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 |
---|---|
13518 | He first inquired whether, in the event of a passage by sea being discovered, we should come to his lands in any ship that might be sent? |
18985 | He first inquired, whether, in the event of a passage by sea being discovered, we should come to his lands in any ship that might be sent? |
46574 | Do you wish lemonade? |
46574 | Have yu tried the grape- vine? |
46574 | He''s my father? 46574 See here-- when do we eat?" |
46574 | Who is that dressed in Copen? |
46574 | Who''s your friend, may I ask? |
46574 | --You live far?" |
46574 | 1] Who is it? |
46574 | 2] Who is it? |
46574 | 3] Who is it? |
46574 | Ai n''t he queer?" |
46574 | Any familiar faces here?] |
46574 | But what was it? |
46574 | DURING WINTER, 1921? |
46574 | How many of us realize that a flustered mind is the cause of more disease than the inoculation of poisonous germs? |
46574 | Jack Gibson, the drug store man, had appeared on the scene and called out,"What have you got there?" |
46574 | Paying the boy''s price of two dollars the car owner remarked,"Well, son, do you make much money at this sort of thing?" |
46574 | The Wild Man"_ Who''s the stranger, mother dear? |
46574 | What is the matter with us anyway? |
43622 | By the way,said the chief life- saver,"can you swim?" |
43622 | Did the tub overflow? |
43622 | Do You Know Him? 43622 Is that so? |
43622 | Say,and he leaned over confidentially,"Ai n''t it hard when the wind blows?" |
43622 | What business are you in? |
43622 | ? |
43622 | ? |
43622 | ? |
43622 | ? |
43622 | Are We 100 Per Cent Efficient? |
43622 | Are n''t you ashamed? |
43622 | Are n''t you interested in the big proposition called"life", more than just enough to watch the procession of progressive mortals passing? |
43622 | Curl ten"ends"and then you''ll say"where''s that pack of worries that was hounding me this afternoon?" |
43622 | Do n''t you care much? |
43622 | Do n''t you like our politics?" |
43622 | How do you know that you''re going to have another as good? |
43622 | Well!_"I say, who was here with you last night?" |
43622 | What''s the matter with you anyway? |
43622 | What''s the matter? |
43622 | Will it make a paragraph? |
43622 | Without material? |
43622 | Would n''t you like to strike out for a real goal, eh? |
43622 | [ Illustration: DO YOU REMEMBER this remarkable aggregation? |
43622 | _ He Got the Job_ Police Commissioner--"If you were ordered to disperse a mob what would you do?" |
43622 | _ Two Strings to Her Beau_ He--"If you could only have two wishes come true, what would you wish for?" |
46935 | And what has been the chief factor which has created such an enviable position for these two companies? |
46935 | Do n''t you know the country is dry? |
46935 | No,said the father;"what makes you ask a question like that while we are eating?" |
46935 | 17)?_ By J. |
46935 | 2nd Girl--"Only your arms?" |
46935 | =========="Are caterpillars good to eat?" |
46935 | ARE WE, or are we not going to have a cricket club this year? |
46935 | Abroad at Home WHAT has become of the old- fashioned winter? |
46935 | And then you sit and wonder why the devil do n''t he write? |
46935 | As the rinks consist of four men only, could they not be spared during the Bonspiel period? |
46935 | Futuristic Fables_ Winnipeg Store News as it Will, Perhaps(?) |
46935 | Have we the players? |
46935 | If I were asked,"What institutions do you consider have been, and are yet, of the greatest service to Canada?" |
46935 | If so, will they organize and get ready for practise? |
46935 | Is your office, your desk, your work the most attractive and interesting in the whole institution-- to YOU? |
46935 | Or grow more mature in wisdom, And more matronly in grace? |
46935 | Percy Timmins, our coming star defence player, is a decided attraction to the games, especially to the fair sex, eh what? |
46935 | The same girl wants to know why they turn out the lights for a moonlight waltz if they wo n''t allow you to get up just a little closer? |
46935 | Then they retired-- poor Joe woke Irma up and said,"Did she( the woman of the Scotch and cloves) say this was a_ feather_ mattress?" |
46935 | WHO IS THE traveller that sold dud eggs as new laid, and what shall be done to him? |
46935 | What Is_ Your Best_? |
46935 | What were the four hundred Assiniboines to do? |
46935 | Why Not a Hudson''s Bay Bonspiel Week? |
46935 | and become a yearly event? |
910 | Ai n''t run out? |
910 | Ai n''t thinkin''it''ll hurt my digestion? |
910 | And how much for one that''s all chewed up like this one? |
910 | And who in hell is Weedon Scott? |
910 | Are you going to take the money? 910 Dead?" |
910 | Did you lock the front door? |
910 | How many cartridges did you say you had left? |
910 | How many dogs''ve we got, Henry? |
910 | How''d it happen? |
910 | Matt, how much is a good sled- dog worth? |
910 | Only what? |
910 | Say, Henry, that other one that come in an''got a fish-- why did n''t the dogs pitch into it? 910 Say, Henry,"he asked suddenly,"how many dogs did you say we had?" |
910 | Say, Henry,he chided gently,"ai n''t you forgot somethin''?" |
910 | Seven again? |
910 | Thinkin''what? |
910 | Tried to steal you, eh? 910 Understand?" |
910 | What d''ye mean by that? |
910 | What d''ye think? |
910 | What the devil can I do with a wolf in California? |
910 | What the devil can you do with a wolf in California? |
910 | What''d I want to kick''m for? 910 What''d it look like?" |
910 | What''s up now? |
910 | Where are you goin''? |
910 | Where''s Lord Alfred? |
910 | Where''s the wolf? |
910 | Who''s croaking now? |
910 | Who''s that mug? |
910 | Wo n''t he run away? |
910 | Wo n''t some of you help? |
910 | Yes what? |
910 | .?" |
910 | .?" |
910 | And is not my brother dead?" |
910 | Beast? |
910 | But what is a dog to know in its consciousness of madness? |
910 | D''ye hear it squeal?" |
910 | D''ye see them marks across the chest?" |
910 | D''ye want to look at''em? |
910 | Did you see that one?" |
910 | For was not Kiche my brother''s dog? |
910 | He had killed this god''s dog, bitten his companion god, and what else was to be expected than some terrible punishment? |
910 | He stopped to listen to it, then he finished his sentence with a wave of his hand toward the sound of the cry,"--one of them?" |
910 | Henry groaned as he passed from sleep to waking, and demanded,"What''s wrong now?" |
910 | How could he spring away with his four legs in the air above him? |
910 | How could it be otherwise? |
910 | How was he to know that this thing that sniffed was a thing at which to bristle? |
910 | It is true, her mother was a dog; but did not my brother tie her out in the woods all of three nights in the mating season? |
910 | Scott never desisted from his efforts, though he looked up coolly and asked:"Your dog?" |
910 | The other nodded, and asked,"How about the back?" |
910 | Understand?" |
910 | Well, well, he made a mistake, did n''t he?" |
910 | What are you doing?" |
910 | What d''ye say?" |
910 | What if the trail of the gods led out on that side? |
910 | What is it?" |
910 | Why should he not hate them? |
910 | or do I have to hit you again?" |
6178 | ''And no man calls you wife?'' 6178 ''But if I go, you will still try to escape?'' |
6178 | ''Oh, is this so?'' 6178 ''Oh, tell me,''I cried, with a quiverin''at my heart,''tell me, is he livin''?'' |
6178 | ''There''s but one Mary Callen,''said I,''but the heart of me is dead, until I hear news that brings it to life again?'' 6178 And Pretty Pierre,"said the trooper,"is not here with her?" |
6178 | And she died? |
6178 | And what about loving Hawley, then? |
6178 | And what does Antoine get out of this? |
6178 | Do? 6178 Father,"she said"Father Corraine, I believe you are?" |
6178 | Have you candles-- many candles, Angelique? |
6178 | How did you escape? 6178 How do you come here, Pierre?" |
6178 | Ida,he gestured,"will you answer me now? |
6178 | Is he a good lad, father? |
6178 | Is not love greater than all? |
6178 | None travels hither; who should find it? |
6178 | She was his wife-- Shon''s wife? |
6178 | Shon McGann,the priest said,"I have words to say to you concerning this poor girl,""You wish to have her taken to the Fort, I suppose? |
6178 | The ground is as iron; one can not dig, and the water under the ice is cruel-- is it not so, Angelique? |
6178 | There is the sound of wings close by-- dost thou not hear them, Angelique? |
6178 | Well, then, there''s nothing to row about, is there? |
6178 | What has it done in the West? 6178 Where is he?" |
6178 | Where is her home, father? |
6178 | Who can say whither a woman''s fancy goes? 6178 Why not write him off twenty shares to propitiate the gods-- gifts unto the needy, eh!--a thousand- fold-- what?" |
6178 | Yet if evil come? |
6178 | You do not love me? |
6178 | You ran from him-- why? |
6178 | You think he''ll play with her? |
6178 | Ah, tell me, father, do you know Shon McGann? |
6178 | And Blanche replied:"When he does that, what will you do, Joe?" |
6178 | And did he not say to you at the last that they were even now? |
6178 | And now what will come of it?" |
6178 | And now? |
6178 | And the girl replied:"Ah, father, have I not told you? |
6178 | And the man did so; and Pierre, as he looked at the dead man, added:''Why did he make me kill him?'' |
6178 | But tell me, does he ever think of me?'' |
6178 | But that other, asleep in his bed at the sacred moment when she parted, suddenly waked, and said to Soldier Joe:"Did you speak, Joe? |
6178 | Can you take me to him?" |
6178 | Did they take him away?" |
6178 | Did you call me?" |
6178 | Did you fight?" |
6178 | Do you know what you ask?" |
6178 | Do you not know a hundred cases where the law has dealt foully? |
6178 | Do you understand?" |
6178 | Do?" |
6178 | Eh?" |
6178 | He looked carelessly round, and then said loudly:"Say, Joe, so you''ve buried Blanche, have you? |
6178 | He said to me, my wife:''Antoine, will you stay and watch the mine until I come with the birds northward, again?'' |
6178 | He said to someone behind him in the shade, who was looking also,"What will be the end of that, eh?" |
6178 | Here the priest interposed:"What is the name of the man in Pipi Valley to whom you are going?" |
6178 | I might have killed two or three of them, and have escaped, but to what good? |
6178 | In the midst of doing so he paused and repeated the words,"And what will come of it?" |
6178 | Is there a Mary Callen dead, and a Mary Callen livin''? |
6178 | Masses for the dead.... What dead? |
6178 | No sooner was this done than Father Corraine entered the room, and seeing the outlaw, said"You have come here, Pierre?" |
6178 | She briefly told him how, and then he said:"Well, I suppose you know all of me now?" |
6178 | So?" |
6178 | Someone-- someone-- he loved?" |
6178 | The man Pretty Pierre, did he not speak puzzling words concerning himself and Shon McGann? |
6178 | The priest said:"You understand, my child?" |
6178 | Then, after a moment, he said:"How do you deserve this? |
6178 | Then:"Is there pain now Antoine?" |
6178 | They clasped hands, and the priest said:"You have come at my call from Fort Cypress?" |
6178 | We could meet no more; but who could have guessed this thing? |
6178 | Well, can you not guess?" |
6178 | Well, well, my daughter?" |
6178 | What is there left?" |
6178 | What was she doing with Pretty Pierre?" |
6178 | What''s the result? |
6178 | When she had answered him, he said:"And you are willing to speak with me still?" |
6178 | Why is it there?" |
6178 | Why should I plead? |
6178 | Will you be my wife?" |
6178 | Will you come now to the home you wanted?" |
6178 | You and Shon McGann are not enemies?'' |
6178 | You are not sorry that you are helping me? |
6178 | You thought me dead, father?" |
6178 | and did both of them love a man that went from Farcalladen Rise one wild night long ago?'' |
6177 | Am I not beautiful? |
6177 | And what are they, bedad? |
6177 | And why''av coorse''? |
6177 | Are you alone? |
6177 | But the City o''Gold- was there much wealth for you there, Shon? |
6177 | Did she know? 6177 Do you know that?" |
6177 | Do you-- do you not know,she said,"that-- that--"He interrupted her:"Do I not know, Lucy, that this is your home? |
6177 | Envy-- Pretty- Pierre,she repeated, in distress;"are you Pretty Pierre? |
6177 | O God,she piteously said,"what did I do? |
6177 | Shoo has told you what happened here? |
6177 | So,''bien?'' |
6177 | To God''s Playground? 6177 Well, what more?" |
6177 | Wendling, you think, cares nothing for women? 6177 What will you do-- tell me, what will you do?" |
6177 | Where are you going? |
6177 | Why did you not make known the marriage with Shon? |
6177 | Will you walk with me? |
6177 | Yes,said Pierre,"as Wendling, at nothing at all? |
6177 | You believe all this poppy- cock, Chief? |
6177 | You will-- come in? |
6177 | ''Bien,''what then?" |
6177 | ''I''m not well, and I thought I heard-- you heard it; what was it like?'' |
6177 | ''Well,''says I to the Injin grinnin''before me,''what''s that, in the name o''Moses?'' |
6177 | ''What''s that? |
6177 | And where is she now? |
6177 | But is it not all the same? |
6177 | But shall I not kiss you, yes, just once after eight years-- my wife?" |
6177 | But the woman--? |
6177 | But where the deuce did he come from with that Italian face? |
6177 | Can you not see, do you not know? |
6177 | Do n''t you hear him calling?" |
6177 | Do you come from the Hills of the Mighty Men?" |
6177 | Does he think we''re all born idiots? |
6177 | He raised his eyebrows slightly, and between the puffs of smoke, said:"Ah yes, my Lucy, why? |
6177 | If it''s the case, where hev we been in the show? |
6177 | Is it not as good as Shon McGann?" |
6177 | Is it not so?" |
6177 | Is n''t that so?" |
6177 | Is not Pretty Pierre as good a name as Francois Rives? |
6177 | It was a punishment for playing too honest, or something; eh, what do you think, Lucy-- or something,''hein?''" |
6177 | Listen: do you know what I shall do? |
6177 | Now this thing hangs fire, and there''s a lack of animation about it, is n''t there?" |
6177 | Oh, why?" |
6177 | Pierre dropped the match and said to him,--"You are looking for your wife?" |
6177 | Pierre, pausing between the whiffs of a cigarette, said:"So? |
6177 | Pretty Pierre remarked nonchalantly in reply,--"The wallaby track-- eh-- what is that, Shon?" |
6177 | She had said that she would not go to her shop this night; but if not, then where could she have gone and Ikni, too? |
6177 | She said whisperingly:"Are you a spirit? |
6177 | She shuddered, then grew still again and whispered:"Why did you let it be thought that you were drowned? |
6177 | Shon laughed, and said between the puffs of smoke,"Wealth for me, is it? |
6177 | Tell me she did n''t know, Pierre?" |
6177 | Ten years is a long time to remember, eh?" |
6177 | That is fair, eh-- that is fair?" |
6177 | The Frenchman''s drooping eyelids closed a little more, and he replied, meditatively:"Money? |
6177 | The grip of the honest hand, quite, and the clinch of an honest waist? |
6177 | The wallaby track? |
6177 | Then Pierre said, sharply:"Bien?" |
6177 | Then he said in a low, cutting tone:"I suppose your heart aches for the beautiful lady, eh?" |
6177 | There is a roof, and there is that woman at Ward''s Mistake, and the brats-- eh, by and by?" |
6177 | There is only one way,"was the reply;"but what shall that way be? |
6177 | This one? |
6177 | To the glacier- top? |
6177 | To this, Pretty Pierre replied:"What can I do? |
6177 | Was this peculiar softness to his last tones assumed or real? |
6177 | Well, sit down, Lucy, it is a long story, and you have much to tell, how much-- who knows?" |
6177 | Well?" |
6177 | What''s that McGann said about the lady being his wife? |
6177 | What''s the avil thing that he has to say? |
6177 | What''s the divil''s proof he would bring? |
6177 | What''s the use of thinkin''? |
6177 | When Shon ended, he said with a sidelong glance:"But what did you think of all that, Shon?" |
6177 | When they were alone again he continued with no anger in his tone:"So, Andre the avocat and you-- that, eh? |
6177 | When were you married to Shon McGann?" |
6177 | Where are you, Lucy? |
6177 | Where was we when the license was around? |
6177 | Why? |
6177 | Why? |
6177 | Will you do as I say?" |
6177 | You know, then, that I am-- that I am married-- to him?" |
6177 | You remember the song we used to sing on the Chaudiere at St. Antoine? |
6177 | You want a proof? |
6177 | You would save him, for a little, for an hour or two-- or more? |
6177 | and what''s got its hand on ye? |
6177 | called Shon,"are we gluin''our eyes to a chink in the wall, whin the tangle of battle goes on beyand? |
6177 | wealth of work and the pride of livin''in the heart of us, and the grip of an honest hand betunewhiles; and what more do y''want, Pierre?" |
6183 | And then, Pourcette? |
6183 | And when you have killed that puma, Pourcette-- if you ever do- what then? |
6183 | And you will come with us,said Lawless,"away from this loneliness?" |
6183 | Can you pilot us in? |
6183 | D''ye think he''s mad? |
6183 | Did anything strange ever happen there? |
6183 | From where away? |
6183 | Hello, who are you? |
6183 | How long have you lived off there? |
6183 | How many are there of you? |
6183 | It was good sport? |
6183 | M''sieu'', who can tell? 6183 So? |
6183 | Was it puma we had betune the teeth? 6183 We heard you over there-- it was you?" |
6183 | What happened? |
6183 | What trouble have you had, of what crime are you guilty? |
6183 | What was the chant? |
6183 | What''s that ye say, Parfaite? |
6183 | What''s that, Pierre? |
6183 | What''s the matter? |
6183 | What''s this, Monsieur Pourcette? |
6183 | Who was''Ma p''tite Corinne,''Pierre? |
6183 | Who- are you? |
6183 | Why did he do that? |
6183 | Why do they swing the censers at the Mass? |
6183 | Why? |
6183 | Yes, yes; and Little Babiche? |
6183 | You stay because you like it-- at King''s House? |
6183 | ''How do you, Babiche?'' |
6183 | ''Well,''he say,''do you know of a bay where few ships enter safe?'' |
6183 | ''What is it, Babiche?'' |
6183 | ''Where is it, Pierre?'' |
6183 | ''Where to and where from, Babiche?'' |
6183 | A finger of rock, waiting as the old man said-- for what? |
6183 | AT POINT O''BUGLES"John York, John York, where art thou gone, John York?" |
6183 | And what''s puma but an almighty cat? |
6183 | And when I returned,"Wouldst thou have me leave thy country, sir?" |
6183 | Are you alone?" |
6183 | At last he said to me,''What day is this, Pierre?'' |
6183 | Behind the symbol lay the Thing what was it? |
6183 | But twice every year he went to yonder point and spoke out the King''s words to him:''John York, John York, where art thou gone, John York?'' |
6183 | He smiled to himself; and I said,''Where''ve you been, Babiche? |
6183 | He speak often of you and of two others--where are they?" |
6183 | His eyes dwelt on Sir Duke Lawless for a moment, and then, coming nearer, he said,"You are an Englishman?" |
6183 | How is it when these come off?" |
6183 | How long has he lived here, did he say?" |
