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 |
---|---|
37891 | Again, if the book was ever written, what became of it? |
37891 | Was there an outbreak of some disease which obtained that name so late as 1720, or was the volume meant for a record of what had gone before? |
37891 | When the pastors are such, what must the people be?" |
27712 | About me, Lucy? |
27712 | After years, Sir Harry? |
27712 | And Emily? |
27712 | And a spendthrift? |
27712 | And about your debts? 27712 And am I to be as false as hell also? |
27712 | And clever? 27712 And for your means? |
27712 | And he need n''t give the girl the property? |
27712 | And he need n''t give you the girl? |
27712 | And how do you mean to pay it? |
27712 | And if so, what then? 27712 And in what am I not nice? |
27712 | And may I hope? 27712 And now what is it?" |
27712 | And should you wonder that Papa should be afraid to trust his only child and all his property to one who,--who knows that he has been reckless? 27712 And then she shall be mine?" |
27712 | And well enough is good enough for you;--is it? 27712 And what am I here?" |
27712 | And what am I to do? |
27712 | And what have you to recommend you to a father for such permission? 27712 And what next?" |
27712 | And who is the lady? |
27712 | And why is it so? 27712 And will not that be the same? |
27712 | And yet you would marry her? |
27712 | And you cheated? |
27712 | And you? |
27712 | And yourself? |
27712 | Another turn? 27712 Are these people in London bothering you?" |
27712 | Are you not changed? 27712 Better than her father''s money?" |
27712 | But Emily--"Well, Papa? |
27712 | But does it signify? |
27712 | But if it should appear that he had done things,--the wickedest things in the world? |
27712 | But if there is nothing good? |
27712 | But the house? |
27712 | But there is not an acre of it will come to you unless he gives it you? |
27712 | But why should that keep us apart, Emily? 27712 But why? |
27712 | But you do, Mamma? |
27712 | But you know it; do n''t you? |
27712 | But, Lucy,--about the family? |
27712 | But, Mamma,said Emily, before she left her mother,"do you not know that you love him yourself?" |
27712 | But, Papa--"Is not that enough? |
27712 | Can they put you in prison, or anything of that kind? |
27712 | Come with the Altringhams, have you? 27712 Dearest, dearest,"he said,"may I believe that you love me?" |
27712 | Did I, my dear? |
27712 | Do you love her? |
27712 | Do you really take me for such as that, Emily? |
27712 | Do you suppose that I want to win money of you? |
27712 | Do? 27712 Does he know that I am here?" |
27712 | Does she think about her cousin at all? |
27712 | Emily,he said to her at last,"why is it that you are so changed to me?" |
27712 | For how long, Papa? |
27712 | Frank, did n''t you see George Hotspur with the Altringhams at Goodwood, last July? |
27712 | George, you will come and see me? |
27712 | George,she said, one day to him,"what do you mean to do?" |
27712 | Had he said anything that meant anything, she would have told you? |
27712 | Has it been your practice, sir, when gambling, to pay back money that you have won? 27712 Has my darling been to me as she used to be?" |
27712 | He has gambled? |
27712 | He has said nothing to her? |
27712 | Hope!--for whom? |
27712 | How are you, old fellow? 27712 How can it be helped?" |
27712 | How d''ye do, Captain Stubber? |
27712 | How is Sir Harry? |
27712 | How not like them? |
27712 | How to do, Sir Harry? |
27712 | How will it help you then? |
27712 | How will you show yourself willing to reform it? |
27712 | I could n''t have known that, Lucy; could I? |
27712 | I suppose it is true? |
27712 | I want to know, Mamma,said Emily Hotspur, the day before the ball,"whether Cousin George is a black sheep or a white sheep?" |
27712 | If I''m to be made to go abroad, what the devil are you to do? |
27712 | If he was so bad, why did he come here? |
27712 | If he were a murderer? |
27712 | In what way, dearest? 27712 In what way?" |
27712 | Is Sir Harry in the house? |
27712 | Is he so very bad? |
27712 | Is he? |
27712 | Is it a good house? |
27712 | Is it a large place? |
27712 | Is she handsome? |
27712 | Is she pleased that he is coming? |
27712 | Is that all the answer, Miss Hotspur? |
27712 | Is that much? 27712 It is all gone?" |
27712 | It is n''t gentlemanlike, is it? 27712 It was very bad, vasn''t it, Captain''Oshspur, having to divide with that fellow Stubber the money from the''Orse Guards? |
27712 | It will be most unnatural, will it not? 27712 Know what, sir?" |
27712 | Large? 27712 Mamma,"said Emily, on the following day,"wo n''t Lord Alfred be very dull?" |
27712 | Mamma,she said,"has Papa gone up to town about Cousin George?" |
27712 | Morton is dead? |
27712 | Must it not be right, then, to make him fit for it when it comes? 27712 Must this be for always?" |
27712 | My darling, will it not be better that we should meet the blow? |
27712 | No; I ai n''t such a fool as I looks, Captain Oshspur, am I? 27712 No; your cruelties do n''t lie in that line; do they, George?" |
27712 | Nor correspond with him? |
27712 | Nor see him? |
27712 | Not give me one kiss? |
27712 | Not go to Goodwood? |
27712 | Not till then? |
27712 | Nothing more than that? |
27712 | Of course we will remain; why not? |
27712 | Papa has been so good; is n''t he good? |
27712 | Papa,she said to him the following morning,"may I come to you?" |
27712 | Shall I not say a word of adieu to Lady Elizabeth? |
27712 | She has the carriage? |
27712 | She is not pretty, then,--this rich bride of yours? |
27712 | Should we hate him because he has been unsteady? 27712 Sir Harry,"he whispered,"could you give me a minute or two before we go to bed?" |
27712 | Something pleasant, is it? |
27712 | That would be impossible, would it not? 27712 The chaffing is all to be on one side, is it, George? |
27712 | Then there can be no hope for Emily? |
27712 | Then what business have you to speak to my daughter? |
27712 | Then why do you go to them? |
27712 | They meant nothing; did they? 27712 To Scarrowby?" |
27712 | To see Cousin George? |
27712 | Understand what, my dear? |
27712 | Vat did you do with poor Valker''s moneys? 27712 Vat von''t do? |
27712 | We could n''t do with the £500 a year, I suppose, any how? |
27712 | Well, George,she said,"how does your wooing thrive?" |
27712 | Well, Mamma, why should n''t he? 27712 Well, Sir Harry?" |
27712 | Were you at Goodwood last meeting? |
27712 | What are you willing to do? |
27712 | What business is that of yours? |
27712 | What can I say, Sir Harry? |
27712 | What could I do when Mrs. Fitzpatrick asked to be taken? 27712 What do people in society always have to say to each other? |
27712 | What do you mean by this, dear? |
27712 | What do you mean, my dear, by asking such a question as that? |
27712 | What does my cousin say? |
27712 | What does some day mean, Emily? |
27712 | What else can I do? |
27712 | What else should I mean? |
27712 | What good will that do you? |
27712 | What have I done that I should be punished in this way? |
27712 | What have you done with that five thousand pounds? |
27712 | What is Mr. Boltby to me? |
27712 | What is a fellow to do? |
27712 | What is he to do, with nobody else here to amuse him? |
27712 | What is it? |
27712 | What is the meaning of that? 27712 What is the one thing?" |
27712 | What more is there to say? 27712 What ought a fellow to do?" |
27712 | What right had you, sir, to speak to her without coming to me first? |
27712 | What should I say? 27712 What thing, dearest?" |
27712 | What things, Sir Harry? |
27712 | What will Lord Alfred have to say to Mrs. Crutchley, mamma? |
27712 | What will you say to him? |
27712 | What would people say? |
27712 | What''s a fellow to do? 27712 What''s the use of it, Papa?" |
27712 | What, Sir Harry? |
27712 | When is it to be? |
27712 | When is what to be? |
27712 | When shall it begin? |
27712 | Who asks you to be afraid? |
27712 | Who says it was card- sharping? |
27712 | Why did he tell you that he was not at those races, when he was there as surely as you are here? 27712 Why did you not postpone the party till George was gone?" |
27712 | Why do n''t you shoot her? |
27712 | Why do you speak in that way, Mamma? 27712 Why is he so changed? |
27712 | Why not ask? 27712 Why not, Sir Harry?" |
27712 | Why should he not come, Mamma? |
27712 | Why should n''t Papa pay his debts? |
27712 | Why should not he? 27712 Why?" |
27712 | Will there be any good in all that? |
27712 | Will you copy it now, George? |
27712 | Will you give up London? |
27712 | Will you remember what we were saying the other day;--what I said? |
27712 | With all your heart? |
27712 | Would you tell him the truth? 27712 Yes, Mr.''Oshspur, it''s about time something was done now; ai n''t it?" |
27712 | Yes, indeed; is n''t it? |
27712 | Yes; will you leave London? 27712 You did n''t tell him anything?" |
27712 | You go down next month, I believe? |
27712 | You mean that I do n''t like to break a woman''s heart? |
27712 | You think, then, there can be no hope? |
27712 | You will be true to me, even though he should refuse his consent? |
27712 | You will know what I mean? |
27712 | You will let me speak now; will you not, Papa? 27712 A male sheep with a fleece as white as that of a ewe- lamb,--is he not considered to be, among muttons, somewhat insipid? 27712 And had he not already told himself that it was a game that he should never have attempted to play? 27712 And if I see my vay to my money one vay, and if I do n''t see no vay the other vay, vy, vhat''s a man to do? 27712 And must he admit to himself, finally, that it was altogether beyond his power to win his cousin''s hand? 27712 And then had not the man himself all natural good gifts to recommend him? 27712 And then why should he do that which his friend had indicated to him, before he knew whether it would be necessary? 27712 And what is this? 27712 And what would Emily think of him? 27712 And what''s up now? |
27712 | And when she had loved him, was it not right that she should cling to her love? |
27712 | And why should n''t Papa let him have the property; I mean, leave it to him instead of to me?" |
27712 | And yet, need it be said that this reprobate was beyond the reach of all forgiveness? |
27712 | Are we not always hearing tales about everybody?" |
27712 | At any rate the thing was done, and why should any man be thrown over simply because the world called him bad? |
27712 | At what hour shall he come?" |
