Questions

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

identifier question
23355To stand in the midst of Fairyland, and play beautiful tunes on a toy fiddle, while all the people clapped their hands-- what could quite equal that?
16964If we say,"A bar 81/2 feet long is to be cut into five pieces of equal length; how long should each piece be?
16964The boy was unable to lay out the work, although when asked by the foreman,"Do n''t you know how to divide 81/2 by 5?
16964What can I do to improve it?"
35757Do n''t you know,she exclaimed,"that I belong to the Band of Hope?"
35757Oh grave, where is thy victory?"
35757Oh grave, where is thy victory?"
35757Suddenly collecting all her remaining strength, with uplifted hand, she exclaimed, in a glad, exultant voice,"Oh death, where is thy sting?
35757The crown of life I then shall wear, The conqueror''s palm my hands shall bear, And all the joys of heaven I''ll share; Will you go?
35757The distance appeared to make no impression whatever on Katie, as she asked the usual question,"Can I go to Sunday- school every week?"
35757To sing the Saviour''s dying love, Will you go?
35757What, Oh what but the religion of Jesus could have stood the test of that awful hour?
35757and then, in a sweet, but feeble voice, she sang two verses of a favorite hymn:"I''m travelling home to heaven above, Will you go?
35757will you go?
35757will you go?
35757will you go?"
37981''Are you hurt, child?'' 37981 ''Did you come begging?''
37981Do n''t you remember Joe Collins, Colonel? 37981 I hope that is n''t all?"
37981Suppose we all keep our attempts secret, and not let our right hand know what the left hand does? 37981 Well, ants build nests higher than a man''s head in Africa; you remember the picture of them in our old geographies?
37981What_ could_ we do?
37981What_ do_ you mean?
37981Could you do as well without eyes?"
37981Have you taken a palatial store on Boylston Street for this year, intending to run it alone?
37981I ca n''t express it, but you know?"
37981Is it a vote?"
37981Is n''t it shameful?"
37981Is n''t that a good joke?
37981Now, who comes next?"
37981One of my gifts at New Year was my own glove- case,--you remember the apple- blossom thing I began last autumn?
37981What do you say?"
37981Who shall begin?"
37981Who''ll buy?
37981You remember how we used to laugh over them when he sent them home?
37981[ Illustration:"''Are you hurt, child?''
37981who''ll buy?''"
39291Can we look to the home to provide this fundamental basis of a true apprenticeship system?
39291Can we rest satisfied that the parents exercise over the growing lads that salutary control all growing lads require?
39291Do they last when school- days are over, and the boys gone out to work?
39291Finally, assuming indentured apprenticeship to be both practical and desirable, would it provide a solution for the problem of boy labour?
39291From what quarter may we expect the new apprenticeship to come?
39291How is the necessary training to be provided?
39291In what direction is the remedy to be looked for?
39291It might, therefore, be asked what is the use of an exchange for boys who can already find employment of a sort more easily than is good for them?
39291Something in place of these he must have, for even labourers''families must live.... What was the way out?
39291To all who ask, or to only selected number?
39291To what extent are boys employed while still liable to attend school?
39291To what extent does the apprenticeship of to- day satisfy the conditions of a true apprenticeship system?
39291To what extent is this general assumption justified by the results of actual experience?
39291To what kind of employers or to what classes of employment shall we send boys?
39291What are the first occupations selected by these 120,000 boys?
39291What contribution does the home make to the solution of the apprenticeship question?
39291What effect does employment have on the physical condition of children under the age of fourteen?
39291What part does the State, as guardian, play in this work of supervision?
39291What, if any, effect does the employment of school- children have on the general question of the preparation for a trade?
39291Why may not we look for a general extension of these methods?
39291Will the poor parent, whose lot is pitiable enough as things are, be able to stand the loss?
44396If ladies do it, why should n''t I? 44396 Could anything be more inconsistent? 44396 Dr. Delos F. Wilcox, in speaking to the subjectWhat is Philadelphia Doing to Protect Her Citizens in the Street?"
44396If not living at home where does boy reside?
44396What of the Newsboy of the Second Cities?
44396What will the verdict of the people be?
44396When asked why he did n''t quit the job, he replied:"You do n''t suppose I want to work for$ 3 or$ 4 a week?
44396Why can not such practices be introduced into the United States?
44396Why, then, do we exempt many forms of street work from the operation of the law?
44396___________________________ What proof has been given that he is over twelve years of age?
44396______________________________ Can child read?
44396_____________________________________________________ Has badge been granted?
44396______________________________________________________ Can child write?
44396_____________________________________________________________________________ Why do parents want him to sell papers?
44396per week?
44396| How often( elsewhere)||home for supper?
44396|"craps"?
44396|+----------------------------------+------+--++---------------------------+|Father||||Why is he selling papers?
44396|+----------------------------------+------+--++---------------------------+|Other Children||||How much given$||||||to family?
44396|Is school work injured by selling papers?
44396|his working?
44396|{ Tenderloin}|+-----------------------+-----------------------+-------------------------+|Does he like|Family require|Why is he working?
44396|| per week?
44396||the work?
20080''Yes, that was the name,''says she;''and where is little Pollie?'' 20080 Ai n''t yer''shamed to talk like that?
20080And does He want me in that beautiful land?
20080And is your mother dead?
20080And will He listen to the likes of me?
20080Are you selling these violets, my child?
20080Are you the little girl I saw here about a year ago?
20080Be that Him you told me on?
20080Do n''t they whop yer at school?
20080Does He want me?
20080How do you pray?
20080I ca n''t get in,Pollie sobbed;"oh, what is the matter?"
20080I have but this one bed,she said hesitatingly,"and-- and-- I should not like her to sleep with Pollie; what shall I do?"
20080I say, Pollie, how many have yer sold, eh?
20080I say, why do n''t yer come with me on Saturdays, Pollie?
20080If you please, is it quite fresh? 20080 Is it my mother?"
20080Is your mother dead, then? 20080 Lor''bless me, child, what are you doing out so late, and in this crowd too?"
20080Nora will soon be like she once was; wo n''t she, mother?
20080Now what''s to be done?
20080O Jimmy, do n''t you know who God is?
20080O mother, what is it?
20080Please, ma''am,said Pollie,"will you let me have a new- laid egg for mother?"
20080Pollie,he said,"shall I go to the kingdom of heaven?
20080Shall I teach you a prayer to say to Jesus, Jimmy?
20080She is not ill, is she?
20080Then will you let me have three bunches?
20080To see Pollie?
20080Well, here I am again,she exclaimed,"and right- down tired, I can tell you; why do n''t cooks know what they want, and order things in the morning?
20080What are you going to buy for yourself?
20080What be she like?
20080What is prayer?
20080What is she then?
20080What is the matter?
20080What is your name?
20080Where are you going?
20080Where are you taking me?
20080Where have you been, Pollie?
20080Where''s your mother?
20080Who can it be?
20080Who have you got there?
20080Who taught you of God?
20080Why are you crying?
20080Why do n''t you get her a bit of meat instead?
20080Will this buy some?
20080Will your mother let me?
20080Would you like a bunch of violets?
20080Would you like some of my sweet violets?
20080Would you like these?
20080Yes; would you like to go with me?
20080You be Pollie Turner, bain''t yer, what lives upstairs with yer mother?
20080And Mrs. Flanagan?
20080And at home?
20080And little Pollie?
20080And of the many who love little Pollie, who so true as Sally Grimes?
20080But where is little Pollie, that she is not with her trusty friend?
20080But who are those two neat young girls who are coming down the path towards the lodge, looking so bright and cheerful?
20080Can you guess, Pollie?"
20080Do you remember me?
20080Every morning before setting off for the City she comes, anxiously asking,"How''s Pollie?"
20080He took them without a word of thanks, but as she was moving away he called out--"I say, did yer make these?"
20080I say, what be you folks doing here?"
20080I see yer sometimes with books, eh?
20080Illustration:"I say, Pollie, how many have yer sold?"
20080Is it night coming on?
20080Lord do yer go there?"
20080Sally hesitated"May I come with you?"
20080Shall I fetch your tea- pot?
20080Shall I say the one I am learning for next Sunday to you?"
20080Shall I tell you what it was?"
20080Surely one is Lizzie Stevens, and the other Sally Grimes?
20080The lady gazed earnestly into the little girl''s flushed face, as she asked--"Why did you not keep that shilling?"
20080There is some one scouring milk- pans in the yard, but whose features are almost hidden by a large black bonnet; who is it?
20080WHO HAD THE VIOLETS?
20080What was to be done?
20080Who in the whole world cares for us as she does?
20080Who so unselfish?
20080Will Jesus put His hands on me, and bless me also?"
20080Would_ she_ be gathered into that fold also?
20080asked the child softly;"are you ill?"
20080asked the widow in surprise;"who is she?"
20080be school nice?"
20080could there be room for_ her_?
20080did I hurt you?"
20080do n''t you know?
20080he repeated,"Who''s He; Him''s mighty clever to fix up these little bits of things, bain''t He?"
20080how was she to get into the house?
20080oh, can it be?"
20080repeated Sally;"is that where yer goes on Sundays?
20080repeated poor benighted Jimmy musingly-- it was the first time he had ever heard those blessed words--"where be that, Polly?"
20080said the mother, as she smoothed back the curls from the anxious little face,"have you forgotten?
20080she asked after a pause,"and where do you live?"
20080was her exclamation, as suddenly she started up,"what be yer going to do?"
20080was the natural question;"is it right to have her here, think ye?"
20080who knows what may be by and by?
20080who so true?
20080who would wish him back again?
14762Afraid?
14762Ai n''t you going halveses?
14762And stole the money?
14762And your mother gave you ten dollars?
14762Annie Lee?
14762Are you from Riverdale, boy?
14762Are you?
14762Been to work there?
14762Boy,said Colonel Whiting, raising his arm with majestic dignity, and pointing to the door,--"boy, do you see that door?"
14762But he will turn us out of the house; and what shall we do then?
14762Ca n''t I?
14762Ca n''t you? 14762 Can I sell you any books to- day?"
14762Can I?
14762Come, Bob, let''s get a horse and chaise and have a ride-- what do you say?
14762Did he give you any thing?
14762Did he run away with you?
14762Did he?
14762Did n''t you tell me you were''hooking jack''? 14762 Did she?"
14762Did you hear about Tom Spicer?
14762Did you hear that, Timmins? 14762 Did you?
14762Do they? 14762 Do you see that door?"
14762Do you see this, Bobby? 14762 Do you stump me?"
14762Do you think you can lick me?
14762Do? 14762 Eh, greeny?"
14762Eh, sappy?
14762Go to Sunday school-- don''t you?
14762Going to run away?
14762Got off slick-- didn''t I?
14762Had you no money?
14762Has your father returned?
14762Have you asked them?
14762Have you sold out?
14762Have you?
14762Have you?
14762He will do better hereafter: wo n''t you, Timmins?
14762He will sell them to me at the same price, wo n''t he?
14762How are they?
14762How came you here, Tom?
14762How did you get off?
14762How do you do, Bobby? 14762 How do you know I have got a wife?"
14762How many books did you carry?
14762How many books you got?
14762How many have you in your valise?
14762How many have you left?
14762How many?
14762How much have you got?
14762How much have you left?
14762How much?
14762How much?
14762How?
14762I am innocent,he repeated to himself,"and why need I fear?
14762I say, what did he give you, Bobby?
14762I should be very willing to do so: but what can I do for you?
14762I should like to know what all this means?
14762I was thinking of that; but what shall I take with me, sir?
14762If your father will put you to a trade, what more do you want?
14762In a hurry? 14762 Indeed; well, what can I do for you?"
14762Indeed; who told you?
14762Is Mr. Bayard in?
14762Is Mr. Whiting in?
14762Is that all?
14762Is this boat big enough to go so far?
14762Is this true, Timmins?
14762Just come out here, and try it fair?
14762Just so; Mr. Bayard is the gentleman whose daughter you saved?
14762Let you? 14762 Mean?
14762Mistake? 14762 Moore''s Poems?"
14762Mr. Bayard keep here?
14762My uncle,, she continued,"is one of the best hearted men in the world-- ain''t you, uncle?"
14762My wife?
14762No, sir; what about him?
14762Nothing to read, eh?
14762Now, how much will these books cost me apiece?
14762Now, sonny, where shall we go?
14762Now, young man, what book have you to sell?
14762O Bobby, is it you? 14762 O Bobby, what have you done?"
14762Of course?
14762Paid?
14762Pert?
14762Saucy, marm? 14762 Stopped him-- didn''t you?"
14762Tell me now; how much was it?
14762That was Tom with you-- wasn''t it?
14762The Wayfarer? 14762 The book business is good just now, is n''t it?"
14762The squire?
14762Tom?
14762Travelled far to- day?
14762Was n''t I fishing with you?
14762Was n''t I with you?
14762Was you, though? 14762 We shall never forget you-- shall we, father?"
14762Well, Bobby, how is trade in the book line?
14762Well, Tom, where are you going?
14762Well, Tom?
14762Well, how did you like it?
14762Well, what of it?
14762Were you?
14762What are you going to do?
14762What are you stopping for, Bob?
14762What can you do?
14762What could I do? 14762 What did you hit me for, then?"
14762What do they fasten them with?
14762What do you mean by greeny?
14762What do you mean by sappy?
14762What do you mean by that, you young monkey?
14762What do you mean by that?
14762What do you mean by this?
14762What do you mean to do, Bob?
14762What do you pay for them?
14762What do your father and mother say?
14762What does mother say?
14762What doing?
14762What have you been doing?
14762What have you come back for then?
14762What if I did? 14762 What is the matter with you, Tom?"
14762What is the price of these?
14762What is the use of having money if we ca n''t spend it? 14762 What of it?"
14762What of that?
14762What of that?
14762What the deuse does she mean by that?
14762What''s the matter?
14762When are you going again?
14762When did they agree to it?
14762Where are all these folks going to?
14762Where are we?
14762Where are you going now?
14762Where are you going, Tom?
14762Where are your books?
14762Where did you get them?
14762Where have you been travelling?
14762Who is going to know any thing about it?
14762Who said she gave me ten dollars?
14762Who says I will?
14762Who told you so?
14762Why did n''t you speak of it then?
14762Why do n''t you set him to work, and make him earn something?
14762Why do you come back? 14762 Why not, as well as you?"
14762Why not?
14762Why should I give them a dollar for carrying me to Boston, when I can just as well walk? 14762 Why should I?"
14762Why, what can you do, Bobby?
14762Why, would n''t you? 14762 Will I?"
14762Will you clear out, or shall I kick you out?
14762Will you please to tell him that I want to see him about something very particular, when he gets back?
14762Wo n''t I?
14762Wo n''t I?
14762Wo n''t mother''s eyes stick out when she sees these shiners? 14762 Wo n''t you let me go with you, Bob?"
14762Wo n''t you take one?
14762Wo n''t you?
14762Would n''t you?
14762Would they trust you?
14762Yes, Tom; you see, when I heard about your trouble, Squire Lee and myself--"Squire Lee? 14762 Yes, ha- ow do they dew?"
14762Yes; ai n''t you rather late?
14762Yon had to buy the books first-- didn''t you?
14762You did n''t, though-- did you? 14762 You did?
14762You have no money for me, marm?
14762You say you sold fifty books?
14762Your father and mother were willing you should come-- were they not?
14762Your mother?
14762And Annie Lee-- would she ever smile upon him again?
14762And you mean to keep it all yourself?"
14762Annie Lee here?
14762Are you an admirer of Moore?"
14762Bobby''s first victory was achieved"Have you got a dollar?"
14762Books sell well there?"
14762But how came you here?"
14762But how do you like it?"
14762But where is Ellen Bayard?
14762But, I say, Bobby, where do you buy your books?"
14762But, Miss Annie, is your father at home?"
14762By the way, have you heard any thing from him?"
14762Can I sell you a copy of''The Wayfarer''to- day?
14762Can you be ready for a start as early as that?"
14762Can you deny that?"
14762Could n''t help lying?"
14762Did n''t he tell the master you were whispering in school?"
14762Did you sell any?"
14762Do n''t I owe Squire Lee sixty dollars?"
14762Do n''t you believe I could do something in this line?"
14762Do you think I mean to rob you?"
14762Do you understand it?"
14762Does he know about it?"
14762Have you ever studied book- keeping?"
14762Have you got sick of the business?"
14762Have you money enough left to pay your employer?"
14762Have you sold out?"
14762He read the preface, the table of contents, and several chapters of the work, before Mr. Bayard was ready to go home"How do you like it, Bobby?"
14762His pardon?
14762How are all the folks up country?"
14762How are you?"
14762How did it happen?"
14762How much did you make?"
14762Is Mr. Bayard in?"
14762So you are selling books to help your mother?"
14762The lady was in danger; if the horse''s flight was not checked, she would be dashed in pieces; and what then could excuse him for neglecting his duty?
14762They cost you seventy cents each-- didn''t they?"
14762This was a concession, and our hero began to feel some sympathy for his companion-- as who does not when the erring confess their faults?
14762Timmins?"
14762Was it possible?
14762What business has he to talk to my mother in that style?"
14762What do you mean by that, you young puppy?
14762What do you mean to do?"
14762What do you say?
14762What is your name, young man?"
14762What made him so?
14762What should he do?
14762What''s that to you?"
14762What''s the use of talking in that way?"
14762Where are you travelling?"
14762Where did you get it, Bobby?"
14762Where did you get the eight dollars?"
14762Where do you intend to go?"
14762Where is she?"
14762Where?"
14762Who is the liar now?"
14762Who was the fellow that wrote that song, mother?"
14762Who would have thought of such a thing?"
14762Why could n''t he do the same?
14762Why do n''t you go to work?"
14762Why do n''t you tell me, Bobby, what you have done?"
14762Why, where did you get all this money?"
14762Will you go with me or not?"
14762Will you go?"
14762Would n''t you do as much as that for a fellow?"
14762Would not Mr. Bayard frown upon him?
14762Would not even Ellen be tempted to forget the service he had rendered her?
14762Would she welcome him to her father''s house so gladly as she had done in the past?
14762Yet what could he do?
14762You ai n''t afeerd, are you?"
14762You do?"
14762You want this money to go into business with-- to buy your stock of books?"
14762as proud as you are bold?"
14762you stump me-- do you?"
19473''The Wayfarer''? 19473 Afraid?"
19473Ai n''t you going halveses?
19473And stole the money?
19473And your mother gave you ten dollars?
19473Annie Lee?
19473Are you from Riverdale, boy?
19473Are you?
19473Been to work there?
19473Boy,said Colonel Whiting, raising his arm with majestic dignity, and pointing to the door,--"boy, do you see that door?"
19473But he will turn us out of the house; and what shall we do then?
19473Ca n''t I?
19473Ca n''t you? 19473 Can I sell you any books to- day?"
19473Can I?
19473Come, Bob, let''s get a horse and chaise and have a ride-- what do you say?
19473Did he give you anything?
19473Did he run away with you?
19473Did he?
19473Did n''t you tell me you were''hooking jack''?
19473Did she?
19473Did you hear about Tom Spicer?
19473Did you hear that, Timmins? 19473 Did you?
19473Do they? 19473 Do you see that door?"
19473Do you see this, Bobby? 19473 Do you stump me?"
19473Do you think you can lick me?
19473Do? 19473 Eh, greeny?"
19473Eh, sappy?
19473Go to Sunday school-- don''t you?
19473Going to run away?
19473Got off slick-- didn''t I?
19473Had you no money?
19473Has your father returned?
19473Have you asked them?
19473Have you got a dollar?
19473Have you sold out?
19473Have you?
19473Have you?
19473He will do better hereafter: wo n''t you, Timmins?
19473He will sell them to me at the same price-- won''t he?
19473How are they?
19473How came you here, Tom?
19473How did you get off?
19473How do you do, Bobby? 19473 How do you know I have got a wife?"
19473How do you like it, Bobby?
19473How many books did you carry?
19473How many books you got?
19473How many have you in your valise?
19473How many have you left?
19473How many?
19473How much have you got?
19473How much have you left?
19473How much?
19473How much?
19473How?
19473I am innocent,he repeated to himself,"and why need I fear?
19473I say, what did he give you, Bobby?
19473I should be very willing to do so; but what can I do for you?
19473I should like to know what all this means?
19473I was thinking of that; but what shall I take with me, sir?
19473If your father will put you to a trade, what more do you want?
19473In a hurry? 19473 Indeed; well, what can I do for you?"
19473Indeed; who told you?
19473Is Mr. Bayard in?
19473Is Mr. Whiting in?
19473Is that all?
19473Is that the way you treat your customers?
19473Is that your lowest price?
19473Is this boat big enough to go so far?
19473Is this true, Timmins?
19473Just so; Mr. Bayard is the gentleman whose daughter you saved?
19473Let you? 19473 Mean?
19473Mistake? 19473 Moore''s Poems?"
19473Mr. Bayard keep here?
19473My uncle,she continued,"is one of the best- hearted men in the world-- ain''t you, uncle?"
19473My wife?
19473No, sir; what about him?
19473Nothing to read, eh?
19473Now, how much will these books cost me apiece?
19473Now, sonny, where shall we go?
19473Now, young man, what book have you to sell?