6183 | I loved them every one; and then there was the mails, the year''s mails-- how should they be brought on? |
6183 | I will stay-- if you please-- hein? |
6183 | If you please?" |
6183 | It was at the time of Noel-- yes?" |
6183 | Lawless shook his head:"Mad? |
6183 | Now and again I crossed him on the trail, for have I not travelled to every corner of the north? |
6183 | Perhaps I could think it out little by little; but it might take too long-- and what is the good?" |
6183 | Presently, however, he heard distinctly, for the man raised his hands high above his head, and the words fell painfully:"Am I my brother''s keeper?" |
6183 | Shon went over to the coat, did as Pourcette had done, and said:"Is it gone y''are, Jo, wid your slow tongue and your big heart? |
6183 | So he said, as though he knew something:"It is a long time since it happened?" |
6183 | Soon the captain come to me and say:''You know the coast, the north coast of the gulf, from Labrador to Quebec?'' |
6183 | Suppose this was the ship of the pirate and murderer? |
6183 | The finger of the devil-- was it not real? |
6183 | The lady-- who can tell what won her over from the honest gentleman to the faithless prince? |
6183 | Then there came a letter to him with great seals, which began:''John York, John York, where art thou gone, John York?'' |
6183 | Then, as if suddenly awakened to the strangeness of the question, he added, in a startled way:"What do you know? |
6183 | Was he not good?" |
6183 | Well, whose was the one? |
6183 | Well--""Well, what?" |
6183 | What else can one do? |
6183 | What is gold to me? |
6183 | What is there like it? |
6183 | What shall be done with Little Babiche, Pierre?" |
6183 | What then?" |
6183 | What were a hundred dynasties beside that precious life, eaten by shame and sorrow? |
6183 | When he was gone I-- what do men do sometimes when starvation is on them, and they have a hunger of hell to live? |
6183 | When they were ready to start, Lawless said to him at the last:"What will you do here, comrade, as the days go on?" |
6183 | Where? |
6183 | Which is the good path over the hills? |
6183 | Who was the other that followed?" |
6183 | Why do you live here?" |
6183 | Why should Gaspard remain here year after year? |
6183 | You do not know? |
6183 | You see?" |
6183 | You''ll come with me to King''s House to- morrow?" |
6183 | have you ever felt the hand of your own child in yours, and looked at the mother, as she lies there all pale and shining between the quilts?" |
6183 | how I remember those days--"''Which is the way that the sun goes? |
6183 | said Shon--"a sun dog?" |
6183 | she speak so gentle and light-- and say to the child:''Would you like go with your father a pretty journey down the gulf?'' |
6188 | Alive or dead? |
6188 | And the old folks? |
6188 | Are the Lumleys all right? 6188 Bignold-- where does he come from? |
6188 | Ca n''t you leave the dead alone? |
6188 | Ca n''t you let them rest? 6188 Come, tell me, did you have a wife and child, and were they both called Alice-- do you remember? |
6188 | Dear old man,he said, his voice shaking,"do you know what I''m thinking? |
6188 | Have I changed so much? 6188 Have you been steeping them some days?" |
6188 | He was married, was n''t he? |
6188 | Hold you-- does he need a Sheriff to tell him when to spik? |
6188 | How long have you come to stay here-- out West? |
6188 | I am to go alone-- eh? |
6188 | I''d like to have gone to Lumley''s, but that''s not possible, is it? 6188 Is my cold bad-- so bad that I need boneset?" |
6188 | It is so? 6188 Jim, and Lance, and Jerry, and Abner?" |
6188 | Man, dear man, if you belong to her-- if you do, ca n''t you see what it will mean to me? 6188 Marcile-- where is Marcile?" |
6188 | Queeck- queeck, where is Marcile? |
6188 | Reprieve? |
6188 | That is it, is it not? |
6188 | They have found it-- gold? |
6188 | To go free-- altogether? |
6188 | Was it near the other entrance? |
6188 | Well, Andy, have you been here ever since? |
6188 | Well, but if your life is saved, Grassette? |
6188 | Well, what is all this, Grassette? |
6188 | What did he do? 6188 What is it?" |
6188 | What time is it? |
6188 | What will you do, Grassette? |
6188 | When be you goin''back East? 6188 Where did you think of livin''out here?" |
6188 | Why did you come, m''sieu''? |
6188 | Will you not help to clear your conscience by doing this thing? 6188 You want to board here?" |
6188 | A chance of life-- what did it mean? |
6188 | Ai n''t it enough to quarrel about the living? |
6188 | Alive or dead? |
6188 | And if I would n''t have him with you, do you think I''ll have you without him? |
6188 | And if he was outside these prison walls, and in the Gulch, and the man was there alive before him, what would he do? |
6188 | Are they still there, at the Forks?" |
6188 | Are you one that has lived to tell the tale? |
6188 | But do you not think how sudden it was? |
6188 | But is there no one that you care for or that cares for you, that you remember, or that remembers you?" |
6188 | Dear old man, say you remember Franklin?" |
6188 | Did he ever laugh in his life?" |
6188 | Did you know Sir John Franklin-- is it true, dear old boy, is it true? |
6188 | Did you know Sir John Franklin-- is it-- tell me, is it true?" |
6188 | Do you remember?" |
6188 | Do you think she''ll git well?" |
6188 | Have you forgotten God, Grassette? |
6188 | Have you forgotten me?" |
6188 | He had brought him out of the wilds, out of the unknown-- was he only taking him into the unknown again? |
6188 | He''s stored up a lot of things to say, and he''ll say them; but you''ll keep the boy in your mind, and be patient, wo n''t you, Cassy? |
6188 | He, John Bickersteth, was going into a world again, where-- as he believed-- a happy fate awaited him; but what of this old man? |
6188 | How many years had gone since he had heard church- bells? |
6188 | Is the house warm enough for you?" |
6188 | It did all right before, did n''t it?" |
6188 | It is so-- eh? |
6188 | It was a wild thought, but yet why not-- why not? |
6188 | Listen-- where is Marcile?" |
6188 | Marcile-- where was Marcile now? |
6188 | Of whom? |
6188 | Were there friends, any friends anywhere in the world waiting for him? |
6188 | What do I care? |
6188 | What had made her fall in love with George Baragar? |
6188 | What is he?" |
6188 | What is his name? |
6188 | What sort of life had it been? |
6188 | What time did you fix for goin''?" |
6188 | What would Grassette do? |
6188 | What would he do? |
6188 | What would the man do? |
6188 | Whence came he? |
6188 | Where was Marcile? |
6188 | Which one did he take?" |
6188 | Whither was he wending now? |
6188 | Who are you? |
6188 | Who are you? |
6188 | Who is he?" |
6188 | Will you not take the chance? |
6188 | You remember the ship-- the Arctic Sea-- the ice- fields, and Franklin-- you remember him? |
6188 | You will do it?" |
6176 | ''Tiens,''you will go? |
6176 | And Lonely Valley is at our feet and Whiteface Mountain beyond? |
6176 | And the writer of the song, who was he? |
6176 | And what was it like-- the gold- pan flyer-- the tobogan ride, Shon? |
6176 | And why do you fear that he is not alive? |
6176 | But in the Valley, in the Valley, where all the miners are? |
6176 | But were it not for the Tobogan Ride we should n''t have stopped here,said the Honourable;"and where would this meeting have been?" |
6176 | Did you not hear voices coming athwart the wind? 6176 Do we know that woman?" |
6176 | Do you think she would have me now? |
6176 | In God''s name what does it mean? |
6176 | Is it a trick of the eye or the hand of the devil? |
6176 | It was an avalanche-- that path between the pines? |
6176 | It was so long ago; might n''t it be better to go over the story again? |
6176 | Just--"Yes? 6176 Say, Shon, when''ll you be through that tobogan ride of yours? |
6176 | She does not move--"She will never move? |
6176 | Shon, old friend, do n''t you know me? |
6176 | Shon, old friend, what is it? |
6176 | Tell me, do you think she still cares for me? |
6176 | That? 6176 There, do n''t you hear it, soft and sighin''? |
6176 | What was his name? |
6176 | What was it like?--what was it like? |
6176 | What was it you whispered soft to yourself, then, Pierre? |
6176 | What were his looks? |
6176 | Where is Shangi? |
6176 | Where is the sun? |
6176 | White man, or Indian? |
6176 | Who can tell? |
6176 | Who was the man in scarlet who came from the woods? |
6176 | Will you not tell me what gives the ache to your words? |
6176 | Yes, but his first name? |
6176 | You are The Man? |
6176 | You are sure? 6176 You saved me from those devils in the valley?" |
6176 | You''ll spin us a long yarn about them another night, Shon? |
6176 | ''Hein?''" |
6176 | Ai nt there any end to it?" |
6176 | And for naught else?" |
6176 | And he said at last, before he was aisy and free again,''Shon,''says he,''it''s better to burn your ships behind ye, is n''t it?'' |
6176 | And the woman, Pierre, the woman aloft?" |
6176 | And while Shon read, the Honourable called into the tent:"Have you any lemons for the whisky, Pierre?" |
6176 | And why have you sought me? |
6176 | Are not my words wise? |
6176 | But yet: had all those people hovering about those lights below done harm to him? |
6176 | Can you see the people at the mines?" |
6176 | Did it come from the Irishman himself? |
6176 | Did you not hear--?" |
6176 | Eh? |
6176 | Eh?" |
6176 | He turned sternly, and said,"Who are you? |
6176 | He turned to the Indian:"Someone lives there"? |
6176 | Hester, how is it you are here in this strange place-- you?" |
6176 | How is it with you?" |
6176 | If he waited-- but Lawless asked her if she cared for him at all, if she wished or intended to marry him? |
6176 | If one remembers, why should the other forget?" |
6176 | Is not love more than legend, and a human heart than all the beasts of the field or any joy of slaughter? |
6176 | It is every man''s talk that there is n''t a herd of buffaloes in the whole country; but this- eh?" |
6176 | Jo Gordineer only said jestingly:"Say, now, what are you doing, Shon, bringing us down here, when we might be well into the Valley by this time?" |
6176 | Me, Duke Lawless? |
6176 | Must go? |
6176 | Must he go the whole course of that frozen slide, plump into the wild depths below? |
6176 | PERE CHAMPAGNE"Is it that we stand at the top of the hill and the end of the travel has come, Pierre? |
6176 | She amusingly said,''Perhaps she had, but it really did n''t matter, did it?'' |
6176 | She stared at him like one that had been awakened from an evil dream, then tottered towards him with the cry,--"Just, Just, have you come to save me? |
6176 | Tell me, what is''t you see?" |
6176 | The Honourable then said,"What is that all about, Shon? |
6176 | Then Shon said:"Duke Lawless, there''s parallels of latitude and parallels of longitude, but who knows the tomb of ould Brian Borhoime?" |
6176 | Then he added:"The end''s cut off, Joey, me boy; but what''s a tobogan ride, annyway?" |
6176 | There is death in the Valley, Pierre?" |
6176 | There, do you not hear them? |
6176 | This Scarlet Hunter, how many times have you seen him?" |
6176 | Trafford thought of Shangi, the Indian,--where had he gone? |
6176 | Was it his own nature acting through those who called him"partner"? |
6176 | Was this Titan that had saved him sculpturing some figure from the metal hill? |
6176 | We''ll start to- morrow morning, if we can get ready, and Shangi here will lead us; eh, Pierre?" |
6176 | What could they say? |
6176 | What do you know of Hester Orval?" |
6176 | What does the letter say?" |
6176 | What would be the use? |
6176 | What?" |
6176 | Which was his way of saying,"How come you here?" |
6176 | Who could have guessed that this outlaw of the North would ever show a sign of sympathy or friendship for anybody? |
6176 | Who told you?" |
6176 | Why do n''t you spake?" |
6176 | Will-- will my mother forgive me?" |
6176 | Yes, they heard it, a deep sonorous sound:"Is the daybreak come?" |
6176 | Yet that glow, that power in the face-- was he Piegan, Blackfoot, Cree, Blood? |
6176 | You sought me to tell me that?" |
6176 | You think it possible, Pierre? |
6180 | An''what is it ye say, little man? |
6180 | An''where''s that, Pierre darlin''? |
6180 | And she died? |
6180 | And what do you give to Ida? |
6180 | And what for that? |
6180 | Are you standin''me frind in this? |
6180 | Are you sure you''ll not run away when they come on? |
6180 | At what time will it be convaynyint for ye? |
6180 | Aw, give what to who, hop- o''-me- thumb? |
6180 | D''ye think I''m a thafe to stale me own word? 6180 D''ye think''twas the duck brought it?" |
6180 | Did you never run away when faced? |
6180 | Does she know that I''m here? |
6180 | Eh, well,persisted Pierre,"but did you never turn tail from a slip of a woman?" |
6180 | Fight her? 6180 Had me fill av it, Trader, me angel? |
6180 | He''s a great bully that, is n''t he, Trader? 6180 Her lovers? |
6180 | How can ye have it out wid a woman? |
6180 | Is it digging out or carvin''in y''are? |
6180 | Is that saddle for Ida? 6180 Is that the word av a frind?" |
6180 | Malahide is a long way off,said Pierre,"but when one travels why should n''t the other?" |
6180 | Mother o''saints,he said,"has it come to that, after all these years? |
6180 | Must this go on? |
6180 | No fightin'', did ye say? 6180 Not more than two at a time, was it?" |
6180 | Oh, is that it? |
6180 | On your oath, Macavoy? |
6180 | Out with her? |
6180 | To the finger call of Hilton''s wife, eh? |
6180 | Well,said Pierre to Wonta,"he is amusing, eh?--so big a coward, eh?" |
6180 | Well,said Pierre,"what about those five at Wonta''s tent?" |
6180 | What Ballzeboob''s tricks are y''at now? |
6180 | What are you going to give? |
6180 | What d''ye mean, by such talk to me, sir? 6180 What do you know av-- av that woman?" |
6180 | What five, then? |
6180 | What for should anny man run from a woman? |
6180 | What will you do? |
6180 | What''s that he said? |
6180 | What''s that, me Frinchman? |
6180 | What''s this y''are sayin''to me? |
6180 | What''s to be done now? |
6180 | What-- what is she doing? |
6180 | Whin you plaze; but a word in your ear; are you sure she''ll not follow us? |
6180 | Who are you? |
6180 | Why d''ye kape the door opin whin the child''s perishin''? |
6180 | Why, what-- do you-- fight? |
6180 | Will to- night do-- at sunset? |
6180 | Will you fight? |
6180 | You had a child, then? |
6180 | You would keep her? |
6180 | You''ve been taking a walk in the country, then? |
6180 | ''Ay, little Tim Macavoy,''he says, says he,''you''ve bin''atin''the husks av idleness long enough; when are you goin''to buckle to? |
6180 | ''Buckle to,''says I,''Father Corraine? |
6180 | A flood under the surface, a tidal river- what? |
6180 | A purty weddin''gift, says I? |
6180 | Allons, what is the good? |
6180 | An''a dab wid red wax it shall have, an''what more be the word o''Freddy Tarlton the lawyer?" |
6180 | And where''s that grand leather belt of yours, eh, my monarch?" |
6180 | Buckle to, yer riv''rince?'' |
6180 | But what the devil good does all yer thinkin''do ye, Pierre? |
6180 | D''ye know the double- an''-twist?" |
6180 | Do yees iver see her now, Pierre?" |
6180 | Every morning at sunrise they begin to eddy and roll-- and who ever saw a stranger sight? |
6180 | For he''s only bragging, of course-- eh?" |
6180 | For what? |
6180 | Have you a mind for Wonta?" |
6180 | He looked at Macavoy musingly, and said to himself:"Well, why not? |
6180 | He roared, as, perhaps, he had never roared before:"Are ye all gone mad- mad- mad? |
6180 | He''ll stand by me in it-- eh, Pierre?" |
6180 | Her lovers, is it? |
6180 | How can you fight a woman?" |
6180 | Is it her and Hilton that''s to ate aff one dish togither? |
6180 | Is there truth on y''r tongue?" |
6180 | Macavoy gave the hand a grasp that turned Pierre sick, and asked:"Had ye iver a child av y''r own, Pierre- iver wan at all?" |
6180 | More than one of them did not believe at first; but, pshaw, what have I been doing all my life to let such fellows doubt me? |
6180 | Pierre was about to rise, but Macavoy suddenly pinned him to his seat with this question:"Did y''iver have a wife, thin, Pierre?" |
6180 | Presently Pierre said aloud:"Well, my Macavoy, what will you do? |
6180 | Promissory notice on demand is it anny toime? |
6180 | S''t, Pierre--"his voice grew softer on a sudden, as a fresh thought came to him--"did y''ever think that the child might be dumb like the mother?" |
6180 | Send this good gift?" |
6180 | She said, would they not search the house? |
6180 | Sure, y''are comin'', ai n''t you, me darlins?" |
6180 | They had the place, but could they hold it? |
6180 | Well?" |
6180 | What food and water were there within? |
6180 | What is life without these things? |
6180 | What was I to do? |
6180 | What was there to do? |
6180 | What would women of that sort do? |
6180 | What''s that for? |
6180 | Who can tell what it is? |
6180 | Who could tell but she might need help? |
6180 | Will ye have a drop av drink-- cold water, man-- near, an''a sponge betune whiles? |
6180 | Yet, what to do? |
6180 | You think that sounds like a woman or a priest? |
6180 | an''run away, is it? |
6180 | asked Pierre;"by the book av the Mass?" |
6180 | fight her? |
6180 | he said;"have n''t you had your fill of it?" |
6180 | is it? |
6180 | said Wonta, starting to her feet;"who is the other woman?" |
6818 | ''And the boys?'' 6818 ''Have you seen my journal- bag?'' |
6818 | ''What is the meaning of that, Billy?'' 6818 ''When?" |
6818 | And what,says the pessimist,"is the fly in all this precious ointment?" |
6818 | And you had it the spring before, too, did n''t you? |
6818 | Are you ill? |
6818 | Are you ready? |
6818 | Did n''t we come to shoot? |
6818 | Do you wish to tell me about it? |
6818 | Have you any pain? |
6818 | Hello, boys, what''s up? |
6818 | How are you fixed for whiskey? |
6818 | How did you get it? |
6818 | How long have you had that? |
6818 | Is n''t your husband kind to you? |
6818 | Is this your husband? |
6818 | Look at this, Jarvis,said I;"is n''t it a bad one? |
6818 | No,he replied,"I did n''t; there''s opium in those pills, is n''t there?" |
6818 | No? |
6818 | Preble, is there any reason why we should not push through this floe using poles to move the cakes? |
6818 | Was it a Cree or a missionary that first thought of it? |
6818 | Was it a native idea? |
6818 | What did we come for? |
6818 | What in the world is it? |
6818 | What is it? |
6818 | What is that Sousi? |
6818 | What? |
6818 | Where does it hurt now? |
6818 | Where is your lodge? |
6818 | Where? 6818 Who invented this?" |
6818 | Will he make choice of some prominent tree in view? |
6818 | Would you like something to ease that cough? |
6818 | You say you have n''t slept? |
6818 | About noon, when all had assembled at camp, I said:"Preble, why, is n''t this Lockhart''s River, at the western extremity of Aylmer Lake?" |
6818 | Am I really to see the Wild Buffalo on its native plains? |
6818 | And what is your name?" |
6818 | Are the Buffalo near? |
6818 | Are you ready?" |
6818 | Are you two still at it,"or,"How are you and your friend these times, Preble?" |