27712 | Because he loves you?" |
27712 | Boltby?" |
27712 | Boltby?" |
27712 | But as to those other reasons, must not her father and her mother know better than she could know? |
27712 | But can you wonder that Papa should wish for some delay and some proof?" |
27712 | But if he was, who should try to save him from worthlessness if not his nearest relatives? |
27712 | But if you can show, for a year or two, that you can give up all that--""Would n''t it be all given up if we were married?" |
27712 | But might he not say a word to Emily? |
27712 | But of a liar, a swindler, one mean as well as vicious, what hope could there be? |
27712 | But so it is; and why should n''t George be allowed to take his place? |
27712 | But what business had the man to write letters to him with the object of getting him into trouble? |
27712 | But what did the carriage or no carriage on Wednesday signify? |
27712 | But what if he were? |
27712 | Can you love me?" |
27712 | Could any duty which he owed to the world be so high or so holy as that which was due from him to his child? |
27712 | Could he look as that other one looked? |
27712 | Could he speak as that other man spoke? |
27712 | Could he, after writing such a letter, at once go to the lawyer and accept the offer? |
27712 | Could it be possible that he should"pull through"after all? |
27712 | Could she believe it of him after knowing him so well; could she think that there was so much of good in him? |
27712 | Could the event"come off"? |
27712 | Did he know what delirium tremens was? |
27712 | Did he want to go to the devil altogether? |
27712 | Did n''t you promise her that you would n''t?" |
27712 | Did not the lesson of every hour seem to tell him that, throughout his long life, he had thought too much of his house and his name? |
27712 | Did she not pine over his guilt, and weep for it day and night, and pray that he might yet be made white as snow? |
27712 | Did we not?" |
27712 | Did you ever see Scarrowby?" |
27712 | Do n''t you feel that with all these princes and potentates you are forced to be something else than your natural self? |
27712 | Do n''t you feel yourself that you are lifted a little off your legs?" |
27712 | Do n''t you go to races?" |
27712 | Do n''t you know that you have to put on a special manner, and to talk in a special way? |
27712 | Do n''t you know they are right? |
27712 | Do n''t you know what depends on it?" |
27712 | Do you know that Sir Harry did me the honour of visiting me?" |
27712 | Do you love her, George?" |
27712 | Do you not know that everything about the house is changed?" |
27712 | Do you see that mare, there?" |
27712 | Do you suppose that the happiness of such an one as she can be trusted to such keeping as yours without a trial of you? |
27712 | Do you think he would live here quietly?" |
27712 | Do you think that I have never to go for hours on the stage, with the gas in a blaze around me, and my head ready to split? |
27712 | Do you think that I would not abandon any consideration as to wealth or family for your happiness? |
27712 | Do you think that you are no more to me than the acres, or the house, or the empty title? |
27712 | Does he talk like a man that is false? |
27712 | Does not the champagne fly to your head, more or less?" |
27712 | Emily?" |
27712 | For how long would it be?" |
27712 | Had Mr. Boltby also been with Captain Stubber? |
27712 | Had he any hope as to his future life? |
27712 | Had he not told Mr. Boltby that he had changed his mind; and what business had the lawyer to interfere with him further? |
27712 | Had it not been for her sake? |
27712 | Had not everything been said already? |
27712 | Had not men before him done as bad, and yet were brought back within the pale of decent life? |
27712 | Had she not once told her mother that should it turn out that he had been a murderer, then she would become a murderer''s wife? |
27712 | Hart?" |
27712 | Has he offered you money?" |
27712 | Has she been allowed to receive the letter which I left for her yesterday?" |
27712 | Has the lady turned against you?" |
27712 | Have you ever known him to be false? |
27712 | Have you not a right to have him here if you wish it? |
27712 | He paused a moment, and then he asked her one other question:"Would you write the letter for me, Lucy?" |
27712 | How can I better show him how willing I am to give it up than by marrying and settling down at once? |
27712 | How can I tell? |
27712 | How can you say that of any one? |
27712 | How could I believe anything that you would say to me,--anything that you would write?" |
27712 | How could he avoid the discord, and bring back the warmth of the sun into his house? |
27712 | How could the one man speak such truths, or the other man listen to them? |
27712 | How do things go with the heiress?" |
27712 | How do you get on with your cousin?" |
27712 | How do you mean? |
27712 | How had it been that such a one as he had won so great a creature? |
27712 | How it happened that in the course of the afternoon George and Emily were there again, and were there unattended, who can tell? |
27712 | How ought I to answer you? |
27712 | How should he discharge this fresh responsibility which now rested on him? |
27712 | How was a man so weighted to run for such stakes as those he was striving to carry off? |
27712 | How was he to live decently without an income? |
27712 | How would it suit him? |
27712 | I do n''t see what''s to be got by waiting?" |
27712 | I suppose it will be off; eh, George?" |
27712 | I will not excuse his life, Papa; but have there not been temptations,--such great temptations? |
27712 | I wish that it were not so; but why should that keep us apart?" |
27712 | I wonder who would stand it, if an attorney were set to work to make all manner of inquiries about everything that he had ever done?" |
27712 | If it be not so, what is all this doctrine of repentance in which we believe? |
27712 | If she were willing to risk herself, why should others interfere? |
27712 | If we do not trust each other, who can trust any one?" |
27712 | If you think races are bad, why do n''t you stay away of your own accord?" |
27712 | In the first place, whose eyes are good enough to know whether in truth a sheep be black or not? |
27712 | In vat vay did you get those moneys from poor Mr. Valker? |
27712 | In what moments had he actually enjoyed them? |
27712 | In what way could he make love to her better than by refraining from his evil ways for the sake of pleasing her? |
27712 | Indeed, was not everything shipwreck around him? |
27712 | Is it not better that you and he should know the truth? |
27712 | Is it not by that compelled rendering up of the heart which men call love? |
27712 | Is it not true? |
27712 | Is n''t''No account''very bad on a cheque, Captain''Oshspur? |
27712 | Is not that so? |
27712 | Is not that true, George?" |
27712 | Is she like him?" |
27712 | Is that fair? |
27712 | Is that it?" |
27712 | It is the duty of some one to reclaim an evident prodigal; and why should it not be her duty to reclaim this prodigal? |
27712 | Look here, George;--you have nothing of your own?" |
27712 | Love her? |
27712 | Make up your mind to this, that you''ll ask Miss Hotspur to be your wife before you leave-- what''s the name of the place?" |
27712 | Might he venture to think once again of Cousin George? |
27712 | Might it not be best that he should let matters arrange themselves? |
27712 | Might not a letter to Mr. Hart, with perhaps a word of truth in it, do some good? |
27712 | Morton?" |
27712 | Of course you will come?" |
27712 | Of what service would his child be to him or he to her, if he were doomed to see her pining from day to day with an unpermitted love? |
27712 | Only why in June? |
27712 | Ought we not to try to reclaim him? |
27712 | Sell his Emily for money? |
27712 | Shall I destroy the letters?" |
27712 | She had accepted his guilt, and why tell her of it any further? |
27712 | She was to be their future lady; but was it not all important that their future lord should be a Hotspur? |
27712 | Should I not speak the truth at once?" |
27712 | Should we not do all that we could in the world to bring him back? |
27712 | That is what you mean; eh, George?" |
27712 | There were books in the room,--hundreds of them; but in such circumstances who could read? |
27712 | Vere is the moneys?" |
27712 | Was Sir Harry at home? |
27712 | Was he not going to pieces on the rocks? |
27712 | Was it not all trouble and disgrace? |
27712 | Was it not cruel that a fellow would not give him so trifling an assistance when he wanted it so badly? |
27712 | Was it not natural that, when a man so endowed had come in her way, she should learn to love him? |
27712 | Was it possible? |
27712 | Was not this man the heir to her father''s title; and was he not the owner of her own heart? |
27712 | Was not this sort of giving acknowledged by all churches in which the words for"better or for worse"were uttered as part of the marriage vow? |
27712 | Was there no hope of that life at Humblethwaite which, when contemplated at a distance, had seemed to him to be so green and pleasant? |
27712 | What are we to do?" |
27712 | What can have brought him, my dear?" |
27712 | What did they think of her when imagining that she would take a husband not of her own choosing? |
27712 | What difference would it have made? |
27712 | What else was he to do? |
27712 | What had been his positive delights? |
27712 | What is a vow but a promise? |
27712 | What is it ails you? |
27712 | What is it that you wish me to do?" |
27712 | What is the use of waiting? |
27712 | What must be their idea of love, and of marriage duty, and of that close intercourse of man and wife? |
27712 | What price would be too high to pay for the extrication of his daughter from so grievous a misfortune? |
27712 | What right have you, who have not a shilling in the world, to speak to my daughter? |
27712 | What should she now do with herself,--how bear herself at this present moment of her life? |
27712 | What was I to do?" |
27712 | What was he to do? |
27712 | What was the title to him now, or even the name? |
27712 | What was to be the meaning of it, and what the result? |
27712 | What''s the meaning of that?" |
27712 | When is it to be?" |
27712 | When she found that the man was made welcome both in town and country, was it not natural that she should suppose that there were no stronger reasons? |
27712 | Where could the poor fellow be on the Sunday? |