19473O, Bobby, is it you? 19473 O, Bobby, what have you done?"
19473Of course?
19473Paid?
19473Pert?
19473Saucy, marm? 19473 Stopped him-- didn''t you?"
19473Tell me now; how much was it?
19473That was Tom with you-- wasn''t it?
19473The book business is good just now, is n''t it?
19473The squire?
19473Tom?
19473Travelled far to- day?
19473Was n''t I fishing with you?
19473Was n''t I with you?
19473Was you, though? 19473 We shall never forget you-- shall we, father?"
19473Well, Bobby, how is trade in the book line?
19473Well, Tom, where are you going?
19473Well, Tom?
19473Well, how did you like it?
19473Well, what of it?
19473Were you?
19473What are you going to do?
19473What are you stopping for, Bob?
19473What can you do?
19473What could I do? 19473 What did you hit me for, then?"
19473What do they fasten them with?
19473What do you mean by greeny?
19473What do you mean by sappy?
19473What do you mean by that, you young monkey?
19473What do you mean by that?
19473What do you mean by this?
19473What do you mean to do, Bob?
19473What do you pay for them?
19473What do your father and mother say?
19473What does mother say?
19473What doing?
19473What have you been doing?
19473What have you come back for, then?
19473What if I did? 19473 What is the matter with you, Tom?"
19473What is the price of it?
19473What is the price of these?
19473What is the use of having money if we ca n''t spend it? 19473 What of it?"
19473What of that?
19473What of that?
19473What the deuce does she mean by that?
19473What''s the matter?
19473When are you going again?
19473When did they agree to it?
19473Where are all these folks going to?
19473Where are we?
19473Where are you going now?
19473Where are you going, Tom?
19473Where are your books?
19473Where did you get them?
19473Where have you been travelling?
19473Who is going to know anything about it?
19473Who said she gave me_ ten_ dollars?
19473Who says I will?
19473Who told you so?
19473Who?
19473Why did n''t you speak of it then?
19473Why do n''t you set him to work, and make him earn something?
19473Why do you come back? 19473 Why not, as well as you?"
19473Why not?
19473Why should I give them a dollar for carrying me to Boston, when I can just as well walk? 19473 Why should I?"
19473Why, what can you do, Bobby?
19473Why, would n''t you? 19473 Will I?"
19473Will you clear out, or shall I kick you out?
19473Will you please to tell him that I want to see him about something very particular, when he gets back?
19473Will you? 19473 Wo n''t I?"
19473Wo n''t I?
19473Wo n''t mother''s eyes stick out when she sees these shiners? 19473 Wo n''t you let me go with you, Bob?"
19473Wo n''t you take one?
19473Wo n''t you?
19473Would n''t you?
19473Would they trust you?
19473Yes, Tom; you see, when I heard about your trouble, Squire Lee and myself----"Squire Lee? 19473 Yes, ha- ow do they dew?"
19473Yes; ai n''t you rather late?
19473You did n''t, though-- did you? 19473 You did?
19473You had to buy the books first-- didn''t you?
19473You have no money for me, marm?
19473You say you sold fifty books?
19473Your father and mother were willing you should come-- were they not?
19473Your mother?
19473And Annie Lee-- would she ever smile upon him again?
19473And you mean to keep it all yourself?"
19473Annie Lee here?
19473Are you an admirer of Moore?"
19473Books sell well there?"
19473But how came you here?"
19473But how do you like it?"
19473But where is Ellen Bayard?
19473But, I say, Bobby, where do you buy your books?"
19473But, Miss Annie, is your father at home?"
19473By the way, have you heard anything from him?"
19473Can I sell you a copy of''The Wayfarer''to- day?
19473Can you be ready for a start as early as that?"
19473Can you deny that?"
19473Could n''t help lying?"
19473Did n''t he tell the master you were whispering in school?"
19473Did you sell any?"
19473Do n''t I owe Squire Lee sixty dollars?"
19473Do n''t you believe I could do something in this line?"
19473Do you think I mean to rob you?"
19473Do you understand it?"
19473Does he know about it?"
19473Have you ever studied book- keeping?"
19473Have you got sick of the business?"
19473Have you money enough left to pay your employer?"
19473Have you sold out?"
19473His pardon?
19473How are all the folks up country?"
19473How are you?"
19473How did it happen?"
19473How much did you make?"
19473Is Mr. Bayard in?"
19473So you are selling books to help your mother?"
19473The lady was in danger; if the horse''s flight was not checked, she would be dashed in pieces; and what then could excuse him for neglecting his duty?
19473They cost you seventy cents each-- didn''t they?"
19473This was a concession, and our hero began to feel some sympathy for his companion-- as who does not when the erring confess their faults?
19473Timmins, what does this mean?"
19473Timmins?"
19473Was it possible?
19473What business has he to talk to_ my_ mother in that style?"
19473What do you mean by that, you young puppy?
19473What do you mean to do?"
19473What do you say?
19473What is your name, young man?"
19473What made him so?
19473What should he do?
19473What''s that to you?"
19473What''s the use of talking in that way?"
19473Where are you travelling?"
19473Where did you get the eight dollars?"
19473Where do you intend to go?"
19473Where is she?"
19473Where?"
19473Where_ did_ you get it, Bobby?"
19473Who is the liar now?"
19473Who was the fellow that wrote that song, mother?"
19473Who would have thought of such a thing?"
19473Why could n''t he do the same?
19473Why do n''t you go to work?"
19473Why do n''t you tell me, Bobby, what you have done?"
19473Why, where did you get all this money?"
19473Will you go?"
19473Would n''t you do as much as that for a fellow?"
19473Would not Mr. Bayard frown upon him?
19473Would not even Ellen be tempted to forget the service he had rendered her?
19473Would she welcome him to her father''s house so gladly as she had done in the past?
19473Yet what could he do?
19473You ai n''t afeard, are you?"
19473You do?"
19473You want the money to go into business with-- to buy your stock of books?"
19473as proud as you are bold?"
19473will you go with me or not?"
19473you stump me,--do you?"
21726''Twas a keenly lode, did''ee say?
21726A powerful man,observed the managing director as they went out;"your clergyman, I suppose?"
21726A young fellow like you may face up against such difficulties, but what is an old man to do? 21726 All right, Bill?"
21726And are all the winzes bridged with a single plank in this way?
21726And do you neither drink nor smoke, Tom?
21726And pray what are winzes?
21726And who may that be?
21726And, pray, how many such winzes are there in the mine?
21726Any children, Spankey?
21726Any more coming?
21726Any news?
21726Any one offer more for this pitch?
21726Are you coming, Zackey?
21726Are you going to work?
21726Are you married, Spankey?
21726Are you married?
21726Are you prepared to die?
21726Are''ee safe, my dear man?
21726Aw, my dear,said Maggot, looking very sad, and shaking his head slowly,"did n''t''ee hear the noos?"
21726Ay, how many?
21726Bad still, Uncle David?
21726Bin down in the mines, I dessay?
21726Braave, thank''ee,said Trezise;"we''ve come for a drop o''brandy, missus, havin''heard that you''ve got some here, an''sure us can smell it-- eh?"
21726But can you not sell your shares in Botallack and refund with the proceeds?
21726But if you die?
21726But surely he might find employment better suited to his talents?
21726But surely you do n''t mean to use fire- arms against them in such a quarrel?
21726But tell me, Oliver, have you heard of the accident to poor Batten?
21726But would it be right,said Rose earnestly,"to sell our shares at a high profit if things be as you say?"
21726By the way, Jack,said Maggot,"was n''t it hereabouts that the schooner went ashore last winter?"
21726By the way, how comes it, sir,said Oliver,"that Cornishmen are so much more addicted to wrestling than other Englishmen?"
21726Can you really see all these places at once from Wheal Dooem?
21726D''ee knaw where he is?
21726D''ee think so?
21726Ded''ee call, uncle?
21726Did he paint landscape at all?
21726Did n''t I tell''ee to leave them things behind?
21726Did you ever travel underground in the dark?
21726Did''ee find any more daws''pon clift?
21726Do n''t you find this bad air tell on your health?
21726Do you believe it has any foundation?
21726Do you know where his house is?
21726Do you know who the girl is?
21726Do you not see them? 21726 Do you really think,"he said at length,"that the man means to do me bodily harm?"
21726Do you suffer much?
21726Do''ee?
21726Does Mr Thomas Donnithorne live here?
21726Good- hevenin'', Eben Trezise; how are_ you_?
21726Good- hevenin'', missus; how dost do?
21726Has Cuttance got off?
21726Hast fought side by side with Jim Cuttance, and then knocked him down?
21726Hast''ee found the brandy?
21726Have I?
21726Have you ever seen them at work?
21726Have you got your pare?
21726Hold on a bit, my son.--P''raps,he said, turning to Trezise,"you''d come up hum with me and have a dish o''tay?
21726How are you, Charlie my boy?
21726How are you, Jack?
21726How can you tell? 21726 How could you make so cowardly an attack on an old man?"
21726How deep does it go?
21726How does Penrose get on?
21726How far down have we come?
21726How fares my suit?
21726How in all the world did you manage to let him go?
21726How long, sur?
21726How many child''n say''ee?
21726How many children has Tom had, Jim?
21726How many children have you had?
21726How old are you, Jim?
21726How''s your son, Matthew?
21726I do wish,said the younger with a slight sigh,"that our work was more in the sunshine?"
21726I hope the daws ai n''t the worse of their ducking?
21726I say, it looks awful real- like, do n''t it?
21726I say, my dear man,asked another,"have''ee bin takin''a waalk''pon the clifts lately?"
21726I suppose that you have frequent changes of fortune?
21726I''m ready to act in any way you propose, Oliver; what do you intend to do? 21726 Is all right?"
21726Is he then so notorious?
21726Is it on the way, Spankey?
21726Is that faither?
21726Is that you, Zackey?
21726Is the sun shining?
21726Miners?
21726Nothing wrong, I hope?
21726Now, David,said he to himself,"the question is, what shall us do-- shall us keep on, or shall us knack?"
21726Oliver,said Mr Donnithorne, sitting down opposite the invalid when his friend had left, and frowning portentously,"d''you know I''m a ruined man?"
21726Pilchards been seen?
21726Pray,interrupted Oliver,"what may be the meaning of` scat''em all in jowds''?
21726So, friend,he said, with a smile,"it seems that smuggling is not your only business?"
21726St. Just, sur?
21726Sur?
21726That leaves us nearly a couple of hours to spare; how shall we spend it?
21726That, Mr Clearemout, is the man I spoke of-- what think you of his personal appearance?
21726That, sur?
21726The wrong road-- eh?
21726Their names?
21726Then I suppose I am not far from the Land''s End?
21726Then you have never seen him, I suppose?
21726Then you never loved him?
21726There''s no saying,replied Eben Trezise;"you''ve heerd as well as we of lodes takin''the bit in their teeth an''disappearing-- eh?"
21726Villain?
21726Well, Jack, what''s doing?
21726Well, Maggot,said Mr Donnithorne,"what is your business with me?
21726Well, sur,said he, without any of the bold expression that usually characterised him,"what can a man do when he''s to be well paid for the job?
21726Well, well, he and I do n''t agree, that''s all; besides, has he never expounded to you that obedience to your husband is a virtue? 21726 Well, what if I do?
21726Well,continued our hero,"I believe that your intentions against Mr Hitchin were not so bad as they would appear to be--""Who told''ee that?"
21726Well,said he, smiling,"how fares your suit?"
21726What can be the matter with it?
21726What care_ I_ for the minister?
21726What danger may that be?
21726What do un look like?
21726What do you think of Mr Clearemout''s new mine?
21726What do''ee grizzle like that for?
21726What does that pump?
21726What have we here, George,he said, rising, and fitting a gold glass in his eye--"not a portrait of Wheal Dooem, is it?"
21726What interests you?
21726What is it?
21726What say you to the Wherry Mine at two o''clock?
21726What say you, boy?
21726What says your friend?
21726What shall us do?
21726What think''ee now, my son?
21726What was that, booy? 21726 What would you say if I told you it was Miss Rose Ellis?"
21726What''s that?
21726What''s the matter with the cheeld-- bad, eh? 21726 What''s wrong with him?"
21726What''s wrong?
21726What? 21726 Where bound to this mornin'', Jack?"
21726Where got you these?
21726Which? 21726 Who is he?"
21726Why do you ask?
21726Why do you laugh?
21726Why so?
21726Why, Frankey, is that thee, booy?
21726Why, what''s this for?
21726Why, whatever brought''ee here?
21726Why, whatever shud we git into trouble''bout it for?
21726Will any one offer for this pitch?
21726Will he see-- a_ little_, sur?
21726Would it not be well at once to relieve your conscience, sir,suggested Oliver respectfully,"by giving up the things that cause it pain?
21726Yes; you have heard the story of its destruction, I suppose?
21726You do tell me that you''ve come so close to water that you''re''fraid to go on? 21726 You have heard of the Gump, I suppose?"
21726You have heard, I dare say, of the burning of Penzance by the Spaniards more than two hundred years ago; in the year 1595, I think it was?
21726You have n''t found a bunch o''copper yet, I dessay?
21726You look well for an old miner,said Oliver;"what may be your age?"
21726You mean, I suppose, the fabled land of Lionesse?
21726You''re a doctor, sur, I think?
21726Your brother Tom is at work here, is n''t he?
21726Zackey, booy, are''ee slaipin''?
21726` Hope I have n''t hurt''ee, Sampy?'' 21726 ` How so?''
21726After six or seven hours I do feel my head like to split, an''my stummik as if it wor on fire; but what can us do?
21726But why go to Penzance?
21726But, after all he is only the cat''s- paw; those who employ him are the real sinners-- eh, Mr Donnithorne?"
21726But, reader, you will say, What has all this to do with our story?
21726But, sure, a walk thither, and thence to St. Just, could not have detained you so long?"
21726Can you show me one of the particular grips or twists that are said to be so effective?"
21726Can you tell me anything of his personal history?"
21726Connected with the Methodist body, I presume?"
21726D''you see?"
21726Did I not hear you, only a few nights ago, say that you had the utmost confidence in the success of your undertaking?"
21726Do you ask,"Why all this excitement?"
21726Do you feel much pain in your head?"
21726Do you happen to know my uncle personally?"
21726Do you hear, little man?"
21726Do''ee see the boat out over?"
21726Dost a hear, my son?"
21726Going to work, I suppose?"
21726H''m-- so old Tom Donnithorne is your uncle, is he?"
21726Had I judged of you at first sight, I should have thought you a--""Well, what?
21726Have you got anything to make a bandage of?"
21726He seized her hand at this point, and-- but really, reader, why should we go on?
21726How comes it that you look so fresh?"
21726However, let me tell you that you do n''t understand these matters--""Then why ask my advice, Tom?"
21726I do confess that I do n''t half like it, but, after all, what have we got to do weth the opinions of owld aunts or uncles?
21726I question much whether you could find his match, Captain Dan, amongst all your men?"
21726I suppose you were going to say that you have heard a different account of him-- eh?"
21726I''spose I cud claim salvage on''em?"
21726If a gurl do choose to go off wi''the man she likes, that''s no matter to we, an''if I be well paid for lendin''a hand, why should n''t I?
21726Is it not something like a violation of good taste to be too particular here?
21726Is it not too bad?
21726Is that so?"
21726Just?"
21726Just?"
21726Just?"
21726May I ask what corps you belong to?"
21726May I venture to ask this favour of you?"
21726Meanwhile, where is this mine?"
21726Mr Clearemout, do n''t you know what a local preacher is?"
21726Now the question is, how are we to find him, for searching in that crowd is almost useless?"
21726Of course I do; who could fail to know him after the graphic description the lawyer gave of him?
21726Oliver at once accosted him,"Pray, sir, is your name Hitchin?"
21726Pray, what is a local?"
21726Reader, shall we follow the two knowing fellows to that shaft?
21726Shall we not behold their dear faces again when we see our blessed Lord face to face?"
21726Some of the lodes( that''s the word, is n''t it?)
21726Something may come of it-- who knows?"
21726Surely your own good sense must compel you to admit that Rose sings splendidly?"
21726There''s a certain shaft near by that has got a bad name for drinkin'', missus; p''raps you may have heard on it?
21726Tom Donnithorne?"
21726Well, Oliver, talking of explanations, how comes it that you are so late?"
21726What mean you by galloping over the country thus like a wild ass-- eh?"
21726What said he about me?"
21726What say you, Molly-- shall we convict Oliver on his own confession?"
21726What say you?"
21726What think''ee, Captain Dan?"
21726What was it?"
21726What will you have-- brandy, gin, or rum?
21726What''s the meanin''of it?''
21726Where did you pick it up?"
21726Where is aunty?
21726Where is he?"
21726Will you explain yourself?"
21726Will your head stand stepping from beam to beam, and can you lower yourself by a chain?"
21726Will''ee come to the berryin, Billy?"
21726You have heard of him, of course?"
21726a smuggling old brandy- loving rascal-- eh?
21726a_ preacher_?
21726and it might, you know, for it_ was_ a real one once, was n''t it?
21726baby gone lost?"
21726but are they not untrained men, liable to teach erroneous doctrine?"
21726cried the old gentleman, losing his temper;"who made_ him a_ judge of my doings?"
21726did I say smuggler?"
21726do miners sometimes work for a month, and receive only two shillings, or_ nothing_ as wages?"
21726exclaimed Mr Donnithorne in surprise;"are ye sure they were not smugglers-- eh?"
21726exclaimed Mrs Maggot in surprise;"what sort o''company?"
21726exclaimed one,"goin''to become an honest man, Maggot?"
21726exclaimed the youth in surprise;"did you not tell me just now that he is a very good fellow?"
21726he exclaimed after a moment''s pause;"the villain, the scoundrel-- what of him?
21726he exclaimed;"where away?"
21726he replied with a sad smile,"how can thee say so?
21726hope you''ll let John an''me have a pitch in the noo bal, wo n''t''ee?"
21726how comes it that they found out the value of them?"
21726interposed Jack,"all the_ chiar_ being on the surface, and the_ oscuro_ down in the mine, eh?"
21726interrupted Hitchin angrily,"have I not said_ can not_?
21726interrupted the old man;"then what''s the use of troubling me about it?"
21726is that you, old Maggot?"
21726is_ he_ a local preacher also?"
21726knocked down the man who saved your life, nephew?
21726my dear men, has any of''ee got a chaw of baccy about''ee?"
21726my dear,"gasped John;"have''ee lost th''rope?"
21726not hurt, are''ee, Dan?"
21726said Maggot;"go to grass to slaip, or slaip in the bal?"
21726said Oliver remonstratively,"before you were born?
21726said Oliver;"pray whereabouts do they dwell?"
21726that martello- tower- like object?"
21726the local''s family?"
21726the miner?"
21726the one painted green, and a scraggy horse with a bag hanging to its nose?"
21726what of him?
21726what''s that?"
21726why?
15218Ai n''t it a pretty night?
15218All one family?
15218And grandmaw keeps Letty clean, do n''t she, Letty? 15218 And you make?"
15218Are you a tailoress?
15218Are you hurt?
15218Are you making anything now?
15218Are you often tired?
15218Are you out of a job?
15218Are you saving up?
15218Are you superstitious?
15218But do n''t you smell it from here?
15218But why not''hold up''awhile?
15218But why not? 15218 But"--my next question I made as dismal as possible--"when do you pay?"
15218Ca n''t he work?
15218Ca n''t you be sure now?
15218Can I find lodging here?
15218Can you afford to pay board?
15218Can you tell me any decent place to board?
15218Come to work in the shops?
15218Could n''t I begin and get raised, perhaps?
15218Did n''t they ever serenade you?
15218Did that man come over to tell you this?
15218Did you hurt yourself?
15218Did you- all git_ worried_ with the train? 15218 Do you know anybody from Jacksonville?
15218Do you like your job?
15218Do you like your job?
15218Do you like your job?
15218Do you live at home?
15218Do you live home?
15218Do you need any girls?
15218Do you spend your money all on yourself?
15218Do you take boarders?
15218Doctor Meadows of Tittihute?
15218Does that look like work?
15218Does your mother work?
15218Does your mother work?
15218Ever been sick?
15218Ever been to Lynn before?
15218Ever done any mangling?
15218Ever worked before?
15218Ever worked in a factory?
15218Ever worked in a shoe- shop before?
15218Going down to get work?
15218Have you ever done any housework?
15218Have you ever operated a power machine?
15218Have you ever run a Gordon press?
15218Have you ever scrubbed before?
15218Have you ever worked in a factory?
15218He d the measles? 15218 How can you deceive people?"
15218How do you like your job?
15218How do you mean?
15218How long have you been at this job?
15218How long have you been at this work?
15218How long have you been here?
15218How long have you been working?
15218How much do you make?
15218How often do you pay?
15218How old are you?
15218I do n''t guess ever any one gets tired of hearing_ sweet music_[7], does you- all?
15218I''m tired of taffeta jackets, are n''t you?
15218If you have a husband, why do n''t you go to him and let him care for you?
15218Look a- hyar, got any of your scrappin''s on writin''hyar? 15218 Mademoiselle Ballard has work?"
15218My, you_ dew_ like it? 15218 Not much,"I answer;"are you?"
15218Oh, I am in earnest; but what sort of work is it?