6818 | But why was it so far from the forest, 20 miles or more, and a couple of miles from this little grove that formed the last woods? |
6818 | CHAPTER XXXVIII THE FIRST WOODS How shall I set forth the feelings it stirred? |
6818 | Ca n''t you give him something to stop them? |
6818 | Can you get any linseed meal or bran?" |
6818 | Can you go with us as guide? |
6818 | Does not this readiness to assemble at a bait suggest a possible means of destroying them? |
6818 | Had n''t 1 any pepper- juice or brandy? |
6818 | Had they been too foolhardy in their struggle with the terrible stream? |
6818 | Had they, too, been made to feel its power? |
6818 | Have I not found for myself a kingdom and become a part of it? |
6818 | He never quivered, but said:"Is that all? |
6818 | He said nothing to me then, but later complained to Billy, asking,"What did we come for?" |
6818 | He seemed to be beating our march of victory, for were we not in triumph coming home? |
6818 | Here or in the south?" |
6818 | How are we to form an idea of their numbers? |
6818 | How could such a craft ride such a stream for 2,000 miles? |
6818 | How did it get the Chipmunk family without digging them out? |
6818 | How know? |
6818 | How long would it take to get them? |
6818 | How was it to be roasted at an open fire without continued vigilance? |
6818 | I looked from one to the other in doubt, and said:"Laquelle est la malade?" |
6818 | In its stomach was part of a sparrow( white- throat?) |
6818 | Is a man ever content with a single sip of joy long- dreamed of? |
6818 | Is this then the secret of its disappearance? |
6818 | It seemed they were full of fears:"What if they should get caught in that floe, and drift around for days? |
6818 | James Evans, Methodist missionary to the Crees on Lake Winnipeg?" |
6818 | Now what should we do? |
6818 | Ogushen, the Indian trapper at Lac des Quinze, found tracks of a large cat at that place in the fall of 1879(?). |
6818 | On Great Slave Lake you say,"Where are the Caribou?" |
6818 | One morning I heard a white voice outside asking,"Is the doctor in?" |
6818 | One morning when we were grown accustomed to this condition I said to Billy:"How is the meat?" |
6818 | Preble was preparing to portage them, but asked Weeso,"Can we run them?" |
6818 | Scurry back to the fort or go ahead and trust to luck? |
6818 | Seeing it was over, Preble says,"Now where does he go? |
6818 | So wore away the month, the last night came, a night of fireside joy at home( for was it not Hallowe''en? |
6818 | Then came the thought, Why despair while two matches remain? |
6818 | Then in a calm of the storm( which he continued to ignore) Pierre turned to me and said:"Why do n''t you go back and try the canoe route? |
6818 | To the Museum?" |
6818 | To what extent are they being destroyed? |
6818 | Was I content? |
6818 | We now had unlimited food as well as unlimited firewood; what more could any one ask? |
6818 | What a glorious sound of woods and life triumphant it seemed; and why did he drum at night? |
6818 | What if a wind should arise( it had been glassy calm for a week)? |
6818 | What if they could'', not get back?" |
6818 | What will be the ultimate history of this jamb? |
6818 | When one is in Texas the topic of conversation is,"How are the cattle?" |
6818 | Which are they? |
6818 | Why are they so scarce? |
6818 | Why is ice always thickest on the kettles? |
6818 | Why? |
6818 | Will it come? |
6818 | Women do n''t do that way in your country, do they?" |
6818 | You never saw blood- poisoning that colour, did you?" |
6818 | and in New York,"How are you getting on with your novel?" |
6818 | and is it on these far breeding grounds that man has proved too hard? |
6818 | in the Klondike,"How is your claim panning out?" |
6818 | who''s boss?'' |
6189 | Ah, you will not see him die? |
6189 | And you are going away at sunrise to- morrow? |
6189 | Are we children that the Great Chief sends a child as messenger? |
6189 | Are you watching the rise of Orion? |
6189 | But you kept thinking in the grass- country of what you''d felt and said and done-- and willed, in the desert, I suppose? |
6189 | But you will not see a man die, if you can save him? |
6189 | Can it be done? |
6189 | Did I say that? 6189 Excommunication?" |
6189 | Have you come for absolution, also? |
6189 | Have you got it? |
6189 | Have you seen her husband-- Meydon-- this year? 6189 His name-- his real name?" |
6189 | How did you come to start it? |
6189 | How long were you in the desert? |
6189 | Is it a difficult case? |
6189 | It has n''t spoiled you-- being converted, has it? |
6189 | M''sieu''Varley? |
6189 | Makes you seem pretty small, does n''t it? 6189 Oh, it''s Meydon, is it, that bad case I heard of to- day?" |
6189 | One of the local doctors could n''t do it, I suppose? |
6189 | Orion is the name-- a beauty, ai n''t it? |
6189 | Perhaps Orion will rise again-- you think so? |
6189 | So you t''ink it better Meydon should die, as Hadley is away and Brydon is sick- hein? |
6189 | The story is told in many ways; which is right? 6189 Then the play is n''t finished?" |
6189 | Then, as you say, she will not marry M''sieu''Varley-- hein? |
6189 | There is another act? 6189 Tim,"she said, and slipped a hand in his,"would you mind the religion--if you had me?" |
6189 | Was it so selfish in Madame to refuse the name of Finden-- n''est- ce pas? |
6189 | Was n''t the old game good enough? 6189 Well?" |
6189 | What did Orion do, and why does he rise? 6189 What is his name? |
6189 | What manner of Great Spirit is it who lets the food of his chief Oshondonto fall into the hands of the Blackfeet? |
6189 | What right had I to risk his life for theirs? 6189 What''s that clump together on the right-- what are they called in astronomy?" |
6189 | What''s to that? 6189 What''s up? |
6189 | Who is this man? 6189 Who knows-- who knows the truth?" |
6189 | Who told you that? |
6189 | Will he ever stop rising? |
6189 | Will you do it? |
6189 | Will you do it? |
6189 | Yes, excommunication,she replied;"but why an enemy? |
6189 | You felt good in the desert? |
6189 | You have not tell any one-- never? |
6189 | You want me to see the man at once? |
6189 | You wonder if he''s worth saving? |
6189 | You''ll want some money for your journey? |
6189 | You''ve got it-- sure? |
6189 | After which the quick tongue of Nicolle Terasse:"You want know? |
6189 | Ai n''t I no rights? |
6189 | And the dead boy there, Wingo, who had risked his life, also dead-- how long? |
6189 | As he handed the pipe to Knife- in- the- Wind, an Indian called Silver Tassel, with a cruel face, said grimly:"Why does Oshondonto travel to us?" |
6189 | As they passed the house where Miss Mackinder lived some one shouted:"Are you watching the rise of Orion?" |
6189 | Bagosh, you not t''ink dat true? |
6189 | But perhaps it is your mind not so big enough to see-- hein?" |
6189 | Ca n''t you see what a swab he is, Laura?" |
6189 | Did not the distant West know Father Bourassa''s gift, and did not Protestants attend Mass to hear him play the organ afterwards? |
6189 | Do n''t you think of that? |
6189 | Do we not need to excommunicate our friends sometimes?" |
6189 | Had n''t we best make sure?" |
6189 | Had she not longed for a little home with a great love, and a strong, true man? |
6189 | Has he got to rise? |
6189 | He is a great man-- I dunno not; but he spik at me like dis,''Is dere sick, and cripple, and stay in- bed people here dat ca n''t get up?'' |
6189 | How did you guess I knew-- everything, father?" |
6189 | How long had he lain there? |
6189 | How would he be able to make the amende honorable to La Touche? |
6189 | If she could feel so much for a,"casual,"why not a little more feeling for him? |
6189 | In the little waiting- room, Finden said to Varley,"What happened?" |
6189 | Is he pretty sick, father?" |
6189 | Is it not so? |
6189 | Is there no one of you--?" |
6189 | It is a fool''s journey-- does the wolverine walk into an empty trap?" |
6189 | It is n''t the importance of a life that''s at stake; it''s the importance of living; and we do not live alone, do we?" |
6189 | It looks as if the police''ll never get him, eh?" |
6189 | Now, is n''t that so, father?" |
6189 | Or was it a fine spirit of adventure with a good heart behind it? |
6189 | Remember the desert, and Mary Jewell, and your mother-- did you have a mother, Scranton-- say, did you have a mother, lad?" |
6189 | Some one getting married-- or a legacy, or a saw- off? |
6189 | Was it a whim, or the excited imagination of youth, or that prompting which the young often have to make the world better? |
6189 | Was it played out? |
6189 | Was she to feel that Jansen did not price her high? |
6189 | Was there anything more than that? |
6189 | Well, about the snakes?" |
6189 | Well, was it in the desert you got your taste for honey, too, same as John the Baptist-- that was his name, if I recomember?" |
6189 | What has the Great Spirit to say? |
6189 | What interests you in him?" |
6189 | What is it?" |
6189 | What is the matter with him-- with Meydon?" |
6189 | What time was it? |
6189 | What, then, held her back? |
6189 | When was it that he had fought his way to the nets and back again- hours maybe? |
6189 | Who will be in it?" |
6189 | Why did he do it? |
6189 | Why did you do it, Scranton?" |
6189 | Why did you take to this? |
6189 | Why does he rise? |
6189 | Why was the gent called Orion in them far- off days?" |
6189 | Will that satisfy you? |
6189 | Will you come back, darlin''? |
6189 | You hear? |
6189 | he asked with a smile;"or is it to get a bill of excommunication against your only enemy-- there could n''t be more than one?" |
6174 | And Grah the Idiot-- what of him? |
6174 | And merry and happy? |
6174 | And no more after that of Pretty Pierre? |
6174 | And promoted? |
6174 | And? |
6174 | But that old life of yours, mother; what was it? 6174 Dear, do you think that life there was so sweet to me? |
6174 | Did he say he would be here? |
6174 | Grasp the North Pole? 6174 He saved you from danger-- from injury, father?" |
6174 | How does that concern you, Pretty Pierre? |
6174 | If not, so much the worse, eh? |
6174 | Is he your friend, Aleck? |
6174 | It is n''t always the custom, is it,she replied,"for ladies to send the very early hunter away with a tally- ho? |
6174 | Oh? |
6174 | Sergeant? |
6174 | To? 6174 What is his crime?" |
6174 | Who is the sylvan maid? 6174 Why should I go with you?" |
6174 | Will you not come to us on Christmas Day? |
6174 | You really mean that about the trophies? |
6174 | You will come to me on Christmas morning, Aleck? |
6174 | You will not go to Pardon''s Drive again, will you, Aleck? |
6174 | Your kremlin? |
6174 | ''Eh, bien,''you will spend Christmas Day with us too-- no? |
6174 | And Pretty Pierre after a moment replied:"So that''s it, Grah?--you''ve got bullets stowed away? |
6174 | And if he knew, what then? |
6174 | And in that case is my duty then so clear?" |
6174 | And the day of the New Year? |
6174 | And to whom are your deeds of valour to be dedicated? |
6174 | Answer, what art thou?" |
6174 | Are you truly not anxious to return to--""''To the husks that the swine did eat?'' |
6174 | Art thou a warrior sated with spoil, master of the sports, spectator of the fight, Prince, or Pistol? |
6174 | As you say yourself,''bien,''is n''t that enough?" |
6174 | Before whom do you intend to lay your trophies of the chase?" |
6174 | Better? |
6174 | Big Moccasin, what of this young live moose?" |
6174 | But Pierre, ah Pierre, you love your mother, do you not?''" |
6174 | But a softer voice than his whispered:"Are you-- content-- Gregory?" |
6174 | But was Sergeant Fones such an one? |
6174 | But what had sent them up here among the moose, the Indians, and the conies-- whatever THEY are? |
6174 | But what of Sergeant Fones? |
6174 | But, if it should be the other way; if I should see your father in the path of an outrageous moose-- what then?" |
6174 | But, my Margaret, there is another to be thought of too, is there not? |
6174 | Curse it all, must I do everything myself?" |
6174 | Do you not tire of this lonely life? |
6174 | Eh, well, how do you feel now? |
6174 | For what?--a sacrifice to the gods you have offended in your classic existence?" |
6174 | Had he exceeded his duty once in arresting Young Aleck? |
6174 | Had he meant to offer his hand in good- bye? |
6174 | Had this rustle of fine trappings been made for him? |
6174 | He said:"Why do you arrest me?" |
6174 | He was roused by John Malbrouck remarking:"Yes, you have lost your bet? |
6174 | How old was Ariadne? |
6174 | How should I get at it? |
6174 | I suppose Young Aleck will be in quarters here on Christmas Day, Miss Mab?" |
6174 | If he spent it on the besiegers, how should they fare for beast and fowl in hungry days? |
6174 | Insolence, you say? |
6174 | It is good sport, eh? |
6174 | Like to be on your feet, would you? |
6174 | Miss Humphrey is inside, I suppose?" |
6174 | Oh, Aleck, is n''t the suspicion about your father enough, but you must put this on me as well?" |
6174 | Oh, you will be up, eh? |
6174 | Pretty Pierre has spare time, a little, to make money for his friends and for himself, eh?" |
6174 | She puzzled me, eluded me--she reminded me of someone; but who? |
6174 | She said to him-- for she of all was never shy of his stern ways:"Why is the grass always greenest there, Sergeant Fones?" |
6174 | That''s what the Factor says, and that''s how the case stands, Idiot--''bien?''" |
6174 | The Sergeant turned at the door, and said in French:"What are your chances for a Merry Christmas at Pardon''s Drive, Pretty Pierre?" |
6174 | The thought instantly came to her mind: Not Sergeant Fones; but who? |
6174 | Then she went and laid her cheek against her mother''s, and said:"They''ve gone away for big game, mother dear; what shall be our quarry?" |
6174 | Thorne?" |
6174 | To meet Pretty Pierre and all the rest, and for what? |
6174 | To the young man:"And you can drink it so free, eh, Young Aleck?" |
6174 | Twenty? |
6174 | Was Ariadne beautiful? |
6174 | Was that the look that had been fixed upon her face a moment ago? |
6174 | Was this the man that sang the tender song under the stars last night? |
6174 | Well, well, you will come to- morrow-- and-- eh,''mon ami,''where do you go the next day? |
6174 | Well, what was it?" |
6174 | Well, where was that girl- child? |
6174 | Well?" |
6174 | What connection was there between the words of Sergeant Fones and those of Private Gellatly? |
6174 | What did I, Gregory Thorne, want of the information anyway? |
6174 | What did it mean? |
6174 | What guessed she of the Slopes of Naxos? |
6174 | What knew she of the girl who helped Theseus, her lover, to slay the Minotaur? |
6174 | What rustle of pretty gowns is pleasant as the silken shiver of the maple leaves in summer at this door? |
6174 | What should Sergeant Fones know of that intended meeting at Pardon''s Drive on Christmas Day? |
6174 | What was Sergeant Fones''s country? |
6174 | When did not Pierre have time to spare? |
6174 | Where better can you take your pleasure for the last time? |
6174 | Where had he come from? |
6174 | Will you not take-- what is it?--a silent partner? |
6174 | Yes, to?" |
6174 | You remember that song you sang the day we first met you? |
6174 | You surely will not leave us on the day of good fortune? |
6174 | You will, eh? |
6174 | like any other Injin-- insolent, was n''t it? |
6174 | no? |
6174 | she slowly said, and looked earnestly at Gregory;"but why to shoot with one arm only?" |
6174 | the conqueror, you, flying from your Moscow?" |
6187 | And did you expect to get any pay, with or without interest? |
6187 | Are n''t you going to kiss me? |
6187 | Are you a giant? |
6187 | Are you hurt bad? 6187 Been celebrating the pigeons?" |
6187 | But what about our wedding to- day? |
6187 | Ca n''t you hide me down by the river till we start? |
6187 | Ca n''t you see? 6187 Ca n''t you talk sense and leave my clothes alone? |
6187 | Did you ever save anybody''s life? |
6187 | Five- million-- what? |
6187 | Have you nothing else, sir? |
6187 | He-- your uncle, Tom Sanger? 6187 Hello, Jinny, fixin''up for to- morrow?" |
6187 | How old are you? |
6187 | I do n''t call her''mummy''because you do, and you must n''t call me Jim because she does-- do you hear? |
6187 | Is your life all your own, mother? |
6187 | Manette, she will live with you? |
6187 | Me? 6187 Qu''appelle? |
6187 | Qu''appelle? 6187 Say, how dare you call your father Jim-- eh, tell me that?" |
6187 | The river? |
6187 | The spring? |
6187 | Then what''s the matter? 6187 What are you doing with your life?" |
6187 | What difference does it make? 6187 What do you want?" |
6187 | What have you done? 6187 What is it?" |
6187 | What is the gutter, dadsie? |
6187 | What is the lodge of a chief? 6187 What was you doing here, and not at Selby, Jake?" |
6187 | What will happen? 6187 What would she have said to what you did to Jim?" |
6187 | What''s it all about, Jinny? 6187 What''ve I got to do with it?" |
6187 | What, you and Jake ai n''t quarrelled again? 6187 Who was it come?" |
6187 | Who you firin''at? |
6187 | Who you got in that room, Jinny? 6187 Why have you done it?" |
6187 | You ca n''t save life without running some risk yourself, not as a rule, can you? |
6187 | You never told him, then-- you never told him that? |
6187 | You want me to run things-- your colossal schemes? 6187 You''re Jenny Long, ai n''t you?" |
6187 | Are you afeard to take the risk?" |
6187 | Are you bleeding much?" |
6187 | Before the knock came to the door Jim had just said,"Why do your eyes shine so, Sally? |
6187 | But do you think that I could have lived my life out, feeling that I might have saved Jim, and did n''t try? |
6187 | But not John Alloway-- shall the crow nest with the oriole?" |
6187 | Can I bind it up or wash it for you? |
6187 | Catch it? |
6187 | Do n''t you know better than that? |
6187 | Do you think you are in no way responsible?" |
6187 | For me-- ah, if I can save him-- and I mean to do so-- do you think that I would not then have my heaven on earth? |
6187 | He stood his gun in the corner and, swinging the pigeons in his hand, said:"Me live out of the mountains? |
6187 | He was silent for a moment, but then said stubbornly:"Why-- why have you done it? |
6187 | Her heart beat hard, and she raised her head and called-- why was it she should call out in a language not her own? |
6187 | His principle was embodied in certain words which he quoted once to Sally from the prophet Amos:"And the Lord said unto me, Amos, what seest thou? |
6187 | How far is it, and can we do it in time?" |
6187 | How shall I do it?'' |
6187 | I am your daughter, and I am here, good or bad-- is your life all your own?" |
6187 | I saved his life right enough, and he came to me a year after and said, You saved my life, now what are you going to do with it? |
6187 | If Jake comes here to- morrow, and you ai n''t here, what do you think he''ll do? |
6187 | If it was Jake''s life in danger, what''d I think of a woman that could save him, and did n''t?" |
6187 | Is all ready for the start?" |