27712 | Who did care for him? |
27712 | Who was she that she should claim for herself the right of having a man that was not bad? |
27712 | Who was so clever? |
27712 | Who would help him in his distress? |
27712 | Why is he to pay your debts? |
27712 | Why not? |
27712 | Why should I?" |
27712 | Why should he not live at Scarrowby, and manage the property there? |
27712 | Why should he? |
27712 | Why should there not be hope? |
27712 | Why should you part with her?" |
27712 | Why was he allowed to come here,--the head of our own family,--if he be so bad as this? |
27712 | Why was she, because she was a girl and an heiress, to be debarred from her own happiness? |
27712 | Why, Mamma, what is all religion but the washing of black sheep white; making the black a little less black, scraping a spot white here and there?" |
27712 | Will it be too much to say, that they had formed a part of her breeding, and had been given to her with her blood? |
27712 | Will it help her to be able to put Lady Hotspur on the bills? |
27712 | Will it not be her money? |
27712 | Will you be able to take me in on the 2nd September? |
27712 | Will you go and live at Scarrowby, and learn to look after the farm and the place?" |
27712 | Will you love me better when I have consented to be untrue? |
27712 | Will you not try to help him?" |
27712 | Would Mr. Boltby have the goodness to make out a schedule of the debts? |
27712 | Would he be justified,--justified in any degree,--in subjecting his child to danger in the hope that his name and family pride might be maintained? |
27712 | Would he not willingly reform? |
27712 | Would it not be to paint the snow white to caution her as to her conduct? |
27712 | Would not I do the same if she were my girl, knowing you as I do?" |
27712 | Would there be in his eye such a depth of colour, in his voice such a sound of music, in his gait so divine a grace? |
27712 | Would you wish me not to be altered after what has passed? |
27712 | You do n''t like dictating to, do n''t you? |
27712 | You have not accepted it?" |
27712 | You know I am to come to Humblethwaite again?" |
27712 | You know that my daughter is my heiress?" |
27712 | You vas too clever for both of us there, Mr.''Oshspur; veren''t you now, Captain''Oshspur? |
27712 | You will agree to that, Papa?" |
27712 | You will promise me?" |
27712 | and by what process are such vows and promises made fitting between a man and a woman? |
27712 | who so bright? |
27712 | who so handsome, so full of poetry and of manly grace? |
27712 | with us?" |
31274 | About his son? |
31274 | About money? |
31274 | Am I to believe it all,--as that man says? |
31274 | Am I to take my things? |
31274 | And I am not to come back again? |
31274 | And I may ask Sir William? |
31274 | And he does this without condition? 31274 And he meant nothing more than that,--simply to be your brother?" |
31274 | And if I did not like her, Aunt Lovel? |
31274 | And if he took the empty hand what should I do? |
31274 | And is he to be alone,--with Lady Anna, up- stairs? |
31274 | And is it a reason that must last for ever? |
31274 | And it is not honourable that she should be seen speaking-- to a tailor? |
31274 | And it is still true? |
31274 | And it was true? |
31274 | And must it not be lust of wealth? 31274 And must you keep your oath?" |
31274 | And now, mamma, what will you do? |
31274 | And now, sir, what would you have me do? |
31274 | And shall it be so? |
31274 | And then? |
31274 | And what about our friend, the Countess? |
31274 | And what am I to be? |
31274 | And what did he say, mamma? |
31274 | And what said you to that? |
31274 | And what shall I do? |
31274 | And where has it gone? |
31274 | And where is Anna? |
31274 | And who told Lord Lovel? |
31274 | And why do n''t you, dear, do exactly what he tells you? |
31274 | And why should I ask even for the half if nothing belongs to me? |
31274 | And why should you not love him well enough to make him your husband? |
31274 | And yet you told me that there was no one else when I spoke to you of Lord Lovel? 31274 And yet you wo n''t be his wife?" |
31274 | And yet,said he in his thoughts,"is it not fit that I should know myself to be better than he is? |
31274 | And you have given your word to that man? |
31274 | And you wish to be his wife? |
31274 | Anna, will you do one thing for me? 31274 Anna,--have not you been unkind to me?" |
31274 | Answer me, Anna;--will you say that you will receive Lord Lovel as your accepted lover? 31274 Are the horses to be kept there?" |
31274 | Are those Lady Anna''s instructions? |
31274 | Are you here, Daniel, at this hour? |
31274 | Are you hurt? |
31274 | Are you the Lady Anna? |
31274 | Are you, my sweetheart? 31274 As how?" |
31274 | At our marriage? 31274 Aunt Jane?" |
31274 | Be we to let him in, my lady? 31274 Be we to let him in, my lady?" |
31274 | Because I wo n''t marry my cousin? |
31274 | But I suppose I may ask how you intend to live? |
31274 | But I would not like all the good people to be my cousins;--would you, papa? 31274 But he said that he was not?" |
31274 | But if the other Italian woman who died was the wife? |
31274 | But if the scheme be not wicked? 31274 But what do you say?" |
31274 | But where will you live? |
31274 | But where? |
31274 | But why should she take the half if the whole belongs to her? |
31274 | But you are Lady Anna,--arn''t you? |
31274 | But you have told me so,--more than once; eh, sweetheart? |
31274 | But you still think that she is the heiress? |
31274 | But you will not stay here? |
31274 | But, Anna, why do you tell me this now? |
31274 | Can not I say it? |
31274 | Can not you call me by my name? 31274 Can you say that they have not?" |
31274 | Could n''t you manage that she should let me go there just once? |
31274 | Could we buy the tailor, Sir William? |
31274 | Could you not be more generous even than that? |
31274 | Did Frederic like it? |
31274 | Did he leave a will? |
31274 | Did he say that too? |
31274 | Did not the lady of the Strachy marry the yeoman of the wardrobe? |
31274 | Did she say so? |
31274 | Did you like him? |
31274 | Did you-- strike him? |
31274 | Did you? |
31274 | Do n''t you know that everybody is wicked, because Eve ate the apple? |
31274 | Do n''t you think it wrong yourself? |
31274 | Do you believe me? |
31274 | Do you call it childish? |
31274 | Do you contradict me? 31274 Do you know why? |
31274 | Do you love him still? |
31274 | Do you love me, Anna? |
31274 | Do you mean me to understand that she is engaged to the Earl? |
31274 | Do you mean that you will force your way up to her? 31274 Do you mean to say that he advanced £9,000 in hard cash?" |
31274 | Do you mean to say that she has been taken away from this? |
31274 | Do you mean to say that you have renewed your engagement to that low- born wretch? |
31274 | Do you not think it will be an excellent arrangement? |
31274 | Do you object to let me know? |
31274 | Do you really like me? |
31274 | Do you still think the girl will marry the Earl? |
31274 | Do you understand that? |
31274 | Do? 31274 Does mamma mean to say that I am never to live with her any more?" |
31274 | Does that matter much to you, Lady Anna? |
31274 | Does your mamma know it? |
31274 | Does your mamma want to have you back? |
31274 | Does your uncle know? |
31274 | Engaged to the tailor,--is she? |
31274 | Enough to be my wife? |
31274 | Frederic, what ails her? |
31274 | Gone, mamma? 31274 Has he said that I struck him?" |
31274 | Has it been His doing, sir,--or the devil''s? |
31274 | Has the consent of Lady Anna been asked? |
31274 | Have I asked for freedom? |
31274 | Have I said that it was, my friend? 31274 Have not generosity and valour always prevailed over wealth and rank with ladies in story?" |
31274 | Have they said so, father? |
31274 | Have you anything to say, sweetheart? |
31274 | Have you given him any reason, Anna? |
31274 | Have you made none to her daughter? |
31274 | Have you not got beyond that with her yet? |
31274 | Have you not? |
31274 | Have you promised another man? |
31274 | Have you quarrelled with him? |
31274 | Have you said so to Frederic? |
31274 | He kissed me, saying that cousins might kiss? |
31274 | How am I to answer that? |
31274 | How can I call her Lady Anna before I have made up my mind to think that she is Lady Anna? |
31274 | How can I not be severe? |
31274 | How can I tell? 31274 How can the girl marry any one, Mr. Flick,--if she''s going to die?" |
31274 | How could you be so foolish, Frederic, as to let her jump it? |
31274 | How do you know that they will withdraw? 31274 How is dear mamma?" |
31274 | How more generous, Serjeant Bluestone? |
31274 | How often has my child lain in your arms when she was a baby, and been quieter there than she would be even in her mother''s? |
31274 | How often have I eaten and drank at your table, when no other table was spread for me? |
31274 | How should I take it? 31274 How should I talk of my future life, my dear? |
31274 | How was it, Daniel? 31274 I might now be as idle as the young Earl,"he said to himself;"but were I to attempt it, what should I do with myself? |
31274 | I suppose she might be asked to the rectory? |
31274 | I suppose the young man has gone, my lady? |
31274 | I suppose, Frederic, that the marriage is not to be? |
31274 | I suppose, Mr. Thwaite, you are not indifferent to her money? |
31274 | If I praise my horse or my dog, do I say that they are of the same nature as myself? |
31274 | If he had been good to you, and you had loved him always, and he had been your best friend,--what would you do then? |
31274 | If it be not so,said the young lord thumping the table,"where have I got the money from?" |
31274 | If she does like this young lord the best, why should n''t she tell the man the truth? |
31274 | If you are true to me,--as I am to you, with all my heart,--will you not tell me so? |
31274 | Impossible!--why impossible? 31274 In Bedford Square?" |
31274 | In my presence? |
31274 | In what way, my dear? |
31274 | Is Lady Anna Lovel the legitimate daughter of the late Earl? |
31274 | Is Lady Anna up? |
31274 | Is anything the matter, my lady? |
31274 | Is anything the matter? |
31274 | Is everybody belonging to you to be ruined because you once spoke a foolish word? |
31274 | Is he handsome? |
31274 | Is he hurt? |
31274 | Is it for that, that I have been fighting? |
31274 | Is it true that you have promised that you would be the wife of Mr. Daniel Thwaite? |