15218Play sweet music?
15218Say, why do n''t some of_ youse_ sing?
15218Say,she yells in a shrill voice,"my cauliflowers ai n''t here, are they?
15218Say,to her neighbour,"where do you think Miss Ballard''s from?
15218See the sun?
15218Shall I come in Monday?
15218Shall I wrap up your old cap for you?
15218Shall Molly sing By- O?
15218She does nothing?
15218Spinnin''?
15218Stranger hyar, I reckon?
15218That do n''t make no difference; they''re all green, ai n''t they, Mary?
15218Then where are you going?
15218Three hours''work and that''s all I''ve made? 15218 Tired already?"
15218Tired, ai n''t you? 15218 Tired?"
15218Tired?
15218To- night is Saturday; alone here?
15218Used to hard work?
15218Want board, do you?
15218Want board?
15218Want some?
15218Was it the one you wanted?
15218Well, of course,I said eagerly,"you will accept him?"
15218What did you make?
15218What did you make?
15218What do you pay?
15218What do you pay?
15218What do you think about all day?
15218What do you want to spin for?
15218What have you done?
15218What is it you want?
15218What is the nicest music you have ever heard, Molly?
15218What was you doing to get your hands like that?
15218What were you doing at five?
15218What will you do about your name?
15218What will you do with your hair and your hands?
15218What would you be if you could choose?
15218What you ever done?
15218What''s the matter with you?
15218What''s the use of these hyar mill- hands tryin''to fight corporations? 15218 What''s wrong?"
15218When are they going to be married?
15218Where did you get it?
15218Where have you been working?
15218Where is your home?
15218Where you going to stay in Granton?
15218Who''s Jim Weston?
15218Why do n''t_ you_ do housework, Maggie?
15218Why do you speak so strongly? 15218 Why?"
15218Why?
15218Why?
15218Will Miss Ida work after she''s married?
15218Work in the shops?
15218Working here? 15218 You got a letter to- night, did n''t you?"
15218You seem happy; are you?
15218You will not feel it a breach of affection and hospitality if I print what you say?
15218You''ll give me a chance, then?
15218You''re from the East, are n''t you? 15218 You''ve been a presser long at the shoe- shops?"
15218_ Misfortune?_ You do n''t mean that!
15218( Four?
15218***** Maggie asked me,"How old do I look?"
15218Ai n''t it?
15218Ai n''t we, Mary?"
15218Ambitious lookin''?
15218An hour at noon?
15218And Jennie, the charwoman, is she a cripple or has toil thus warped her body?
15218Another woman said:"_ My_ little girl work?
15218Are these little American children, then, to have no books but labour?
15218As soon as a girl passes the age, let us say of seventeen or eighteen, there is no hesitation in her reply when you ask her:"Do you like the mills?"
15218As we were both new girls, there was no indiscretion in my direct question:"Like your job?"
15218At last a narrow door opens, letting a puff of hot rank air blow upon me as I stand in the vestibule questioning:"Do you take boarders?"
15218At what period of their lives should the children of the Southern mill- hand be educated?
15218At what should they rejoice?
15218Can such a word be expressive of the factory which has daily blackened and scarred and dulled this human instrument?)
15218Can you- all sing?"
15218Could I pay her in advance?
15218Did I mean a superficial remedy, a palliative?
15218Did life mean to them merely the diminishing of their forces?
15218Did she not plainly say to them"For$ 17 you can look as I do"?
15218Did you ever write anything?"
15218Do n''t they, Mary?"
15218Do n''t you find them so?"
15218Do n''t you think you are foolish?
15218Do you like reading?"
15218Do you want it?"
15218Do you- all know the Banks girl over to Calcutta?"
15218Do you- all like readin''?"
15218Do you_ wish_ her to be so?
15218For what and for whom do they work?
15218Frankly, what is there to be seen in these dusty suburbs?
15218Got a job?"
15218Got any?"
15218Got it good?"
15218Her happiness?
15218Here is a mystic, I thought; so I continued:"And what about dreams?"
15218Homes?
15218How can they be so slow?
15218How can they keep on so steadily, so swiftly?
15218How can you expect it?
15218How could I feel the slavery they felt?
15218How could this be done?
15218How has she lived so long and so well, with life"so hyard on her"?
15218How long have you been at it?"
15218How well satisfied are they, or how restless?
15218How, pray?"
15218I asked,"What would you rather do than this?"
15218I could not understand what she answered, so I continued:"Ever worked before?"
15218I felt only sympathy in asking:"Are you alone to bring up your child?"
15218I hailed a cluster of children in the gutter:"Say,"I said,"do you know where Mrs. Hicks lives to?"
15218I never did like a pail.... How would you like to take a dead man''s place?"
15218I profit by this moment, and, changing from tragedy to a good- humoured smile, I ask:"Say, are you sure those girls''ll come?
15218I saw her apply for work, and saw, too, the man''s face as he looked at her when she asked:"Got any work?"
15218I says to him,''Do n''t you feel good?''
15218I thanked her and said:"Do you think that you''d know?"
15218If I was hard put, do n''t you s''pose I''d go to the next man if he offered me what I offer you?
15218If they do not pass the early years of their lives in study, when should they learn?
15218In the great mobs and riots of history, what class is it which forms the brawn and muscle and sinew of the disturbance?
15218Is it coming to administer some punishment?
15218Is it conducive to progressive development, to the making of decent manhood or womanhood?
15218Is it like real places?
15218Is the existence_ ideal_?
15218Is their fundamental thought to be of benefit to a family or to some member of a family?
15218Is their indirect object to be strong, thrifty members of society?
15218Jones?"
15218Just how far personal, and just how far human, his kindness, who can say?
15218Musing on this desolation as she walks up and down the line, she says:"I dew love flowers, do n''t you?"
15218My Min seed her peekin''out from behind the loom in the weave- room, thought she was a boy, and said:''Who''s that yere pretty boy peekin''at me?''
15218My demand for work was greeted at the office this time with--"Any signs out?"
15218No recreation?
15218Now do n''t you think you''ll miss it?"
15218Now what, I asked myself, is the mill''s attraction and what is the power of this small town?
15218Now, what would you order,"he went on,"if you could have anything you liked?"
15218Now, which of these facts is the truth?
15218On a pine board is spread our food-- can you call it nourishment?
15218On her third round she faced me with the same question:"Why do n''t you finish them pants?"
15218On his next visit he asked me:"Where you goin''; to when you get out of here to- night?"
15218On whom were the consequences weighing more heavily?
15218One day a new gyrl come for to run a loom and they yells out at her,''Is you- all a grass widow?
15218Over and over again she repeated the one single question to me during the time I worked by her side:"Do you like your job?"
15218Say, I reckon you- all did n''t see my new hat?"
15218See that cat?"
15218She called out angrily both times without waiting for an answer:"Why do n''t you finish them pants?"
15218She did n''t even look at me, but called-- shrieked, rather-- above the machine din to her colleagues:"Got anything for a green hand?"
15218Tew tyred to eat, tew; and the water hyar is regularly pisen; hev you- all seen it?
15218The boss came in and seen it, and the second question he asked, he says,''Say, is the machinery running all right?''
15218The dirty women around her, low- browed, sensual, are the forms of womanhood that she knows; and the men?
15218The expression,"Who is she going with?"
15218The factory girls are happy, are they not?
15218The girl with the goggles looks at me blindly and says:"Ai n''t it just awful hard work?
15218The little girl has become a weight to be carried on Sundays; she has worked six days of the week-- shall she not rest on the seventh?
15218Then, turn about is fair play in her mind, I suppose, for she asks:"What would_ you- all_ be?"
15218These are children?
15218They make the poor work for just as little as they can, do n''t they?
15218They work like men; why should they not live as men do, with similar responsibilities?
15218This is your first day, ai n''t it?"
15218To be crushed out of life to satisfy the ignorance and greed of their parents, the greed of the manufacturers?
15218To- day Maggie says to me:"I reckon you- all is''Piscopal?"
15218Was it money alone that kept them from the places of authority?
15218Was it, then, in big things that the divergence began which places them as a lower class?
15218We talk an hour-- and on what?
15218Well, what is it?
15218Were they a band of slaves, victims to toil and deprivation?
15218Were they making the pitiful exchange of their total vitality for insufficient nourishment?
15218Whar you come from?"
15218What are the conclusions to be drawn?
15218What can Hope work in this down- trodden soil for any future harvest?
15218What can we learn from them?
15218What can we teach them?
15218What could be hoped for in such surroundings?
15218What did I mean by_ help_?
15218What did the timekeeper say he''d give you?"
15218What did these busy women order for lunch?
15218What did they talk about?
15218What do they care for a few penniless lot of strikers?
15218What harmony can there be between the elaborate get- up of these young women and the miserable homes where they live?
15218What hope is there for family life near the hearth which is abandoned at the factory''s first call?
15218What is it that determines superiority in this class?
15218What kind of citizen can this child-- if he is fit enough in the economic struggle of the world to survive-- turn out to be?
15218What miserable chance has brought her here?
15218What must this settlement be in midsummer heat?
15218What opposition could the German woman place, what could she risk, knowing that two hungry mouths waited to be fed beside her own?
15218What part did the love of humanity play in this young egoist''s heart?
15218What part does self- respect play?
15218What quality decides that four shall direct four hundred?
15218What shall be my clue?
15218What should we think of a class of masculine clerks and employees who spent all their money on clothes?
15218What sort of women are those who sacrifice all on the altar of luxury?
15218What spirit deeper than her character has hitherto displayed stirs the mill- girl in the bed next to me?
15218What time would he suggest that they should spend in the reading- room, even if they have learned to read?
15218What was the appearance of my companions?
15218What were my first impressions of the hands who returned at noon under the roof which had extended unquestioning its hospitality?
15218What were the favourite topics, those returned to most frequently and with surest interest?
15218What were the subjects of conversation pursued at dinner?
15218What were their ambitions, their perplexities?
15218What''s the row?''
15218What, first of all, was my purpose in going to live and work among the American factory hands?
15218When I return the cook lectures me in this way:"Here alone, are you?"
15218When he had gone back to his job she said to me:"Say, w''y do n''t yer push that platform away and stand down on the floor?
15218When this is known, does not the philosophy of the American working woman become a subject of vital interest?
15218Where one passes most of one''s life, is it not_ Home_?
15218While I am cutting bread for the two hundred I hear her say to the cook in a gossipy tone:"How do you like the new girl?
15218Who will act as mediator?
15218Why was this?
15218Why, to my shop when a new hand applies for a job the foreman asks:''What does he look like?
15218Would the whistle never blow?
15218You ca n''t even make a tool to get a living with, out of gold; but just do away with the iron, and where would you be?"
15218You own one- half the mill in----, Carolina?"
15218[ Illustration:"THEY TRIFLE WITH LOVE"] What could be the result upon the mind and health of this frantic mechanical activity devoid of thought?
15218_ He wanted to live._"Where did you sleep last night?"
15218_ That_ question who can answer for her or for you?)
15218she taunted me, in a sneering voice,"that''s dreadful, ai n''t it?
15218was she?
4296Where be''est going?
4296''Ai n''t I to have no supper?''
4296''Alfred,''said Ellen,''do you know where Harold is?
4296''All what?''
4296''And before that?''
4296''And can nothing be done, Sir, when he feels so sinking and weak?''
4296''And does that make you glad?''
4296''And he seems to be the chief sufferer.--Are you in much pain, Paul?''
4296''And how did he teach you?''
4296''And may I think that all my faults will be taken away and forgiven?''
4296''And what did he say to that boy?''
4296''And what did he say?''
4296''And what good will that be to- night?''
4296''And when he was not?''
4296''And where did you say--?''
4296''And where''s the grub?''
4296''And who is the boy that came to help you?''
4296''And you did n''t see which way he was gone?''
4296''And you do not grieve over your year of illness?''
4296''And you have not sent him to the workhouse yet?''
4296''Ay?
4296''But did she say so?''
4296''But does it mean me?''
4296''But how ought I to believe, Sir?''
4296''But if I ca n''t do anything to make up for them, what''s the use?
4296''But is n''t it punishment?''
4296''But of this?''
4296''But where did he come from?''
4296''But where-- which way is he gone?''
4296''But who taught him about Cayenne?''
4296''But why do you think he would be?''
4296''But you do n''t think I shall get well, Mother?''
4296''D''ye know where Paul Blackthorn is?''
4296''D''ye think I''d care for stuff like that?''
4296''Did I?''
4296''Did Miss Selby give you those flowers?''
4296''Did he say so, Mother?''
4296''Did n''t the inspector want you to go to a training- school?''
4296''Did they ever know who he belonged to?''
4296''Did you ever make out a bill?''
4296''Did you like it?''
4296''Did you never think it hard to be kept strictly, and punished by your good mother?''
4296''Did you wish it?''
4296''Do you know he slept all night on a hay- cock?''
4296''Do you know if many of the boys are gone to the merry orchard?''
4296''Do you know who the fellow was?''
4296''Do you remember when we used to bathe together, Harold, and go after the minnows?''
4296''Do you think you can keep the ticket safe if I give it you now, Paul?''
4296''Does he think he shall get well?''
4296''Eh?''
4296''Every one is sinful,''said Alfred slowly;''but why have some more to bear than others that may be much worse?''
4296''Have they?
4296''Have you not seen him since?
4296''Have you seen my boy Harold?''
4296''Here, Nelly,''as she moved about, tidying the room,''do you hear?
4296''How can you, Alfred, speak so to Mother?''
4296''How has he ever got the dog up the ladder?''
4296''How is he, Paul?''
4296''How long ago was this?''
4296''How shall I, Sir?''
4296''How should I know?''
4296''However did you do it?''
4296''I say, Harold, do n''t ye never put one of they letters in your pocket?''
4296''I say, would n''t you like to be one of they chaps at Ragglesford School?''
4296''Is Harold come safe?''
4296''Is it-- is it very dreadful?''
4296''Is not he come home?''
4296''Is that another new parson?''
4296''Is that boy gone?''
4296''Is that he upon the bridge-- that chap about the size of our Harold?''
4296''Is the ointment come?''
4296''Is the pain so very bad?''
4296''It is nothing infectious, of course, Sir?''
4296''May I go up?''
4296''Mother, Mother,''Alfred cried in a whisper, so eager that it made him cough,''you ca n''t never send him to the workhouse?''
4296''No, Mother; but if it ai n''t here long?
4296''No,''he said, beginning to get sulky because he felt he was wrong;''only Peggy lost a shoe--''''Lame?''
4296''Nobody got at the horses?''
4296''Not all for me?''
4296''O Mother, must you speak the truth?''
4296''O mother, what do you think?
4296''Oh, did n''t you hear?
4296''Oh, will you tell Grandmamma?''
4296''So you have this youth here?''
4296''That''s to settle for me, then,''he said; and Harold who was at tea, asking,''What''s that?''
4296''The Reverend-- what''s his name?
4296''The lad?''
4296''The place is n''t to be harbouring thieves and vagrants, or who''s to pay the rates?
4296''Then she did n''t think I''d taken the eggs?''
4296''Then what did you bring all that good- for- nothing set roaring and shouting up the road for?
4296''Then what''s all this?
4296''Then you do n''t think he is getting any better, Sir?''
4296''Then you think this poor lad will be ill a long time, Sir?''
4296''Then you ventured to wait?''
4296''Then you wo n''t?''
4296''There, wo n''t you be raised up to see her?
4296''Upon your word and honour?''
4296''Was he there?''
4296''Was it pain that kept you awake?''
4296''Well, Alfred, how are you to- day?''
4296''Well, Paul, then he is not worse?''
4296''Well, and what you do think now you''ve tried your liberty?''
4296''Well, but am I?''
4296''Well, old chaps, have you quarrelled yet?
4296''Well, what are you doing here?''
4296''Well, what is become of them?''
4296''Well,''he said,''and what wilt get by it?''
4296''What are you gaping at?''
4296''What did you say?''
4296''What do you mean, Mother?''
4296''What do you say, Harold?''
4296''What do you see, Mother?''
4296''What is he, then?
4296''What is it?
4296''What was the chaplain''s name?''
4296''What, Alfy dear?
4296''What, Mrs. King?
4296''What, and turned him off?''
4296''What, is he asleep?''
4296''What, quarrelling here?
4296''What, the dirty boy?
4296''What?
4296''What?''
4296''Who taught you all this, Paul?''
4296''Who told you I was with bad company?''
4296''Who told you to put in your word, John Farden?''
4296''Who''s there?
4296''Who?
4296''Who?
4296''Who?''
4296''Why did n''t you bring him up with you?''
4296''Why did n''t you lick him?''
4296''Why did you never let me know how you were treated?''
4296''Why do n''t thee cut?''
4296''Why, did not we tell you what a real beautiful sermon the new clergyman preached on Sunday?
4296''Why, do n''t we all know that you''re one of the parson''s own sort?
4296''Why, how do you know?''
4296''Why, old chap, what is it?
4296''Why, what harm is there in eating a few cherries?''
4296''Why, what would he do to her?
4296''Why, what''ll they do to ye?''
4296''Why, what''s put that in your head?''
4296''Why, what''s the matter now?''
4296''Would you take that?''
4296''Yes,''said Harold,''I''d better have told him of that when I was about it; do n''t you think so, Nelly?''
4296''You are quite sure it is not so?''
4296''You going away, Paul?''
4296''You''ll have him too ill to be moved; and then what will you do?
4296''You''ve not sent Harold off for the cart?''
4296''You, going to cut?''
4296''Your lass would n''t like to come too, I suppose, eh?''
4296Alfred answered rather fretfully,''But if it is good to be punished, why ai n''t all alike?''
4296Alfred smiled, and said,''Please, Sir, how old is he?''
4296Am I interrupting--?''
4296And Harold, he is but fourteen-- would he be old enough, Sir?''
4296And if he shot away his half- pence, how should he pay for the shoeing of the pony?
4296And if you could make him look a little more decent?''
4296And the time?
4296And was this his resolution?
4296And what did you say you were to be, Paul?''
4296And what made you so taken up with that new boy that Ellen runs on against, and will have it he''s a convict?''
4296And what''s your name?''
4296And where was Harold?
4296Betsey Hardman?
4296But how did my Lady come to hear of it?''
4296But how ever did he know?''
4296But how long might this life be?
4296But what could she say?
4296But what did Ellen mean?''
4296But what did you say about some eggs?''
4296But what made you go off without a word to nobody?''
4296But who''s that?''
4296CHAPTER VI-- THE MERRY ORCHARD Where was Harold?
4296Can you tell me what books you used to read to this master?''
4296Cope promised me?''
4296Cope pushed it towards him, and said,''Well, will you mind letting me see how you can write from dictation?''
4296Cope repeated,''Eh, Paul?''
4296Cope will know him?''
4296Cope''s doing, or my Lady''s?''
4296Cope''s droll way of putting it,''I never meant--''''Well, but what were you thinking of?''
4296Cope''s got an offer of a place for Paul-- five pounds a year, and board and lodging, to be school- master''s whipper- in, or what d''ye call it?''
4296Cope-- were you there?
4296Could Jem think he had been a wicked boy, and take it as punishment?
4296Dear dear Alf, is it anything dreadful?''
4296Did he make anything out of him?''
4296Did n''t he go to church with you?''
4296Did they disturb the pony?
4296Did you ever see such a figure?
4296Do not these cases often partially recover?''
4296Do you leave him quite alone?
4296Does Mother keep you too short?''
4296Eh?''
4296Go on now, Harold; what about the boy?''
4296Harold made a very queer face, and said,''How is he to do it up in the hay- loft, Mother?
4296Has he been begging?''
4296Has the doctor been?''
4296Have you been jolly together?
4296Have you finished the last?''
4296Have you got knit up with cold, sitting here?''
4296He did once take courage to say to Harold,''Did your sister really say I had run away from gaol?''
4296He heard all, but he chose to seem to be asleep, and, would you believe it?
4296He is merciful, do n''t you know?''
4296He is not gone, is he?''
4296He seemed to have a great mind not to hear, and turned very slowly with his shoulder towards her, making a sound like''Eh?''
4296How d''ye know?''
4296How did you come to think of it?''
4296How did you manage that, Paul?''
4296I hope his majesty does not like bad company?''
4296I see him under that shed, and who is that lad with him?
4296If he should be worse, will you send this to Mr. Carter, at Ragglesford?
4296Is Charlie Hayward there?
4296Is he so very fractious, then?''
4296Is it the other monarch''s charge?''
4296Is n''t that the way you may be to follow Him?''
4296Is that it?''
4296Moreover, whither did that path of suffering lead?
4296Mother, what are you thinking of?''
4296Mr. Blunt, however, came, and at any rate he would have it out with him; so he asked at once very straightforwardly,''Am I going to die, Sir?''
4296Mrs. King felt sorrowful; but, as Ellen said,''What could you expect of him?''
4296My eggs are gone, I tell you, and who should take''em but that lad, I''d like to know?''
4296Nay, had He not raised him up friends already in his utmost need?
4296Now, do you know what they are?''
4296Oh dear, would the night never be over?
4296Old pony tumbled down dead?''
4296Peter?''
4296Please, Sir, when I''m gone away, will you tell them all that I''ll never forget''em?
4296She asked Harold about it, and had for answer,''Do you think he would, after the way you served him?''