6187 | Is it because o''him that you bin talkin''about no weddin''to- morrow? |
6187 | Is it one o''the others come back, puttin''you off Jake again?" |
6187 | Jake-- what Jake? |
6187 | Must the world stand still because a handful of Crees need a hunting- ground? |
6187 | QU''APPELLE( Who calls?) |
6187 | Qu''appelle?" |
6187 | Qu''appelle?" |
6187 | Railway construction? |
6187 | Say, you''ll do it, wo n''t you? |
6187 | See-- Pauline?" |
6187 | They ai n''t going to look for him in my bedroom, be they?" |
6187 | This rough white plainsman was come to make love to her, and to say-- what? |
6187 | Was it all bad, and only that which belonged to white life good? |
6187 | Was it her duty to pay the"little gal''s debt,"to save the man at Bindon? |
6187 | Was not she herself the descendant of Blackfoot and Piegan chiefs through generations of rulers and warriors? |
6187 | Was there not Piegan and Blackfoot blood in the girl''s veins? |
6187 | What are they after you for?" |
6187 | What do you see ahead of you?" |
6187 | What is the good? |
6187 | What man you got in that room? |
6187 | What was you doing, if it ai n''t cheek to ask?" |
6187 | What were they to me? |
6187 | What''s ahead of me? |
6187 | What''s his name?" |
6187 | What''s in your mind?" |
6187 | What''s that about my canoeing a man down to Bindon?" |
6187 | Which is the greater thing, to get what pleases one, or to work for something which is more to one than all else in the world? |
6187 | Who do you think''d be postman from Selby here? |
6187 | Who''s going to take him down the river to- night? |
6187 | Why should she be sacrificed? |
6187 | Why should she cramp her soul to this one issue, when the same soul could spend itself upon the greater motives and in the larger circle? |
6187 | Why will your friend lose his life if you do n''t get to Bindon?" |
6187 | With a smile which showed her fine white teeth, she said,"Is that for me?" |
6187 | Would he last out the course? |
6187 | You ai n''t broke it off at the last moment, same as before? |
6187 | You ai n''t had a letter from Jake?" |
6187 | You got a temper, Jinny; and you got a pistol too, eh?" |
6187 | You think--?" |
6187 | You''re Jenny Long, ai n''t you?" |
6187 | You''ve been married, and have children, have n''t you?" |
6186 | Am I not a white man''s wife? |
6186 | Are you comin''with me, Nance, dear? |
6186 | But I mus''to get there, an''you- you will to help me, eh? |
6186 | But if the white man''s Medicine fail? |
6186 | But if there were the Sun Medicine also, the Medicine of the days long ago? |
6186 | But now? |
6186 | Ca n''t have a fire, I suppose? |
6186 | Clint right or wrong? 6186 Do you think you could stand a little parting?" |
6186 | Do you want to risk all and lose? |
6186 | Have all your dreams come true, my mother? |
6186 | Have you told her you''ve got a wife-- down East? 6186 Hiding him away here--""Hiding? |
6186 | How d''ye cook without fire? |
6186 | How long? |
6186 | How long? |
6186 | Is that your shack-- that where you shake down? |
6186 | It is Medicine for a white man, will it be Medicine for an Indian? |
6186 | Long way, I no can get dere in time? |
6186 | My name''s Buckmaster, ai n''t it-- Jim Buckmaster? 6186 No chance to get him at the Fort?" |
6186 | Qui va la? 6186 Qui va la? |
6186 | Show you what? |
6186 | Take me with you-- me-- where? |
6186 | Tell me again-- it is so at last? |
6186 | Tell me,she said quietly--"tell me how you are able to save Haman?" |
6186 | Then the moon''s up almost? |
6186 | There-- rock? |
6186 | Was it any of your business, Abe? |
6186 | Was that all Ricketts told you, Buck? |
6186 | Water? |
6186 | What are you doing out there, Mitiahwe? |
6186 | What did I say? |
6186 | What do you mean? |
6186 | What does he know about the business? 6186 What for?" |
6186 | What has happened? 6186 What have you to do with Haman?" |
6186 | What is it, Mitiahwe? |
6186 | What is that? |
6186 | What time is it? |
6186 | What time, if please? |
6186 | What was it you were saying? 6186 What was the story Ricketts told you? |
6186 | What''s that-- what''s that you say? 6186 What''s the use of my hearin''? |
6186 | When did you eat last? |
6186 | When was that? |
6186 | Why did n''t Ricketts tell it right out at once? |
6186 | Why did n''t you tell me he was here? |
6186 | Why do you do this kind of thing? 6186 Why do you want to go the''quick''way to Askatoon?" |
6186 | Why do you want to go the''quick''way to Askatoon? |
6186 | Why, gol darn it, Nance, what''s got into you? 6186 Will you not to show me?" |
6186 | Would n''t it be better for the law to hang him, if you''ve got the proof, Buck? 6186 You can show me dat way?" |
6186 | You go on-- how can you go on? |
6186 | You not happy-- you not like me here? |
6186 | You''re sure Greevy killed your boy, Buck? |
6186 | You''re sure he did it? |
6186 | Your old home was in Nove Scotia, was n''t it, Dingan? |
6186 | A nice quiet time coming on the border, Abe, eh?" |
6186 | A year or so in jail, an''a long time to think over what''s going round his neck on the scaffold-- wouldn''t that suit you, if you''ve got the proof?" |
6186 | And now that Mitiahwe had been told that he would go, what would she do? |
6186 | Anne?" |
6186 | Are you a colonel, or a captain, or only a principal private?" |
6186 | Are you comin''?" |
6186 | But if there were the red man''s Medicine too--""What is the red man''s Medicine?" |
6186 | D''ye see?" |
6186 | Did I not see it all in my dream, and follow after them to take them to my heart? |
6186 | Did I? |
6186 | Do n''t I know my own name? |
6186 | Have you told her that you''ve got a wife you married when you were at college-- and as good a girl as ever lived?" |
6186 | He was sure to do it; and, when he had done it, and found her gone on this errand, what would he do? |
6186 | Herself-- to leave her here, who had been so much to him? |
6186 | His people? |
6186 | His return? |
6186 | How goes it-- all right?" |
6186 | How long have I slept?" |
6186 | I''m a bit of hickory, I''m not a prairie- flower--""Who said you was a prairie- flower? |
6186 | Is it so, ma''m''selle?" |
6186 | Never-- wronged- a- woman? |
6186 | Presently he said, holding out his pipe,"You not like smoke, mebbe?" |
6186 | Shall the white man''s Medicine fail? |
6186 | She called into the icy void,"Qui va la? |
6186 | Then I waked with a cry, but my man was beside me, and his arm was round my neck; and this dream, is it not a foolish dream, my mother?" |
6186 | Walk into the parlour?" |
6186 | Was he going? |
6186 | Were they both thinking of the same thing now? |
6186 | What did he ever do but what was right? |
6186 | What did your boy tell Ricketts? |
6186 | What had she said to the prisoner? |
6186 | What was Ba''tiste to her? |
6186 | What would she herself do if she were in Mitiahwe''s place? |
6186 | What''s got into you, Abe?" |
6186 | What''s he doing out here? |
6186 | What''s she to me?" |
6186 | When Long Hand comes, what will Mitiahwe say to him?" |
6186 | Where?" |
6186 | Who goes?" |
6186 | Who is it? |
6186 | Who is it?" |
6186 | Who were you speaking to?" |
6186 | Who''s been hiding him? |
6186 | Why are you off the trail?" |
6186 | Why did Ba''tiste haunt her so? |
6186 | Why do you smuggle?" |
6186 | Why had she not gone with him and attempted the shorter way the quick way, he had called it? |
6186 | Why had she not gone with him? |
6186 | Would he go? |
6186 | Would he reach Askatoon in time, she wondered, as she shut the door? |
6186 | You comin''with me, Nance?" |
6186 | You remember how Clint used to laugh sort of low and teasin''like-- you remember that laugh o''Clint''s, do n''t you?" |
6186 | You''re ready to step in when he steps out, ai n''t you, Lablache?" |
6190 | And his schooling, and his clothing, and everything; and you have to pay for it all? |
6190 | And so you put your hand in the railway company''s money- chest? |
6190 | And stake what''s left on the last throw? |
6190 | Are you sure I was n''t calling you, and you had to come? |
6190 | Are you sure it was n''t me? |
6190 | Ben, you will do it to- night-- then? |
6190 | Blackmail- you think I''ll stand it? |
6190 | Come now, how much? |
6190 | Did he do that, Jo? |
6190 | Did you want to see me? |
6190 | Do n''t you know me? |
6190 | Do what? |
6190 | Do you see him up here ever? |
6190 | Does any one know his real history? 6190 Eh ben, it is all right-- yes?" |
6190 | For small stakes? |
6190 | Glad to see you? 6190 Goin''on by stage?" |
6190 | He does n''t look rich, does he? |
6190 | How did you know he was up here? |
6190 | How? 6190 I said the Beast of Revelations-- don''t you know the Scriptures?" |
6190 | If I had to go to prison-- or swing, as you say, do you think I''d go with my mouth shut? 6190 In Heaven''s name, why did you talk to that man?" |
6190 | Is he as rich an old miser as they say? |
6190 | Is he so bad? |
6190 | May I come in? |
6190 | Or you''ll set the law on him? |
6190 | Qui reste la-- Lygon? |
6190 | Racing-- cards? |
6190 | Shall I do it? |
6190 | She here-- out here? |
6190 | There is a way-- have you never thought of it? 6190 They know-- the railway people-- Shaughnessy knows?" |
6190 | Thief- thief? |
6190 | Two thousand dollars-- nothing less? |
6190 | What are you doing here? 6190 What brings you out here, Jo?" |
6190 | What did she come here for? |
6190 | What do you want for your shack and the lake? |
6190 | What do you want with him--not medicine of that old quack, that dreadful man? |
6190 | What do you want with me, then? |
6190 | What do you want-- medicine? |
6190 | What do you want? 6190 What do you want?" |
6190 | What for, Jo? 6190 What has he done?" |
6190 | What is his name? |
6190 | What is it-- quick? |
6190 | What is it? |
6190 | What is that to you? |
6190 | What is the matter, Flood? |
6190 | What the devil''s all this? 6190 What''s his price in the open market?" |
6190 | What''s that scar on your forehead, Jo? 6190 What''s your game? |
6190 | Where am I going, then? |
6190 | Where do you come from? |
6190 | Who is Dupont? |
6190 | Who told you- the truth? |
6190 | Why are you so dreadfully poor-- and everything? |
6190 | Why did I do it? 6190 Why did I never notice the likeness before?" |
6190 | Why did you never write and tell me that, Jo? 6190 Why do n''t you hit out, sergeant?" |
6190 | Why do n''t you sleep? |
6190 | Why should you ruin your life for him? |
6190 | Would n''t you have come if you knew I was here? |
6190 | You call me a beast? |
6190 | You got the ten t''ousan''each-- in cash or cheque, eh? 6190 You said it was for Dan,"he said--"Dan Welldon?" |
6190 | You want me to go to prison, then? |
6190 | You were never bad,she added; then, with an arm sweeping the universe,"Oh, is n''t it all good, and is n''t it all worth living?" |
6190 | You''ll do what''s right- by Bobby? |
6190 | ......................"Who told you? |
6190 | ........................."Say, ai n''t he pretty?" |
6190 | A moment, then he added:"The letter was n''t to be sent here in his own name, was it?" |
6190 | AS DEEP AS THE SEA"What can I do, Dan? |
6190 | And you''ve kept, Dorl''s child with your own money all these years?" |
6190 | Are n''t you glad to see me?" |
6190 | Boys, what is he-- what-- is he? |
6190 | By speaking to your sister?" |
6190 | Could n''t you see what the end would be, if your plunging did n''t come off? |
6190 | Debilitated, demoralised, how could he, even if he wished, struggle against this powerful confederate, as powerful in will as in body? |
6190 | Did n''t he go by that name when you saw him?" |
6190 | Did this Caliban have some understanding of what was at stake in his heart and soul? |
6190 | Did you come to see me?" |
6190 | Do you sometimes, even in your dreams, speak to me? |
6190 | Does any one know him here? |
6190 | Does it look so bad?" |
6190 | Far beneath unconsciousness is there the summons of your spirit to me? |
6190 | Has any one seen him?" |
6190 | How did you come to speak to him, Grace?" |
6190 | How much did you figure you could get out of me, if I let you bleed me?" |
6190 | Is it so secret?" |
6190 | Is it-- is it you that calls? |
6190 | It''s eight years old now, is n''t it?" |
6190 | Now we want another ten t''ousan''to us each, to forget we do it for him--hein?" |
6190 | Presently he steadied to the ordeal of suspense, while he kept saying to himself,"What does he know-- what-- which?" |
6190 | Right enough, is n''t it?" |
6190 | The cheque or the money- hein?" |
6190 | There was old Lamson-- fifteen hundred for the goitre on his neck; and Mrs. Gilligan for the cancer-- two thousand, was n''t it? |
6190 | Tincture of Lebanon leaves you called the medicine, did n''t you? |
6190 | Was he to commit a new crime? |
6190 | Was it to go on? |
6190 | Was she afraid of something? |
6190 | Well, Jo?" |
6190 | What brings you here? |
6190 | What brought you, Flood?" |
6190 | What do you want with Dorl?" |
6190 | What do you want with me?" |
6190 | What do you want?" |
6190 | What had it to do with the face of this outcast she had just left? |
6190 | What is your business with him? |
6190 | What-- is-- Sergeant Foyle-- boys?" |
6190 | When you threatened others as you did me, and life seemed such a little thing in others--can''t you think?" |
6190 | Where were you going when you came across me here?" |
6190 | Who are you?" |
6190 | Why, do you know where you are? |
6190 | With no eye upon him? |
6190 | Wo n''t you tell me? |
6190 | Would it never end? |
6190 | You do n''t mean you''re trying to arrest me again, after letting me go?" |
6190 | You will leave him to me?" |
6182 | ''Father,''she said all at once,''have you killed the man that killed Fenn?'' 6182 ''Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour''?" |
6182 | ''Why should the door be shut?'' |
6182 | And as time went on? |
6182 | And no one-- is coming? |
6182 | And so you punish yourself? |
6182 | And the woman? 6182 But there is more?" |
6182 | But what will my father do? |
6182 | But what will you do? |
6182 | But,said Lawless, not heeding the scene,"what about that sixth bullet?" |
6182 | But?--but? |
6182 | Can you not guess? 6182 Did you not hate?" |
6182 | Do you think that evens John Marcey''s death? |
6182 | Do you throw your life away if you do what is the only thing you are told to do? |
6182 | Ever since? |
6182 | Fingall took it to spare the girl, eh? |
6182 | Give''em back, Mallory? 6182 He has not come here?" |
6182 | Heavy of heart is the Red Patrol--( Why should the key- hole rust?) 6182 How is she?" |
6182 | How long have you lived here? |
6182 | How long was that ago? |
6182 | I am out of the world; why tempt it all again? 6182 I helped you out of a bad scrape on the river?" |
6182 | If he saves the Company''s man, that will make up the man he lost for them, eh-- you think that, eh? |
6182 | Is she mad? |
6182 | It is no answer,she said:"what will my father do?" |
6182 | It''s more to you to understand you than to be good, eh? |
6182 | Life is so strange, and who knows what is not life, my child? |
6182 | Mad? 6182 Nothing has been heard of any of them?" |
6182 | She knew you? |
6182 | She was married then? |
6182 | She will get well? |
6182 | The answer is well,returned Fawdor;"but what is the greatest commandment that a man can make for himself?" |
6182 | The girl? |
6182 | The mail came once every year from the world? |
6182 | The shutter? |
6182 | The ten? |
6182 | Well, after? |
6182 | Well? |
6182 | What came after? |
6182 | What commandments have you made for yourself, Pierre? |
6182 | What could I have done then? |
6182 | What did you do with him? |
6182 | What is the use? |
6182 | What is the way? |
6182 | What matter? 6182 What was it he said to you?" |
6182 | What will my father Athabasca do? |
6182 | Where did she get it? |
6182 | Where is he now? |
6182 | Who can tell? 6182 Who killed the lad?" |
6182 | Why did you not go back? |
6182 | Why does my father fear to speak to his child? |
6182 | Will you not stay, Cynthie? |
6182 | Would n''t it be just as well to give''em back, sir? |
6182 | Would you? |
6182 | You do n''t care for things so rough, mebbe? |
6182 | You hear? 6182 You saw him, there amie?" |
6182 | You see as far as Indian Island? |
6182 | You will come again,she said;"you will-- help me?" |
6182 | ''The Scarlet Hunter is sick for home--( Why should the door be shut?)''" |
6182 | Another--""Another?" |
6182 | Better luck next time, eh? |
6182 | Broken down, eh? |
6182 | Brydon frowned, then said:"Well, made for what, Pierre?" |
6182 | But why did she live here? |
6182 | But why did she sing that song? |
6182 | Can you see the Eddy?" |
6182 | Do you know the secret of life, Pierre?" |
6182 | Do you know where is the home of the White Swan? |
6182 | Do you think it true, father?" |
6182 | Fawdor?'' |
6182 | Had she and her mother gone to Winnipeg to be near Laforce, to comfort him? |
6182 | Has Mitawawa seen him since the shameful day?" |
6182 | He came to her, and"Ah, p''tite Lucille,"he said,"you remember me, eh? |
6182 | How can you tell the way things happen? |
6182 | I was not to read them till you died-- bien?" |
6182 | If thou art blinded even at the door, The door of the Safe Tent, Sing in thy heart, Rejoice, O son of man, thy pilot leads thee home?'' |
6182 | It was just below where you stand.... Father, can you see its face?" |
6182 | Long has he watched, and far has he called The lonely sentinel of the North:"Who goes there?" |
6182 | Made for this?" |
6182 | Marcey is sleeping-- what does it matter? |
6182 | Must a child not be responsible? |
6182 | Presently he heard the voice again:"He waits at the threshold stone--( Why should the key- hole rust?) |
6182 | Shall I give them back? |
6182 | THE HOUSE WITH THE BROKEN SHUTTER"He stands in the porch of the world--( Why should the door be shut?) |
6182 | That was it--"Hungry and cold is the Red Patrol--( Why should the door be shut?) |
6182 | The Scarlet Hunter has come to bide,( Why is the window barred?)" |
6182 | The Scarlet Hunter has come to bide--( Why is the window barred?)" |
6182 | The Scarlet Hunter is sick for home,( Why should the blind be drawn?)" |
6182 | The Scarlet Hunter is sick for home,( Why should the blind be drawn?)" |
6182 | The eagle broods at his side,( Why should the blind be drawn?) |
6182 | The evening wore on, and in the little back room a woman''s voice said:"Is it morning yet, father?" |
6182 | The grey wolf waits at his heel,( Why is the window barred?) |
6182 | The letters were lost, I suppose, on the way to me, somehow-- who can tell? |
6182 | The old man? |
6182 | The rapids long and the banks of green, As we ride away in the morning, On the froth of the Long Lachine?" |
6182 | They had almost reached the shore, when Pierre cried out sharply:"What''s that?" |
6182 | Was Laforce free now, and was she unwilling? |
6182 | What difference to me-- five, or forty, or ninety? |
6182 | What do you think? |
6182 | What does a woman care for the world when she loves a man? |
6182 | What had happened? |
6182 | What is the good of saying,''Thou shalt keep holy the Sabbath day,''when a man lives where he does not know the days? |
6182 | What is the good of saying,''Thou shalt not steal,''when a man has no heart to rob, and there is nothing to steal? |