31274 | Is it true? 31274 Is it what I said to you last night?" |
31274 | Is it wrong, mamma? |
31274 | Is not that enough? |
31274 | Is not that true? |
31274 | Is she a lady,--or anything like a lady? |
31274 | Is she a prisoner? |
31274 | Is she better now? |
31274 | Is she much hurt? |
31274 | Is she wicked? |
31274 | Is that all? |
31274 | Is that all? |
31274 | Is that it? |
31274 | Is the hot- house plant stronger or better, or of higher use, than the ear of corn? |
31274 | Is there anything the matter? |
31274 | Is this Wyndham Street? |
31274 | It can not now;--or do you mean the word to be for ever? |
31274 | It will be well for her,--will it not,--to be the wife of her cousin? |
31274 | It''s all very well talking of waiting, but how am I to live? |
31274 | Lady Anna, where have you been? |
31274 | Lady Anna? |
31274 | Lord Lovel? |
31274 | Lord Lovel? |
31274 | Mamma, mamma; is anything the matter? 31274 Mamma,"Lady Anna said, as soon as the maid had left the room,"has old Mr. Thwaite been here?" |
31274 | Mamma,said Lady Anna;"will Lord Lovel be here to- day?" |
31274 | Mamma,she said one day,"wo n''t you sit by me?" |
31274 | May I ask my aunts? |
31274 | May I go to him, mamma, to see him? |
31274 | Must I beg to him then? 31274 Must it be so, so soon?" |
31274 | My dear Lady Anna,said the Serjeant,"may I ask you to sit down for a moment or two while I speak to you? |
31274 | My pretty child,he said,"why should I do that?" |
31274 | No, mamma; why should I? |
31274 | No, mamma;--why should I? |
31274 | Nor yet see anything? |
31274 | Not much among lawyers, is it, Mr. Flick? 31274 Not though you know the reasons which induce me to take her away from England before she slips entirely out of my hands and ruins all our hopes?" |
31274 | Now I may go, Sir William? |
31274 | Of what are you sure? |
31274 | Oh yes,--how should one not like him? |
31274 | Oh, Daniel;--are you ill? |
31274 | Oh, mamma;--how could you do it? |
31274 | Oh, mamma;--if I forgive you, will you not be friends with us? |
31274 | Oh, mamma;--is that you? |
31274 | Perhaps you will not tell your son of this,--yet? |
31274 | Shall I go with you, Anna? |
31274 | Shall I go, mamma? |
31274 | Shall I help you, my dear? |
31274 | Shall it be so? |
31274 | Shall we attempt to get her up to the road, Minnie, or wait till Mr. Cross comes to help us? |
31274 | She has applied to you? |
31274 | So it is done? |
31274 | Tell her,said the Countess,"tell her--; but, of what use to tell her anything? |
31274 | Tell me, Anna--; or shall I say Lady Anna? |
31274 | Tell me, Daniel;--what is it, Daniel? |
31274 | The Countess has been complaining of me then? |
31274 | Then there has been a slip? 31274 Then there is nothing to be done?" |
31274 | Then what would her engagement be if now made with the Earl? 31274 Then why do you harass me by saying it?" |
31274 | Then why the mischief wo n''t she have him? |
31274 | Then you know Mrs. Grimes already? |
31274 | Then you lied to me? |
31274 | Then, sir, you do not believe in vows of love? |
31274 | Then, what more can you want? |
31274 | There are horrible penalties for anybody who calls me lord in this house;--are there not, Aunt Jane? 31274 They have not told you, then?" |
31274 | Thinking as I do,continued Sir William,--"with a natural bias towards my own client,--what will a jury think, who will have no such bias? |
31274 | Unless you did, how on earth could he wear such grand gowns as that? 31274 Was my father like that?" |
31274 | Was that all? |
31274 | We start soon, I suppose? |
31274 | Well;--what of it? 31274 What condition, mamma?" |
31274 | What condition? |
31274 | What do you mean to do now, Frederic? |
31274 | What do you mean, father? |
31274 | What do you mean, mamma? |
31274 | What does Sir William say? |
31274 | What does it matter, Lady Lovel? 31274 What does mamma mean to do?" |
31274 | What does she want to have done? |
31274 | What else can they do? 31274 What good can it do, Frederic?" |
31274 | What has she said? |
31274 | What is that to me? 31274 What makes you say so, Anna?" |
31274 | What makes you think so? |
31274 | What name does she propose to bear? 31274 What reason, dear?" |
31274 | What shall I tell her? |
31274 | What should we have done without him? |
31274 | What sort of a trip have you had? |
31274 | What story, Daniel? |
31274 | What to say,--Anna? |
31274 | What was it? |
31274 | What will mamma say? |
31274 | What will you have? |
31274 | What would come of it? |
31274 | What;--because she has said this in her sickness,--when she is half delirious,--while she is dreaming of the words that man spoke to her? 31274 Where does she mean to go? |
31274 | Where has he gone? |
31274 | Where have you been? |
31274 | Where is cousin Anna? |
31274 | Where is it that you are going to live? |
31274 | Where is she then? |
31274 | Where must I wait? |
31274 | Where should it go? 31274 Who bade him?" |
31274 | Who can say, my lord? 31274 Who could be empowered to sacrifice her rights?" |
31274 | Who else should have it? |
31274 | Who has driven me to it? 31274 Who is he, Lady Anna?" |
31274 | Who is he, Lady Anna? |
31274 | Who says so? |
31274 | Whose blood shall be shed? |
31274 | Why are you all alone, Fred? |
31274 | Why can I never marry her? 31274 Why did he come? |
31274 | Why did the Earl always say that the Italian woman was his wife? |
31274 | Why does n''t she give it to him? |
31274 | Why have things been said then? |
31274 | Why impossible, my dear;--what do you mean by impossible? |
31274 | Why is it too late? |
31274 | Why may n''t I come? |
31274 | Why not he, as well as you? 31274 Why not talked about? |
31274 | Why not, my dear? |
31274 | Why not, uncle Charles? |
31274 | Why not? 31274 Why not?" |
31274 | Why now? |
31274 | Why should I not dare? 31274 Why should any one despise you?" |
31274 | Why should she not be pleased? 31274 Why should the children of lords be such to the tenth and twentieth generation?" |
31274 | Why should we not give it up to her at once? |
31274 | Why that? 31274 Why, dear?" |
31274 | Why, mamma? 31274 Why?" |
31274 | Will it not be well that we should be friends? |
31274 | Will it not break her heart? 31274 Will nothing turn you from it?" |
31274 | Will that be regular, Sir William? |
31274 | Will you allow me to continue my statement? 31274 Will you do this, dearest;--will you take one week to consider and then write to me? |
31274 | Will you let me speak to him for a minute? |
31274 | Will you not kiss me, mamma, before you go? |
31274 | Will you not say as much as that for me? 31274 Will you not spare me?" |
31274 | With the Lovels,--in Yorkshire? |
31274 | Would it not be better that she should die? |
31274 | Would you have been angry with me? |
31274 | Would you have the heart to disappoint me, now that the victory is won;--now that it may be made our own by your help? 31274 Would you like to go to Yoxham?" |
31274 | Would you, sir, have done so? |
31274 | Would you,--if you had promised another man? |
31274 | Wrong in preferring those who work for their bread to those who eat it in idleness? |
31274 | Yes, dear;--I am ill;--not very ill. Did you hear nothing? |
31274 | You believe that Anna Murray is the real heir? |
31274 | You believe that she will be so easily pleased? |
31274 | You can not tell whether or no he has asked you to be his wife? |
31274 | You do n''t mean that you want us to have Mr. Thwaite here? |
31274 | You do n''t mean to say you doubt? |
31274 | You feel quite sure, Sir William? |
31274 | You give up the girl, then? |
31274 | You have heard of your cousin,--the young Earl? |
31274 | You have heard, I suppose, that the trial has been decided in your favour? |
31274 | You have told-- Daniel? |
31274 | You liked her;--did you not? |
31274 | You mean about Lady Anna? |
31274 | You mean, Mr. Goffe, that Lady Anna has given her cousin half her money? |
31274 | You really think so, Frederic? |
31274 | You say you like him? |
31274 | You think that a wicked scheme like this can succeed before an English judge? |
31274 | You think then it is that which I have wanted? |
31274 | You think then that I should give her up entirely? |
31274 | You think, then, that nothing should be done? |
31274 | You will not even allow her six months to think of it? |
31274 | You will not go? |
31274 | You will not help me then? |
31274 | You will send for me if you are ill, Daniel? |
31274 | You would n''t mind having her here? |
31274 | Your foot is quite well? |
31274 | A girl must cotton to somebody, and who was there? |
31274 | After a year or two he might have looked elsewhere,--but what was he to do in the meantime? |
31274 | After all, is it come to this?" |
31274 | After what fashion should they be prepared to live? |
31274 | And for what? |
31274 | And how can you have been so unwise as to offer it after I have told you that she shall be free,--if she chooses to be free? |
31274 | And how do you and Minnie get on? |
31274 | And how will he maintain it? |
31274 | And how would it be with him if hereafter men said of him that he held her to an oath extracted from her in her childhood because of her wealth? |
31274 | And how would the meeting be arranged? |
31274 | And if she loved him, as she had sworn that she did, why should he be false to her? |
31274 | And now what could her mother mean? |
31274 | And then she herself;--how would it be with her? |
31274 | And then would you throw away from you in some childish phantasy all that I have been struggling to win for you during my whole life? |
31274 | And then, Lord Lovel, what knew I of rank, living under his father''s wing? |
31274 | And this son is the man who claims to be affianced to the Lady Anna?" |
31274 | And what espousals could be so auspicious as these? |
31274 | And what is it that I am asking you to do? |
31274 | And what must he be when he comes to me again after that?" |
31274 | And what should he do when he got to the new country? |
31274 | And what should we have gained had we done so? |
31274 | And what will you do, my lord? |
31274 | And why had they not so prevailed? |
31274 | And why should he not tell,--he who was her enemy? |
31274 | And why should he think that she was weaker, vainer, less noble than himself? |
31274 | And yet how could he claim that of which he had said, now a score of times, that he knew that it was not his own? |
31274 | And yet who was I that I should think that you would suffer so much for me? |
31274 | Are they fit associates for such as you and me?" |