4296She would have shrieked for her mother, but he held out his hand, and said, in a low hoarse whisper,''Ellen, is it true?''
4296Sure he is not gone to the merry orchard?''
4296That would just have made it up, but what hopes were there of that?
4296Was it Harold?
4296Was it because he had such an affliction?''
4296Was it brotherly love?
4296Was it the taking up the cross so as to bear it like his Saviour, Who spoke no word of complaining, no murmur against His tormentors?
4296Was not He touched with a fellow- feeling for the lonely boy?
4296Was she coming?
4296Was this patience?
4296Was this the shewing the sincerity of his repentance through his conduct in illness?
4296Well, and ca n''t you stop a minute to say how your poor brother is?''
4296Well, and do you know where this place was?''
4296Well, and how are the bones, Paul?
4296Well, and then may n''t yours be being plagued and bullied, without any friends?
4296What business had every one to set up that great hoarse laugh?
4296What could he have been thinking about?
4296What did they say?
4296What do you think of it, Paul?''
4296What is the matter?''
4296What was his mother saying?
4296What was that she had heard?
4296What will become of me?''
4296What would become of Mother and me?''
4296What would they say at the post- office?
4296What''s the row?
4296Whatever does he want?''
4296Where does he come from?''
4296Which part of England?''
4296Which was nearest being right?
4296Who could have said it?
4296Who did you leave her with?''
4296Who is he, Ellen?''
4296Who said it?
4296Who was ever a good boy if you was not?''
4296Who was he?''
4296Who would have thought, that not six months ago that poor cripple was the merriest and most active boy in the parish?
4296Whom is he helping over the stile?
4296Why did n''t you?''
4296Why do n''t you get some of them boxes of pills, that does cures wonderful?
4296Why do you wish to know?
4296Why had not he asked?
4296Why, Mrs. King, what have I said?
4296Why, what''s the matter?''
4296Will he beg of him?''
4296Wo n''t you?''
4296Would He not help him to bear his friendless lot as a share of His own Cross?
4296You said nothing of Alfred; do you think he will not be well enough?''
4296You''ll be one with me then, Paul?''
4296and she was going to lift him up, but he only murmured a cross''Ca n''t you be quiet?''
4296and so they keep him for a school- master?''
4296are you worse?''
4296cried Alfred, raising himself and panting;''and where did he go first?''
4296cried Ellen eagerly,''is anything the matter?''
4296cried the farmer, turning on Paul angrily;''d''ye mean to waste any more of the day?''
4296does the doctor think so ill of him?
4296exclaimed Alfred, in dismay;''you wo n''t let her come up here, Mother?''
4296how should I know?''
4296not since I''ve been at Friarswood?''
4296or ha''n''t you got the money?
4296said Alfred;''do n''t you know how the Psalm says,"God careth for the stranger, and provideth for the fatherless and the widow"?''
4296said Ellen, who was busy shaking her mother''s bed, and had not heard at the first moment, but now turned eagerly;''what did you say his name was?''
4296said Harold--''an old skinflint like Farmer Shepherd''s old woman?''
4296said John,''what good''ll that do ye?''
4296said Paul,''what do you want of me?''
4296was it not crossing him how impossible it would seem to do anything to vex one who so cared for him?
4296what could he do to her, with all the hay- field and Farmer Shepherd there to take care of her?
4296what is that?''
4296what shall I do?''
4296what would she not have given for power to listen to her mother, and cry at her ease?
20071''As yer brought news of Sue, boy?
20071''Ave he missed me yet?
20071''Ow is father?
20071''Ow long''ud they be wicked enough to keep me there fur what I never did?
20071''Ow long''ud they keep me there?
20071''Ow''s Giles? 20071 ''Tain''t true, ma''am, is it?"
20071A little, fat, podgy kind o''woman- gel, wid a fine crop o''freckles and sandy hair?
20071About when does he expect father home?
20071Afore I do anything,said Connie--"''ave you''ad your tea?"
20071Ai n''t he a real beauty to- night?
20071Ai n''t it fine?
20071Ai n''t one enough at a time?
20071Ai n''t that other a coward?
20071Ai n''t that sofy comfor''ble to look at? 20071 Ai n''t yer anxious now''bout dear Sue?"
20071Ai n''t you a perfect duck of a darlin''?
20071An''do yer know that she''ad made up her mind to go to prison''stead o''you?
20071An''why did n''t yer bring Connie along?
20071An''yer do think as she''ll come back again?
20071And I give you a little saucer of it all hot and tasty for your tea, did n''t I, my little love?
20071And I''ll see him to- night?
20071And did she ever make you go a little, tiny bit in front of her?
20071And did she tell you the names of the poor little critters?
20071And had that''ere Harris much money?
20071And is he coming to see you one day?
20071And she wore a big, big cloak, with pockets inside?
20071And then wot became of you?
20071And w''y were n''t yer frightened, Giles?
20071And what message am I to give to Sue-- poor girl-- when she comes''ome?
20071And what''ull come o''him ef yer go ter prison-- yer goose? 20071 And wot am I to do?"
20071And_ w''y_ do n''t yer?
20071Be I to take her out, sir?
20071Be I, Sue?
20071Be Sue a thimble, scissors, or a gel?
20071Be that you, Peter Harris?
20071Be yer a parson?
20071Be yer agen me, boy?
20071Be yer hinnercent?
20071Be yer now?
20071Be yer willin''to take the adwice of a person a deal wiser nor yourself? 20071 Be your name Ronald?"
20071Big Ben? 20071 Burglars?"
20071Burned, father?
20071But Giles-- Giles?
20071But are you strong enough to be moved, Giles?
20071But please-- please,said Ronald, who had suddenly lost all his fear,"may Connie come, too?"
20071But tell me, Ronald,continued Connie,"how was it yer got the fever?"
20071But tell me-- do tell me-- is his father really dead?
20071But what could she do with us?
20071But what do you think, Connie? 20071 But what is she stayin fur?"
20071But what''ll I have to do?
20071But where, and fur how long?
20071But why ca n''t she come back?
20071But why may n''t I wait for Sue?
20071But why should yer do that, ma''am? 20071 But why-- why?"
20071But wot did you want? 20071 But,"said Connie, her voice trembling,"is he wery, wery ill?"
20071Ca n''t people be like that now?
20071Ca n''t yer get back on to yer sofa, Giles?
20071Can I help you, ma''am?
20071Can us see her?
20071Can you bear a bit o''pine?
20071Can you recall his name?
20071Certainly; but where is the boy?
20071Cinderella,he said,"am I to act as yer prince or not?"
20071Connie back?
20071Connie dear, could n''t we send her a message to come straight home to me now? 20071 Connie"--the man''s whole tone altered--"what will you give me if I let you go?"
20071Connie, Connie-- where are we?
20071Connie, if we can unpick the lock and get the door open, where shall we go?
20071Connie, wot were that as I read last?
20071Connie,he said after a minute,"be yer really meanin''to spend the night with me?"
20071Connie,he said after a time,"it''s the worst of all dreadful things, is n''t it, to pretend that you are what you are n''t?"
20071Connie?
20071Could n''t you try?
20071Cut up? 20071 Did yer never yere of a man called Tennyson?
20071Did yer''ear wot he said now?
20071Did you ever see them before? 20071 Did you like it?"
20071Do n''t I know wot a dear little boy wants? 20071 Do n''t fit yer, do n''t they?"
20071Do n''t they? 20071 Do n''t yer think, Cinderella, as it wor_ he_ put the locket in your pocket?"
20071Do n''t yer?
20071Do n''t you think as you could jest keep back to- day, Mary Jones? 20071 Do yer believe that, Sue?"
20071Do yer mean that Giles is goin''--goin''right aw''y?
20071Do yer promise?
20071Do yer think as he''ll come soon?
20071Do yer, promise?
20071Do you mean dead? 20071 Do you really, really think so?"
20071Do you think that matters?
20071Do you think, by chance, that his name was Harvey?
20071Ef yer please, parson, may I speak to yer''bout Giles and me?
20071Eh?
20071Father John,said Ronald--"who is he?"
20071Father,said Connie again,"may I go and spend the night''long o''Giles?
20071Find her?
20071Giles is worse, Pickles,said Connie,"an''wot''s to be done?"
20071Giles, I need n''t, need I? 20071 Has any one come down from the top floor?"
20071Has my father come back?
20071Has my father missed me?
20071Has n''t Connie come back?
20071Have I?
20071Have yer no name for the pore child?
20071Have you a father, Connie?
20071Have you heard from him? 20071 Have you no plan in your head?
20071Have you?
20071He could n''t manage to run away and escape afterwards?
20071Help?
20071How be yer, Ronald?
20071How can you tell that_ was_ what Big Ben said?
20071How can you tell?
20071How could he hear?
20071How is the little chap?
20071How long were you with her, Ronald?
20071How long were you with that woman Warren?
20071I did wot?
20071I do n''t want you to worry yourself, dear; but can you recall anybody ever calling to see your mother-- anybody who might be a relation of yours?
20071I dunno; only Big Ben----"Giles dear, wot_ do_ yer mean?
20071I fond o''poetry?
20071I guessed long ago-- didn''t I, Connie?
20071I make''lowance fur yer tears-- ye''re but a gel, and I allow as the picture''s dark-- but who hever is Giles? 20071 I suppose,"she added,"there''s no doubt in yer moind that I''_ ave_ come from the parients of the boy?"
20071I want to go wid yer; only wot am I to do with Giles?
20071I''m right, ai n''t I?
20071In the woods is he, now?
20071In this room, sir?
20071Is Father John looking for her too?
20071Is he likely to come soon?
20071Is he quite right in the''ead now?
20071Is his name Harvey-- same as mine?
20071Is it Connie Harris?
20071Is it Ronald?
20071Is my father in?
20071Is n''t it cold?
20071Is this real, real country?
20071Is your father in London?
20071Is''e wery bad?
20071It is certainly against the rules, but-- will you stay here for a few minutes and I''ll speak to the ward superintendent?
20071It''s a beautiful verse, is n''t it, Connie?
20071Little Ronald''s a real gent--_''e''s_ the son of a hofficer in''Is Majesty''s harmy, an''the hofficer''s name is Major Harvey, V. C."What?
20071Lor'', now, did he?
20071Lost-- you say? 20071 Lost?"
20071Ma''am,said Connie,"wot do yer mean by his death not bein''confirmed?"
20071May I go, Giles? 20071 May I speak to yer, ma''am?"
20071May I take Connie along, please, sir?
20071May n''t I speak, sir?
20071Mother,interrupted Sue,"does yer think as Providence''ull get me constant work at the sewing, enough to keep Giles and me?"
20071Mr. Harris,said Sue, all of a sudden,"you were cruel to Connie last night; but w''en she comes back again you''ll be different, wo n''t yer?"
20071Must I''ave a new name too?
20071My father guv you your breakfast?
20071Next clue-- shall I''elp yer a bit? 20071 No doubt, my dear,"said the policeman;"but of course you wo n''t object to be searched?"
20071No news of his sister, I suppose?
20071No one has paid her, dear?
20071No talk o''dark rooms and nasty nightmares and cruel old women? 20071 No, madam?"
20071Not there? 20071 Now must I give her a blow, or must I not?"
20071Now, Cinderella,he began,"you say as ye''re hinnercent o''that''ere theft?"
20071Now, Jamie, what do you mean?
20071Now, ai n''t I good?
20071Now, what hever do yer mean by that?
20071Now,said the widow,"what can I do for you?"
20071Of course, there is little doubt that Major Harvey is dead; but you could call at the War Office and inquire, mother, could n''t you?
20071Oh Giles-- wot?
20071Oh, have you got a mother?
20071Oh, how so, Connie?
20071Oh, how will he get in? 20071 Oh, please, father,"said Connie,"ef you be goin''out, may I go''long and pay Giles a wisit?
20071Oh, why-- why did I let her go?
20071Oh, worn''t he?
20071Oh,said Ronald,"do n''t you even know that?
20071On wot, sir?
20071Pain?
20071Perfessional?
20071Please, ma''am,said Connie,"be yer the mother o''Mr. George Anderson-- the bravest fireman, ma''am?
20071Portland Mansions, p''r''aps?
20071Purty little Connie? 20071 Real pain?"
20071Seen me do it?
20071Shall I make you some toast, ma''am?
20071Shall we go to bed?
20071She do n''t mind the dark-- do yer, mother?
20071She shall and must stay here for the present; but it can not go on always, for what would the poor little brother do? 20071 Sit down, wo n''t you?"
20071Sue,he said,"does you know as Connie came back last night?"
20071Sue-- the most honest gel in all the world-- go to prison?
20071That you''d rather not go?
20071That''ull be real pain to yer aunty, wo n''t it?
20071The fact is,he began"this sort o''thing ought to be punished, or however could poor folks live?
20071The name?
20071Then he-- he''s-- still alive?
20071Then perhaps you will come and pay us a visit, and see Ronald after he has learned the full use of the saddle and bridle-- eh, Ronald?
20071Then what do you call her?
20071Then why are n''t you with him?
20071Then why-- wot''ave I done to deserve a child like this? 20071 Then wot''ave come to her?"
20071Then you really, really chooses to go ter prison, Cinderella?
20071Then you''ve bought it for me?
20071To prison?
20071To the country? 20071 To wear in this''ere kitchen, sir?"
20071Toast? 20071 Toast?"
20071Trade?
20071W''ere are yer taking me, then, Agnes?
20071W''y, gel, w''ere hever were yer hall this time? 20071 Waiting for something, little man?"
20071Was it your photograph,he said at last,"that my father kept in his dressing- room?"
20071Was that why yer pinched me so''ard when I axed why yer spoke o''Portland Mansions?
20071We wo n''t get lost, will us, ma''am?
20071Well, Ronald,said Mrs. Warren,"and''ow may yer be, my dear little boy?
20071Well, ai n''t you a lydy, and ai n''t I a lydy? 20071 Well, ca n''t yer guess?
20071Well, ha''n''t she to find hout wot the price o''them are? 20071 Well, now, wot hever did yer guess?"
20071Well, then, Pickles,continued Sue,"if I go and hide, what''ull become o''Giles?"
20071Well, wot next? 20071 Well,"said the doctor,"but Cinderella-- she does n''t seem touched in the head?"
20071Well,she said,"an''''ow do yer like it?"
20071Well-- and wot did she want?
20071Well?
20071Wen''ull Sue come back?
20071What can be done?
20071What do yer mean by that?
20071What do yer mean by that?
20071What do yer mean by that?
20071What do yer mean?
20071What do you mean by answering me like that?
20071What do you mean by that, Agnes?
20071What do you mean?
20071What do you mean?
20071What do you want me for, Pickles?
20071What does Big Ben say? 20071 What does he say?"
20071What for?
20071What is it?
20071What is it?
20071What is that verse?
20071What is that?
20071What is the matter? 20071 What is your name?"
20071What shall I do? 20071 What shall I put outside?"
20071What shall I sing?
20071What sort of work?
20071What sort? 20071 What voice?"
20071What''s all the fuss, Agnes? 20071 What''s the matter with the room?"
20071What''s the matter, girl? 20071 What''s up now, Jamie, boy?"
20071What?
20071What?
20071Whatever are you talking about?
20071When, sir?
20071Where are we to go?
20071Where do you live?
20071Where does it come from?
20071Where''s Mammy Warren?
20071Where?
20071Where?
20071Which father?
20071Who can it be?
20071Who dragged you into that court last night?
20071Who''s Connie?
20071Who''s he?
20071Who''s he?
20071Who''s your father?
20071Who, dear?
20071Who? 20071 Whoever is Pickles?"
20071Whoever is Ronald?
20071Whoever is the girl?
20071Whoever''s he?
20071Why are we coming here?
20071Why are yer back so soon, Connie?
20071Why did he go out? 20071 Why do you look like that?"
20071Why do you think that?
20071Why should I mind? 20071 Why should n''t I?"
20071Why so, madam? 20071 Why, Giles-- how do you know?"
20071Why, sir?
20071Why, yer Silly, yer do n''t s''pose as yer can go hout and about as you are now? 20071 Why, yer never be livin''here?"
20071Why,she said in a joyful tone,"is it true that I have the honor of speaking to the great street preacher?"
20071Why,''ow is it to be done?
20071Will I wash and have a bit o''breakfast? 20071 Will the sky fall?"
20071Will yer come or will yer not?
20071Will yer?
20071Will you come and have a slice, Connie? 20071 Will you sing to me?
20071Wo n''t she, now?
20071Wo n''t you ever see me any more?
20071Wor that his text, Sue?
20071Worn''t Jesus real good to bring me yere?
20071Wot ails yer?
20071Wot are we to do''bout Sue?
20071Wot be they?
20071Wot do doctor say?
20071Wot do yer mean by that, chile?
20071Wot do yer mean by that?
20071Wot do yer mean by that?
20071Wot do yer mean?
20071Wot do you mean now?
20071Wot does I mean? 20071 Wot hever does yer mean now?"
20071Wot hever''s the matter with yer?
20071Wot hin? 20071 Wot in?"
20071Wot now, young''un?
20071Wot sort be it, Connie?
20071Wot sort?
20071Wot''s that?
20071Wot, sir?
20071Wot?
20071Wot?
20071Wottever can it be?
20071Wottever do you mean?
20071Wottever do you want?
20071Wottever is it?
20071Would he?
20071Would you like to go back to- night? 20071 Wull Mammy Warren come back to- night?"
20071Wull, an''wottever do yer want?
20071Wull,she said,"and''ow be you, Connie?"
20071Wull-- and''ow yer?
20071Wull?
20071Yer do n''t?
20071Yer mean that I''m to spend all the evening with yer?
20071Yer mean that yer''ll come along to my room an''put things in order?
20071Yer would n''t niver, niver, let little Ronald go away?
20071Yer''ll be losing yer purty sleep,she said,"and then where''ll yer be?"
20071Yer''ll like that, wo n''t yer?
20071Yer''ll promise to let me go in the morning?
20071You ai n''t of a wery obleeging turn, be yer? 20071 You believes me, marm?"
20071You do n''t never tell no lies, do you, boy?
20071You do n''t think, Sue, do yer,said Connie,"that_ us_ could stop seekin''yer until we found yer?"
20071You have news of her?
20071You saw Sue to- day?
20071You surely do n''t mean little Connie Harris? 20071 You wo n''t say?
20071You would n''t be inclined, now, that we should have hour talk hover a pint of hot coffee? 20071 You would n''t know your way back again?"
20071You would n''t tell a lie, would you, girl?
20071You''d win the V. C., Ronald, would n''t you, now?
20071You''re not afraid of the streets, my poor little child?
20071You''re not frightened, then?
20071You''re quite sure it_ was_ only a dream?
20071You''re sick o''machine- work, ai n''t you?
20071You-- my aunt?
20071Your congregation?
20071Your''eart''s desire, Giles?
20071Yus,said Connie,"I could; but would it be right?"
20071Yus,said Connie,"it do look purty, do n''t it?
20071Yus-- didn''t I zay so?
20071Yus-- why not? 20071 _ Ef_ I choose, sir-- may I choose?"
20071''Ow did I happen ter be born?
20071''Ow did he take yer comin''''ome again, wench?"
20071''Ow''s the other kid?"
20071''ow can this''ave''appened?"
20071''ow is Giles?"
2007112 Carlyle Terrace?
20071A boy with two fathers need n''t feel starved about the heart, need he, now?"
20071Agnes, now, can go and tell yer father, and bring wot clothes yer want to- morrow.--Agnes, yer''ll do that, wo n''t yer?"
20071Ai n''t it natural that Mrs. Warren should want yer to stay now she ha''got yer?
20071Ai n''t it now?"
20071Ai n''t yer hin luck not to be in prison, and ai n''t that a subject for rejoicing?
20071All those things quite forgot?"
20071An''did yer never read that most touching story of the consumptive gel called the''May Queen''?
20071And am I to have naught but grumbles for my pains?
20071And does she find it wery beautiful?"
20071And ef poor, ugly Mammy Warren''ave made herself still uglier for yer sweet sakes,''oo can but love''er for the ennoblin''deed?
20071And may I ax how old you are, my love?"
20071And now, do n''t you feel very anxious about your father and your old friends?"
20071And she come''ere-- and I turned her off?
20071And what amount of money ought I to give you for the woman?"
20071And when''ull she be back?"
20071And where are the stones?
20071And would Father John look for her?
20071And would her own people ever find her?
20071And you would n''t like to give her a kiss fur me?"
20071And''oo''s he?"
20071And''ow''s Giles?"
20071Are you taking me to him?"
20071Are you?
20071As soon as she entered the room he said one word to her--"When?"
20071Be yer fond o''poetry yerself, Agnes?"
20071But I ca n''t remember where the country is-- can you, Connie?"
20071But about Sue?
20071But do you want me to help you?"
20071But now, ca n''t yer guess where she his?"
20071But now, wot do you think of it all?"
20071But where be she?
20071But''ave yer nothing else to say''bout her?"
20071C.?"
20071Ca n''t you take me back to him now-- can''t you?"
20071Can I help you?"
20071Connie was the name of one----""Connie?"
20071Connie, wull yer sing to me?"
20071Could she not get out of that house and go back to Sue and Giles?
20071Cricket?"