6182 | What was the good of lying? |
6182 | What will you do?" |
6182 | Why did I go? |
6182 | Why not justice on myself? |
6182 | Will you go and look?" |
6182 | Will you take them yourself?" |
6182 | Will you?" |
6182 | You have not read them?" |
6182 | You know her, Pierre-- her story?" |
6182 | to the wandering soul: Heavy of heart is the Red Patrol( Why should the key- hole rust?) |
6175 | An''who''s to bury her, the poor colleen? |
6175 | And who is the law- breaker, Sergeant Tom? |
6175 | Are you man or devil? |
6175 | Did you call, Jen? |
6175 | Eh, Sergeant Tom, it is you? 6175 Father, father,"she said,--"what is it?" |
6175 | Father, will you tell the truth to me? 6175 He ca n''t never come here, Pierre, can he?" |
6175 | I say,said the corporal, taking the papers--"what''s your name?" |
6175 | Me darlin'',he said,"have y''come to me?" |
6175 | Nothing-- nothing would keep you? |
6175 | Pierre, do you mean that? |
6175 | Poison, Jen? 6175 See, see, father,"she said,"Pretty Pierre and-- and can it be Val?" |
6175 | What difference does it make to you, Jen? |
6175 | What difference-- what difference to me? 6175 What do you go there for, Pretty Pierre?" |
6175 | What do you want me to do? |
6175 | What''s that you''re doing, Galbraith? |
6175 | When shall it to be? |
6175 | Who''s there? 6175 Why does my own flesh and blood do such wicked tricks to an Irish soldier? |
6175 | Why should you wake him? 6175 With Pretty Pierre-- Pierre?" |
6175 | You are better, Sergeant Tom? |
6175 | You carried that letter to Inspector Jules last night, Jen? |
6175 | After some scalawag that''s broke the law?" |
6175 | After? |
6175 | And look: if the Riders of the Plains should stop here to- night, or to- morrow, you will be cool-- cool, eh?" |
6175 | And she? |
6175 | And what brings you down here, Sergeant Tom? |
6175 | And yet again, woman- like, she knew it would lead to the same conclusion:"You must go to- night?" |
6175 | But I-- I''ve paid my debt, have n''t I, Jen?" |
6175 | But he said hoarsely, and with an attempt at being brave--"How dare you enter my house with out knocking? |
6175 | But her father? |
6175 | But was the song so pointless to the occasion, after all, and was the man so abstracted and indifferent as he seemed? |
6175 | But you will, all the same, bring him to justice-- you call it that? |
6175 | Could her father approve of any harm happening to Tom? |
6175 | Curse you, why do n''t you go?" |
6175 | Did they think he was ill? |
6175 | Do you know me?" |
6175 | Do you think a white girl is like a redskin woman, to be sold as you sell your wives and daughters to the squaw- men and white loafers, you reptile?'' |
6175 | Eh, Galbraith? |
6175 | Eh, Sergeant Tom, what is the matter? |
6175 | Eh? |
6175 | Eh? |
6175 | Galbraith again said to his daughter,--"Jen, you carried them papers? |
6175 | Galbraith put the little vial back in his waistcoat pocket, and presently said:"What will you have to drink, Pretty Pierre?" |
6175 | Had there ever been? |
6175 | Had they anything to do with this sleep? |
6175 | Have I been asleep? |
6175 | He showed anxiety; that was unmistakable, but was it the anxiety of guilt of any kind? |
6175 | His look was of mingled wonder and despair, as he said, in a gasping whisper,"You carried that letter to Archangel''s Rise?" |
6175 | I regret to disturb you, but you will sit, eh?" |
6175 | In the sitting- room Sergeant Tom was saying:"Where is your brother, Miss Galbraith?" |
6175 | Is Val quite, quite safe?" |
6175 | Is it flesh and blood they think I am? |
6175 | Jon replied, a secret triumph at her heart:"But what about his orders, the papers he was to carry to Archangel''s Rise? |
6175 | No? |
6175 | Now what will we do, Larry, me boy? |
6175 | Oh,"he added, as he caught sight of the familiar uniform;"where from?" |
6175 | Perhaps I can be of use here?" |
6175 | Sergeant Tom smiled a little grimly, then he nodded and said:"Been at it ever since, Pretty Pierre? |
6175 | She hated herself, but why deepen his misery? |
6175 | Slowly it came to him that Little Hammer was keeping him alive against the will of the spirits-- but why should they strike him instead of the Indian? |
6175 | Stay here is it, me boy? |
6175 | Still, we do n''t hector him, Sergeant Tom; hectoring never does any good, does it?" |
6175 | That you should be a murderer?" |
6175 | The coffee- was that the key? |
6175 | The danger? |
6175 | The half- breed, still musing, replied:"An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth-- is that it, Shon?" |
6175 | The woman? |
6175 | Then he added:"What is the matter? |
6175 | Then he turned from her, and with hand clenched and teeth set spoke to the soldier:"Have n''t you heard enough? |
6175 | Then the halfbreed said to him,"You were careful-- thirty drops?" |
6175 | Then the old man said:"Better give him some of that old cheese, Jen, had n''t you? |
6175 | There''s some fresh coffee, is n''t there, Jen?" |
6175 | They''re a lovely band of pilgrims are the Riders of the Plains Will some sinner please to pass around the hat?" |
6175 | To him Val said:"Why, dad, what''s the matter? |
6175 | Val is safe now--"In a low strained voice, interrupting him, she said,"Did Val leave you wounded so on the prairie?" |
6175 | Was he dead? |
6175 | Was it connected with the papers? |
6175 | Was there any sun in the world? |
6175 | Was this sleep natural? |
6175 | We''ll let him sleep till noon, or longer-- or longer, wo n''t we, Pierre?" |
6175 | Well, we understand each other,''hein?''" |
6175 | Well? |
6175 | What about his being back at Fort Desire in the time given him?" |
6175 | What brings you so far from your straw- bed at Fort Desire?" |
6175 | What do you want?" |
6175 | What had happened? |
6175 | What should one hope for but that vengeance should be taken out of the hands of mortals, and be delivered to the angry spirits? |
6175 | What should the gods do but frown, or the elements be at, but howling on their path? |
6175 | What spite made you do this?" |
6175 | What was the matter? |
6175 | What was to be done? |
6175 | What would you do, judge honourable? |
6175 | What''s this Irish policeman to you? |
6175 | When was I here last, Ma''m''selle?" |
6175 | Where did you say he was hid?" |
6175 | Who has robbed me? |
6175 | Why did you do it? |
6175 | Why does it give poison to an Irish soldier?" |
6175 | Why is my cheek so? |
6175 | Why should it? |
6175 | Why was he dressed in civilian''s clothes? |
6175 | Why, you''re comin''in, are n''t you? |
6175 | Will you not listen? |
6175 | Will you permit me to light a cigarette? |
6175 | Will you say what I ask you, Jen?" |
6175 | Yet what could be done? |
6175 | Yet, as Sergeant Tom often asked himself during the past six months, why should he think of her? |
6175 | You have not told her?" |
6175 | You know the word''Raca''of the Book? |
6175 | You see, Galbraith?" |
6175 | You see? |
6175 | You''re not keepin''a grudge agin me, my girl?" |
6175 | his revolver, where was it? |
6175 | or fire or heat anywhere, or anything but wind and snow in all God''s universe? |
6175 | shock or some physical chill? |
6175 | well?" |
6175 | what is that? |
6175 | what was I sayin''? |
6175 | whin shall it be, Pierre?" |
6184 | Are you going-- alone? |
6184 | But what if you are stunned, or do not care? |
6184 | Ca n''t we come aboard without that? |
6184 | D''ye mean to say,he groaned,"that the game is up? |
6184 | Dad,she said,"are you asleep?" |
6184 | Do you surrender? |
6184 | Eight or nine? 6184 He''s sure to come?" |
6184 | How many times have you met him? |
6184 | I bin a good dad to ye, hain''t I, Liddy? |
6184 | Is money-- gold-- contraband? |
6184 | Is n''t that enough to start with? 6184 It is n''t wise to go alone, for if there''s trouble and I should go down, who''s to tell the truth? |
6184 | Look like you? 6184 Money? |
6184 | Never had no ma but Manette, did ye? |
6184 | Pshaw,she said,"what does he want?" |
6184 | She is of age? |
6184 | So- so? |
6184 | Suppose they should turn and fight? |
6184 | The Belle Chatelaine? 6184 They want-- Lydia-- to keep house for them?" |
6184 | Think that''s whisky? |
6184 | Want? 6184 Well?--Why do n''t you fetch him?" |
6184 | What I will? 6184 What are they doing there?" |
6184 | What do you want? |
6184 | What do you want? |
6184 | What does she say about it herself? |
6184 | What have you got to say about it? |
6184 | What if I should take her with me? |
6184 | What is money to him? 6184 What is that?" |
6184 | What is the thing to do in such a case? |
6184 | What is the worst thing that can happen a man, eh? |
6184 | What kept you, Gobal? |
6184 | What will I understand? |
6184 | What will you do if you get the money? |
6184 | When Throng is put to By- by what will you do? |
6184 | When do you expect Gobal? |
6184 | Which way? |
6184 | Who said to go alone? |
6184 | Who''re you talking for? |
6184 | Why do you go? 6184 Why do you stand by it now?" |
6184 | Will you let me search? |
6184 | Will you ride on? |
6184 | You do n''t think he''ll last long? |
6184 | You''ve got our man? |
6184 | ''Member when she tended that felon o''yourn, Pierre?" |
6184 | --a breach of the peace?--a misdemeanour? |
6184 | Ai n''t I done fair by her always-- ain''t I? |
6184 | Ai n''t tomorrow bakin''-day?" |
6184 | Bien?" |
6184 | Bissonnette and I could make a stand for it alone, but what''s to become of you? |
6184 | But now he said in a half monotone:"Have you seen the way I have built my nest? |
6184 | But the same matter had been in his mind when, later, he asked,"What is the worst thing that can happen to a man?" |
6184 | Come, where''s the good? |
6184 | Contraband? |
6184 | Do n''t I know how the Ministers and the officers have done their duty at Quebec? |
6184 | Do you mean it?" |
6184 | Does it come within the act? |
6184 | Eh, Tarboe?" |
6184 | For the rest, you shall keep a quiet tongue, eh? |
6184 | H.''M''sieu''le capitaine, is it like that?" |
6184 | Has n''t everybody stood up and said there was n''t anyone like her in the North? |
6184 | Have n''t I always kept my word like a clock?" |
6184 | Have n''t we set store by her? |
6184 | Have you come to surrender?" |
6184 | He was not disposed to let his enemy off on even such terms, so he now turned to Joan and said:"What say you to a chase of the gentleman?" |
6184 | Hein?" |
6184 | Hello, my Gobal, what''s the matter? |
6184 | I never met a man of your stamp before--""A professional gambler-- yes? |
6184 | I would rather talk with you than with any other man in the country, and yet--""And yet you would not take me to your home? |
6184 | If my daughter Joan give her word--""Is she with you?" |
6184 | If we fight, there''s someone sure to be hurt, and if I''m hurt, where''ll you be?" |
6184 | If you can? |
6184 | In all the North is there a woman to say I wrong her? |
6184 | Is it a trespass-- an assault and battery? |
6184 | Is it all finished? |
6184 | Is it like that? |
6184 | Is it not so?" |
6184 | Is it the end, eh? |
6184 | Is that all? |
6184 | Let me see? |
6184 | Liddall looked keenly at him, and replied more brusquely than he felt:"Do you think it fair to stay-- fair to her?" |
6184 | Look like you, Jim, with a face to turn milk sour? |
6184 | Martin?" |
6184 | No one''s: for who should say what ship it was, or what people were robbed by Brigond and those others? |
6184 | No; I am first the daughter of my father, and afterwards--""And afterwards?" |
6184 | Pierre looked at the table laid for breakfast, and said:"Where''s Lydia Throng?" |
6184 | Pierre mounted his horse and said, as if a thought had struck him:"If I stand for the law in this, will you stand against it some time for me?" |
6184 | Pierre would not lie in a thing like that, and--""Why did n''t he get the gold himself?" |
6184 | Pierre, waving the liquor away, said quietly to the girl:"You wish to go back to your father, to Jimmy Throng?" |
6184 | Presently he straightened himself, and, after a half- malicious look at Pierre, he said to Throng:"Where are they, do you say?" |
6184 | So at last she said:"Father, what''s all this for?" |
6184 | Suddenly, with a soft fierceness, he added:"If I looked in her room, what of that? |
6184 | Tarboe lit another cigar-- that badge of greatness in the eyes of his fellow- habitants, and said:"What''s all this for, Joan? |
6184 | Tarboe looked on with a keener eye and understanding, for was she not bone of his bone and flesh of his flesh? |
6184 | Tell me now, have you got anything contraband on board? |
6184 | That roan-- you know where he come from?" |
6184 | The girl is worth fighting for, hein?" |
6184 | The girl? |
6184 | The law the keeper of stolen goods, eh? |
6184 | There were quick words of explanation, and then,"Must the girl go too?" |
6184 | There''ll be a nasty mess about the thing, for me and all of us, and why ca n''t we compromise? |
6184 | Three men rose from seats by the fire as he did so, and one said:"Hullo, who''re you?" |
6184 | Want? |
6184 | Was n''t it''cause we was lonely an''loved her we took her? |
6184 | We are gentlemen on a serious errand, are n''t we?" |
6184 | Well, what if I carry her room in my eye; does that hurt her or you?" |
6184 | Well?" |
6184 | What I will, Joan? |
6184 | What do you think we''d better do?" |
6184 | What has spoiled your reputation?" |
6184 | When do you start, captain? |
6184 | Where are you going?" |
6184 | Where have you seen him?" |
6184 | Who has he robbed? |
6184 | Who was he that he should fail to know her? |
6184 | Whose money was it? |
6184 | Why did n''t they do so before? |
6184 | Why not call a truce? |
6184 | Why so pious all at once? |
6184 | Why wo n''t you be sensible? |
6184 | You mean that they may fire on you?" |
6184 | You''re my gel, ai n''t ye?" |
6184 | Your duty? |
6184 | do you think the law moves because an old man cries? |
6184 | he asked;"and where shall I find the horses?" |
18149 | Achille, you have n''t anything against me-- do you want me to die? |
18149 | All is at peace between us? |
18149 | All of that is quite true,he repeated after a second''s pause;"but what has it to do with me? |
18149 | And in the meantime? |
18149 | Are you just a little sorry for me? |
18149 | Are you there, Galen Albret? |
18149 | Are you? 18149 Better to take_ la Longue Traverse_ in summer, eh?" |
18149 | But is it not a little calculating? 18149 But your heart?" |
18149 | Ca n''t you see? |
18149 | Do n''t you hear? |
18149 | Do n''t you see the logic of events forces me to think so? 18149 Do n''t you think this farce is about played out? |
18149 | Do you leave-- to- day? |
18149 | Do you think I will tell you? |
18149 | Do you wish me to go, father? |
18149 | For w''at I want dat you die? 18149 Have you a canoe?" |
18149 | Have you a rifle-- for_ la Longue Traverse_? |
18149 | How could I know? |
18149 | How you mak''eet him so mad? |
18149 | How you mak''eet him? |
18149 | I beleef you,responded Achille, cheerfully;"w''at you call heem your nam''?" |
18149 | Is he gone? |
18149 | Is that all? |
18149 | Is the journey then so long, sir,she asked composedly,"that it at once inspires such anticipations-- and such bitterness?" |
18149 | Is the trade so good, are your needs then so great, that you must run these perils? |
18149 | Is there anything I can do for you? |
18149 | Mademoiselle? |
18149 | Must I decide at once? |
18149 | No-- yes-- why not? |
18149 | Shall I be sent out at once, do you think? |
18149 | Sorry for a weakness you do not understand? 18149 Surely you can forgive me, a desperate man, almost anything?" |
18149 | That you? 18149 Then why did you change your mind?" |
18149 | Then why do you stay in this dreadful North? |
18149 | Then why is he not our guest? |
18149 | Then why? |
18149 | This dreadful thing is necessary? |
18149 | This_ Longue Traverse_,went on Albret,"what is your idea there? |
18149 | Virginia goes with me? |
18149 | Virginia, this is true? |
18149 | W''at you do? 18149 W''at you wan''me do?" |
18149 | Well? |
18149 | What do you mean by that? |
18149 | What do you mean? |
18149 | What do you mean? |
18149 | What do you want with me? |
18149 | What does this mean? |
18149 | What great danger is he in? |
18149 | What happened? |
18149 | What is his station? 18149 What is that?" |
18149 | What is that? |
18149 | What then? |
18149 | What wrong? |
18149 | What? |
18149 | Who can tell? |
18149 | Who is that man? 18149 Who told you?" |
18149 | Who was that second person? |
18149 | Who? |
18149 | Whose? |
18149 | Why did I come? 18149 Why did I come?" |
18149 | Why did you come here, then? 18149 Why did you not ask me, as you intended? |
18149 | Why not? |
18149 | Why, if you have realized the gravity of your situation have you persisted after having been twice warned? |
18149 | Why-- why did you come? |
18149 | Why? 18149 Why?" |
18149 | Why? |
18149 | Why? |
18149 | Will she not come? |
18149 | Will she recover? |
18149 | You are going to Quebec? |
18149 | You are going to do this thing, father,appealed Virginia,"after what I have told you?" |
18149 | You can not mean that? |
18149 | You consent? 18149 You do not believe me?" |
18149 | You have everything you need? |
18149 | You knew my father? |
18149 | You knew this before? |
18149 | You know who aided this man? |
18149 | You love my daughter truly? |
18149 | You persist in that nonsense? |
18149 | You refuse? |
18149 | You tell me of it yourself? 18149 You think so?" |
18149 | You think so? |
18149 | You were alone? |
18149 | You? |
18149 | Your father-- you knew him well? |
18149 | Your right? |
18149 | _Will not the princess leave her sisters of dreams?" |
18149 | Am I forgiven?" |
18149 | And that is a solemn thing; is it not?" |
18149 | Are you going to treat your little girl so-- your Virginia? |
18149 | Are you, indeed?" |
18149 | But do I err in concluding that the state of your game law is such that it would be useless to reclaim my rifle from the engaging Placide?" |
18149 | But last night--""Yes, last night?" |
18149 | But where did you get this rifle?" |
18149 | Can you ask that? |
18149 | Did he not owe her, too, some reparation? |
18149 | Did n''t you hear me calling you when you paddled away? |
18149 | Did you come here to try_ la Longue Traverse_ of which you spoke to- day?" |
18149 | Do n''t you see how I felt? |
18149 | Do n''t you suppose I had weighed the risks and had made up my mind to take my medicine if I should be caught? |
18149 | Do n''t you suppose I knew what I was about when I came into this country? |
18149 | Do n''t you understand?" |
18149 | Do you dare deny my will? |
18149 | Do you dare interfere where I think well? |
18149 | Do you dare set your judgment against mine? |
18149 | Do you refuse?" |
18149 | Do you think I have not been here often before I was caught? |
18149 | Do you wish to know the real reason for my coming into this country, why I have traded in defiance of the Company throughout the whole Far North? |
18149 | Does it touch you a little? |
18149 | Does the Company own the Indians and the creatures of the woods?" |
18149 | Does_ he_ give such orders? |
18149 | Feel the wind on your cheek? |