31274 | Are you so poor a creature?" |
31274 | Are you tired?" |
31274 | As a boy, what could I believe but what I was told? |
31274 | As it was, would it not be necessary that she should be handed over to the law, and dealt with for the offence? |
31274 | Aunt Jane,--couldn''t we go for one night to Bolton Abbey?" |
31274 | Because he helped me some steps on earth, is he to imprison me afterwards in hell? |
31274 | But could she be sure of nothing beyond that? |
31274 | But how could he not tell? |
31274 | But how should he see Lady Anna? |
31274 | But how then would it be with this man who had driven her, by his subtle courage and persistent audacity, to utter destruction? |
31274 | But how was the first suggestion to be made? |
31274 | But how would it be with Lady Anna? |
31274 | But if it were not so, what had the girl meant by saying that it was impossible? |
31274 | But if not,--if he would not take it, or if, as might still be possible, the tailor''s place could not be made vacant for him,--what then? |
31274 | But if so--""Well, Lord Lovel;--if so?" |
31274 | But if the cousins were willing to accept her husband, why should he not be willing to be accepted? |
31274 | But in what manner would he accost her? |
31274 | But in what respect would the triumph be sweet to her? |
31274 | But of what good is my love to me, if she disgraces me? |
31274 | But she''ll exult at such an end to all her troubles;--and what maid would not? |
31274 | But then if she has no right to any of it, what does it amount to?" |
31274 | But what can I say? |
31274 | But what else could a girl say at a first meeting with a proposed lover? |
31274 | But what is there that a counsel will not do for a client? |
31274 | But what mattered it to him whether she were at Yoxham or in Keppel Street? |
31274 | But what should she do? |
31274 | But what should she do? |
31274 | But what should she do? |
31274 | But what was it expedient that she should do? |
31274 | But who should propose it, and how should it be proposed? |
31274 | But who would share her home with her, and where should she find her friends? |
31274 | But you lived near it;--did you not?" |
31274 | But, uncle, would you oblige me by not speaking of it just at present? |
31274 | Can it be real love,--to which there has been no forerunning acquaintance?" |
31274 | Can it be that his mind in this matter is not sordid and dishonest? |
31274 | Can you be bound by any promise to so great a crime as that would be? |
31274 | Could he accept a heart that had once been promised to a tailor''s workman? |
31274 | Could he be justified in flattering himself that she had hitherto resisted temptation because in her heart of hearts she was true to her first love? |
31274 | Could he have expected better things from a declared Countess? |
31274 | Could he take to his heart one who had been pressed close in so vile a grasp? |
31274 | Could it be that her mother had struck him in her anger with some chance weapon that had come to hand? |
31274 | Could n''t you ask Serjeant Bluestone whether something could n''t be done to divide the money, so that there might be no more law? |
31274 | Could nothing be done? |
31274 | Could steps be taken by which it might be settled at once? |
31274 | Could the doctor take a message from him to Lady Anna;--but one word? |
31274 | Could there be anything due to them from him? |
31274 | Could you call on me to- morrow at eight o''clock in the evening,--here? |
31274 | Did I not know him before you were born? |
31274 | Did anybody know her? |
31274 | Did he come as a friend?" |
31274 | Did he expect to better himself? |
31274 | Did he not come to you with that object?" |
31274 | Did it not behove him as a man to find his way into the girl''s presence and to assist her with his courage? |
31274 | Did not Minnie go with you?" |
31274 | Did not all the world know that these impostors were impostors? |
31274 | Did she like the place? |
31274 | Did the poet think that there was any reason why, in such circumstances, a tailor should not marry the daughter of a Countess? |
31274 | Did you ever know any other woman to give away ten thousand a- year to a fellow simply because he was her cousin? |
31274 | Did you not say so, mamma?" |
31274 | Do brothers marry sisters; and had not this man already told her that he wished to make her his wife? |
31274 | Do brothers marry their sisters? |
31274 | Do n''t you think she is very,--very nice?" |
31274 | Do not I bear all? |
31274 | Do you care about visiting the poor?" |
31274 | Do you hear me?" |
31274 | Do you know the Duke?" |
31274 | Do you mean to come down to Yoxham this winter?" |
31274 | Do you mean to say that you will abandon her?" |
31274 | Do you not know that all this means that he is to win you to be his wife? |
31274 | Do you remember the young man who comes to Hotspur on the battlefield, or him whom the king sent to Hamlet about the wager? |
31274 | Do you suppose I would not stick to my brief if I did not feel sure that it is so?" |
31274 | Do you suppose that my name will be allowed to me if you should refuse your cousin''s suit? |
31274 | Do you tell me that she has been removed?" |
31274 | Do you think I''d ask you if I was n''t sure?" |
31274 | Do you think it possible that the Countess should be otherwise than outraged at the proposition you have made to her?" |
31274 | Do you think it pretty about here?" |
31274 | Do you think that I had learned then to love my rank?" |
31274 | Do you think that I will live to see my daughter the wife of a foul, sweltering tailor? |
31274 | Do you think that I will stop at anything now;--after having done so much? |
31274 | Do you think that it is you that he cares for? |
31274 | Do you think that your joy can consist in calling that man your husband?" |
31274 | Do you understand me?" |
31274 | Do you understand?" |
31274 | Do you wish for any change,--as regards me?" |
31274 | Does he not wish it?" |
31274 | Does it seem natural to you? |
31274 | Does the Duke let people come here always?" |
31274 | Flick?" |
31274 | For what have I done it all, if this is to be the end of it?" |
31274 | For what should I live? |
31274 | For what was the money wanted but that the Lovels might be great and noble and splendid? |
31274 | For whose sake could it be wished that a life so degraded should be prolonged? |
31274 | From what you know of me, do you think that my spirit could stoop so low? |
31274 | Goffe?" |
31274 | HAVE THEY SURRENDERED? |
31274 | HAVE THEY SURRENDERED? |
31274 | Had anybody seen her? |
31274 | Had he not evidence to show him that she was strong enough to resist a temptation to which he had never been subjected? |
31274 | Had misery so great as this overtaken her after all? |
31274 | Had not the old Earl been acquitted of the charge of bigamy, when the unfortunate woman had done her best to free herself from her position? |
31274 | Had not they all sworn anything that was wanted, and were they not to be paid? |
31274 | Had she already married this tailor, how would it have been with him then? |
31274 | Had she been happy at Yoxham? |
31274 | Had she caught him at advantage, would she not have smote him, hip and thigh? |
31274 | Had she not loved as a mother, and with all a mother''s tenderness? |
31274 | Has she not told you so? |
31274 | Has the Earl agreed to it?" |
31274 | Have I not known him all through? |
31274 | Have not I borne everything-- contumely, solitude, ill words, poverty, and now this girl''s unkindness? |
31274 | Have you asked nothing of her?" |
31274 | Have you ever thought of what my life has been, Anna?" |
31274 | Have you ever thought, Anna, that it would be good for you to be married?" |
31274 | Have you no more strength than that? |
31274 | Have you thought ill of me because I have not been here to welcome you sooner?" |
31274 | He has not offended you?" |
31274 | He hasn''t-- wronged her, I suppose?" |
31274 | He loved the girl, and was he making her miserable by his love? |
31274 | How can I help it? |
31274 | How can I love him when I never saw him?" |
31274 | How can I offer it now?" |
31274 | How can he love me when he never saw me? |
31274 | How could I despise him because he was a tailor? |
31274 | How could it be brought to pass that the acknowledged daughter of an Earl, dowered with enormous wealth, should become the wife of a tailor? |
31274 | How could it be possible that you should doubt it after twenty years of a mother''s care? |
31274 | How could there be splendour, how even decency, in such a marriage as this? |
31274 | How did Mr. Goffe know? |
31274 | How should I make the hours pass by?" |
31274 | How should he renew it again in the presence of Serjeant and Mrs. Bluestone and of Sir William and Lady Patterson? |
31274 | How too late? |
31274 | How would it be with her, and him too, if, in after life, she should rebuke him because he had not allowed her to be the wife of a nobleman? |
31274 | How would you feel if it were like that with you?" |
31274 | If Daniel is so poor a creature because he is a tailor,--must not I be poor who love him? |
31274 | If I could believe in your love after two days, Lord Lovel, could I not trust his after twenty years of friendship?" |
31274 | If I have no self- confidence, how can I be bold to persevere? |
31274 | If I never speak to you of Lord Lovel again, will you forget Daniel Thwaite?" |
31274 | If Lord Lovel wishes to marry her, why does n''t he do so? |
31274 | If he thinks you fit, and you can like him,--as you say you do,--what more can be wanted? |
31274 | If he will promise me that it shall go no farther,--then may I tell him? |
31274 | If in Parliament, would you not wish to be heard there? |
31274 | If it was, as he was told, that his beloved was dying, might he be allowed to stand once at her bedside and kiss her hand? |
31274 | If mayor, would you not wish to be its representative in Parliament? |
31274 | If she came forward afterwards, on her own behalf, where would you all be then?" |
31274 | If she loves me, should I leave her to think, as time goes on, that I have forgotten her? |
31274 | If she were a countess why had she thrown herself into the arms of an old tailor? |
31274 | If they are cousins,--distant cousins,--why should they not marry and be happy, one bringing the title, and the other the wealth? |
31274 | If they would put out their hands to him, why should he refuse to put out his own? |
31274 | If we had gone on quarrelling and going to law, where should I have been now? |