20071Dare you?"
20071Did Connie tell you about that?"
20071Did yer never see the country?"
20071Do n''t I work for yer, and toil for yer?
20071Do n''t yer s''pose as yer''ll be advertised?"
20071Do n''t yer think as it''ull break_ his_ heart ef yer is tuk ter prison?
20071Do n''t you believe it?"
20071Do yer mind?"
20071Do you know anything about her?"
20071Do you know why?"
20071Do you promise?"
20071Do you think I''d allow yer to spile yer purty face with the fire beatin''on it?
20071Do you think, Connie, that Mammy Warren could have invented that story about him?"
20071Dressed shabby, no doubt, and wid hard- hearted sisters-- but had n''t she small feet, now?
20071Ere we to betray the hinnercent?"
20071Father did worse things than that-- why should I be afraid?"
20071First, tell me, how is the little lame chap as is fretting fur his sister wot is kept in the country?"
20071Ha''n''t I jest rescued yer from the hands o''that''ere nipper?"
20071Ha''n''t she, stoo- pid?"
20071Had anything happened?
20071Hanythink else?"
20071Harris?"
20071Have you been in a fire?"
20071Have you brought news of Ronald?
20071Have you ever considered what a truly fascinating thing a girl''s hand is?"
20071He''ll be a nice companion for yer, Connie, and yer''ll like that, wo n''t you?"
20071Her father and I are in great trouble about the child----""What child?"
20071How do you do?"
20071How do you s''pose, mother, as the locket did get inter Cinderella''s pocket?"
20071How long?
20071I ca n''t go back, can I, Giles-- can I?"
20071I know all about it: Yer''ll stop that-- d''yer''ear-- d''yer''ear?"
20071I s''pose, as the disguise is ter change me, will it make me beautiful?
20071I think w''en they''re full- grown----""Wot then?"
20071I was not a bit frightened at first, of course, for my father''s boy must n''t be a coward, must he, Connie?"
20071I''d manage so to terrify him aforehand that he''d have ter confess----""And then he''d be put in prison?"
20071I''m going away to a much better place, ai n''t I, Connie?"
20071In his case, that is the best sort of illness, is it not?
20071Is he wery cut up?"
20071Is it in love you be-- an''you not fourteen years of age?
20071Is that other little party alive or dead?
20071Is that what she''s staying fur?"
20071Is the furnace in proper order?"
20071Is there a neighbor who would sit with him?"
20071Is your story quite true, little girl?"
20071It has been a long time-- wery, wery long-- but have I been patient''bout Sue all this long time, Connie?"
20071It said in cheerful tones:"Why have n''t you fire here, and a candle?
20071It''s a little bit hard to be very patient, is n''t it, Connie?"
20071It''s a''most like''eaven to think of the country-- ain''t it, Connie?"
20071Machine- work-- attic work?--Shop?"
20071May I come?"
20071Mr. Harris, wot does yer think?
20071Never neglect a friend-- eh?
20071Not to''ome?"
20071Now speak the truth, full and solemn; be yer hinnercent?"
20071Now then, look spruce, wo n''t yer?"
20071Now then-- yer ai n''t frightened, be yer?"
20071Now, Cinderella, wot kind o''man wor that''ere Peter Harris wot went wid yer to the shop?"
20071Now, Pickles, my boy, wot have you got in the back o''your''ead?
20071Now, do you want to have a shelter for yourself and your little brother to- night?''
20071Now, w''en a stranger seeks yer hout, is n''t it safe to s''pose as he brings news?"
20071Now, will you speak?
20071Now, wot''s yer favorite character?
20071Now-- do yer promise?"
20071Oh, could the awful moment ever come when Giles would look at him with reproachful eyes-- when Giles would turn away from him?
20071Oh, sir, will you, jest because mother did trusten so werry much?"
20071On their way Connie turned innocently to her companion and said:"Why ever did yer say as we lived in Portland Mansions?"
20071One word has been changed from the original to correctly identify the speaker, Agnes, replying to Connie''s question: p. 27 original:"Wot sort?"
20071Or do yer want somethin''better?
20071Please, Father John,_ you_ wo n''t ask me?"
20071Please, please, Pickles, where is she?"
20071Shall I take yer''ome first, or wull yer come with me?"
20071Shall I tell you other things that father did?"
20071Shall I?"
20071Shall us both come in?"
20071She put her hand on my shoulder and said,''Wotever are you doing here?''
20071She went to the door and, before opening it, called out,"Who''s there?"
20071She worn''t a wandering sort o''gel, as neglected her home duties, wor she?"
20071She would n''t''ave tuk all her things ef she meant to come; would she, Ronald?"
20071She''s not a real kind person, is she, Connie?"
20071So late?"
20071Suddenly, however, he winked, and said in a shrill, cheerful tone:"Well, then, plucky''un,''ow does yer find yerself now?"
20071Sue, did you never consider that maybe ef we''re good and patient Lord Christ''ull take us to''eaven any day?"
20071That was''ow I pulled''i m round.--Wasn''t it, Ronald, my dear?"
20071Them be thieves, bean''t they?"
20071There now,''oo''s that a- knockin''at the door?"
20071There, now-- ain''t that fine?"
20071This child is n''t for us; let her alone in future.--Are you ready, Connie?"
20071WHAT WAS HARRIS TO HER?
20071WHAT WAS HARRIS TO HER?
20071Warren''s?"
20071Warren?"
20071Warren?"
20071Warren?"
20071Warren?"
20071Was any one within?
20071Was he drunk?
20071Was it more than a coincidence?
20071Was it the roar of human voices or the roar of something else-- a devouring and awful element?
20071Was she late?
20071Was this another and a rougher way of taking her to the lock- up?
20071Was this queer boy friend or foe?
20071Was this the man she was to be so dreadfully afraid of?
20071Welcome my lass home?
20071Well now, madam, will you see to this?
20071What did the girl mean?
20071What new and dreadful departure was this?
20071What was it?
20071What was the matter?
20071What was the matter?
20071What was this cowardly Harris to her that she should risk so much and suffer so sorely for his sake?
20071What was to be done?
20071What was wrong with pretty Connie, and why did she not go with her?
20071What would she not give to hear his magnificent voice as he preached to the people once again?
20071What would yer mother s''y ef she knew?"
20071What_ did_ Cinderella mean?
20071What_ has_ happened, Connie-- what_ has_ happened?"
20071Where are yer to go to?
20071Where be she?
20071Where could she be?
20071Where in all the world could she be?
20071Where is she?
20071Where was she?
20071Where''ud she be likely ter be?
20071Where?
20071Wherever is my little gel?"
20071Who are you running away from?"
20071Who could tell if his father himself might not have returned, and might not be there, and might not hear him if he sang loud enough and sweet enough?
20071Who, I''d like to know,''ud employ a prison lass-- and what else''ud you be?"
20071Why be you so chuff to poor Sue, and whatever''ave you got to say?"
20071Why did that boy speak like that?
20071Why did yer say so?"
20071Why did you run away?"
20071Why should n''t it be for you?
20071Why was she absent?
20071Why, Connie, ca n''t you guess that we''ve been praying for you?"
20071Why, oh why did not his father come to fetch him?
20071Why, to mother, of course-- where else?"
20071Why?
20071Will it cost you so much money to keep yourself and Giles in that little attic?"
20071Will yer take a message back to Sue?"
20071Will you come in, and I''ll fetch him?"
20071Will you come?"
20071Will you wash first and have a bit of breakfast, or shall I tell you now?"
20071Will you write the note, Connie?"
20071Worn''t Cinderella wot might''ave bin called beautiful?
20071Wot be Giles to me?"
20071Wot could be wrong?
20071Wot did yer do with her, Father John?"
20071Wot do yer take me fur?
20071Wot do yer think I come''ere for so often but jest to comfort the poor thing an''bring her news o''Giles?
20071Wot do yer think Mammy Warren wanted yer for?"
20071Wot''s to be done?
20071Wot''s up?
20071Wotever''s the hour?
20071Wotever''s the matter with yer, Connie?"
20071Wottever is to be done, father?"
20071Wottever is to be done?
20071Wottever''ud take her to the country at this time o''year?"
20071Would Sue be satisfied that Connie was not quite lost?
20071Would any one in all the world think of the little machinist if she sallied forth in purple silk and Paisley shawl?
20071Would he again turn her out into the street?
20071Would he give her up for ever?
20071Would n''t I jest jump at gettin''into your shoes if I could?
20071Would not her own father search heaven and earth to find his only child?
20071Would that long day ever come to an end?
20071Would you like to see her again?"
20071Wull yer do that, Agnes-- wull yer, now?"
20071Yer do n''t think as yer father''ll be''ome to- night, Connie?"
20071Yer want to know who''s_ he_?
20071Yes, she knows all, Sue does; but, Mr. Harris----""Yes; wot have I to say to this tale?
20071You and me wo n''t disgrace our fathers, will we, Giles?"
20071You could n''t help me, now, ter find a guilty party?"
20071You go out arter you ha''been at my house?
20071You ha''never seen little Giles Mason?"
20071You have n''t an idea what it is like, have you?"
20071You know the way there; you wo n''t let yourself be kidnapped any more, will you, Connie?"
20071You know wot to do?"
20071You refuse my goodness?
20071You surely have not been frightening her with the base idea that we would give her up, my boy?"
20071You wants ter live in a cottage in the country, do n''t yer?"
20071You would n''t mind my treating yer, jest fer once, would yer?"
20071You yere me, Connie?
20071You''asn''t, so to speak, lost something lately-- thimble, or a pair of scissors, or something o''that sort?"
20071You''ll take me to see him, and then you''ll bring me back, wo n''t you, Connie?"
20071You_ ai n''t_ goin''to work to- day-- be you, Connie?"
20071_ You would_ like that, would n''t you?"
20071ai n''t the world strange and difficult to live in?
20071and ai n''t it lucky for the kid?
20071and wot''s yer name, boy?"
20071but, mother, may n''t I tell her my own self?
20071continued Mrs. Nelson,"w''y hever should Sue be so late-- and this night, of all nights?"
20071could n''t yer take her a little bit of a present?"
20071have yer heard of her?"
20071how hever could he?"
20071how is he?
20071is she really lost?
20071replacement:"Wot sort?"
20071said Connie--"burglars?
20071what do yer think?
20071why did those words sound through the room unless there_ is_ trouble about Sue?"
20071with that drinkin''father o''yourn, wot do you want all alone by yer lonesome?
20071wo n''t my little Giles be glad?"
20071wot do you want wid him?"
20071wot is she staying fur?
20071you back?"
20071you have a little brother, Cinderella?"
43111A Magistrate, eh?
43111A fraud on the Bank of England?
43111A nautical phenomenon, eh?
43111A new one?
43111A prosperous one?
43111A pupil?
43111A what?
43111Again?
43111Agnes, shall I tell you what about? 43111 Agnes?"
43111Ah, Copperfield?
43111Ah, but you mean here, at your own home?
43111Aha?
43111Aha?
43111Ai n''t I volatile?
43111Ai n''t I what?
43111Ai n''t you, by G--? 43111 Ai n''t you?"
43111All the way where?
43111All to be earned?
43111All well, my dear Traddles?
43111All, Agnes?
43111Alone, and on foot?
43111Along o''you? 43111 Am I grown?"
43111Ambition, love of approbation, sympathy, and much more, I suppose? 43111 Amigoarawaysoo?"
43111And Emily?
43111And I have no doubt she loves you like a brother?
43111And a governess?
43111And another shilling or so in biscuits, and another in fruit, eh?
43111And are doing well? 43111 And are you sure you like me very much?"
43111And did he frighten my aunt again?
43111And did n''t_ you_ know who it was?
43111And do you go too, ma''am?
43111And do you recollect them?
43111And do you wish me to go with you?
43111And has he heard Littimer himself?
43111And how are they all? 43111 And how are you, old woman?"
43111And how did you receive it, Agnes?
43111And how do you get on, and where are you being educated, Brooks?
43111And how do you think we are looking, Master Copperfield,--I should say, Mister?
43111And how is Master David?
43111And how is our good friend the Doctor, Copperfield?
43111And how my dear, dear, old Peggotty is?
43111And how''s your friend, sir?
43111And it''s Mr. Copperfield, is it? 43111 And patient, Agnes?"
43111And pray, what did you mean by that, sir?
43111And since I''ve took to general reading, you''ve took to general writing, eh, sir?
43111And so,he said, gaily,"we abandon this buccaneer life to- morrow, do we?"
43111And tell that to_ me_,she added,"with your shameful lips?
43111And the brother and sister are pursuing their old course, are they?
43111And the premium, sir,I returned,"is a thousand pounds?"
43111And there was no settlement of the little property-- the house and garden-- the what''s- its- name Rookery without any rooks in it-- upon her boy?
43111And was David good to you, child?
43111And what did Mrs. Gummidge say?
43111And what did you do?
43111And what do you mean by your look?
43111And what do you mean to do, Peggotty?
43111And what do you want here?
43111And what does the boy say?
43111And what is it?
43111And what of Mr. Dick, this morning?
43111And what the devil do you mean,retorted Steerforth,"by putting Mr. Copperfield into a little loft over a stable?"
43111And what''s become of him?
43111And when, Agnes,said I,"will you forgive me the other night?"
43111And when, Trot,said my aunt, patting the back of my hand, as we sat in our old way before the fire,"when are you going over to Canterbury?"
43111And who''s this shaver?
43111And why do n''t you abandon me to my deserts?
43111And win what race?
43111And ye steer with a rudder, do n''t ye? 43111 And you mean to say the little thing is very fascinating, I suppose?"
43111And you really miss me, Doady?
43111And you wo n''t tell me, any more, that we make other people bad,coaxed Dora;"will you?
43111And your shirts,said Miss Murdstone;"have you brought''em home?"
43111Annie? 43111 Are many of the young ladies with you?"
43111Are they bright, though?
43111Are they dead, ma''am?
43111Are they what? 43111 Are they?"
43111Are you a prig?
43111Are you alone?
43111Are you composed enough,said I,"to speak on the subject which so interested you-- I hope Heaven may remember it!--that snowy night?"
43111Are you confirmed in your impression?
43111Are you going back those many thousand miles, so soon?
43111Are you happy now, you foolish boy?
43111Are you not aware, sir,returned Mr. Chillip, with his placidest smile,"that your father- in- law is again a neighbour of mine?"
43111Are you not my own for ever, Dora?
43111Are you only going to Yarmouth then?
43111Are you ready to go, David?
43111Are you reconciled?
43111Are you reconciled?
43111Are you sure it is?
43111Are you? 43111 Are you?"
43111Are you?
43111Ask-- HEEP-- Mr. Traddles, who lived in his house after him,said Mr. Micawber, breaking off from the letter;"will you?"
43111Ask-- HEEP-- if he ever kept a pocket- book in that house,said Mr. Micawber;"will you?"
43111At any rate, they are all reconciled to it now, I hope?
43111Aye, aye?
43111Aye, aye?
43111Aye?
43111Bare enough now, an''t it?
43111Barkis''s the carrier''s wife-- Peggotty''s the boatman''s sister-- she had something to do with your family? 43111 Barkis, do you mean?"
43111Beg your pardon, sir?
43111Bred them Suffolk Punches by wholesale?
43111But I mean, boy,resuming his gravity,"what do you consider me in this respect?"
43111But advocates and proctors are not one and the same?
43111But he could board somewhere else, I suppose?
43111But if you marry a person, and the person dies, why then you may marry another person, may n''t you, Peggotty?
43111But is n''t it, though?--I want to be put right if I am wrong-- isn''t it really?
43111But no doubt you are a good deal changed since then, sir?
43111But really, Mr. Copperfield,she asked,"is it a nick- name?
43111But what is your opinion, Peggotty?
43111But what''s she to do while we''re away?
43111But who do you suppose our other friend is?
43111But you''ll come back to dinner?
43111But-- but do you think it did Edward good?
43111But_ were_ you ever married, Peggotty?
43111But_ would_ you have any objections to my laying down before the fire?
43111By my look? 43111 By what name?"
43111Ca n''t he speak?
43111Ca n''t you, indeed, David?
43111Can I do anything more, sir?
43111Can I-- or Copperfield-- do anything?
43111Can I?
43111Can you come with me?
43111Can you cook this young gentleman''s breakfast for him, if you please?
43111Can you defend your conduct if you do, sir?
43111Can_ I_ do nothing--_I_, who come to you with_ my_ poor sorrows?
43111Capital?
43111Carries a bag?
43111Charley does?
43111Chrisen name? 43111 Clara Peggotty, again?"
43111Compensation to the lady, sir?
43111Contented?
43111Copperfield,he said at length, in a breathless voice,"have you taken leave of your senses?"
43111Could I defend my conduct if I did not, sir?
43111Could I say a word to you before you go into Court?
43111Counting from when?
43111Cross, my love?
43111Dan is Mr. Peggotty, is he?
43111David Copperfield?
43111David''s son? 43111 David''s son?"
43111David,he said, making his lips thin, by pressing them together,"if I have an obstinate horse or dog to deal with, what do you think I do?"
43111Davy who?
43111Dead?
43111Dear Miss Trotwood, is that all the history?
43111Dearest, what?
43111Deny that he is a beggar, Steerforth?
43111Did I indeed, sir?
43111Did I see her to- night, Ham, on the sands, after we met you?
43111Did he die in the hospital?
43111Did he tell you you would find him here?
43111Did it change her much?
43111Did n''t I know?
43111Did n''t you get my last letter?
43111Did she object to it?
43111Did she say when you might expect to see her again?
43111Did she tell you why?
43111Did you ever buy a sheet of letter- paper?
43111Did you get nothing, Traddles, after all?
43111Did you give your son the name of Ham, because you lived in a sort of ark?
43111Did you leave her pretty jolly?
43111Did you remain long at Yarmouth, that time?
43111Did_ she_ make''em, now?
43111Do I constantly entreat you,said Mrs. Steerforth,"to speak plainly, in your own natural manner?"
43111Do I follow you?
43111Do I gather from what you say, ma''am, that Mr. Maldon is ill?
43111Do I know it?
43111Do I understand, my dear Mr. Traddles, that, at the expiration of that period, Mr. Micawber would be eligible as a Judge or Chancellor?
43111Do n''t I think it would have been better to have done nothing, than to have tried to form my little wife''s mind?
43111Do n''t he go over to Blunderstone now?
43111Do n''t it-- I do n''t say that it_ does_, mind I want to know-- don''t it rather engross him? 43111 Do n''t say no,"returned the little woman, looking at me with the aspect of a connoisseur;"a little bit more eyebrow?"
43111Do n''t you find Mr. Wickfield blooming, sir? 43111 Do n''t you know that they are both mad with their own self- will and pride?"
43111Do n''t you know the Doctor better,said I,"than to suppose him conscious of your existence, when you were not before him?"
43111Do n''t you know? 43111 Do n''t you know?"
43111Do n''t you remember Traddles? 43111 Do n''t you think that,"I asked the coachman, in the first stage out of London,"a very remarkable sky?
43111Do n''t you think the fowl may have come out of the country, aunt?
43111Do n''t you think, my dear,said I,"it would be better for you to remonstrate with Mary Anne?"
43111Do n''t you think,said Traddles,"you could copy writings, sir, if I got them for you?"
43111Do n''t you, man?
43111Do n''t you, though?
43111Do n''t_ you_ see a wasting and a wearing in him, Miss Wickfield?
43111Do she though?
43111Do with David''s son?
43111Do you care for taters?
43111Do you doubt my being what I always have been to you?
43111Do you know Twenty Eight''s offence?
43111Do you know anything?
43111Do you know her?
43111Do you know how he is to- night?
43111Do you know how my little brother is, sir?
43111Do you know that she is in London?
43111Do you know that we have followed you a long way to- night?
43111Do you know the Giantess in question, Daisy?
43111Do you know what I ca n''t help thinking of, Traddles, as I sit here looking at you?
43111Do you know where Mr. Traddles lives in the Inn?
43111Do you know who this is, who is with me?
43111Do you know, yet, what it is?
43111Do you know,said I, as we walked along the passage,"what felony was Number Twenty Seven''s last''folly?''"
43111Do you mean a compliment?
43111Do you mean that there is money, sir?
43111Do you mean that you are jealous of a female person?
43111Do you mean the D. of A.''s?
43111Do you mean the house, ma''am?
43111Do you mean to go and seek your fortune?
43111Do you mean to say, child, that any human being has gone into a Christian church, and got herself named Peggotty?
43111Do you really mean that?
43111Do you recollect where you had it last, Annie?
43111Do you remember what you told me once, about her making all the apple parsties and doing all the cooking?
43111Do you remember when he did this?
43111Do you remember when, in his inheritance of your nature, and in your pampering of his pride and passion, he did this, and disfigured me for life? 43111 Do you see this?"
43111Do you set a watch upon Miss Wickfield, and make her home no home, because of me?
43111Do you stay long here, Littimer?
43111Do you suppose he has any money, Traddles?
43111Do you think he is old?
43111Do you think it did Edward harm, Clara?
43111Do you think it is nonsense?
43111Do you think it pretty, Doady?
43111Do you think so?
43111Do you think they would come?
43111Do you waltz? 43111 Do you want to spend anything now?"
43111Do?