18149 | Had he nothing more to tell her? |
18149 | Had she not heard it in the music of his voice from the first?--the passion of his tones? |
18149 | Have there been men sent out since you came here?" |
18149 | How could I help but come? |
18149 | I believe I could touch her pity-- ah, Ned Trent, Ned Trent, can you ever forget her frightened, white face begging you to be kind?" |
18149 | In what danger does he stand? |
18149 | Is he a common trader? |
18149 | She exclaimed, in astonishment,"Are you not of the Company?" |
18149 | Surely you admit the injustice?" |
18149 | That is a solemn thing, too, is it not?" |
18149 | The hardships of the wilderness are many, the dangers terrible-- what more natural than that a man should die of them in the forest? |
18149 | They have my goods-- but I--""You?" |
18149 | Was not this an opportunity vouchsafed him to repair his ancient fault, to cleanse his conscience of the one sin of the kind it would acknowledge? |
18149 | Was the word to lack, the word she needed so much? |
18149 | Was this to be all? |
18149 | What are you going to ask of me?" |
18149 | What do you suppose I care what, or what not, any of this crew wants? |
18149 | What does he want a rifle for? |
18149 | What is your information?" |
18149 | What must he think of her? |
18149 | What other course is open to you? |
18149 | What was the aid you asked of him? |
18149 | When do I leave?" |
18149 | Who is this man?" |
18149 | Why am I stopped and sent out from the free forest? |
18149 | Why did you come back? |
18149 | Why did you come?" |
18149 | Why did you tell me these lies?" |
18149 | Why has it been kept from me alone? |
18149 | Why is that?" |
18149 | Will you not greet me?" |
18149 | Will you promise to do that?" |
18149 | Wo n''t you tell me about it?" |
18149 | Would not you too mock and sneer? |
18149 | Would not you, too, be bitter, mademoiselle? |
18149 | Would you like to go to Quebec?" |
18149 | You is come trade dose fur? |
18149 | You will be there-- surely?" |
18149 | _ He?_""No orders are given. |
18149 | _ What_ is he?" |
18149 | _ Who_ is he? |
18149 | and where else did you expect to get it?" |
18149 | the dreamy, lyrical swing of his talk by the old bronze guns? |
6181 | ''Twas just the same as Father Corraine bein''here, when mother had Sunday, was n''t it? |
6181 | ''Will you do it? |
6181 | A vow? 6181 A woman?" |
6181 | Because there was no one to speak for him-- eh? 6181 But that was not the name of the Slave?" |
6181 | But word for word? |
6181 | By the holy poker, Pierre, where did you spring from? |
6181 | Do you mean to say, Pierre, that she''s here? |
6181 | Father,he said slowly, and in a kind of dream,"when you hear a sweet horn blow at night, is it the Scarlet Hunter calling?" |
6181 | Father,he suddenly added,"what does it mean when you hear a bird sing in the middle of the night?" |
6181 | Give-- give? |
6181 | How could there be snow flying and stars shining too, father? |
6181 | How did any of those papers, signed with a scrawl, begin? |
6181 | How do they call that name? |
6181 | How do you remember so? |
6181 | How? |
6181 | I can pray out loud if I want to, ca n''t I? |
6181 | I''ve heard mother sing them, or something most like them:Why does the fire no longer burn? |
6181 | In God''s name, why did n''t Malachi speak? |
6181 | Magor will do the man injury? |
6181 | Perhaps for a book? |
6181 | Perjure my soul? 6181 She''d come if she knew I was hurted, would n''t she?" |
6181 | So they said he must walk the air? |
6181 | Suppose the wild cat had got me, she''d be sorry when she comes, would n''t she? |
6181 | T''sh, what''s the good of five hundred dollars up here? 6181 That name was droll, eh?" |
6181 | The wife and child, Bagot? |
6181 | Then I said,''And if virgins has it so fine, why did n''t you stay one?'' |
6181 | To hear his speech? |
6181 | To the Great Slave? |
6181 | Trevoor said to her-- he told me this himself--''Why did you not whistle for me, Norice? 6181 Was ever such another letter written to any man? |
6181 | Was that all, Dominique? |
6181 | Were you-- were you one of that ten? |
6181 | What did it sing like, Dominique? |
6181 | What does it mean when you hear a voice like that, father? |
6181 | What good can it do to call him bad now? |
6181 | What have you preached? |
6181 | What is the proper dose? |
6181 | What was that scrawl? |
6181 | What were the words? |
6181 | What will happen? |
6181 | What would you give Christ, Bagot, if He had saved her to you? |
6181 | What would you have? 6181 What''s this?" |
6181 | When did you hear it, my son? |
6181 | When did you see her last? |
6181 | When? |
6181 | Where are those letters now? |
6181 | Where is she, Bagot? |
6181 | Where is the girl, Pierre? |
6181 | Where was your God to help you, then? |
6181 | Who am I that I should teach my Master? |
6181 | Who spoke for him at the trial? |
6181 | Why did n''t you offer rum-- rum? 6181 Will you go on, or will you pause?" |
6181 | Yes, that is what you did-- what was it you said which was''pretty rough''? |
6181 | You know it so well, why do n''t you preach yourself? |
6181 | You think he could not have been so great unless, eh? 6181 You''d have liked one of those papers?" |
6181 | ''But,''says Freddy Tarlton here,''are you goin''to hang a man on the little you know? |
6181 | A little of this, a little of that, a drink here, a game of euchre there, a ride after cattle, a hunt behind Guidon Hill!--But what is that? |
6181 | A vow? |
6181 | Again there was a pause, his eyes opened wide, and he said:"Do you think mother''s lost, father?" |
6181 | And that''Charles Rex,''what of him?" |
6181 | And the lady-- who can tell?" |
6181 | Anything more than you''ve told?" |
6181 | At last the old man said:"Will he die, Pierre?" |
6181 | Break my vow in the face of the enemies of God''s Church? |
6181 | But Norice stepped forward a little, and said:"May we come in?" |
6181 | But how was she philosopher enough to understand the cause? |
6181 | But it is so, as I said, that I may choose who shall light the fires?'' |
6181 | But she: with all a woman suffers, how can she bear life-- and man-- without God? |
6181 | But that speech of''Freddy Tarlton here''?" |
6181 | But where was the man? |
6181 | But you, what have you cared? |
6181 | But, here, answer me a question: Was the lady-- his wife, she that was left in England-- a good woman? |
6181 | Come"--he leaned forward, looking into the other''s face--"will you play it? |
6181 | Damnation, ca n''t you see I''m on needles to hear? |
6181 | Did they feel the animal underneath it yet, giving it beauty, life, glory? |
6181 | Did you ever pray-- ever since I married you to her?" |
6181 | Did you ever think how much such men as Jacques Parfaite know? |
6181 | Do n''t you hear it-- don''t you hear it, daddy?" |
6181 | ETEXT EDITOR''S BOOKMARKS: Bad turns good sometimes, when you know the how How can you judge the facts if you do n''t know the feeling? |
6181 | Evil? |
6181 | For the visions of the boy, who can know the divers ways in which God speaks to the children of men? |
6181 | Happy? |
6181 | He looked round, half fearfully, for if here were those great children of the ages, where was the keeper of the house, the Red Patrol? |
6181 | He said to me,''What does a priest want of a woman?'' |
6181 | He said:"Am I not right? |
6181 | He told her that she could not come with him, for there was that lady in England-- his wife, eh? |
6181 | Hein, is it not?" |
6181 | His eyes closed, and he seemed about to fall asleep, but presently looked up and whispered:"I have n''t said my prayers, have I?" |
6181 | How can you judge the facts if you do n''t know the feeling? |
6181 | I do n''t know, for there has n''t been no Sunday up here since mother went away-- has there?" |
6181 | If they came, when was it? |
6181 | Is it not?" |
6181 | It is a great stake-- will you play it? |
6181 | Know ye not that in the new springtime of the world ye shall be outcast, because ye have called the sleepers to judgment before their time? |
6181 | Lone and sick are the vagrant souls--( When shall the world come home?)" |
6181 | Maybe those''cheerful doings''at Highgate, eh? |
6181 | Offer rum? |
6181 | Oh, why do you shut your eyes to me? |
6181 | Or are you goin''to credit him with somethin''of what you do n''t know? |
6181 | Or did they come still-- those strange people, whoever they were-- and watch ghostly gladiators at their fatal sport? |
6181 | Or is it that you think old men are cowards?" |
6181 | Pierre answered:"Tell it with your tongue, and this shall be nothing to it, for what am I? |
6181 | Put the matter on your own hearthstone, eh? |
6181 | She sat up straight, with pride in her eyes, for was it not a great prince, as she thought, asking? |
6181 | She tried to save me-- well?'' |
6181 | Strangers enter the Judgment House--( Why do the sleepers sigh?) |
6181 | T''sh, you bats, you sheep, what have you in your skulls? |
6181 | THE GOING OF THE WHITE SWAN"Why do n''t she come back, father?" |
6181 | Tell me, who has ever said,''You have showed me how to live''? |
6181 | The priest felt the boy''s pulse softly, then with a close personal look he spoke hardly above his breath, yet distinctly too:"Your wife, Bagot?" |
6181 | The swan had come in-- would it go out alone? |
6181 | Then early teaching came to him, never to be entirely obliterated, and he added:"Has the child been baptised?" |
6181 | Then he knelt down and said, as he laid out the cards one by one till there were thirty:"Whoever gets the ace of hearts first, wins-- hein?" |
6181 | Then the Red Patrol, the Scarlet Hunter spoke:"Why have you sinned your sins and broken your vows within our house of judgment? |
6181 | Then, as if with sudden thought:"To whom were the letters addressed, Pierre?" |
6181 | Then, with a sudden thought,"Do you know anything of her, m''sieu''?" |
6181 | Then--""How does that touch the case?" |
6181 | There it is again? |
6181 | This wolf- skin''s most too much on me, is n''t it, father?" |
6181 | To destroy its life!--Well, would it not be better for the child to go out of all possible shame, into peace, the peace of the grave? |
6181 | Was he so sick of all, that he would go so far he could never get back? |
6181 | Was it a farce or a sacrifice? |
6181 | Was not this the true thing in her, the very truest? |
6181 | Was there anything in the letters about the lady? |
6181 | We will draw lots, and see, eh?--and see?" |
6181 | Well, this story of the Great Slave-- eh? |
6181 | What English have I, a gipsy of the snows? |
6181 | What do any of you know about Malachi? |
6181 | What do you know of Malachi, Gohawk? |
6181 | What do you think? |
6181 | What else?" |
6181 | What good have you done? |
6181 | What good will it do?" |
6181 | What have you done for me that I should do this for you, John Bagot?" |
6181 | What is a man with a matter like that? |
6181 | What more?" |
6181 | What was there to do?" |
6181 | What was to blame-- the Church-- religion-- himself? |
6181 | What would you do with a letter like that?" |
6181 | Which is right? |
6181 | Who can tell what it was? |
6181 | Who has got on his knees and changed his life because of you? |
6181 | Who has told his beads or longed for the Mass because of you? |
6181 | Who played the parts? |
6181 | Who told-- your mother-- the song?" |
6181 | Who was the keeper of the house? |
6181 | Why does the tent- door swing outward? |
6181 | Why, Dominique?" |
6181 | Why? |
6181 | You have heard the cry of the eagle, you have seen him carry off a lamb, you have had a pot- shot at him, but what do you know of the eagle''s nest? |
6181 | You know his name-- what was it?" |
6181 | he added, and going toward the bed, continued, presently, in a low voice:"Dominique is ill?" |
6181 | he said, as if breathing gave him sorrow--"my wife?" |
6181 | said Tarlton;"why did n''t he tell me this?" |
6181 | what is a vow beside a woman-- my wife?" |
28688 | An''the Captain''s house? |
28688 | An''would Granny''s boy not be fearing to cross the swamp alone? |
28688 | An''would Peter Lauchie not be coming across the swamp with you,_ m''eudail bheg_? |
28688 | An''you would be pitchin''into him good for his lies, would n''t you? |
28688 | An''you''re Kirsty John''s little girl, too, ai n''t you? |
28688 | And by the way, Archie, does he know anything about this? |
28688 | And did he never give any hint of what the trouble was? |
28688 | And do you remember what I found a comfort then? 28688 And how will all the folk in the glen be, Jimmie?" |
28688 | And how''s our big man that will be going to school? |
28688 | And is it dinner for all this raft ye''ll be after wantin'', Malcolm MacDonald? |
28688 | And is your name just Scotty? |
28688 | And now,said the man, suddenly becoming grave again,"will you tell me how you come to have two names? |
28688 | And what are you going to be, Scotty? |
28688 | And what will you and the master be reading, this winter, James? |
28688 | And what would Kirsty be doing? |
28688 | And when will I see you again? |
28688 | And where will you be going for the winter? |
28688 | And who would you be fightin'', Scotty? |
28688 | And would I be sitting here, James Thompson, an''see that piece o''Popish iniquity kill my son? |
28688 | And would it be telling about the comets, whatever? |
28688 | Are ye ashamed o''yer name, ye young English upstart? |
28688 | Are ye deef? |
28688 | Are you much hurt? |
28688 | But that is n''t all, is it? 28688 But the grandfather? |
28688 | But what difference would that be making? |
28688 | But-- I-- would you not be knowing? |
28688 | But-- but, wo n''t you be Captain Herbert''s little girl? |
28688 | Ca n''t you say thistle? |
28688 | Can ye read? |
28688 | Captain Herbert? 28688 Come, are you willing to call it quits?" |
28688 | Could you fix it all up in one day? |
28688 | D''ye think she''ll ever have you, Jimmie? |
28688 | Did n''t you get a lickin''? |
28688 | Do n''t you go in your bare feet at home? |
28688 | Do n''t you love to run away off in the bush like this, and have nobody to bother you? |
28688 | Do n''t you remember it was always either an Indian or a soldier, a''Black Watcher''you used to call it? 28688 Do they? |
28688 | Do you know Kirsty? |
28688 | Do you know what made Danny Murphy say I was an Englishman? |
28688 | Do you mean you''d really like to come here and live with-- with Kirsty again? |
28688 | Eh, eh, Malcolm, an''is yon yersel''? |
28688 | Eh, losh, an''what would it be about? |
28688 | Eh? 28688 Hamish,"he cried in a sharp whisper,"is-- is-- Callum-- dead?" |
28688 | Hamish,he whispered,"where''s Cape Canady?" |
28688 | Has he an attack of spasms? |
28688 | Hast thou commanded the morning since thy days; and caused the day- spring to know his place?... 28688 Have you got a Granny too?" |
28688 | He''s awful nice, is n''t he, Granma MacDonald? |
28688 | How did Kirsty John''s mother get this one? |
28688 | How did the fire start? |
28688 | How is he gettin''on wi''Ivanhoe? |
28688 | How is it you''re not hanged yet? |
28688 | How''s our big college- student? |
28688 | I can read too, ca n''t I, Granma MacDonald? |
28688 | I do n''t care, you would n''t let him touch me, would you? |
28688 | I know the place, Granma, do n''t I? |
28688 | I read to you sometimes, do n''t I? |
28688 | I suppose that''s all true, but what difference does that make? 28688 I suppose you''d better tell the boy-- everything?" |
28688 | I''m Scotch, too,came in a whisper from inside the wrappings,"an''it''s nice to be Scotch, is n''t it?" |
28688 | I-- I suppose you sometimes come to the Glen? |
28688 | In giving up? |
28688 | Is it because of what you saw this afternoon? |
28688 | Is it fearful grand? |
28688 | Is it? |
28688 | Is n''t he fine? |
28688 | Is that all true he''s telling us, Big Scalper? |
28688 | It wo n''t be as big as the old country, though, will it? |
28688 | Knowing what? |
28688 | Look here, father,called Hamish,"do you see what the schoolmaster would be writing in Scotty''s book?" |
28688 | Malcolm,she whispered,"Malcolm, what is this about our son Callum?" |
28688 | McAlpine? |
28688 | Murderin''blazes, who''s that? |
28688 | Murphy? |
28688 | Now, Archie, what sort of figure do you think I shall cut running for Parliament next fall? 28688 Now, Scotty, you know you did n''t let me have my own way, now, did you? |
28688 | Oh, an''Gran''mamma MacDonald? 28688 Oh, jist about the same, jist about the same; but,"he lowered his voice confidentially,"what do you suppose she would be doin''the night?" |
28688 | Oh, would n''t I? |
28688 | Pshaw, they''re supposed to muddle a little with politics, but what''s the difference? 28688 Scotty MacDonald, how can you say such a mean thing?" |
28688 | That we-- that I would be making the schoolhouse worse than ever? |
28688 | That''s what you''re generally doin''; how fast did you come? |
28688 | The master? |
28688 | The what? |
28688 | They were just the loveliest old times, were n''t they, Scotty? 28688 Was it Jimmie?" |
28688 | Was you ever at the Captain''s place? |
28688 | Was your father''s second name Everett? |
28688 | Well,--the Captain was thoughtful--"what does he want?" |
28688 | Well,he said, coming to the fireside,"why do n''t you speak? |
28688 | Well,--I might,--pshaw, why not? 28688 What in heaven''s name is the matter with that child?" |
28688 | What is it ye will be saying, man? |
28688 | What is it? |
28688 | What would Danny be doin''to you? |
28688 | What ye readin'', Hamish? |
28688 | What''s he sayin''? |
28688 | What''s his name, I wonder? |
28688 | What''s his name? |
28688 | What''s that, Grandaddy? |
28688 | What''s that, Hamish? |
28688 | What''s that? |
28688 | What''s the matter with the confounded little fire- eater? |
28688 | What''s the matter? |
28688 | What, Big Scalper, is that you? |
28688 | What, what? |
28688 | What? |
28688 | What? |
28688 | What? |
28688 | When''ll you come back again? |
28688 | Where are they? |
28688 | Where does your mother live? |
28688 | Where is your cousin now? |
28688 | Where wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth? 28688 Where will Callum be?" |
28688 | Where''s Cape Canady? 28688 Where?" |
28688 | Who is this that darkeneth counsel, by words without knowledge? 28688 Who''re they?" |
28688 | Who''s Callum? |
28688 | Who, the bluejacket? |
28688 | Who? |
28688 | Why does your grandfather hate the Captain so? |
28688 | Why, was it you, Big Scalper? |
28688 | Why? 28688 Wo n''t she be letting you jump?" |
28688 | Wo n''t you shake hands, then, and let me feel I am quite forgiven? |
28688 | Would n''t you be liking a silk dress? |
28688 | Would she be catching it at school? |
28688 | Ye hae the boys in wi''ye the day, Malcolm? |
28688 | Ye''ll think Ah''ll not find ye out? |
28688 | Yes; whisht, will ye? 28688 Yes?" |
28688 | Yes? |
28688 | You are a MacDonald, too, I believe? |
28688 | You do n''t know? |
28688 | You''d stay at home if there was a Fenian Raid, would n''t you? |
28688 | You''re Scotty, are n''t you? |
28688 | Your name will be Isabel, wo n''t it? |
28688 | A good thing? |
28688 | A little assistance at present would make his fortune, and who so fitted to give that assistance as Captain Herbert? |