31274 | If you found it sad, what must it have been to me? |
31274 | If you had broken your leg, how would you have borne it?" |
31274 | If you had once given your word to another man, would you go back because a lord asked you?" |
31274 | If you were a master tradesman, would you not wish to lead and guide your brother tradesmen? |
31274 | If you were an alderman in your borough, would you not wish to be the mayor? |
31274 | In charity and loving kindness, would the doctor tell him of the state of his beloved one? |
31274 | In her present condition, how could she have any happy love? |
31274 | Is he to have all, because he gave some aid? |
31274 | Is he to take from me my heart''s blood, because he bound up my arm when it was bruised? |
31274 | Is it because we are strangers to each other? |
31274 | Is it much that ails him?" |
31274 | Is it not clear as noon- day? |
31274 | Is it not so?" |
31274 | Is it not so?" |
31274 | Is it nothing to you that the chiefs of your own family who shall come after you shall be able to hold their heads up among other British peers? |
31274 | Is it thus that men love?" |
31274 | Is it true that Earl Lovel was with you the other day?" |
31274 | Is n''t cousin Anna to be your wife?" |
31274 | Is n''t she his cousin, mamma? |
31274 | Is n''t that pretty?" |
31274 | Is not everything at stake,--everything for which my life has been devoted?" |
31274 | Is that all, Lord Lovel?" |
31274 | Is that true?" |
31274 | Is that true?" |
31274 | Is there no reason why she should have treated you thus? |
31274 | Is this true?" |
31274 | Is your duty to him higher than your duty to me? |
31274 | It is something from him?" |
31274 | It is your home; and as I must go soon, had I not better go at once?" |
31274 | It would not make you unhappy to think that you were going to be the wife of a man you could love?" |
31274 | May I be a bridesmaid when you are married?" |
31274 | May I tell him what you told me yesterday?" |
31274 | May n''t I go back again?" |
31274 | Might he accept it? |
31274 | Might it not be best for her happiness that he should do so? |
31274 | Might she be permitted to do so? |
31274 | Might there not be a safe solution from further difficulty in that way? |
31274 | Might they not climb up among those woods on the opposite bank? |
31274 | Must I ask him to save me from the wrath to come? |
31274 | Must I have a pink silk gown to walk about in, early in the morning?" |
31274 | Must I kneel to him? |
31274 | Of course I should like to do what mamma wants; but how would you feel if you had promised somebody else? |
31274 | Of what avail to me will have been his goodness, if he is to rob me of the very treasure which his goodness helped to save? |
31274 | Of what good will her life be to herself, or to any one else, if she pollute herself and her family by this marriage? |
31274 | Of what nature should the marriage be? |
31274 | Of what use is it to grovel there, while your spirit is in rebellion? |
31274 | Of what use would it be to abase herself? |
31274 | Oh, Daniel, you will tell me everything?" |
31274 | Oh, mamma, why have you not let me come to you? |
31274 | Or how would it be with him if he should be minded to go east instead of west? |
31274 | Perhaps he will let me live at Lovel Grange?" |
31274 | Shall I cross it on your bankers? |
31274 | Shall I kneel to you?" |
31274 | She did not interfere when you told her that you were coming to me? |
31274 | She had sworn to him, as he had sworn to her, and was he not bound to believe her oath? |
31274 | She loves the young Earl,--as why should she not? |
31274 | She wo n''t live always in Keppel Street?" |
31274 | Should she be false to all her vows, and try whether happiness might not be gained in that way? |
31274 | Should she institute a prosecution against him for bigamy, thereby acknowledging that she was herself no wife and that her child was illegitimate? |
31274 | Should she make this letter an excuse for going to the house in Bedford Square, and of seeing her child, towards whom her very bowels were yearning? |
31274 | Should she rush after him, and try what she could do with that other bullet? |
31274 | Should there be any festival? |
31274 | Should there be bridesmaids? |
31274 | Supposing at the last moment Lady Anna were to decline the alliance, would they withdraw then? |
31274 | That he was at liberty to say that she had rejected his offer must be a matter of course; but might he go beyond that, and tell them the whole story? |
31274 | That is easy to say; but how shall he know what is the best?" |
31274 | The boys, I suppose, teased you out of your life?" |
31274 | Then aunt Julia, in the cause of wisdom, asked a question;--"Where is Minnie? |
31274 | There is no reason, I suppose, why you should not meet him? |
31274 | There is nothing else, dearest?" |
31274 | There might be a contest, but had not she ever been contesting? |
31274 | There might be sorrow, but had not she sorrowed? |
31274 | There might be suffering, but had not she suffered? |
31274 | Thwaite?" |
31274 | Thwaite?" |
31274 | Thwaite?" |
31274 | Thwaite?" |
31274 | Thwaite?" |
31274 | Thwaite?" |
31274 | Thwaite?" |
31274 | Thwaite?" |
31274 | To which of us has she given her promise? |
31274 | To whom should the Solicitor- General first break the matter? |
31274 | Using his judgment as best he might on her behalf, ought he to wish that she should do so? |
31274 | WILL YOU PROMISE? |
31274 | WILL YOU PROMISE? |
31274 | Was he acting the part of the dog in the manger, robbing others of happiness without the power of achieving his own? |
31274 | Was he at liberty to tell to them the secret which the girl had told to him? |
31274 | Was he bound by honour or duty to stand on any terms with them? |
31274 | Was he even to conceive so badly of her as to think that she would drop her love because she was an heiress? |
31274 | Was he in earnest? |
31274 | Was he to drop his love, to confess himself unworthy, and to slink away out of her sight, because the girl would become an heiress? |
31274 | Was it as the Countess had represented? |
31274 | Was it not natural that she should wish to do so? |
31274 | Was it not probable that some happy man might share her wealth with her? |
31274 | Was it not pusillanimous in him to make no attempt to see his love and to tell her that he at any rate was true to her? |
31274 | Was it not so?" |
31274 | Was it possible that any girl should not like such a man as that, and he an earl? |
31274 | Was it to come to her at last? |
31274 | Was not the fact that the man had made such a will in itself sufficient proof of his madness? |
31274 | Was she to fight for long years that she might be beaten at last when the prize was so near her,--when the cup was almost at her lips? |
31274 | Was the Earl there?" |
31274 | We can go back another way?" |
31274 | Well sir;--have you anything else to say?" |
31274 | Well,--why do you wait?" |
31274 | Well;--what else?" |
31274 | What am I doing,--what have I done that you should speak to me like this?" |
31274 | What better end could there be to her long struggles? |
31274 | What can they be to the likes o''you? |
31274 | What cause had he to fear them? |
31274 | What chance can she have if I do not interfere to let her know that I am true to her?" |
31274 | What could I say? |
31274 | What could be more fitting? |
31274 | What could such as the Countess and her titled daughter be to him, Daniel Thwaite, the broken tailor? |
31274 | What does it all signify, if you are not happy?" |
31274 | What dresses should be bought? |
31274 | What had she been doing? |
31274 | What had we better do? |
31274 | What has been done, mamma?" |
31274 | What have you seen in me to lead you to suppose that I would sell myself for a bribe? |
31274 | What if she should refuse to come?" |
31274 | What is a year in such a case as this?" |
31274 | What is it, mamma?" |
31274 | What is the matter?" |
31274 | What law of God, or of man,--what law of nature can prevent us from being man and wife? |
31274 | What maid would not? |
31274 | What must be done? |
31274 | What should be done? |
31274 | What should he now do with himself and his money,--how bestow himself,--how use it so that he might be of service to the world? |
31274 | What should she do? |
31274 | What should she do? |
31274 | What should we gain, even if we succeeded in proving that the Earl was married in early life to the old Sicilian hag that still lives? |
31274 | What should you think of having him for your husband?" |
31274 | What was he to do with himself? |
31274 | What was he to do with the girl? |
31274 | What was he to say to Mr. Flick and to the Solicitor- General? |
31274 | What was it to him whether the Countess were or were not a real Countess? |
31274 | What was the love of one individual, what was the romance of a childish girl, to the honour and well- being of an ancient and noble family? |
31274 | What were they to do with her? |
31274 | What will he call her?" |
31274 | What would be the Earldom of Lovel without the wealth which the old mad Earl had amassed? |
31274 | What would it have signified if I had gone away with him straight from Cumberland, before I had ever seen my cousins? |
31274 | What would she not have done at his bidding? |
31274 | What would she say to herself if she got that letter? |
31274 | What would the tailor think of this invitation? |
31274 | What would the world have been to them if they could not talk with comfortable ease and grace of their nephew Frederic? |
31274 | What;--is it probable that she should wish to mate so much below her degree, if she were now left to her own choice? |
31274 | When was he going? |
31274 | When you were a workman among workmen, did you not wish to be their leader? |
31274 | When you were foremost among them, did you not wish to be their master? |
31274 | Where else could I take you then?" |
31274 | Where should they go when they were married? |
31274 | Where should we be then if they did n''t hit it off together? |
31274 | Where would mamma have been,--and I,--had there been no Mr. Thwaite to comfort us? |
31274 | Who dares to say that I palter? |
31274 | Who should give away the bride? |
31274 | Who was it made the offer?" |
31274 | Who would wish to rob the girl of her noble name and great inheritance if she be the heiress? |
31274 | Who yet ever met a man who did not in his heart of hearts despise an attempt made by others to deceive-- himself? |
31274 | Whom else could I have trusted as I do you? |