43111Doctor not angry with her, Trotwood?
43111Does Mr. Traddles live here?
43111Does he exercise the same influence over Mr. Wickfield still, Agnes?
43111Does he gloomily profess to be( I am ashamed to use the word in such association) religious still?
43111Does he know where I am, aunt?
43111Does he say all this?
43111Does it belong to anybody in the neighbourhood?
43111Does she sing at all?
43111Does she suggest anything?
43111Does your Sophy play on any instrument, Traddles?
43111Does_ he_ keep a school?
43111Dog?
43111EH?
43111Eh, Daisy?
43111Eh, Trotwood?
43111Even poor, giddy, stupid me?
43111Except well?
43111Favorites?
43111For the Church?
43111For the bill that is to be a certain investment?
43111For this gentleman?
43111Forgot?
43111Frightened, my own?
43111Frightens my aunt, sir?
43111From Creakle the schoolmaster?
43111From India?
43111From what, then?
43111From whom?
43111Go for a soldier, do you mean?
43111Gone?
43111Good heavens, Clara, do you see?
43111Good?
43111Growed, Mas''r Davy bor''? 43111 Had they run away?"
43111Has Miss Dartle sent you for me?
43111Has he come home, sir?
43111Has she become more settled?
43111Has that Copperfield no tongue?
43111Has that there little bill of mine been heerd on?
43111Have I called you down from the stars?
43111Have I got all my traps? 43111 Have I, Jip?
43111Have n''t you, Doady?
43111Have you any intention of going away again?
43111Have you been studying much law lately?
43111Have you been there long?
43111Have you been to the Study then, mama?
43111Have you breakfasted?
43111Have you considered your years, and my daughter''s years, Mr. Copperfield? 43111 Have you dined?"
43111Have you ever been there?
43111Have you got the price of a pint of beer about you?
43111Have you made no remonstrance about it, Agnes? 43111 Have you not seen him, sir?"
43111Have you read it?
43111Have you thought how, Agnes?
43111Have you, sir?
43111He died the night before we went to Canterbury?
43111He had a son with him, had n''t he?
43111He is very handsome, is he not?
43111He pays well, I hope?
43111He said I should object?
43111He''s a young man, sure?
43111Her name?
43111His son?
43111How are you, Copperfield?
43111How are_ you_?
43111How can I be otherwise, my own love, when I see your empty chair?
43111How can you be such a silly thing,replied Dora, slapping my hand,"as to sit there, telling such stories?
43111How do you fare to feel about it, Mas''r Davy?
43111How do you find yourself to- day?
43111How do you find yourself?
43111How do you get on, Minnie?
43111How do you know it''s not that?
43111How do you suppose he comes to be a Middlesex Magistrate?
43111How do_ you_ get on?
43111How is Mr. Omer, after this long time?
43111How is Mrs. Micawber now, sir?
43111How is she?
43111How is she?
43111How long ago?
43111How long are the holidays?
43111How long has he been in the Inn?
43111How much?
43111How shall we live without, Dora?
43111How so, sir?
43111How''s Mrs. Fibbitson to- day?
43111How''s mama, dear Peggotty? 43111 How''s the pie?"
43111How? 43111 I am not dreadful now, Dora?"
43111I beg to ask, Mr. Copperfield, if you have anything to say in reply?
43111I beg your pardon, my dear Jane,said my mother,"but are you quite sure-- I am certain you''ll excuse me, my dear Jane-- that you understand Davy?"
43111I beg your pardon, sir?
43111I come to know, ma''am, whether he will keep his wured?
43111I do n''t know!--You must n''t marry more than one person at a time, may you, Peggotty?
43111I hope it was n''t the boat that----"That father was drownded in?
43111I hope she is well?
43111I hope you have both brought appetites with you?
43111I hope,he said,"that you are doing well?"
43111I mean are all these yours?
43111I say it''s very hard I should be made so now,returned my mother, pouting;"and it is-- very hard-- isn''t it?"
43111I shall get a horse, and ride over to- morrow morning, aunt, unless you will go with me?
43111I suppose history never lies, does it?
43111I suppose you are quite a great lawyer?
43111I suppose,said my aunt, eyeing me as narrowly as she had eyed the needle in threading it,"you think Mr. Dick a short name, eh?"
43111I tell you what,said the milkman, looking hard at her for the first time, and taking her by the chin,"are you fond of milk?"
43111I think I am earnest and persevering?
43111I think-- shall I be quite plain, Agnes, liking him so much?
43111I thought you came from Oxford?
43111I was inquiring,said I,"whether Mr. Traddles at number two in the Court, has not a rising reputation among the lawyers?"
43111I was willin''a long time, sir?
43111I wonder why you ever fell in love with me?
43111I wonder,said Peggotty, who was sometimes seized with a fit of wondering on some most unexpected topic,"what''s become of Davy''s great- aunt?"
43111I?
43111If I might ask one other favor, I hope you would n''t think it absurd, Copperfield?
43111If Mr. Copperfield should yet remember one unknown to fame, will Mr. T. take charge of my unalterable regards and similar entreaties? 43111 If he had been your own boy, you would have put him to it, just the same, I suppose?"
43111If it is miserable to bear, when she is here,he said,"what would it be, and she away?
43111If you are to blush to hear of such things, now you are an old married woman, when are you not to blush to hear of them?
43111If you please, sir, would you have the goodness to walk in, and speak to Miss Dartle?
43111If you please, sir,I said, when we had accomplished about the same distance as before,"is it far?"
43111If you were thinking of being married-- to Mr. Barkis, Peggotty?
43111If you''re Master Murdstone,said the lady,"why do you go and give another name, first?"
43111In the name of Heaven,said Miss Betsey, suddenly,"why Rookery?"
43111In what is that man assisting him, who never looks at me without an inscrutable falsehood in his eyes? 43111 In what way do you mean?
43111Indeed? 43111 Indeed?"
43111Indeed?
43111Indeed?
43111Is Martha with you yet?
43111Is Miss Wickfield at home?
43111Is Mr. Barkis at home, ma''am?
43111Is Mr. Copperfield informed of everything, Rosa?
43111Is Mr. Omer at home?
43111Is Mr. Steerforth coming from Oxford?
43111Is Mr. Steerforth coming from Oxford?
43111Is Mr. Traddles within?
43111Is Mr. Wickfield at home, Uriah Heep?
43111Is Sophy the youngest?
43111Is Suffolk your county, sir?
43111Is anything the matter, aunt?
43111Is he as soft as ever? 43111 Is he at home?"
43111Is he coming up from Oxford?
43111Is he fickle? 43111 Is he his own enemy?"
43111Is he indeed?
43111Is he-- is Mr. Dick-- I ask because I do n''t know, aunt-- is he at all out of his mind, then?
43111Is it Murdstone, ma''am?
43111Is it a Memorial about his own history that he is writing, aunt?
43111Is it a large school, aunt?
43111Is it my doing?
43111Is it possible that I had the honor, sir, of officiating when----?
43111Is it the last occupant''s furniture?
43111Is it, indeed?
43111Is n''t it a dog, sir?
43111Is n''t what a dog?
43111Is she so altered?
43111Is she the eldest?
43111Is that all the message?
43111Is that all?
43111Is that all?
43111Is that all?
43111Is that another letter in your hand?
43111Is that likely?
43111Is that the question? 43111 Is that the reason why Miss Murdstone took the clothes out of my drawers?"
43111Is that what you have been trying?
43111Is that why you called him a humbug, just now?
43111Is the mother living?
43111Is there any last wured, Mas''r Davy?
43111Is there any news to- day?
43111Is there any one forgotten thing afore we parts?
43111Is there anything at all on your mind, now?
43111Is there anything more I can have the honor of doing for you, sir? 43111 Is there nobody else in the world to come there?"
43111Is there nothing else, Sister?
43111Is there room for me?
43111Is this all your family, ma''am?
43111Is your brother an agreeable man, Peggotty?
43111Is your heart mine still, dear Dora?
43111Is_ that_ far, sir?
43111It seems a good deal, do n''t it?
43111It was originally, I think, eight thousand pounds, Consols?
43111It would be a very good match for you; would n''t it?
43111It''s an ingenious thing, ai n''t it?
43111It''s better for me to be stupid than uncomfortable, is n''t it?
43111It''s very hard,said my mother,"that in my own house--""_ My_ own house?"
43111Jones?
43111Keeping us in sight?
43111Ma''am,returned Mr. Micawber, with a bow,"you are very obliging: and what are you doing, Copperfield?
43111Made out of a boat, is it?
43111Married a young lady of that part, with a very good little property, poor thing.--And this action of the brain now, sir? 43111 Mas''r Davy?"
43111Master Copperfield,he began--"but am I keeping you up?"
43111May I ask,said I,"without any hazard of repeating the mistake, how my old friends Mr. and Miss Wickfield are?"
43111May I now venture to confide to Mr. T. the purport of my letter? 43111 May I tell her as you doen''t see no hurt in''t, and as you''ll be so kind as take charge on''t, Mas''r Davy?"
43111Me leave you? 43111 Me, Master Copperfield?"
43111Me, ma''am?
43111Me?
43111Mind, my darling?
43111Mind, my dear Agnes?
43111Miss Agnes, Master Copperfield--"Well, Uriah?
43111Miss Dartle,said I,"if you can be so obdurate as not to feel for this afflicted mother----""Who feels for me?"
43111Mr. Copperfield,said Mr. Micawber, gravely,"I hope I see you well?"
43111Mr. Dick,said my aunt,"what shall I do with this child?"
43111Mr. Dick,said my aunt,"you have heard me mention David Copperfield?
43111Mr. Micawber was in the Bush near you?
43111Mr. Micawber,said I,"what is the matter?
43111Mr. Steerforth has not seen it yet, I suppose?
43111Mr. Traddles has a rising reputation among the lawyers, I believe?
43111Must it? 43111 My dear Agnes, do you doubt my being true to you?"
43111My dear Copperfield,cried Traddles, punctually appearing at my door, in spite of all these obstacles,"how do you do?"
43111My dear Steerforth, what is the matter?
43111My dear, another glass?
43111My dear,returned Tom, in a delighted state,"why not?
43111My dearest life,I said one day to Dora,"do you think Mary Anne has any idea of time?"
43111My heart, who is there upon earth that I could miss so much?
43111My love,said I to Dora,"what have you got in that dish?"
43111My mistress?
43111Near London?
43111No fresh reference,said I,"to-- I would n''t distress you, Agnes, but I can not help asking-- to what we spoke of, when we parted last?"
43111No motive,said Mr. Wickfield,"for meaning abroad, and not at home?"
43111No, that ai n''t likely at all.--I wonder, if she was to die, whether she''d leave Davy anything?
43111No; do n''t you come from him?
43111No? 43111 No?"
43111No?
43111No?
43111No?
43111No?
43111No?
43111Nor from me?
43111Nor him?
43111Not Mowcher?
43111Not a bore, I hope? 43111 Not along of my being heer, ma''am, I hope?"
43111Not chops?
43111Not just yet?
43111Not light- headed?
43111Not like a lady''s hand, is it?
43111Not little Em''ly?
43111Not the message?
43111Not until then?
43111Not yet? 43111 Not you, I suppose, Agnes?"
43111Nothing, aunt?
43111Nothing?
43111Now, Twenty Seven,said Mr. Creakle, entering on a clear stage with_ his_ man,"is there anything that any one can do for you?
43111Now, what shall we give him, that sum included?
43111Now, what would you give him?
43111Now,she said,"is your pride appeased, you madwoman?
43111Of our town?
43111Of whom are you jealous, now?
43111Oh dear me, dear me, do you think it will do me any good?
43111Oh, but, really? 43111 Oh, do n''t you think he''s changed?"
43111Oh, how much for the jacket?
43111Oh, if that''s all, Master Copperfield,said Uriah,"and it really is n''t our umbleness that prevents you, will you come this evening?
43111Oh, it''s you, is it?
43111Oh, my eyes and limbs, what do you want? 43111 Oh, my lungs and liver, will you go for threepence?"
43111Oh, what do you want?
43111Oh, you''re a broth of a boy, ai n''t you?
43111Oh-- goroo!--how much for the jacket?
43111Old?
43111On Dora?
43111On the life before you, do you mean?
43111One or other? 43111 Or if the poor child, his mother, had been alive, he would still have gone into the respectable business, would he?"
43111Or would you be persuaded to try a new- laid hegg? 43111 P''raps you might be writin''to her?"
43111Paint at all?
43111Papa calls her my confidential friend, but I am sure she is no such thing-- is she, Jip? 43111 Peggotty, do you mean, sir?"
43111Peggotty,says I, suddenly,"were you ever married?"
43111Perhaps you''d like to spend a couple of shillings or so, in a bottle of currant wine by- and- by, up in the bedroom?
43111Perhaps,observed Traddles,"it was mere purposeless impertinence?"
43111Pleasantly, I hope, aunt?
43111Pray has this girl been found?
43111Pray, have you thought about that emigration proposal of mine?
43111Pretty stiff in the back?
43111Quite alone?
43111Rather a good marriage this, I believe?
43111Rather hard, I suppose?
43111Really musical, is n''t it, my dear Copperfield?
43111Really what?
43111Really? 43111 Remember, Agnes?
43111Riding to- day, Trot?
43111Run away?
43111Say? 43111 Says Em''ly,''Martha, is it you?
43111See what, my dear Jane?
43111Sha n''t I see mama?
43111Shall I go away, aunt?
43111Shall I put a little more tea in the pot afore I go, ma''am?
43111Shall I-- be-- given up to him?
43111Shall I?
43111Shall we go and see Mrs. Micawber, sir?
43111Shall we turn?
43111She asks me, here, if I think I should like to be a proctor? 43111 She does n''t sing to the guitar?"
43111She has a great admiration for Miss Agnes, Master Copperfield, I believe?
43111She is very clever, is she not?
43111She-- excuse me-- Miss D., you know,said Traddles, colouring in his great delicacy,"lives in London, I believe?"
43111Shooting, sir?
43111Should I?
43111Should you like to go to school at Canterbury?
43111Should you like to go to- morrow?
43111Should you?
43111Should you?
43111Sir,said he, with tears starting to his weather- beaten face, which, with his trembling lips, was ashy pale,"will you come over yonder?"
43111Smoke? 43111 So long as that?"
43111So she makes,said Mr. Barkis, after a long interval of reflection,"all the apple parsties, and doos all the cooking, do she?"
43111So you have left Mr. Dick behind, aunt?
43111Stay with us, Trotwood, eh?
43111Steerforth?
43111Tell me what should you say, darling?
43111Thank you, Master Copperfield,returned Uriah, putting his book away upon a shelf.--"I suppose you stop here, some time, Master Copperfield?"
43111That I want to be satisfied about?
43111That ai n''t a sort of man to see sitting behind a coach- box, is it though?
43111That he may be ready?
43111That is a black shadow to be following the girl,said Steerforth, standing still;"what does it mean?"
43111That is about Miss Wickfield''s time, is it not?
43111That little man of a doctor, with his head on one side,said my aunt,"Jellips, or whatever his name was, what was_ he_ about?
43111That night when it snew so hard?
43111That ship- looking thing?
43111That sort of people.--Are they really animals and clods, and beings of another order? 43111 That''s not it?"
43111That''s rather a chuckle- headed fellow for the girl; is n''t he?
43111The C. of B.''s?
43111The Russian Prince is a client of yours, is he?
43111The boat brought you word, I suppose?
43111The counting- house, sir?
43111The next in reversion-- you understand me?
43111The next will be regulated without much reference to them, I dare say,I returned:"what are they doing as to this?"
43111The pretty little widow?
43111The rooks-- what has become of them?
43111The same as ever?
43111The second daughter, perhaps?
43111The sisters took your part, I hope, Traddles?
43111The----?
43111Then what do I recommend? 43111 Then why, my love,"said my aunt, looking earnestly at me,"why do you think I prefer to sit upon this property of mine to- night?"
43111Then why_ do_ you wait?
43111Then you all came back again, ma''am?
43111Then, when your articled time is over, you''ll be a regular lawyer, I suppose?
43111Then, why do n''t you tell him so, you ridiculous thing?
43111There is a great improvement here, ma''am?
43111There was that sort of thing done to me somehow? 43111 There was-- pardon me-- really such a person, and at all in his power?"
43111They?
43111Things are changed in this office, Miss Trotwood, since I was a numble clerk, and held your pony; ai n''t they?
43111This is a fellow,she said,"to champion and bring here, is he not?
43111This is a pollis case, is it? 43111 This is a wild kind of place, Steerforth, is it not?"
43111Tight in the arms and legs, you know? 43111 To cancel your articles, Copperfield?
43111To degrade_ you_?
43111To drink?
43111To the system?
43111To what, ma''am?
43111To who, sir?
43111To whom?
43111To-- to Captain Bailey?
43111To--?
43111Umph? 43111 Umph?"
43111Under such circumstances, what could a man of Mr. Micawber''s spirit do? 43111 Unquestionably,"said I--"but I am thinking--""Yes, Mas''r Davy?"
43111Up from anywhere, then?
43111Upon your soul?
43111Uriah Heep?
43111Very sad, is it not?
43111Wait for you?
43111Walking about?
43111Walking about?
43111Was I though?
43111Was it in that year that the man appeared, sir?
43111Was it? 43111 Was n''t he fed, poor thing?"
43111Was that_ your_ thought?
43111We could show her the substance of one, I think?
43111Weak?
43111Well now,said the waiter, in a tone of confidence,"what would you like for dinner?
43111Well then,returned my aunt, softened by the reply,"how can you pretend to be wool- gathering, Dick, when you are as sharp as a surgeon''s lancet?
43111Well, Mates,said Mr. Peggotty, taking his seat,"and how are you?"
43111Well, Trot,she began,"what do you think of the proctor plan?
43111Well, my dear friend,said my aunt, after a pause,"and you have really extorted the money back from him?"
43111Well, sir, her cousin-- you know it''s a cousin she''s going to be married to?
43111Well, sir,observed Mr. Chillip,"I hope you''ll excuse me, if I am compelled to ask the favor of your name?"
43111Well, sir?
43111Well, then, why_ do n''t_ you think so?
43111Well,returned my mother, half laughing,"and if she is so silly as to say so, can I be blamed for it?"
43111Well? 43111 Well?"
43111Well?
43111Well?
43111Well?
43111Well?
43111Well?
43111Well?
43111Were you comfortable together?
43111What a melancholy confirmation: ai n''t it? 43111 What answer was sent?"
43111What are you a talking on? 43111 What are you doing, you stupid creature?"
43111What are you talking about, Clara?
43111What are you talking about?
43111What are you waiting for?
43111What can I do for you, sir?
43111What can I do?
43111What can have put such a person in your head?
43111What can that be?
43111What can we do, Trotwood?
43111What ceremony, my dear Traddles?
43111What clouds?
43111What did I know?
43111What did he do for you?
43111What did you say?
43111What do I deduce from this?
43111What do you care for an Irish song?
43111What do you consider me, sir?
43111What do you mean, Miss Mowcher?
43111What do you mean,said the tinker,"by wearing my brother''s silk hankercher?
43111What do you mean?
43111What do you say, Daisy?
43111What do you suppose he meant?
43111What do you think of him?
43111What do you think of that for a kite?
43111What do you think of that letter?
43111What do you think of the other?
43111What do you think? 43111 What do you think?"
43111What do you want with her, boy?
43111What does my sister say to that?
43111What does that mean?
43111What dog?
43111What end?
43111What has_ he_ been brought up to?
43111What have I done?
43111What have we got here?
43111What have you done?
43111What is going to be done with me, Peggotty dear? 43111 What is he doing?"
43111What is he now?
43111What is it that''s amiss? 43111 What is it?
43111What is it? 43111 What is it?"
43111What is it?
43111What is the conclusion, my dear Mr. Copperfield, to which I am irresistibly brought? 43111 What is the matter with Rosa?"
43111What is the matter?
43111What is your part of the country now?
43111What is your state of mind, Twenty Eight?
43111What is?
43111What lay are you upon?
43111What money have you got, Copperfield?
43111What name was it, as I wrote up, in the cart, sir?
43111What name would it be as I should write up now, if there was a tilt here?
43111What name?
43111What ought I to do then, Agnes?
43111What says our aunt on the subject?
43111What shall you do with him?
43111What should I tell?
43111What should you-- what should I-- how much ought I to-- what would it be right to pay the waiter, if you please?
43111What upon?
43111What were you doing for Lady Mithers?
43111What will she do there?
43111What wonderful thing is that?
43111What work, then?
43111What would he be?
43111What would it be right to do?
43111What would you do with him, now?
43111What''s become of him?
43111What''s that?
43111What''s the amount altogether?
43111What''s the matter?
43111What''s the matter?
43111What''s the matter?
43111What''s the matter?
43111What''s the matter?
43111What''s the report of this boy?
43111What''s the use of this?
43111What''s to be done? 43111 What, he spoilt you, I suppose?"
43111What, not in your own, eh?
43111What? 43111 What?"
43111What_ is_ a proctor, Steerforth?
43111When a person''s umble, you know, what''s an apology? 43111 When did she first hear of it?"
43111When do you propose to introduce me there, Daisy?
43111When it was clear that nothing could be done, Miss Dartle--"Did I tell you not to speak to me?