28688 | A mad notion born of that night in the wilderness the spring before? |
28688 | A mere sentiment? |
28688 | Ai n''t she pretty?" |
28688 | Am I not wicked?" |
28688 | An''Weaver Jimmie?" |
28688 | An''all, Oro, an''Lake Simcoe? |
28688 | An''he says to me,''What''s your name, child?'' |
28688 | An''will the school- house be in Canady too?" |
28688 | An''you live with your granma, do n''t you?" |
28688 | And Isabel? |
28688 | And did Mary have the heartbreak too, like her auntie? |
28688 | And did n''t he think he was very unkind not to have answered her last two letters? |
28688 | And do n''t you hate to be grown up?" |
28688 | And had he missed her? |
28688 | And had n''t Hash Tucker''s father and a lot more from the Tenth been on their side, too? |
28688 | And has it been well with Granny''s boy all this weary time?" |
28688 | And he had left all, had turned his back upon friends and home, and love itself, for what? |
28688 | And how in the name of all nationalities did it happen that the Caldwells and the Tuckers came to be fighting together against the Murphys? |
28688 | And how would the mother be to- night, Jimmie?" |
28688 | And it is a good thing to be standing upon the threshold of life, is it not?" |
28688 | And was n''t it just too perfectly lovely for anything that Kirsty and Jimmie were getting married, and that he and she were together at the wedding? |
28688 | And was there not the chance that he might be a young man of property some day? |
28688 | And were n''t Orangemen far worse than Fenians, anyway? |
28688 | And what could do justice to the great occasion but"The Grave of Highland Mary"? |
28688 | And what made those bells ring up in the tree? |
28688 | And when would he be back? |
28688 | And where was Nancy? |
28688 | And where were the fifes and the drums? |
28688 | And why, in the name of all the cardinal points, was it coming down the north hill from the Oa, instead of from the Flats? |
28688 | And, oh, was n''t it an awfully long time since she had seen any of them? |
28688 | And, say, Scot, did ye hear him say he was a Canadian or from Canady, or somethin''like that? |
28688 | But Ah want the laddie to read me the wee bit that Kirsty reads me; ye ken it, bairnie?" |
28688 | But Hamish had said Callum was gone, Scotty argued, and Nancy with him; had they come back then? |
28688 | But he was an old man now, and retired from his labours, and how came he to be wandering in this trackless wilderness after nightfall? |
28688 | But then there was no accounting for the ways of the gentry, and these people were half English and half Irish, anyway, and what could a body expect? |
28688 | But to- night he had been very expeditious, and with good reason; for had n''t Granny warned him that Isabel might arrive at any moment? |
28688 | But what could I do? |
28688 | But what in the world would you be wanting to know for?" |
28688 | But what was the minister reading now? |
28688 | But what''s all this? |
28688 | But who is He that is the King Of Glory? |
28688 | But, honestly now, is it or is it not true that you jumped a claim and appropriated the boy''s property, perhaps unwittingly?" |
28688 | Canst thou bind the sweet influences of the Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion?" |
28688 | Confess his disgrace to this man whom he knew Granddaddy despised? |
28688 | D''ye hear yon? |
28688 | D''ye mind yon sermon, Lauchie, on''Simon Peter, lovest thou me''?" |
28688 | Dan declared the little spalpeens knew he was home, for what else would make them bust their foolish little throats wid shoutin''? |
28688 | Did he never interfere in the child''s interests?" |
28688 | Did n''t he love all Long Lauchie''s folks? |
28688 | Did ye iver see such a banty rooster as the young wasp was? |
28688 | Do n''t ye think He micht, lassie?" |
28688 | Do n''t you remember the day I left Toronto to come up here? |
28688 | Do n''t you wish I''d come back, too?" |
28688 | Do you know any stories?" |
28688 | Do you know what''s the matter with my auntie?" |
28688 | Do you know why I stopped?" |
28688 | Do you want me to present him with a deed of all my property?" |
28688 | Eh, what would yer puir auld Granny do if ye didna come to see her in the simmer? |
28688 | For though Pat Murphy and his friends prophesied death and destruction to the procession and all that had part or lot in it, what matter? |
28688 | Had he not, in his broader life, missed some uplifting joy, some great blessing in which these old people rejoiced? |
28688 | Had the forest taken voice, or was it all but a part of his dream? |
28688 | Had they gone to the old country? |
28688 | Had this man been sent out of the darkness of the forest to show him how foolhardy were his attempts to escape from God? |
28688 | Hate it? |
28688 | Have the gates of death been opened unto thee? |
28688 | Have you got a cousin?" |
28688 | He had ill- used him, no doubt, but he was making reparation, and what more could any man do? |
28688 | He heard Granny say,"Where''s Callum? |
28688 | He remembered with a chill the anxiety of the day and the awesomeness of the night before, and asked suddenly,"Where''s Callum?" |
28688 | He scarcely understood her grief; was Granny crying because he was only an Englishman after all? |
28688 | He wanted to fight the Fenians now, but with Danny a Fenian, and Nancy and Hash Orangemen, what would become of him? |
28688 | How did ye happen to have such luck, ye beggar? |
28688 | How does a Highland Scot like you happen to have such a name as Stanwell?" |
28688 | How was it that, all through his life, his English name seemed always to produce consternation? |
28688 | If it was, why could n''t his old grandfather have gone to law about it?" |
28688 | Is Canady very far away?" |
28688 | Is Toronto away over in the old country?" |
28688 | Is n''t he funny? |
28688 | Is the boy as big as me?" |
28688 | Jist look at the wicked eye o''him now, will ye?" |
28688 | MacDonald?" |
28688 | Maybe Jesus''ll come and make you straight too, wo n''t He?" |
28688 | McAlpine?" |
28688 | Miss Herbert surely knows that they have been like brother and sister since their baby days?" |
28688 | Murphy, eh?" |
28688 | Now do n''t you see how difficult it is for me to show him any kindness, even if I wanted to? |
28688 | Now, I ask you, is there any living man could blame me?" |
28688 | Oh, Scotty, you do n''t ever have to sew, do you?" |
28688 | Oh, is n''t that nice? |
28688 | Say, though, do n''t you wish you''d been there?" |
28688 | Scotty gasped; was he going to ignore the whitewashing altogether? |
28688 | Shall not our love this rough, sweet land make sure, Her bounds preserve inviolate, though we die? |
28688 | Someone else was bending over him, too, and saying,"And you''ll be sure to let him come, then?" |
28688 | Surely, as I was born and brought up in Canada I''m likely to know a red Indian from myself now, am I not?" |
28688 | That? |
28688 | The Englishman Grandaddy hates?" |
28688 | The backwoods is the best place, is n''t it, Scotty?" |
28688 | The rigours of seven Canadian winters had bred a hardy spirit in this little backwoodsman, and besides what was there to dread in the forest? |
28688 | There''s sumpfin''more?" |
28688 | They were alone in the forest with unlimited whitewash; and with Scotty inciting them to deeds of daring, how could they resist? |
28688 | Think the Oa''ll run me off the face of the earth?" |
28688 | Thou knowest my down- sitting and mine uprising, thou understandest my thoughts afar off.... Whither shall I go from thy spirit? |
28688 | Was Isabel sure? |
28688 | Was there, then, a different code of honour in the country from that which was adhered to in the town? |
28688 | What cared he that his chum preferred working in the bush to a college education? |
28688 | What have you got to say about it?" |
28688 | What name?" |
28688 | What sort of aptitude would he have for figures?" |
28688 | What was it? |
28688 | What will you be laughing at?" |
28688 | What would Isabel think? |
28688 | What would be its bearing upon his life? |
28688 | What would he be saying?" |
28688 | What''s your name, youngster? |
28688 | Who could be wandering in this wild, lonely place at night singing,--singing the very things calculated to touch the depths of his soul? |
28688 | Who is this? |
28688 | Whose bairn are ye?'' |
28688 | Why not ask Granny? |
28688 | Why should the MacDonalds be helping Orangemen? |
28688 | Why should they not go over to Peter''s place some day and_ make_ him tell all about it? |
28688 | Why, in all the world?" |
28688 | Will it be like the rheumatics Granny has?" |
28688 | Would not be back? |
28688 | Would she be there? |
28688 | Would you be so good as to assist me?" |
28688 | Yes, the procession was certainly coming, but what was this unearthly noise it was making? |
28688 | You have n''t lapsed into the old warlike days in my absence, I hope?" |
28688 | You know, of course, that his name is not really MacDonald?" |
28688 | You''ll let me come, wo n''t you?" |
28688 | You_ are_ glad I came, are n''t you, Scotty?" |
28688 | cried Scotty, running indoors in alarm,"what''s gone wrong with Grandaddy, will he be gone daft?" |
28688 | cried the little one with the hopefulness of childhood,"course He will, wo n''t He, Scotty?" |
28688 | declare, if thou hast understanding.... Whereupon are the foundations thereof fastened? |
28688 | he cried,"would it be the Murphys and the MacDonalds again?" |
28688 | he whispered,"Hamish, will that be an--_English_ name?" |
28688 | is it Gabriel''s trump, then?" |
28688 | or hast thou seen the doors of the shadow of death?... |
28688 | or whither shall I flee from thy presence? |
28688 | or who laid the cornerstone thereof; when the morning stars sang together and all the sons of God shouted for joy?" |
28688 | she whispered eagerly,"d''ye hear yon? |
26905 | ''_ Is not the life more than meat?_''he asked them. |
26905 | Ah, you will not see him die? |
26905 | Alive or dead? |
26905 | Am I not a white man''s wife? |
26905 | And did you expect to get any pay, with or without interest? |
26905 | And his schooling, and his clothing, and everything; and you have to pay for it all? |
26905 | And so you put your hand in the railway company''s money- chest? |
26905 | And stake what''s left on the last throw? |
26905 | And the old folks? |
26905 | And you are going away at sunrise to- morrow? |
26905 | Are n''t you going to kiss me? |
26905 | Are the Lumleys all right? 26905 Are we children, that the Great Chief sends a child as messenger?" |
26905 | Are you a giant? |
26905 | Are you comin''with me, Nance, dear? |
26905 | Are you hurt bad? 26905 Are you sure I was n''t calling you, and you had to come?" |
26905 | Are you sure it was n''t me? |
26905 | Are you watching the rise of Orion? |
26905 | Been celebrating the pigeons? |
26905 | Bignold-- where does he come from?--What is he? |
26905 | Blackmail-- you think I''ll stand it? |
26905 | But I mus''to get there, an''you-- you will to help me, eh? |
26905 | But if the white man''s Medicine fail? |
26905 | But if there were the Sun Medicine also, the Medicine of the days long ago? |
26905 | But now? |
26905 | But what about our wedding to- day? |
26905 | But you kept thinking in the grass- country of what you''d felt and said and done-- and willed, in the desert, I suppose? |
26905 | But you will not see a man die, if you can save him? |
26905 | Ca n''t have a fire, I suppose? |
26905 | Ca n''t you hide me down by the river till we start? |
26905 | Ca n''t you leave the dead alone? |
26905 | Ca n''t you let them rest? 26905 Ca n''t you see? |
26905 | Ca n''t you talk sense and leave my clothes alone? 26905 Can it be done?" |
26905 | Clint right or wrong? 26905 Come now, how much?" |
26905 | Dear old man, did you have a wife and child, and were they both called Alice-- do you remember? 26905 Dear old man,"he said, his voice shaking,"do you know what I''m thinking? |
26905 | Did I say that? 26905 Did he do that, Jo?" |
26905 | Did you ever save anybody''s life? |
26905 | Did you want to see me? |
26905 | Do n''t you know me? |
26905 | Do what? |
26905 | Do you see him up here ever? |
26905 | Do you think you could stand a little parting? |
26905 | Do you want to risk all and lose? |
26905 | Does any one know his real history? 26905 Excommunication?" |
26905 | Five-- million-- what--? |
26905 | For small stakes? |
26905 | Glad to see you? 26905 Goin''on by stage?" |
26905 | Have I changed so much? 26905 Have all your dreams come true, my mother?" |
26905 | Have you been steeping them some days? |
26905 | Have you come for absolution, also? |
26905 | Have you got it? |
26905 | Have you nothing else, sir? |
26905 | Have you seen her husband-- Meydon-- this year? 26905 Have you told her you''ve got a wife-- down East? |
26905 | He does n''t look rich, does he? |
26905 | He was married, was n''t he? |
26905 | He-- your uncle, Tom Sanger? 26905 Hello, Jinny, fixin''up for to- morrow?" |
26905 | Hiding him away here--"Hiding? 26905 His name-- his real name?" |
26905 | Hold you-- does he need a Sheriff to tell him when to spik? |
26905 | How d''ye cook without fire? |
26905 | How did you come to start it? |
26905 | How did you know he was up here? |
26905 | How long have you come to stay here-- out West? |
26905 | How long were you in the desert? |
26905 | How long? |
26905 | How long? |
26905 | How old are you? |
26905 | How? 26905 I am to go alone-- eh?" |
26905 | I do n''t call her''mummy''because you do, and you must n''t call me_ Jim_ because she does-- do you hear? |
26905 | I said the Beast of Revelations-- don''t you know the Scriptures? |
26905 | I''d like to have gone to Lumley''s, but that''s not possible, is it? 26905 I''ve got to see if he''ll take you first?" |
26905 | If I had to go to prison-- or swing, as you say-- do you think I''d go with my mouth shut? 26905 In Heaven''s name, why did you talk to that man?" |
26905 | Is he as rich an old miser as they say? |
26905 | Is he so bad? |
26905 | Is it a difficult case? |
26905 | Is my cold bad-- so bad that I need boneset? |
26905 | Is that your shack-- that where you shake down? |
26905 | Is your life all your own, mother? |
26905 | It has n''t spoiled you-- being converted-- has it? |
26905 | It is Medicine for a white man, will it be Medicine for an Indian? |
26905 | It is so? 26905 Jim, and Lance, and Jerry, and Abner?" |
26905 | Long way, I no can get dere in time? |
26905 | M''sieu''Varley? |
26905 | Makes you seem pretty small, does n''t it? 26905 Man, dear man, if you belong to her-- if you do, ca n''t you see what it will mean to me? |
26905 | Manette, she will live with you? |
26905 | Marcile-- where is Marcile? |
26905 | May I come in? |
26905 | My name''s Buckmaster, ai n''t it-- Jim Buckmaster? 26905 No chance to get him at the Fort?" |
26905 | Oh, it''s Meydon, is it, that bad case I heard of to- day? |
26905 | One of the local doctors could n''t do it, I suppose? |
26905 | Or you''ll set the law on him? |
26905 | Orion is the name-- a beauty, ai n''t it? |
26905 | Perhaps Orion will rise again-- you think so? |
26905 | Queeck-- queeck, where is Marcile? |
26905 | Racing?--cards? |
26905 | Reprieve? |
26905 | Say, ai n''t he pretty? |
26905 | Say, how dare you call your father_ Jim_--eh, tell me that? |
26905 | Shall I do it? |
26905 | She here-- out here? |
26905 | Show you what? |
26905 | So you t''ink it better Meydon should die, as Hadley is away and Brydon is sick--_hein_? |
26905 | Take me with you-- me-- where? |
26905 | Tell me again-- is it so at last? |
26905 | Tell me,she said, quietly--"tell me how you are able to save Haman?" |
26905 | That is it, is it not? |
26905 | The river? |
26905 | The spring? |
26905 | The story is told in many ways; which is right? 26905 Then the moon''s up almost?" |
26905 | Then the play is n''t finished? |
26905 | Then what''s the matter? 26905 Then, as you say, she will not marry M''sieu''Varley--_hein_?" |
26905 | There is a way-- have you never thought of it? 26905 There is another act? |
26905 | There-- rock? |
26905 | They have found it-- gold? |
26905 | They know-- the railway people-- Shaughnessy knows? |
26905 | Thief?--thief? |
26905 | Tim,she said, and slipped a hand in his,"would you mind the religion-- if you had me?" |
26905 | To go free--_altogether_? |
26905 | Two thousand dollars-- nothing less? |
26905 | Was it any of your business, Abe? |
26905 | Was it near the other entrance? |
26905 | Was it so selfish in Madame to refuse the name of Finden--_n''est- ce pas_? |
26905 | Was that all Ricketts told you, Buck? |
26905 | Water? |
26905 | Well, Andy, have you been here ever since? |
26905 | Well, but if your life is saved, Grassette? |
26905 | Well, what is all this, Grassette? |
26905 | Well? |
26905 | What are you doing here? 26905 What are you doing out there, Mitiahwe?" |
26905 | What are you doing with your life? |
26905 | What brings you out here, Jo? |
26905 | What did I say? |
26905 | What did Orion do, and why does he rise? 26905 What did he do? |
26905 | What did she come here for? |
26905 | What difference does it make? 26905 What do you mean?" |
26905 | What do you want for your shack and the lake? |
26905 | What do you want with him-- not medicine of that old quack, that dreadful man? |
26905 | What do you want with me, then? |
26905 | What do you want-- medicine? |
26905 | What do you want? 26905 What do you want?" |
26905 | What do you want? |
26905 | What does he know about the business? 26905 What for, Jo? |
26905 | What for? |
26905 | What has happened? 26905 What has he done?" |
26905 | What have you done? 26905 What have you to do with Haman?" |
26905 | What is his name? 26905 What is his name?" |
26905 | What is it, Mitiahwe? |
26905 | What is it-- quick? |
26905 | What is it? 26905 What is it?" |
26905 | What is it? |
26905 | What is it? |
26905 | What is that to you? |
26905 | What is the gutter, dadsie? |
26905 | What is the lodge of a chief? 26905 What is the matter, Flood?" |
26905 | What is_ that_? |
26905 | What manner of Great Spirit is it who lets the food of his chief Oshondonto fall into the hands of the Blackfeet? |
26905 | What right had I to risk his life for theirs? 26905 What the devil''s all this? |
26905 | What time is it? |
26905 | What time is it? |
26905 | What time, if please? |
26905 | What was it you were saying? 26905 What was you doing here, and not at Selby, Jake?" |
26905 | What will happen? 26905 What will you do, Grassette?" |
26905 | What would she have said to what you did to Jim? |
26905 | What you talkin''about, Jinny? 26905 What''s his price in the open market?" |
26905 | What''s it all about, Jinny? 26905 What''s that clump together on the right-- what are they called in astronomy?" |
26905 | What''s that scar on your forehead, Jo? 26905 What''s that-- what''s that you say? |
26905 | What''s the use of my hearin''? 26905 What''s to that? |
26905 | What''s up? 26905 What''s your game? |
26905 | What''ve I got to do with it? |
26905 | When be you goin''back East? 26905 When did you eat last?" |
26905 | When was that? |
26905 | Where am I going, then? |