31274 | Why are you unkind to me? |
31274 | Why did she let her daughter play with the tailor''s child,--if, in truth, that daughter was the Lady Anna? |
31274 | Why do n''t you go in and get ready to go?" |
31274 | Why do you wait? |
31274 | Why had he ever permitted her to be invited to his rectory? |
31274 | Why had not the girl gone when she was so like to go? |
31274 | Why had she not died when it had seemed to be God''s pleasure to take her? |
31274 | Why is it too late?" |
31274 | Why not?" |
31274 | Why should I not love him now, when I was not ashamed to love him before?" |
31274 | Why should I not say it to you, who know all? |
31274 | Why should he come? |
31274 | Why should it be impossible?" |
31274 | Why should it not do? |
31274 | Why should it not have done so? |
31274 | Why should not the girl rejoice at the prospect of winning such a husband? |
31274 | Why should she not be satisfied? |
31274 | Why should she not go back to her own mother? |
31274 | Why should she not marry Mr. Thwaite? |
31274 | Why should we be crushed? |
31274 | Why should we give it up? |
31274 | Why should you not ask her down here again?" |
31274 | Why should you not love him? |
31274 | Why should you not see each other?" |
31274 | Why should you try to part us?" |
31274 | Why was he going? |
31274 | Why,--oh, why had he allowed himself to be talked out of his own opinion? |
31274 | Will he be as bold to abide by her choice?" |
31274 | Will he treat me as fairly? |
31274 | Will you do this? |
31274 | Will you give me your word of honour that you will never see him again?" |
31274 | Will you give me your word of honour that you will never see him again?" |
31274 | Will you meet me at nine in the drawing- room? |
31274 | Will you not be glad to see him?" |
31274 | Will you promise me that you will never become the wife of Daniel Thwaite?" |
31274 | Will you remember who you are;--what blood you have in your veins;--what name it is that you bear? |
31274 | Will you save us all from destruction, misery, and disgrace? |
31274 | Will you say that I may tell him?" |
31274 | Will you say that you will become Lord Lovel''s wife?" |
31274 | Will you take a message from me to Daniel Thwaite?" |
31274 | Will you tell me that you will discard him as a suitor for your hand? |
31274 | Will you, at any rate, pledge to me your word that you will never become the wife of Daniel Thwaite?" |
31274 | Wo n''t you sit down?" |
31274 | Would Minnie come down with her, and ramble about among the ruins? |
31274 | Would any jury get over that unless you had evidence to offer to them that was plain as a pikestaff, and absolutely incontrovertible?" |
31274 | Would he follow them and be constant in his suit, even though the frantic girl should still talk of her tailor lover? |
31274 | Would he have wished that she should at once have given herself up without one maidenly scruple, one word of feminine recusancy? |
31274 | Would he not be disposed to take it as encouragement in his pernicious suit? |
31274 | Would he not go to Keppel Street with a determination to insist upon the girl''s promise? |
31274 | Would he, Lord Lovel, follow them? |
31274 | Would her mother be present? |
31274 | Would it have been right that he should have asked for anything, and that I should have refused it?" |
31274 | Would it not be better that she should be married to Daniel Thwaite out of hand, and so be freed from the burden of any secret? |
31274 | Would it not be better to take what the young lord chose to give them and to be at rest? |
31274 | Would it not have been better to have died in poverty and obscurity,--while there were yet doubts,--before any assured disgrace had rested on her? |
31274 | Would not all the world know and say that he had done it solely for the money,--even should he succeed in doing it? |
31274 | Would not any one have imagined that this advocate had been paid to plead the cause, not of the Earl, but of the Countess? |
31274 | Would not my ring be as binding on her finger as his? |
31274 | Would not the parson''s word make me and her one flesh and one bone as irretrievably as though I were ten times an earl? |
31274 | Would not you have loved him?" |
31274 | Would she be happy in quarrelling with her mother and her new- found relatives? |
31274 | Would you break your mother''s heart, and mine, and bring disgrace upon your family merely because he was good to you?" |
31274 | Would you disgrace the child in the presence of her mother?" |
31274 | Would you not desire wealth in order that you might be assisted by it in your views of ambition? |
31274 | Would you not wish that your own son should come to be Earl Lovel, with wealth sufficient to support the dignity?" |
31274 | You know what your mother thinks?" |
31274 | You lied to me?" |
31274 | You will let me try to love you, Anna?" |
31274 | You will let me try? |
31274 | You will take me home with you now;--will you not?" |
31274 | and which of us, Mr. Flick, is attracted to the marriage by the lately assured wealth of the young woman? |
31274 | which of us has she known and loved? |
31274 | which of us has won her by long friendship and steady regard? |
31274 | without such wrong where should we have been?" |
26088 | A key in the lock? |
26088 | A mistake as to the night,he said;"what can be plainer?" |
26088 | A week-- a whole week? 26088 Ai n''t ye got a bed handy?" |
26088 | All will be well with my darling boy soon, will it not? |
26088 | Am I in time? |
26088 | An illegitimate son? |
26088 | And Greta is his daughter? 26088 And Greta?" |
26088 | And Hugh was in his own room? |
26088 | And Lowther had the marriage annulled? |
26088 | And Paul has no say in it except finding the brass, ey? |
26088 | And as to dreams, to be sure, they are on''y dreams; and what''s dreams, say I? |
26088 | And can I have the order for Portland? |
26088 | And do you think I have waited until now to sound that shoal water with a cautious plummet? 26088 And happen what may that be, sir?" |
26088 | And has he gone? |
26088 | And he will be there to meet me? |
26088 | And his eyes-- are they changing color?--going brown? |
26088 | And his skin-- is it cold and clammy? |
26088 | And how is the young missy? |
26088 | And how lang dusta say''at missis has been here? |
26088 | And how''s Mr. Bonnithorne this rusty weather? 26088 And how''s Parson Christian?" |
26088 | And if I is abed, it''s better nor being in bed- lam, is n''t it? |
26088 | And if oo had a little boy would oo give him sweets ery often-- all days-- sweets and cakes-- would oo? |
26088 | And if you please, your worship, may me and my husband take care of the child until the poor young thing is well enough to come for it? 26088 And let her go to grandma''s whenever she liked, and not tell grandpa he''s not to give her ha''pennies, would you?" |
26088 | And mine? |
26088 | And never whip her? |
26088 | And next morning-- did you see him then? |
26088 | And of what age would Paul Lowther be now? |
26088 | And so the convict was punished? |
26088 | And so you found the time long and tedious? |
26088 | And the gentleman, too, belike? |
26088 | And these were the only entries? |
26088 | And they did do it? |
26088 | And was there no young fellow in all Hendon to make those lonely walks of yours more cheerful? |
26088 | And was this what you came to say? |
26088 | And what about her? |
26088 | And what about me? |
26088 | And what about the husband-- ain''t he another shrewd fellow? |
26088 | And what ever did he say? |
26088 | And what happened then? |
26088 | And what if you do not get it? |
26088 | And what is your especial reason? |
26088 | And what is your house to me, sir? 26088 And what of that?" |
26088 | And what then? |
26088 | And what then? |
26088 | And what was that, pray? |
26088 | And what would I do while you were thrang at that laal job? |
26088 | And what''s rush- bearing? |
26088 | And when my mother recovered she said nothing? |
26088 | And when you leave them to- night, do you leave him behind you? |
26088 | And where did the money come from? |
26088 | And where''s your damages to come from? |
26088 | And wherever can I put them? 26088 And who had a better right to it?" |
26088 | And who has been in the room since you left it? |
26088 | And why not? |
26088 | And will you let me go down whenever I like? |
26088 | And yet he''s her half- brother,said the lawyer, softly; and then he added, with the conventional smile:"Odd, is n''t it?" |
26088 | And you followed? 26088 And you have neither kith nor kin left in all the world?" |
26088 | And you knew it was a lie? |
26088 | And your address? |
26088 | And your correspondent can be relied upon? |
26088 | And your father is insensible? |
26088 | And your mother-- has she also been the victim of a delusion? |
26088 | And yours, sir? |
26088 | Angry with you, little one? 26088 Another one-- your master, you mean?" |
26088 | Answer me-- tell me the truth-- be frank for once-- tell me, can you explain this mystery? |
26088 | Antony Blindman kens ta me, sen I bought butter and cheese o''thee? 26088 Any news of her?" |
26088 | Any news of his daughter? |
26088 | Any on you know owt about her? |
26088 | Any trouble, Mercy? |
26088 | Anybody here who knows her? |
26088 | Anybody seen my Willie? |
26088 | Anybody with him? |
26088 | Anything doing upstairs? |
26088 | Anything fresh while I''ve been away? |
26088 | Are we so much alike? 26088 Are you Paul Ritson, the eldest son and heir of Allan Ritson?" |
26088 | Are you conscious that you are rendering yourself liable to penal servitude? |
26088 | Are you not too hard on him? 26088 Are you ready?" |
26088 | Are you sure he has not got back? |
26088 | Are your eyes very sore to- day, Mercy, they are so red? |
26088 | Ay, where is he? |
26088 | Back, sir? 26088 Been delving for potatoes to- day, Peter?" |
26088 | Besides,said Hugh,"what matter about the name if your mother is dead?" |
26088 | Bless thee, Gubblum, and whatever didsta do? |
26088 | Bonnithorne, what is the place where the girl Mercy lives? |
26088 | Bonnithorne? 26088 Brave? |
26088 | Brought the deed? |
26088 | Burn my body, and what''s on now? |
26088 | But do n''t the folk see that his wife as it might be, Miss Greta as was, wo n''t have nowt to say to him? |
26088 | But what of mine? |
26088 | But why did he not come for me himself? |
26088 | But you go out sometimes-- into the village-- to London? |
26088 | Can I get a fly, my good woman, at this hour of the night? |