43111When she told you you would be a Judge? 43111 When you came away from home at the end of the vacation,"said Mrs. Creakle, after a pause,"were they all well?"
43111When, Peggotty?
43111Where are the birds?
43111Where are you going?
43111Where are you going?
43111Where are you going?
43111Where do you come from?
43111Where does he sleep? 43111 Where is Miss Dora?"
43111Where were you going now?
43111Where''s Em''ly?
43111Where''s mama, Master Davy?
43111Where''s there?
43111Where?
43111Which, of course, you have done?
43111Who are you to make yourself known?
43111Who dares malign him? 43111 Who do you think is going to be married to- morrow?
43111Who else could compare my brother''s baby with your boy? 43111 Who gave him that name, then?"
43111Who has ill- used him, you girl?
43111Who is it?
43111Who is?
43111Who talked about favorites?
43111Who''s he?
43111Who''s our friend in the tights?
43111Who, my life?
43111Who?
43111Whom are you talking to?
43111Why Rookery?
43111Why do n''t he go?
43111Why do you bring division between these two mad creatures?
43111Why do you bring this man here?
43111Why not, my love?
43111Why not?
43111Why should she be inclined to forgive him now?
43111Why should you be so uncomfortable?
43111Why should you?
43111Why should_ you_ be inconvenienced? 43111 Why so?"
43111Why so?
43111Why to London?
43111Why, Doady?
43111Why, has n''t he now?
43111Why, how do you come to be here?
43111Why, how should I ever spend it without you?
43111Why, what do you mean?
43111Why, what on earth does_ she_ do here?
43111Why, where does he go a begging?
43111Why-- I suppose you would like me as much then, Peggotty, as you do now?
43111Why?
43111Why?
43111Will you be improved?
43111Will you be silent? 43111 Will you call me a name I want you to call me?"
43111Will you come?
43111Will you hold your tongue, mother, and leave it to me?
43111Will you laugh at my cherishing such fancies, Agnes?
43111Will you not walk back with Trotwood and me?
43111Will you trust me?
43111Will you try to teach me, Doady?
43111Will you?
43111With Peggotty?
43111With him, aunt? 43111 With my school?"
43111With no one else?
43111Without a story-- really?
43111Wo n''t be smoothed down?
43111Wo n''t you?
43111Wot box?
43111Wot job?
43111Would n''t you like to step in,said Mr. Omer,"and speak to her?
43111Would you know how to buy it, my darling?
43111Would you let me fetch another pat of butter, ma''am?
43111Would you like to be taught Latin?
43111Would you love each other too much, without me?
43111Would you object to my mentioning it to him, sir?
43111Would you ride with me a little way to- morrow morning?
43111Would you?
43111Yes, Peggotty?
43111You an''t cross, I suppose, Peggotty, are you?
43111You are a precious set of people, ai n''t you?
43111You are a very handsome woman, an''t you?
43111You are going through, sir?
43111You are not angry, aunt, I trust? 43111 You are not going, papa?"
43111You are not gone mad, after all, Mr. Wickfield, I hope? 43111 You are not very intimate with Miss Murdstone, are you?"
43111You are quite changed?
43111You are quite happy yourself?
43111You are reading for the bar, Mr. Waterbrook informed me?
43111You are sure?
43111You are too young to have been at school with Mr. Henry Spiker?
43111You are very lonely when you go down stairs, now?
43111You bad man,returned my aunt, with great emotion;"how can you use me so?
43111You did at last?
43111You do n''t mean to say that there is any affinity between nautical matters and ecclesiastical matters?
43111You do n''t remember me?
43111You do n''t say so? 43111 You have been to school?"
43111You have heard of her, I dare say?
43111You have heard something, I des- say, of a change in my expectations, Master Copperfield,--I should say, Mister Copperfield?
43111You have just come back,said I,"and it would be in vain to ask you to go with me?"
43111You have mentioned this to Mr. Spenlow, I suppose?
43111You have much to do, dear Agnes?
43111You have n''t got a sister, have you?
43111You have no mother?
43111You have quite made up your mind,said I to Mr. Peggotty,"as to the future, good friend?
43111You know Charley?
43111You know this gentleman, I believe?
43111You know what I told you about time- servers and wealth- worshippers?
43111You know what_ I_ want?
43111You mean it is a little dry, perhaps?
43111You receive stolen goods, do you?
43111You remember my aunt, Peggotty?
43111You saw the boat completed?
43111You stay with us, Trotwood, while you remain in Canterbury?
43111You thought her looking very beautiful to- night, Master Copperfield?
43111You villain,said I,"what do you mean by entrapping me into your schemes?
43111You want to know what, Rosa?
43111You were brought up by an uncle, then?
43111You will wait and see papa,said Agnes, cheerfully,"and pass the day with us?
43111You wo n''t think what I am going to say, unreasonable, after what you told me, such a little while ago, of Mr. Wickfield''s not being well? 43111 You would like to be a lady?"
43111You would n''t relapse, if you were going out?
43111You''ll be glad to spend another shilling or so, in almond cakes, I dare say?
43111You''re quite a sailor, I suppose?
43111You''re the new boy?
43111You''ve come from The Willing Mind, Dan''l?
43111Your husband, aunt? 43111 _ David_ Copperfield?
43111_ Do_ you think them pretty?
43111_ Has_ he been hiding ever since?
43111_ I_ made you, Trotwood?
43111_ You_ have never been to school,I said,"have you?"
43111_ You_ love him? 43111 ''Begging pardon, sir,''said the Griffin to Charley,''it''s not-- not-- not ROUGE, is it?'' 43111 ''Mama,''said Annie, still crying,''would he be unhappy without me? 43111 ''Oh, what shall I do, what shall I do? 43111 ''The amiable old Proctor''--who''s he? 43111 ''What is that?'' 43111 ''What the unmentionable to ears polite, do you think I want with rouge?'' 43111 ( Are tears the dewdrops of the heart? 43111 ( Do we not remark this in moon likewise? 43111 ( Must not D. C. confide himself to the broad pinions of Time? 43111 --Would you like to hear it read?"
43111--thousand, do you mean?"
43111A glass of srub and water, now?
43111Accordingly, when I mentioned it, with the greatest precaution, to Mrs. Crewler--""The mamma?"
43111After another pause,"Was your mama well?"
43111After reflecting about it, with a sagacious air, Mr. Barkis eyed her, and said:"_ Are_ you pretty comfortable?"
43111Ah, Janet, how do you do?"
43111Ai n''t it lucky?"
43111Ai n''t that lucky?
43111Ai n''t we, father?"
43111All along you''ve thought me too umble now, I should n''t wonder?"
43111All day long, little Minnie has cried for her, and asked me, over and over again, whether Em''ly was wicked?
43111Am I a nasty, cruel, selfish, bad mama?
43111Am I in love again?
43111Am I pale?''
43111Am I wrong in saying, it is clear that we must live?"
43111Am I?"
43111An important public character arising in that hemisphere, shall I be told that its influence will not be felt at home?
43111An''t they?
43111And I could n''t bear to slight him, because he was a little altered-- could I, Jip?"
43111And are who what?"
43111And by the way,"I said aloud,"I suppose you never draw any skeletons now?"
43111And dear me, it''s a long time ago, now, an''t it?
43111And do you remember when I got caned for crying about Mr. Mell?
43111And he ever cared for her, she''d tell me?
43111And how have you been since?"
43111And is this,"she added, looking at her visitor with the proud intolerant air with which she had begun,"no injury?"
43111And not forget poor papa?"
43111And not silly?"
43111And now, what have you got to say next?"
43111And so soon?"
43111And take some of the old walks?
43111And that I thus became immeshed in the web he had spun for my reception?''"
43111And that fellow with her, eh?
43111And that''s all about it, is it?"
43111And the little girl I saw on that first day at Mr. Wickfield''s, where is she?
43111And the shadow I have mentioned, that was not to be between us any more, but was to rest wholly on my own heart?
43111And what''s going to be undertook for that unfortunate young woman, Martha, now?"
43111And when I wait upon''em, they''ll say to me sometimes--_with it on_--thick, and no mistake--''How am I looking, Mowcher?
43111And when you can do better, you will?
43111And when you used to tell the stories?
43111And where the deuce did you pick_ him_ up?"
43111And who minds Dick?
43111And why did n''t I go away, now, if I could n''t bear her?
43111And why does he give it you?
43111And you wo n''t mind things going a tiny morsel wrong, sometimes?"
43111And-- yes to be sure-- you recollect Mr. Jack Maldon, Copperfield?"
43111Any what?"
43111Are coals to be relied upon?
43111Are the young ladies and all the family quite well?"
43111Are they, though?"
43111Are you certain that you can afford to part with so much money, and that it is right it should be so expended?
43111Are you certain?"
43111Are you going away soon?"
43111Are you ill?"
43111Are you rewarded,_ now_, for your years of trouble?"
43111Are you sure it was me?"
43111Are you sure that it would not be better to try that course?
43111Are you sure you do n''t think, sometimes, it would have been better to have--""Done what, my dear?"
43111Are you?
43111Are you?"
43111As to his situation-- which was a precious one, was n''t it?--do you suppose I am not going to write home, and take care that he gets some money?
43111At all events would n''t it be well to try?"
43111At last she said, putting out her hand, and laying it affectionately on the hand of her old servant,"Peggotty, dear, you are not going to be married?"
43111Barkis?"
43111Barkis?"
43111Barkis?"
43111Barkis?"
43111Barkis?"
43111Barkis?"
43111Barkis?"
43111Barkis?"
43111Being my limbs, what does it signify?
43111Being together, shall we go out now, and try to find her to- night?"
43111Besides,"said Dora, putting back her hair, and looking wonderingly at my aunt and me,"why should n''t you both go?
43111Bewitching Mrs. Copperfield''s incumbrance?"
43111But Mrs. Crupp said, Do n''t say that; oysters was in, and why not them?
43111But Trotwood, come here,"getting me close to him, that he might whisper very softly;"why did she give him money, boy, in the moonlight?"
43111But has she any lover who is worthy of her?
43111But he checked me and said:"Should you like to stay with us, Trotwood, or to go elsewhere?"
43111But he repeated, sweetly:"Some local irritation, ma''am?"
43111But if they do_ not_ choose to place their money in Mr. Micawber''s hands-- which they don''t-- what is the use of that?
43111But is n''t it a little----Eh?--for him; I do n''t mean you?"
43111But we ca n''t expect a Dictionary-- especially when it''s making-- to interest Annie, can we?"
43111But what could I do?
43111But what is the latest news of him?"
43111But what need I know or care about this fellow, and his common niece?"
43111But what put marriage in your head?"
43111But who is this that breaks upon me?
43111But why do I ask?
43111But why not say so?
43111But you''ll bear in mind about the money, as theer''s at all times some laying by for him?"
43111But, as I fell asleep, I could not forget that she was still there looking,"Is it really, though?
43111But, my good young friend, what''s seventy pounds a- year?"
43111But_ I_ ca n''t go and say''how is he?''"
43111By- and- by he turned to Peggotty again, and repeating,"Are you pretty comfortable though?"
43111By- and- by, he said:"No sweethearts, I b''lieve?"
43111Ca n''t you see I am as umble as I can be?
43111Can I be so weak as to imagine that Mr. Micawber, wielding the rod of talent and of power in Australia, will be nothing in England?
43111Can I ever forget?"
43111Can I say of her innocent and girlish beauty, that it faded, and was no more, when its breath falls on my cheek now, as it fell that night?
43111Can this be Julia Mills?
43111Can you come directly?"
43111Can you hear?"
43111Can you think what it was?"
43111Cancel?"
43111Chillip?"
43111Chillip?"
43111Conscientious, is he?
43111Copperfield, my dear fellow, how do you do?"
43111Copperfield, will you go round to the Guildhall, and bring a couple of officers?"
43111Copperfield?"
43111Copperfield?"
43111Copperfield?"
43111Copperfield?"
43111Copperfield?"
43111Copperfield?"
43111Copperfield?"
43111Copperfield?"
43111Copperfield?"
43111Copperfull?"
43111Crupp?"
43111Crupp?"
43111Crupp?"
43111D''ye hear?
43111Dare I ask Mr. T. to endeavour to step in between Mr. Micawber and his agonised family?
43111Dare I fervently implore Mr. T. to see my misguided husband, and to reason with him?
43111Davy boy, how do you do?"
43111Davy dear, what should you think if I was to think of being married?"
43111Davy, my darling, are you listening?
43111Dear me, yes-- the party was a lady, I think?"
43111Did I mention the Reverend Horace?"
43111Did I press it in the least?
43111Did I tell you Littimer had come down?"
43111Did he say anything to you about King Charles the First, child?"
43111Did he sip every flower, and change every hour, until Polly his passion requited?--Is her name Polly?"
43111Did it bite, hey?
43111Did it bite?
43111Did you ever breed any Suffolk Punches yourself, sir?"
43111Did you ever see a crocodile overcome?"
43111Did you get that date out of history?"
43111Did you hear me tell you not to wait?"
43111Did you think whose it was?"
43111Do I know, now, that my child- wife will soon leave me?
43111Do n''t I know she would n''t?
43111Do n''t it make him, perhaps, a little more remiss than usual in his visits to his blindly doting-- eh?"
43111Do n''t you expose it to a good deal of excitement, sir?"
43111Do n''t you find it fatigue you?"
43111Do n''t you see a thinness in him?"
43111Do n''t you think he would rather have his favorite old pupil near him, than anybody else?"
43111Do n''t you think so?"
43111Do n''t you think that any secret course is an unworthy one?"
43111Do you approve of this?"
43111Do you attend the family?"
43111Do you call that confidence, my love, towards Doctor Strong?
43111Do you consider me so?"
43111Do you ever think of the home you have laid waste?"
43111Do you forgive me for all this?"
43111Do you hear me when I tell you that, my darling?
43111Do you hear me, you fairy spirit?
43111Do you hope to move_ me_ by your tears?
43111Do you imagine that I bestow a thought on it, or suppose you could do any harm to that low place, which money would not pay for, and handsomely?
43111Do you know what my great grandfather''s name was?"
43111Do you know what you have done?
43111Do you know?"
43111Do you observe?
43111Do you recollect him?"
43111Do you remember the nights in the bed- room?
43111Do you remember what Steerforth said to me about this unfortunate girl, that time when I saw you both at the inn?"
43111Do you remember-- hear what I say, with fortitude-- think of your great object!--do you remember Martha?"
43111Do you think that you could find her?
43111Do you understand?"
43111Do you wish to know what is known of her?"
43111Do you wish to say anything further to him?"
43111Do you?"
43111Do_ you_ know me?
43111Doen''t I want you more now, than ever I did?"
43111Does an individual place himself beyond the pale of those preferments by entering on such an office as Mr. Micawber has accepted?"
43111Does he think to reduce me by long absence?
43111Does he-- do they-- aunt?"
43111Dora would think a little, and then reply, perhaps, with great triumph:"Why, the butcher would know how to sell it, and what need_ I_ know?
43111Eh, Brooks?"
43111Eh, my pretty?"
43111Eh?"
43111Eh?"
43111Five hundred pounds?"
43111For a year or more I had endeavoured to find a satisfactory answer to her often- repeated question,"What I would like to be?"
43111From this employment she suddenly desisted, and said to Steerforth, much to my confusion:"Who''s your friend?"
43111Good gracious me,_ when_ did you come,_ where_ have you come from,_ what_ have you been doing?"
43111Gummidge?"
43111Gummidge?"
43111Gummidge?"
43111Had it a deep prong, hey?
43111Has any one?"
43111Has that fellow,"to the man with the wooden leg,"been here again?"
43111Have I been silent all these years, and shall I not speak now?
43111Have I never been married, Peggotty?"
43111Have you considered what it is to undermine the confidence that should subsist between my daughter and myself?
43111Have you honours?
43111Have you no choice?"
43111Have you observed any gradual alteration in Papa?"
43111Have you posts of profitable pecuniary emolument?
43111Have you riches?
43111Have you settled yet?"
43111Having got it, why do you give me the pain of looking at you for another moment, and seeing what you have become?"
43111He asked me what I would have for dinner?
43111He has known me in all that has happened to me, have n''t you, Jip?
43111He knew us directly; and said, as he came out-- with the old writhe,--"How do you do, Mr. Copperfield?
43111He looked at me sideways, and said with his hardest grin,"You mean mother?"
43111He must be very good, I should think?"
43111He now asked what Mr. Jack Maldon had actually written in reference to himself, and to whom he had written it?
43111He now said:"And so, Mr. Copperfield, you think of entering into our profession?
43111He remained for a little, biting the handkerchief, and then said to me with a scowl:"What more have you got to bring forward?
43111He replied, with a small pale smile,"Is she so, indeed, sir?
43111He said, what was it after all?
43111He shook his head when I asked him where he would seek her, and inquired if I were going to London to- morrow?
43111He stood moodily rattling the money, and shaking his head, until at length he said:"Is this all you mean to give me, then?"
43111He then showed me the cane, and asked me what I thought of_ that_, for a tooth?
43111He was to be another father to him, and they were all to live together in a garden of roses, were n''t they?
43111Heep?"
43111Heep?"
43111Here, another gentleman asked, with extreme anxiety:"Are you quite comfortable?"
43111Hey?
43111Hey?"
43111Hey?"
43111Hey?"
43111Hey?"
43111How am I ever to break it to him, Mas''r Davy?"
43111How are you both?"
43111How are you, my Bacchanal?"
43111How can Trot and I do best, upon our means?
43111How can you do it to me, boys?"
43111How can you make yourself so inferior to me, as to show such a bad spirit?
43111How can you reconcile it to your conscience, I wonder, to prejudice my own boy against me, or against anybody who is dear to me?
43111How could I, when, blended with it all, was her dear self, the better angel of my life?
43111How could I_ but_ believe him?
43111How d''ye do, Barkis?
43111How d''ye do, boy?"
43111How dare you appeal to me just now, you false rascal, as if we had been in discussion together?"
43111How dare you to insinuate that you do n''t know my character better than your words imply?"
43111How dare you trespass?
43111How dare you?"
43111How did that fall?
43111How do you do?
43111How do you find yourself, sir?"
43111How do you think my Ury looking, sir?"
43111How do_ you_ come to be here, Steerforth?"
43111How has it been since?"
43111How is he, sir?"
43111How is_ she_?"
43111How long could I bear it?
43111How long was I to bear this?
43111How was it, having so little in reality to conceal, that I always_ did_ feel as if this man were finding me out?
43111Hows''ever, at last I have made up my mind to speak plain; and I have mentioned to Doctor Strong that-- did you speak, sir?"
43111I am sure you''ll be a friend to him, Mas''r Davy?"
43111I asked Mr. Spenlow what he considered the best sort of professional business?
43111I asked Uriah if he had been with Mr. Wickfield long?
43111I asked her if that were not our destination?
43111I asked him how Ham was?
43111I asked him what he thought Ham''s state of mind was, in reference to the cause of their misfortunes?
43111I asked him where he meant to go?
43111I asked him whether he had reason, so far, to be satisfied with his friend Heep''s treatment of him?
43111I asked him, terror- stricken, leaning on the arm he held out to support me:"Has a body come ashore?"
43111I believe I''ve only had the honor of seeing you once myself?"
43111I did n''t know, and now I do know; and that shows the advantage of asking-- don''t it?"
43111I expressed my pleasure in the contemplation of it, and little Em''ly was emboldened to say, shyly,"Do n''t you think you are afraid of the sea, now?"
43111I groped my way to the door, and putting my own lips to the keyhole, whispered:"Is that you, Peggotty, dear?"
43111I have been thinking, do you know, Mr. Dick, that I might call him Trotwood?"
43111I hope I see you well, sir?"
43111I hope you''re well?"
43111I know you''ll excuse the precautions of affection, wo n''t you?
43111I laughingly asked my child- wife what her fancy was in desiring to be so called?
43111I may go so far?"
43111I merely say, with quite another view, you are probably aware I have some property to bequeath to my child?"
43111I missed it somehow in a bad apprenticeship, and now do n''t care about it.--You know I have bought a boat down here?"
43111I naturally inquired why he was not there too, instead of pacing the street by himself?
43111I remember one hot evening I went into the bar of a public- house, and said to the landlord:"What is your best-- your_ very best_--ale a glass?"
43111I returned,"I see you ask me not to speak of to- night-- but is there nothing to be done?"
43111I said to Miss Spenlow,''Dora, what is that the dog has in his mouth?
43111I said,"How do you do, Miss Murdstone?
43111I said,''Now, Annie, tell me the truth this moment; is your heart free?''
43111I saw her, distinctly, and the whole power of her face and character seemed forced into that expression.--Would he Never come?
43111I should say he was-- let me see-- how old are you, about?"
43111I sprung out of bed, and asked what wreck?
43111I started up in bed, and putting out my arms in the dark, said:"Is that you, Peggotty?"
43111I suppose Annie would only have to say to the old Doctor--""Meaning that Mrs. Strong would only have to say to her husband-- do I follow you?"
43111I suppose it is, Copperfield, because there''s no help for it?"
43111I suppose,"with a jerk,"you have sometimes plucked a pear before it was ripe, Master Copperfield?"
43111I thanked him and said, No; but would he take no dinner himself?
43111I think we had better leave him behind?"