26905 | Where did you think of livin''out here? |
26905 | Where do you come from? |
26905 | Who is Dupont? |
26905 | Who is this man? 26905 Who knows-- who knows the truth?" |
26905 | Who told you that? |
26905 | Who told you-- the truth? |
26905 | Who was it come? |
26905 | Who you firin''at? |
26905 | Who you got in that room, Jinny? 26905 Why are you so dreadfully poor-- and everything?" |
26905 | Why did I do it? 26905 Why did I never notice the likeness before?" |
26905 | Why did n''t Ricketts tell it right out at once? |
26905 | Why did n''t you tell me he was here? |
26905 | Why did you come, m''sieu''? |
26905 | Why did you never write and tell me that, Jo? 26905 Why do n''t you hit out, sergeant?" |
26905 | Why do n''t you sleep? |
26905 | Why do you do this kind of thing? 26905 Why do you want to go the''quick''way to Askatoon?" |
26905 | Why do you want to go the''quick''way to Askatoon? |
26905 | Why have you done it? |
26905 | Why should you ruin your life for him? |
26905 | Why, gol darn it, Nance, what''s got into you? 26905 Will he ever stop rising?" |
26905 | Will you come back, darlin''? 26905 Will you do it?" |
26905 | Will you do it? |
26905 | Will you not help to clear your conscience by doing this thing? 26905 Will you not to show me?" |
26905 | Would n''t it be better for the law to hang him if you''ve got the proof, Buck? 26905 Would n''t you have come if you knew I was here?" |
26905 | Yes, excommunication,she replied;"but why an enemy? |
26905 | You ca n''t save life without running some risk yourself, not as a rule, can you? |
26905 | You call me a beast? |
26905 | You can show me dat way? |
26905 | You go on-- how can you go on? |
26905 | You got the ten t''ousan''each-- in cash or check, eh? 26905 You have not tell any one-- never?" |
26905 | You never told him, then-- you never told him that? |
26905 | You not happy-- you not like me here? |
26905 | You said it was for Dan,he said--"Dan Welldon?" |
26905 | You want me to go to prison, then? |
26905 | You want me to run things-- your colossal schemes? 26905 You want me to see the man at once?" |
26905 | You want to board here? |
26905 | You were never bad,she added; then, with an arm sweeping the universe,"Oh, is n''t it all good, and is n''t it all worth living?" |
26905 | You wonder if he''s worth saving? |
26905 | You''ll do what''s right-- by Bobby? |
26905 | You''ll want some money for your journey? |
26905 | You''re Jenny Long, ai n''t you? |
26905 | You''re sure Greevy killed your boy, Buck? |
26905 | You''re sure he did it? |
26905 | You''ve got it-- sure? |
26905 | You_ felt_ good in the desert? |
26905 | Your old home was in Nova Scotia, was n''t it, Dingan? |
26905 | _ Ben_, you will do it to- night-- then? |
26905 | _ Eh_,_ ben_, it is all right-- yes? |
26905 | _ Qu''appelle? 26905 _ Qui reste là _--Lygon?" |
26905 | _ Qui va là ?_ Who is it? 26905 _ Qui va là ?_ Who is it? |
26905 | _ Qui va là ?_ Who is it? |
26905 | _ Qui va là ?_ Who is it? |
26905 | ''Tincture of Lebanon Leaves''you called the medicine, did n''t you? |
26905 | ***** In the little waiting- room, Finden said to Varley,"What happened?" |
26905 | *****"Who told you? |
26905 | A chance of life-- what did it mean? |
26905 | A moment, then he added,"The letter was n''t to be sent here in his own name, was it?" |
26905 | A nice, quiet time coming on the border Abe, eh?" |
26905 | A year or so in jail, an''a long time to think over what''s going round his neck on the scaffold-- wouldn''t that suit you, if you''ve got the proof?" |
26905 | AS DEEP AS THE SEA"What can I do, Dan? |
26905 | After which the quick tongue of Nicolle Terasse:"You want know? |
26905 | Ai n''t I no rights? |
26905 | Ai n''t it enough to quarrel about the living? |
26905 | Alive or dead? |
26905 | And if I would n''t have him with you, do you think I''ll have you without him? |
26905 | And if he was outside these prison walls, and in the Gulch, and the man was there alive before him, what would he do? |
26905 | And now that Mitiahwe had been told that he would go, what would she do? |
26905 | And the dead boy there, Wingo, who had risked his life, also dead-- how long? |
26905 | And you''ve kept Dorl''s child with your own money all these years?" |
26905 | Anne_?" |
26905 | Are n''t you glad to see me?" |
26905 | Are they still there, at the Forks?" |
26905 | Are you a colonel, or a captain, or only a principal private?" |
26905 | Are you afeard to take the risk?" |
26905 | Are you bleeding much?" |
26905 | Are you comin''?" |
26905 | Are you one that has lived to tell the tale? |
26905 | As he handed the pipe to Knife- in- the- Wind, an Indian called Silver Tassel, with a cruel face, said, grimly:"Why does Oshondonto travel to us?" |
26905 | As they passed the house where Miss Mackinder lived, some one shouted:"Are you watching the rise of Orion?" |
26905 | At length he spoke, looking into Buckmaster''s face:"What was the story Ricketts told you? |
26905 | At length the tense silence was broken:"Was n''t the old game good enough? |
26905 | Before the knock came to the door Jim had just said,"Why do your eyes shine so, Sally? |
26905 | Boys, what is he-- what-- is-- he? |
26905 | But do you not think how sudden it was? |
26905 | But do you think that I could have lived my life out, feeling that I might have saved Jim and did n''t try? |
26905 | But if there were the red man''s Medicine too--""What is the red man''s Medicine?" |
26905 | But is there no one that you care for or that cares for you, that you remember, or that remembers you?" |
26905 | But perhaps it is your mind is not so big enough to see--_hien_?" |
26905 | By speaking to your sister?" |
26905 | Ca n''t you see what a swab he is, Laura?" |
26905 | Can I bind it up or wash it for you? |
26905 | Catch it? |
26905 | Could n''t you see what the end would be if your plunging did n''t come off? |
26905 | D''ye see?" |
26905 | Dear old man, say you remember Franklin?" |
26905 | Debilitated, demoralized, how could he, even if he wished, struggle against this powerful confederate, as powerful in will as in body? |
26905 | Did I not see it all in my dream, and follow after them to take them to my heart? |
26905 | Did I? |
26905 | Did he ever laugh in his life?" |
26905 | Did n''t he go by that name when you saw him?" |
26905 | Did not the distant West know Father Bourassa''s gift, and did not Protestants attend Mass to hear him play the organ afterward? |
26905 | Did she fear that-- she knew not quite what, but it had to do with a long ago? |
26905 | Did this Caliban have some understanding of what was at stake in his heart and soul? |
26905 | Did you come to see me?" |
26905 | Did you know Sir John Franklin?--is it true, dear old boy?--is it true? |
26905 | Did you know Sir John Franklin?--is it-- tell me, is it true?" |
26905 | Do n''t I know my own name? |
26905 | Do n''t you know better than that? |
26905 | Do n''t you think of that? |
26905 | Do we not need to excommunicate our friends sometimes?" |
26905 | Do you remember?" |
26905 | Do you sometimes, even in your dreams, speak to me? |
26905 | Do you think she''ll git well?" |
26905 | Do you think you are in no way responsible?" |
26905 | Does any one know him here? |
26905 | Does it look so bad?" |
26905 | Far beneath unconsciousness is there the summons of your spirit to me?... |
26905 | For me-- ah, if I can save him-- and I mean to do so!--do you think that I would not then have my heaven on earth? |
26905 | Had n''t we best make sure?" |
26905 | Had she not longed for a little home with a great love, and a strong, true man? |
26905 | Has any one seen him?" |
26905 | Has he got to rise? |
26905 | Have you forgotten God, Grassette? |
26905 | Have you forgotten me?" |
26905 | Have you told her that you''ve got a wife you married when you were at college-- and as good a girl as ever lived?" |
26905 | He had brought him out of the wilds, out of the unknown-- was he only taking him into the unknown again? |
26905 | He is a great man-- I dunno not; but he spik at me like dis,''Is dere sick, and cripple, and stay- in- bed people here dat ca n''t get up?'' |
26905 | He was silent for a moment, but then said, stubbornly:"Why-- why have you done it? |
26905 | He was sure to do it; and, when he had done it, and found her gone on this errand, what would he do? |
26905 | He''s stored up a lot of things to say, and he''ll say them; but you''ll keep the boy in your mind, and be patient, wo n''t you, Cassy? |
26905 | He, John Bickersteth, was going into a world again where-- as he believed-- a happy fate awaited him; but what of this old man? |
26905 | Her heart beat hard, and she raised her head and called-- why was it she should call out in a language not her own?--"_Qu''appelle? |
26905 | Her-- what''ll it matter to her? |
26905 | Herself!--to leave her here, who had been so much to him? |
26905 | His principle was embodied in certain words which he quoted once to Sally from the prophet Amos--"_And the Lord said unto me, Amos, what seest thou? |
26905 | His return? |
26905 | How did you come to speak to him, Grace?" |
26905 | How did you guess I knew-- everything, father?" |
26905 | How far is it, and can we do it in time?" |
26905 | How goes it-- all right?" |
26905 | How long had he lain there? |
26905 | How long have I slept?" |
26905 | How many years had gone since he had heard church- bells? |
26905 | How much did you figure you could get out of me, if I let you bleed me?" |
26905 | How shall I do it?'' |
26905 | How would he be able to make the_ amende honorable_ to La Touche? |
26905 | I ai n''t so young as I used to be, and, anyhow, what''s the good? |
26905 | I am your daughter, and I am here, good or bad-- is your life all your own?" |
26905 | I saved his life right enough, and he came to me a year after and said,''You saved my life, now what are you going to do with it? |
26905 | I''m a bit of hickory, I''m not a prairie- flower--""Who said you was a prairie- flower? |
26905 | If Jake comes here to- morrow, and you ai n''t here, what do you think he''ll do? |
26905 | If it was Jake''s life in danger, what''d I think of a woman that could save him, and did n''t?" |
26905 | If she could feel so much for a"casual,"why not a little more feeling for him? |
26905 | Is all ready for the start?" |
26905 | Is he pretty sick, father?" |
26905 | Is it because o''him that you bin talkin''about no weddin''to- morrow? |
26905 | Is it not so? |
26905 | Is it one o''the others come back, puttin''you off Jake again?" |
26905 | Is it so secret?" |
26905 | Is it so, ma''m''selle?" |
26905 | Is it--_is_ it you that calls? |
26905 | Is the house warm enough for you?" |
26905 | Is there no one of you--?" |
26905 | It did all right before, did n''t it?" |
26905 | It is a fool''s journey-- does the wolverine walk into an empty trap?" |
26905 | It is n''t the importance of a life that''s at stake; it''s the importance of living; and we do not live alone, do we?" |
26905 | It is so-- eh? |
26905 | It looks as if the police''ll never get him, eh?" |
26905 | It was a wild thought, but yet why not?--why not? |
26905 | It''s eight years old now, is n''t it?" |
26905 | Jake-- what Jake? |
26905 | Listen-- where is Marcile?" |
26905 | Marcile-- where was Marcile now? |
26905 | Must the world stand still because a handful of Crees need a hunting- ground? |
26905 | Never-- wronged-- a-- woman? |
26905 | Now is n''t that so, father?" |
26905 | Now we want another ten t''ousan''to us each, to forget we do it for him--_hein_?" |
26905 | Of whom? |
26905 | Or was it a fine spirit of adventure with a good heart behind it? |
26905 | Presently he said, holding out his pipe,"You not like smoke, mebbe?" |
26905 | Presently he steadied to the ordeal of suspense, while he kept saying to himself,"What does he know-- what-- which?" |
26905 | QU''APPELLE(_ Who calls?_)"But I''m white; I''m not an Indian. |
26905 | Qu''appelle?_"And once again on the still night air came the trembling appeal,"Pauline!" |
26905 | Qu''appelle_?" |
26905 | Railway construction? |
26905 | Remember the desert, and Mary Jewell, and your mother-- did you have a mother, Scranton?--say, did you have a mother, lad?" |
26905 | Right enough, is n''t it?" |
26905 | Say, you''ll do it, wo n''t you? |
26905 | See-- Pauline?" |
26905 | Shall the crow nest with the oriole?" |
26905 | Shall the white man''s Medicine fail? |
26905 | She called into the icy void,"_ Qui va là ?_ Who goes?" |
26905 | She called into the icy void,"_ Qui va là ?_ Who goes?" |
26905 | Some one getting married-- or a legacy, or a saw- off? |
26905 | That was the feelin''among''em: What was the good of making things worse? |
26905 | The check or the money--_hein_?" |
26905 | Then I waked with a cry, but my man was beside me, and his arm was round my neck; and this dream, is it not a foolish dream, my mother?" |
26905 | There was old Lamson-- fifteen hundred for the goitre on his neck; and Mrs. Gilligan for the cancer-- two thousand, was n''t it? |
26905 | They ai n''t going to look for him in my bedroom, be they?" |
26905 | This rough, white plainsman was come to make love to her, and to say-- what? |
26905 | Walk into the parlor?" |
26905 | Was he going? |
26905 | Was he to commit a new crime? |
26905 | Was it a whim, or the excited imagination of youth, or that prompting which the young often have to make the world better? |
26905 | Was it all bad, and only that which belonged to white life good? |
26905 | Was it her duty to pay the"little gal''s debt,"to save the man at Bindon? |
26905 | Was it played out? |
26905 | Was it to go on? |
26905 | Was not she herself the descendant of Blackfoot and Piegan chiefs through generations of rulers and warriors? |
26905 | Was she afraid of something? |
26905 | Was she to feel that Jansen did not price her high? |
26905 | Was there anything more than that? |
26905 | Was there not Piegan and Blackfoot blood in the girl''s veins? |
26905 | Well, Jo?" |
26905 | Well, about the snakes?" |
26905 | Well, was it in the desert you got your taste for honey, too, same as John the Baptist-- that was his name, if I recomember?" |
26905 | Were there friends, any friends anywhere in the world, waiting for him? |
26905 | Were they both thinking of the same thing now? |
26905 | What are they after you for?" |
26905 | What brings you here? |
26905 | What brought you, Flood?" |
26905 | What did Jim''s life mean? |
26905 | What did he ever do but what was right? |
26905 | What did your boy tell Ricketts? |
26905 | What do I care for life? |
26905 | What do I care? |
26905 | What do you see ahead of you?" |
26905 | What do you want with Dorl?" |
26905 | What do you want with me?" |
26905 | What do you want?" |
26905 | What had it to do with the face of this outcast she had just left? |
26905 | What had made her fall in love with George Baragar? |
26905 | What had she said to the prisoner? |
26905 | What has the Great Spirit to say? |
26905 | What interests you in him?" |
26905 | What is his name? |
26905 | What is it?" |
26905 | What is the good? |
26905 | What is the matter with him-- with Meydon?" |
26905 | What is your business with him? |
26905 | What man you got in that room? |
26905 | What sort of life had it been? |
26905 | What time did you fix for goin''?" |
26905 | What time was it? |
26905 | What was Ba''tiste to her? |
26905 | What was you doing, if it ai n''t cheek to ask?" |
26905 | What were they to me? |
26905 | What would Grassette do? |
26905 | What would he do? |
26905 | What would she herself do if she were in Mitiahwe''s place? |
26905 | What would the man do? |
26905 | What''s ahead of me? |
26905 | What''s got into you, Abe?" |
26905 | What''s he doing out here? |
26905 | What''s his name?" |
26905 | What''s in your mind?" |
26905 | What''s she to me?" |
26905 | What''s that about my canoeing a man down to Bindon?" |
26905 | What, then, held her back? |
26905 | What-- is-- Sergeant Foyle-- boys?" |
26905 | When Long Hand comes, what will Mitiahwe say to him?" |
26905 | When was it that he had fought his way to the nets and back again-- hours, maybe? |
26905 | When you threatened others as you did me, and life seemed such a little thing in others-- can''t you think?" |
26905 | Whence came he? |
26905 | Where was Marcile? |
26905 | Where were you going when you came across me here?" |
26905 | Where?" |
26905 | Which is the greater thing, to get what pleases one, or to work for something which is more to one than all else in the world? |
26905 | Which one did he take?" |
26905 | Whither was he wending now? |
26905 | Who are you? |
26905 | Who are you? |
26905 | Who are you?" |
26905 | Who do you think''d be postman from Selby here? |
26905 | Who is he?" |
26905 | Who were you speaking to?" |
26905 | Who will be in it?" |
26905 | Who''s been hiding him? |
26905 | Who''s going to take him down the river to- night? |
26905 | Why are you off the trail?" |
26905 | Why did Ba''tiste haunt her so? |
26905 | Why did he do it? |
26905 | Why did you do it, Scranton?" |
26905 | Why did you take to this? |
26905 | Why do you smuggle?" |
26905 | Why does he rise? |
26905 | Why had she not gone with him and attempted the shorter way-- the quick way, he had called it? |
26905 | Why had she not gone with him? |
26905 | Why should she be sacrificed? |
26905 | Why should she cramp her soul to this one issue, when the same soul could spend itself upon the greater motives and in the larger circle? |
26905 | Why was the gent called Orion in them far- off days?" |
26905 | Why will your friend lose his life if you do n''t get to Bindon?" |
26905 | Why, do you know where you are? |
26905 | Will that satisfy you? |
26905 | Will you not take the chance? |
26905 | With a smile which showed her fine, white teeth, she said,"Is that for me?" |
26905 | With no eye upon him? |
26905 | Wo n''t you tell me? |
26905 | Would he go? |
26905 | Would he last out the course? |
26905 | Would he reach Askatoon in time? |
26905 | Would it never end? |
26905 | You ai n''t broke it off at the last moment, same as before? |
26905 | You ai n''t had a letter from Jake?" |
26905 | You comin''with me, Nance?" |
26905 | You do n''t mean you''re trying to arrest me again, after letting me go?" |
26905 | You got a temper, Jinny; and you got a pistol, too, eh?" |
26905 | You hear? |
26905 | You remember how Clint used to laugh, sort of low and teasin''like-- you remember that laugh o''Clint''s, do n''t you?" |
26905 | You remember the ship-- the Arctic Sea-- the ice- fields, and Franklin-- you remember him? |
26905 | You think--?" |
26905 | You was a tough, but who''s goin''to judge you? |
26905 | You will do it?" |
26905 | You will leave him to me?" |
26905 | You''re Jenny Long, ai n''t you?" |
26905 | You''re ready to step in when he steps out, ai n''t you, Lablache?" |
26905 | You''ve been married, and have children, have n''t you?" |
26905 | [ Illustration:"OH, ISN''T IT ALL WORTH LIVING?" |
26905 | _ Bagosh_, you not t''ink dat true? |
26905 | he asked, with a smile;"or is it to get a bill of excommunication against your only enemy-- there could n''t be more than one?" |
26905 | you and Jake ai n''t quarrelled again? |