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Why are n''t you satisfied? ” “ I''m not satisfied. |
4520 | “ Why are you crying? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Why are you such a baby? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Why do you have those people? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ Why must you interfere? ” “ Because I intend to, ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Why not carry it out-- eh? |
4520 | “ Why not? |
4520 | “ Why not? ” Both were watching blankly the roaring night of mid- London, the phantasmagoric old Bloomsbury Square. |
4520 | “ Why not? ” replied Robert, answering for her. |
4520 | “ Why not? ” “ I do n''t want to. ” “ Why not? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ Why not? ” “ I do n''t want to. ” “ Why not? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ Why not? ” “ It''s just my nature. ” “ Are you a seeker? |
4520 | “ Why not? ” “ It''s just my nature. ” “ Are you a seeker? |
4520 | “ Why should I? ” And she looked away into the restless hive of the theatre. |
4520 | “ Why should n''t I? ” she persisted. |
4520 | “ Why should n''t you be, anyhow? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Why, have you left valuables in your overcoat? ” “ My flute, ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ Why, how do you mean, what sort? |
4520 | “ Why, what more could a man want from life? |
4520 | “ Why? ” she exclaimed. |
4520 | “ Why? ” “ I know it. |
4520 | “ Will he heed, will he heed? ” thought the anxious second self. |
4520 | “ Will he never hear? |
4520 | “ Will you be alone all winter? ” “ Just myself and Tanny, ” he answered. |
4520 | “ Will you be leaving in the morning, Mr. Sisson? ” asked Lady Franks. |
4520 | “ Will you come to dinner tomorrow evening? ” said his hostess to him as he was leaving. |
4520 | “ Will you get the flute? ” she said as they entered. |
4520 | “ Will you have supper? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ Will you really come? |
4520 | “ Will you stay to dinner? ” said the Marchesa. |
4520 | “ Will you tell me why you left your wife and children?--Didn''t you love them? ” Aaron looked at the odd, round, dark muzzle of the girl. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t it break? ” she persisted. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t they be expecting you? ” said Robert, trying to keep his temper and his tone of authority. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you come and have a cocktail? ” she said. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you go home to them? ” she said, hysterical. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you kiss me? ” came her voice out of the darkness. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you let me try some accompaniment? ” said the soldier. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you stay? ” she said, in a small, muted voice. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you take off your coat? ” she said, looking at him with strange, large dark eyes. |
4520 | “ Wo n''t you? ” “ Yes, ” he said quietly. |
4520 | “ Would n''t you? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ Would you like a little tea? ” “ Ay-- and a bit of toast. ” “ You''re not supposed to have solid food. |
4520 | “ Would you like me to play it? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Would you like tea or anything? ” Lilly asked. |
4520 | “ Would you like to be wrapped in swaddling bands and laid at the breast? ” asked Lilly, disagreeably. |
4520 | “ Would you like to see the room where we have music? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Would you rather take a bus? ” she said in a high voice, because of the wind. |
4520 | “ Would you rather? ” she said, keeping her face averted. |
4520 | “ Yes, I prefer it. ” “ You like living all alone? ” “ I do n''t know about that. |
4520 | “ Yes, and THEN WHAT? ” cried the landlady. |
4520 | “ Yes, why not? ” said Tanny. |
4520 | “ Yes-- shall you buy us some, Father? |
4520 | “ Yes.--May I have another whiskey, please? ” She rose at once, powerfully energetic. |
4520 | “ Yes? ” he said. |
4520 | “ Yet you can give no reasons? ” “ Not any reasons that would be any good. |
4520 | “ You agree? ” “ Yes, on the whole. ” “ So do I-- on the whole. |
4520 | “ You are new in Florence? ” he said, as he presented the match. |
4520 | “ You are sure it wo n''t be too much for you-- too far? ” said the little officer, taking his wife''s arm solicitously. |
4520 | “ You believe in love, do n''t you? ” said Jim, sitting down near Aaron, and grinning at him. |
4520 | “ You brought the flute? ” she said, in that toneless, melancholy, unstriving voice of hers. |
4520 | “ You ca n''t REMEMBER us, can you? ” she asked. |
4520 | “ You can take a sudden jump, ca n''t you? ” he said. |
4520 | “ You did n''t expect me, then? ” “ Yes, oh, yes. |
4520 | “ You do everything for yourself, then? ” said Aaron. |
4520 | “ You do know, do n''t you? ” she insisted, still with the wistful appeal, and the veiled threat. |
4520 | “ You do n''t mind if I play it, do you? ” he said. |
4520 | “ You do n''t mind? ” “ No-- why-- It''s just as you see it.--Jim Bricknell''s a rare comic, to my eye. ” “ Oh, him!--no, not actually. |
4520 | “ You do n''t want emotions? |
4520 | “ You have n''t eaten? |
4520 | “ You have n''t heard from your husband? ” he added. |
4520 | “ You know what I mean-- ” “ You like your own company? |
4520 | “ You know you''ve been wrong to me, do n''t you? ” she said, half wistfully, half menacing. |
4520 | “ You mean the bird of your voice? |
4520 | “ You seriously think so? ” said Miss Wade. |
4520 | “ You want to stay? ” he said. |
4520 | “ You wanted the book of_ chansons_? ” she said. |
4520 | “ You will stay to dinner tonight, wo n''t you? ” she said. |
4520 | “ You wo n''t forget our candles, will you, Father? ” asked Millicent, with assurance now. |
4520 | “ You would n''t like me to wire to your wife? ” said Lilly. |
4520 | “ You''ll come and have dinner with me-- or lunch-- will you? |
4520 | “ You''ll eat a mince- pie in the kitchen with us, for luck? ” she said to him, detaining him till last. |
4520 | “ You''ll go to bed, wo n''t you? ” said Lilly to Aaron, when the door was shut. |
4520 | “ You''ll take another glass yourself, Sir? ” “ Yes, I will, I will. |
4520 | “ You''re going in the morning? ” said Arthur. |
4520 | “ You''re not offended, are you? ” he asked. |
4520 | “ You''ve got a husband, have you? ” “ Rather! |
4520 | “ You''ve known some life, have n''t you? ” he asked. |