43111I think you said sixteen hundred and forty- nine?"
43111I think, my dear Clara, even you must observe it?"
43111I thought that kind of life was on all hands understood to be-- eh?"
43111I told you I was going out of town?
43111I took her to the sign of the exquisite, and treated her with an elopement, her name''s Emily, and she lives in the east?
43111I trust I give no offence to the companion of my youth, in submitting this proposition to his cooler judgment?"
43111I was addressing myself as"Copperfield,"and saying,"Why did you try to smoke?
43111I was flushed by her summary of delights, and replied that it would indeed be a treat, but what would my mother say?
43111I wonder what''s become of her?"
43111I wonder where they_ do_ go, by- the- by?
43111I''ll try to be plainer, another time.--Is that Mr. Maldon a- norseback, ringing at the gate, sir?"
43111If I could n''t bear her, why did n''t I send her away to her aunts at Putney, or to Julia Mills in India?
43111If I do so, for the time, whose fault is that?
43111If I have gone a little beyond what you were prepared for, I can go back I suppose?
43111If I have said too much, or more than I meant, what of it?
43111If corn is not to be relied upon, what is?
43111If it had been my ears, what should I have done?
43111If it had been my eyes, what should I have done?
43111If people are so silly as to indulge the sentiment, is it my fault?
43111If she had never loved me, could I believe that she would love me now?
43111If she married and got rid of it, which was the best thing she could do, why do n''t you give her the benefit of the change?
43111If the public felt that their wills were in safe keeping, and took it for granted that the office was not to be made better, who was the worse for it?
43111If you can not confidently trust me, whom will you trust?"
43111If you decide to go, why should n''t you go in the same ship?
43111If you saw me looking out of an upper window, you''d think I was a fine woman, would n''t you?"
43111In the rouge way?"
43111Is Mr. Steerforth quite well?"
43111Is he dead?"
43111Is he in London?"
43111Is he ready to go?
43111Is his new wife young?"
43111Is it lonely down- stairs, Doady?"
43111Is it really, though?"
43111Is it there?"
43111Is it-- eh?--because he thinks you young and innocent?
43111Is my chair there?"
43111Is my master not here, sir?"
43111Is n''t that delightful?"
43111Is n''t this ungrateful of you, now?"
43111Is she very angry with me?"
43111Is that long enough?"
43111Is that the boat, where I see a light yonder?"
43111Is that_ your_ knowledge of life?
43111Is there anything else?"
43111Is this no injury?"
43111Is your profession really so engaging and interesting as to absorb your whole attention?
43111It is laborious, is it not?"
43111It mounted from her legs into her chest, and then into her head--""What mounted?"
43111It ought not to be, perhaps, but what can I do?
43111It was Mr. Murdstone''s hand, and he kept it on my arm as he said:"What''s this?
43111It was only whether people, who are like each other in their moral constitution-- is that the phrase?"
43111It''s very gratifying and agreeable to me, I am sure; but do n''t you think you could do better?
43111Jack?"
43111Jip can protect me a great deal better than Miss Murdstone,--can''t you, Jip dear?"
43111Less guarded and more trustful?
43111Let sleeping dogs lie-- who wants to rouse''em?
43111Maldon?"
43111Markleham?"
43111Master Micawber''s moroseness of aspect returned upon him again, and he demanded, with some temper, what he was to do?
43111May I go and tell him you are here?
43111May I hold the pens?"
43111May I mention something?"
43111May I speak out, among friends?
43111Micawber?"
43111Micawber?"
43111Micawber?"
43111Micawber?"
43111Micawber?"
43111Micawber?"
43111Micawber?"
43111Mine?"
43111Minnie, is she worth any six, now?"
43111Minnie, my dear, you recollect?
43111Miss Dartle was full of hints and mysterious questions, but took a great interest in all our proceedings there, and said,"Was it really, though?"
43111Miss Shepherd being the one pervading theme and vision of my life, how do I ever come to break with her?
43111Moan?
43111Moreover, he said, he wanted to hear her sing all the new singer''s songs to him; and how could she do that well, unless she went?
43111Mr. Barkis, we had some grave talks about that matter, had n''t we?"
43111Mr. Copperfield, ai n''t I volatile?"
43111Mr. Copperfield, ai n''t I volatile?"
43111Mr. Littimer bent his head, as much as to say,"Indeed, sir?
43111Mr. Peggotty is here; shall he come up?"
43111Mr. Spenlow inquired in what respect?
43111Mr. Traddles, I have your permission, I believe, to mention here that we have been in communication together?"
43111Murdstone?"
43111Murdstone?"
43111My dear boy, I hope you are not worn out?"
43111My dear kind Steerforth, how can I tell you what I think of your generosity?"
43111My dear, you''ll get a dinner to- day, for company; something good to eat and drink, will you?"
43111My eyes were dim, and so were Mr. Peggotty''s; but I repeated in a whisper,"With the tide?"
43111My friend Copperfield will perhaps do me the favor to check that total?"
43111My love, will you fetch the girls?"
43111My love, will you give me your opinion?"
43111My marriage?
43111My mind ran upon what they would think, if they knew of my familiar acquaintance with the King''s Bench Prison?
43111Need I say that this necessity had been foreseen by-- HEEP?
43111No mischief?"
43111No more than that was ever said against her, Minnie?"
43111Nobody?
43111Nonsense!--You mean to go to- morrow, I suppose?"
43111Not a wured to Mas''r Davy?"
43111Not an ill wind, I hope?"
43111Not paralysis, I hope?"
43111Now what are you going to do?
43111Now you''ll go, wo n''t you?
43111Now, here you see young David Copperfield, and the question I put to you is, what shall I do with him?"
43111Now, is it not unjust, and unlike you, to judge him from what you saw of me the other night?"
43111Now, is it?"
43111Now,_ are_ the circumstances of the country such, that a man of Mr. Micawber''s abilities would have a fair chance of rising in the social scale?
43111Of course, little Emily is not married yet?"
43111Of the Inner Temple, I believe?"
43111Oh!--Would you excuse me asking for a cup more coffee?"
43111Oh, my eyes and limbs, what do you want?
43111Oh, my lungs, and liver, what do you want?
43111Oh, she''s not dead, Peggotty?"
43111Oh, you naughty boy, fie for shame, what do you do so far away from home?
43111Oh, you''re a downy fellow, Steerforth, so you are, and I''m another, ai n''t I?
43111Old lady?"
43111Omer?"
43111On your word, now?"
43111Or have you not begun to think about it yet?"
43111Or nat''ral name?"
43111Or, having once a clue to hope, was there something opening to me that I had not dared to think of?
43111Ought to end,''and they lived happy ever afterwards;''ought n''t it?
43111Pay us, will you?
43111Pay us, will you?
43111Peggotty go away from you?
43111Peggotty?"
43111Peggotty?"
43111Peggotty?"
43111Peggotty?"
43111Peggotty?"
43111Peggotty?"
43111Peggotty?"
43111Peggotty?"
43111Peggotty?"
43111Perhaps you will sleep in your own room?
43111Polly?"
43111Really and truly pretty comfortable?
43111Really conscientious, now?"
43111Really conscientious?
43111Really?
43111Really?"
43111Say I am seventeen, and say that seventeen is young for the eldest Miss Larkins, what of that?
43111Say?
43111Says she, perhaps,''Answer to what?''
43111Says you-- what name is it?"
43111See it done?
43111Several gentlemen were much affected; and a third questioner, forcing himself to the front, inquired with extreme feeling:"How do you find the beef?"
43111Shall I?"
43111She had got a baby-- oh, there were a pair of babies when she gave birth to this child sitting here, that Friday night!--and what more did she want?"
43111She is at home?"
43111She kneeled down playfully by the side of the bed, and laying her chin upon her hands, and laughing, said:"What was it they said, Davy?
43111She now said very softly, in a trembling voice:"Mama, I hope you have finished?"
43111She sat sobbing and murmuring behind it, that, if I was uneasy, why had I ever been married?
43111She was in service there, sure?"
43111She whispered something, and asked was that enough?
43111So, put me down for whatever you may consider right, will you be so good?
43111Somebody incautiously asked, what from?
43111Something to drink?"
43111Sometimes, the speculation came into my thoughts, what might have happened, or what would have happened, if Dora and I had never known each other?
43111Stay with your uncle, Moppet?
43111Steerforth then said,"You are all right, Copperfield, are you not?"
43111Still in the wine trade?"
43111Suppose some of the boys had seen me coming through Canterbury, wayworn and ragged, and should find me out?
43111Suppose you were not satisfied with the Consistory, what did you do then?
43111Supposing nobody should ever fetch me, how long would they consent to keep me there?
43111Supposing there was no mistake in the case, and Mr. Murdstone had devised this plan to get rid of me, what should I do?
43111Take a seat.--Smoke not disagreeable, I hope?"
43111That mean, fawning fellow, worm himself into such promotion?"
43111That''s the best way, ai n''t it?"
43111The best school?
43111The fact is, when-- was it you that tumbled up stairs, Copperfield?"
43111The ladies are great observers, sir?"
43111The last you see on him-- the very last-- will you give him the lovingest duty and thanks of the orphan, as he was ever more than a father to?"
43111The little panelled room that opens from the drawing- room?"
43111The sound of her voice had not reached me, but he bent his head as if he listened to her, and then said:"Let you stay with your uncle?
43111The theatre?
43111Then he said, in a low voice:"Who''s the man?
43111Then she looked at me, and said:"Is that your boy, sister- in- law?"
43111Then, addressing me, she said, with enforced calmness:"My son is ill.""Very ill.""You have seen him?"
43111Then, it''s not so?
43111Then, turning affectionately to me, with her cheek against mine,"Am I a naughty mama to you, Davy?
43111There is an antipathy between us----""An old one, I believe?"
43111There was something positively awful to me in this, and in the brightness of her eyes, as she said, looking fixedly at me:"What is he doing?"
43111They grow out of our knowledge, ma''am?"
43111This man?"
43111Those were happy times, were n''t they?"
43111To my accepting the offer, and your going with me?"
43111To say"How do you do, Mr. Larkins?
43111To"form her mind?"
43111Traddles in our room at Salem House?"
43111Traddles?"
43111Uriah?
43111Very decided character there, sir?"
43111Was I making any observation?"
43111Was it a double tooth, hey?
43111Was it a selfish error that was leading me away?
43111Was it a sharp tooth, hey?
43111Was it you, sir?"
43111Was there anything like-- what we are going through to- day, for instance?"
43111We had walked but a little way together, when he said, without looking at me:"Mas''r Davy, have you seen her?"
43111We mean to bestow our confidence where we like, and to find out our own friends, instead of having them found out for us-- don''t we, Jip?"
43111We walked a little farther, and he said:"Mas''r Davy, shall you see her, d''ye think?"
43111We wo n''t be confidential, and we''ll make ourselves as happy as we can in spite of her, and we''ll teaze her, and not please her,--won''t we, Jip?"
43111Were they not?"
43111Were you?"
43111What a refreshing set of humbugs we are, to be sure, ai n''t we, my sweet child?"
43111What about the letter you were speaking of at breakfast?"
43111What am I to do, I ask you?
43111What am I to do?
43111What am I to say, in- doors?
43111What answer do you make?"
43111What are you thinking of, Trot?"
43111What business had she to do it?"
43111What can I do?
43111What did Em''ly do?"
43111What did he die of?"
43111What did you do then?
43111What do I mean by my look?"
43111What do you ask me to do?"
43111What do you call your girl?"
43111What do you look at me for?"
43111What do you mean by it, Peggotty?"
43111What do you say to that writing, Copperfield?"
43111What do you say, Agnes?"
43111What do you say?"
43111What do you think of it?"
43111What do you want of me?
43111What does this portend?
43111What else do I remember?
43111What else do you ever do?"
43111What faces are the most distinct to me in the fleeting crowd?
43111What have I to do, to free myself for ever of your visits, but to abandon you to your deserts?"
43111What have the people been about, who have been the busiest in getting money, and in getting power, this century or two?
43111What he supposed, for example, Ham would do, if he and Steerforth ever should encounter?
43111What is it?
43111What is that upon your face?"
43111What is that?"
43111What is the matter, gentlemen?
43111What is the matter?"
43111What is there that any woman could n''t do, that she should n''t do-- especially on the subject of another woman''s good looks?"
43111What is your love to mine?
43111What is your secret, Agnes?"
43111What is your separation to ours?"
43111What is_ not_ the matter?
43111What message should she take up stairs?
43111What more can a man expect?
43111What other changes have come upon me, besides the changes in my growth and looks, and in the knowledge I have garnered all this while?
43111What should it be?
43111What was the Arches?
43111What would you have, sir?"
43111What''s his number?
43111What''s that game at forfeits?
43111What''s this?"
43111What''s your motive in this?"
43111What''s your name now,--P?"
43111What, Em''ly?
43111What?
43111What?
43111Whatever the motive, you want the best?"
43111When I can run about again as I used to do, Doady, let us go and see those places where we were such a silly couple, shall we?
43111When I got nigh the place as I had been told of, I began to think within my own self,''What shall I do when I see her?''"
43111When I saw you, for the first time, coming out at the door, with your quaint little basket of keys hanging at your side?"
43111When we are at home here, of an evening, and shut the outer door, and draw those curtains-- which she made-- where could we be more snug?
43111When we used to have the suppers?
43111When you became engaged to the young lady whom you have just mentioned, did you make a regular proposal to her family?
43111When your husband that''ll be so soon, is here fur to take you home?
43111Where does that responsibility rest?
43111Where have you been?"
43111Where''s mama?"
43111Where, in the name of wonder, should his sister, Betsey Trotwood, have run from, or to?"
43111Whether I should be taken into custody, and sent to prison?
43111Whether I was at all in danger of being hanged?
43111Whether he believed it was dangerous?
43111Whether he could come out by force at the opera, and succeed by violence?
43111Whether he could do anything, without being brought up to something?
43111Whether he could go into the next street, and open a chemist''s shop?
43111Whether he could rush to the next assizes, and proclaim himself a lawyer?
43111Whether he had been born a carpenter, or a coach painter, any more than he had been born a bird?
43111Whether it was a criminal act that I had committed?
43111While I was yet in the full enjoyment of it, the old woman of the house said to the Master:"Have you got your flute with you?"
43111Who forces it upon him?"
43111Who has made the least allusion to gold watches?"
43111Who has succeeded to Miss Larkins, Trotwood?"
43111Who is he?"
43111Who is this young butcher?
43111Who knows it better than I?
43111Who knows when we may meet again, else?
43111Who was the better for it?
43111Who were the Delegates?
43111Why did n''t you say, you hard- hearted thing, that you were convinced I was worse than a transported page?
43111Why did n''t you tell me your opinion of me before we were married?
43111Why do I do myself the injustice of calling myself a girl?
43111Why do I secretly give Miss Shepherd twelve Brazil nuts for a present, I wonder?
43111Why do n''t you make him speak?
43111Why do n''t you?"
43111Why had n''t I said, even the day before we went to church, that I knew I should be uneasy, and I would rather not?
43111Why has n''t she come out to the gate, and what have we come in here for?
43111Why has_ she_ done nothing to set things right?"
43111Why on monument?
43111Why should I dread your doing your worst to all about you?
43111Why should he go to India, except to harass me?
43111Why should it be made a longer one than is needful?"
43111Why should n''t you be in all the world''s power, Mr. Wickfield?
43111Why, what''s put that in your silly little head?"
43111Wickfield?"
43111Wickfield?"
43111Will anybody be so good as find a ribbon; a cherry- colored ribbon?"
43111Will he now allow me to throw myself on his friendly consideration?
43111Will you come and see me to- day, at any time you like to appoint?
43111Will you come up and see him, my dear?"
43111Will you give me your opinion of it?"
43111Will you grant me time-- any length of time?
43111Will you have it now?"
43111Will you mind it, if I say something very, very silly?--more than usual?"
43111Will you promise me one thing, Peggotty?
43111Will you remember that?"
43111Will you take something?
43111Will you walk in, sir?"
43111Will you, if you please, Peggotty?"
43111Will you?"
43111Wo n''t umbleness go down?
43111Wo n''t you speak to Master Davy?"
43111Would I come and look at it?
43111Would he never come?
43111Would he never, never come?
43111Would it, indeed, have been better if we had loved each other as a boy and girl, and forgotten it?
43111Would n''t that make a difference, Copperfield?
43111Would n''t you go a day''s journey, if you were in my place?"
43111Would n''t_ that_ be a treat?"
43111Would they keep me long enough to spend seven shillings?
43111Would you be so good as look arter her, Mawther, for a minute?"
43111Would you be so good as tell us?
43111Would you be so kind as see how''tis?"
43111Would you believe he tried to do without me-- in the Life- Guards, too?"
43111Would you walk into the shop, Master Copperfield?"
43111Would you wish me to shave my head and black my face, or disfigure myself with a burn, or a scald, or something of that sort?
43111Yes or no, sir?
43111You and me know what we know, do n''t we?
43111You are going to a Cathedral town?"
43111You are going to see your nurse, I suppose?"
43111You are married, sir, I am told?"
43111You are not ashamed of the face that has done so much?"
43111You are playing Booty with my clerk, are you, Copperfield?
43111You call_ that_ something to lend?"
43111You did n''t exactly understand me, though?"
43111You do n''t mean chimneys?"
43111You do n''t mistrust me?"
43111You do n''t suppose, I hope, that you are the only plain dealer in the world?"
43111You do n''t think at all of what I shall do, in return; or of getting yourself into trouble for conspiracy and so forth?
43111You have chambers?"
43111You have done your duty?"
43111You have forgot that, I have no doubt, Master Copperfield?"
43111You have heard something, I des- say, of a change in my expectations, Master Copperfield,--_I_ should say, Mister Copperfield?"
43111You have no family, sir?"
43111You just pay us, d''ye hear?
43111You know how ignorant I am, and that I only ask for information, but is n''t it always so?
43111You know your aunt?"
43111You never do anything at all to please me, do you, dear?"
43111You recollect my mentioning Sarah, as the one that has something the matter with her spine?"
43111You remember, when you came down to me in our little room-- pointing upward, Agnes?"
43111You remember?
43111You told me so, Copperfield?"
43111You want to keep the keys yourself, and give out all the things, I suppose?
43111You were always a puppy with a proud stomach, from your first coming here; and you envy me my rise, do you?
43111You were an orphan, were n''t you?"
43111You will never sacrifice yourself to a mistaken sense of duty, Agnes?"
43111You will not think the worse of my umbleness, if I make a little confidence to you, Master Copperfield?
43111You wo n''t be quite at the other end of the world, will you?"
43111You wo n''t mind?"
43111You''d have betted a hundred pound to five, now, that you would n''t have seen me here, would n''t you?
43111You''d like to know whether I stop her hair from falling off, or dye it, or touch up her complexion, or improve her eyebrows, would n''t you?
43111You''ll be worthy of her, wo n''t you?"
43111You''re a going to bolt, are you?
43111You''ve not been intimate with Mr. Wickfield, I think, Mr. Traddles?
43111Your letter is like you, and what could I say of it that would be higher praise than that?
43111_ I_ do n''t love you at all, do I?"
43111_ Is_ there anybody?"
43111_ That_ would prevent it?
43111_ You?_"she cried, with her clenched hand, quivering as if it only wanted a weapon to stab the object of her wrath.
43111and that''s a reason why you want relief and change-- excitement, and all that?"
43111are you a perfect fool?"
43111are you ill?"
43111begin to break her, like a poor caged bird, and wear her deluded life away, in teaching her to sing_ your_ notes?"
43111cried I,"did n''t I say that there was not a joy, or sorrow, or any emotion of such honest hearts that was indifferent to you?"
43111cried Mr. Micawber, running into the room;"what is the matter?"
43111do with him?"
43111he retorted,"will you keep quiet?
43111he then cried, peeping hideously out of the shop, after a long pause,"will you go for twopence more?"
43111inquired my aunt, with uncommon composure,"or pounds?"
43111my dear Daisy-- will you mind my calling you Daisy?"
43111or should I brile a rasher?
43111really?
43111repeated my aunt,"What do you mean?
43111returned my aunt, alarmed;"or go to sea?
43111returned the other fiercely;"what is there in common between_ us_, do you think?"
43111said Dora,"or that the weather has really changed?"
43111said I, after glancing up and down the empty street, without distinctly knowing what I expected to see besides;"how do you come here?
43111said Mr. Micawber,"and all the circle at Canterbury?"
43111said Mr. Omer,"how do you find yourself?
43111said Steerforth, laughing still more heartily;"why should I trouble myself, that a parcel of heavy- headed fellows may gape and hold up their hands?
43111said Traddles, considering about it,"do I strike you in that way, Copperfield?
43111said he--"bag with a good deal of room in it-- is gruffish, and comes down upon you, sharp?"
43111said my aunt, peering through the dusk,"who''s this you''re bringing home?"
43111said my aunt, sternly,"what''s he about?
43111said my mother;"where?"
43111says Dora,"and sure you do n''t repent?"
43111then, this is_ not_ my natural manner?"
43111wo n''t you speak to me?"
43111you recollect my skirmishes with Rosa, do you?"
43111you think she would n''t have run away?"
43111you were at it by candle- light last night, when I was at the club, then?