26088 | Can I see the superior? |
26088 | Can I sleep here to- neet? |
26088 | Can anything be plainer? |
26088 | Can you bear it? |
26088 | Can you do it? |
26088 | Can you get me a fly, my good fellow? |
26088 | Can you not tell me? |
26088 | Can you put these persons into the witness- box? |
26088 | Can you send me a dog- cart at half past four in the morning? |
26088 | Can you show us the letter? |
26088 | Cheated? |
26088 | Cold neet, eh? 26088 Cold without your coat, eh?" |
26088 | Come, Mercy, tell the truth, you sly little thing-- eh? |
26088 | Come, do n''t you know that what belongs to the wife belongs to the husband? |
26088 | Comfortable hotel, sir; think you''d like to put up, sir? |
26088 | Consented? |
26088 | Convent, sir? 26088 Coorse I will; why not? |
26088 | Could it be true? |
26088 | Could n''t be Ritson, eh? |
26088 | Could nothing part us? |
26088 | Could one get accommodation here for the night? 26088 Could you not hold the scoundrel?" |
26088 | Cummerland? 26088 Cutting in the church- yard to- day, Job? |
26088 | D''ye call this a man''s work? |
26088 | D''ye hear? |
26088 | D''ye hear? |
26088 | D''ye say so? 26088 Dangerous spot, eh?" |
26088 | Decided what? |
26088 | Did I ever tell you of her father''s strange legacy? |
26088 | Did I never tell you that the peddler, Oglethorpe, said he saw Paul at the Hawk and Heron in Hendon? |
26088 | Did I not say it was a lie? |
26088 | Did I not say there was a terrible reason why your father should make a will? |
26088 | Did I? 26088 Did Parson Christian also realize the mistake?" |
26088 | Did any one accompany the defendant to St. Pancras that night? |
26088 | Did he follow me? 26088 Did he laugh? |
26088 | Did he look changed?--anything different about him? |
26088 | Did n''t I say you would scarcely know your own house when you came home again? |
26088 | Did n''t I tell you to be in bed? |
26088 | Did n''t you hear somebody in the house? |
26088 | Did n''t you meet the stableman? |
26088 | Did n''t you say I was to be Paul Lowther? |
26088 | Did n''t you wave your hand to me as we went by-- me and Bessy? |
26088 | Did the boy see them?--did he see the children? |
26088 | Did the defendant offer any resistance? |
26088 | Did you hear of the fire at the mill on Saturday night? |
26088 | Did you now? |
26088 | Did you scream,he asked,"when you saw-- when you saw-- it?" |
26088 | Did you see him there? |
26088 | Did you see him yourself? |
26088 | Did you tell her? |
26088 | Did you tell him I meant to come back? |
26088 | Didsta hear nowt when you drove mistress to the rail, Reuben? |
26088 | Didsta hear owt? |
26088 | Didsta see owt of thy master down- stairs? |
26088 | Do it? 26088 Do n''t I speak plain?" |
26088 | Do n''t you see that he is shattered in mind as well as purse? |
26088 | Do they call it the Hawk and Heron? |
26088 | Do they? 26088 Do you ask?" |
26088 | Do you believe I have told you the truth? |
26088 | Do you believe I saw Paul in the lane? |
26088 | Do you hear me, you dear old darling? |
26088 | Do you hear the sports, father? |
26088 | Do you know anything? |
26088 | Do you know for certain that he went away? |
26088 | Do you know him? |
26088 | Do you know that Mercy Fisher is likely to regain her sight? |
26088 | Do you know that a few years back many a poor wretch whose crime was trifling compared with yours has gone from the dock to the gallows? |
26088 | Do you know that you are now talking to a gentleman? |
26088 | Do you know, Paul, I heard a great parl about you to- day? |
26088 | Do you know,he said,"it never once came into my simple old pate to ask which would find the dross and which the honest labor?" |
26088 | Do you mean at the trial? |
26088 | Do you mean that I am-- a bastard? |
26088 | Do you remember all you told me about my brother Hugh-- that he said he loved you? |
26088 | Do you see that man in court? |
26088 | Do you then love him? |
26088 | Do you think it would be too great a sacrifice to give up--"What? |
26088 | Do you think of him? |
26088 | Do you think of that when you talk of revenge? 26088 Do you think to frighten me with the cruelties of the law?--me?--me?" |
26088 | Do you think,she asked, in a voice all but inaudible,"that father knows who it is?" |
26088 | Do? |
26088 | Does he live here, missis? |
26088 | Does he suspect? |
26088 | Does she live at the parson''s-- Parson Christian''s? |
26088 | Does that entry properly describe you? |
26088 | Doubts? 26088 Dusta gang back to the fell, Mattha?" |
26088 | Dusta ken who came down last? |
26088 | Dusta mean as it were the other one-- Hugh? |
26088 | Dusta say to- day, Mistress Ritson? |
26088 | Dusta think they dunnot ken he''s the wrong man? |
26088 | Eh? 26088 Eh? |
26088 | Eh? 26088 Eh?" |
26088 | Eight o''clock? 26088 Er-- why, what''s that?" |
26088 | Ever seen owt like it since the good auld days you crack on sa often, auld man? |
26088 | Giles,said the peddler,"where was Paul Ritson night afore last?" |
26088 | Gone? 26088 Good for a tip, eh? |
26088 | Good- morning, John; are ye gayly? |
26088 | Good- neet to you, sir, and how fend ye? |
26088 | Got your smelting- house at wark down at the pit, Mattha? |
26088 | Grace Ormerod? 26088 Greta, do you remember what Mistress Branthet said when her baby died last back- end gone twelvemonth?" |
26088 | Greta, have you nothing more to say to me? |
26088 | Greta,said Hugh Ritson, in a low tone of indescribable pathos,"which of these men is your husband?" |
26088 | Greta,said Mercy, and her voice fell to a whisper,"do you think Ralphie is like-- anybody?" |
26088 | Greta,she said in a startled whisper,"does he look pinched?" |
26088 | Greta,she said, very slowly,"will you go for him?" |
26088 | Greta? 26088 Gubblum, shall I tell you what''s a- matter with Paul?" |
26088 | Had n''t you better sleep on it, and come to see me at Whitehall in the morning? |
26088 | Had she the child with her? |
26088 | Hark ye, laal man, didsta see two men leaving the house a matter of fifteen minutes ago? |
26088 | Has he come? |
26088 | Hasta heard of the lang yammer in the papers about yon matter? |
26088 | Hasta heard what happened at auld Laird Fisher''s this morning? |
26088 | Have I suffered so little from it already that you dare to say,''Imprison her,''as if that would drive me to your house? |
26088 | Have the gentlemen arrived? |
26088 | Have you a tarpaulin? |
26088 | Have you apprised Parson Christian? |
26088 | Have you brought it? 26088 Have you counted the cost?" |
26088 | Have you heard,he said in a subdued voice,"that the doctors have operated on the girl Mercy, and that she is likely to regain her sight?" |
26088 | Have you never heard as it ai n''t all gold as glitters? |
26088 | Have you no pity? |
26088 | Have you not learned her name? |
26088 | Have you nothing to say to me? |
26088 | Have you seen Paul? |
26088 | Have you seen her since? |
26088 | Have you told him? |
26088 | He called his master''s debtors together, and said to the first,''How much do you owe?'' 26088 He did not explain?" |
26088 | He has a secret power over Paul-- what is it? |
26088 | He was the thief, Mrs. Ritson; you believe me, do n''t you? |
26088 | He''s a stunner, for sure-- where is he? |
26088 | Heard anything? |
26088 | Heard, had you? 26088 Her Christian name?" |
26088 | Her occupation, my good woman, what was it? 26088 Here you, speak up, will ye?" |
26088 | Here? 26088 Here?" |
26088 | Him? |
26088 | His bread? |
26088 | His young woman, ai n''t it? |
26088 | How are you so certain sure? |
26088 | How could I? 26088 How could she examine her conscience and be happy? |
26088 | How d''ye know? |
26088 | How different? 26088 How do I come to be here?" |
26088 | How do I know where? 26088 How dusta find the cobbles to- day-- any softer?" |
26088 | How far has the present one proceeded? |
26088 | How fend ye, John? |
26088 | How fend ye, Mattha? |
26088 | How is your patient now? |
26088 | How long will you be? |
26088 | How many bushels? |
26088 | How many of you are left? |
26088 | How much does she lose? |
26088 | How so? |
26088 | How''ll ye track him? 26088 How''s ta rubbun on?" |
26088 | How''s that? |
26088 | How? |
26088 | Hugh, we could not love in this world-- something went astray with us; but we shall meet again, shall we not? |
26088 | Hugh, what is it? |
26088 | Hugh,she said, passionately,"are you sure that you love me well enough to think of me when I am gone?--are you quite, quite sure?" |
26088 | Hugh? |
26088 | I am anxious, reverend mother--"What is it, my daughter? |
26088 | I am to decoy the young thing away by making her believe as I''m her husband, eh? |
26088 | I dare say you have grandchildren by this time? |
26088 | I have been left in this room insensible, and the impostor who resembles me-- where is he now? |
26088 | I have come to ask--"Yes? |
26088 | I knew it would come;"I telt the master lang ago;"Where''s my man? |
26088 | I say, missy, got bad eyes? |
26088 | I say,shouted a hoary convict,"take a crooked message out?" |
26088 | I suppose you are reconciled to losing her? |
26088 | I think you draw a painful inference-- what is it? |
26088 | I wonder why he wants it? |
26088 | I''ve no call to hide my face now-- not now that he has come-- have I? |
26088 | I-- I? |
26088 | If I could explain it, how would it be a mystery? |
26088 | If Miss Greta is at home tell her I should be glad to speak with her-- do you hear? |
26088 | If it is false,she said,"whatever it is, why need it trouble you?" |
26088 | If this thing had been true, do you think we should not have known it-- she and I-- in the natural recoil of our own hearts? 26088 Ill? |
26088 | In course-- what else, when the big hotel fails and he loses his job? 26088 In short, you think what I saw was merely the result of woman''s hysteria?" |
26088 | In what terms? |
26088 | In what turgid melodrama does not just such an episode occur? |
26088 | Indeed? |
26088 | Is Parson Christian coming? |
26088 | Is he alive? |
26088 | Is he growing, Gubblum? |
26088 | Is he looking? 26088 Is he pale?" |
26088 | Is he sleeping? 26088 Is he-- is he very like me?" |
26088 | Is it London you are going to? |
26088 | Is it a fancy? 26088 Is it all die- spensy?" |
26088 | Is it good for him, I wonder? |
26088 | Is it impossible to see him to- morrow? |
26088 | Is it not something for me to do? |
26088 | Is it prompt? |
26088 | Is it so? 26088 Is it so?" |
26088 | Is it that you are too jealous of your good name to allow it to be bruited abroad in a scandal, as you say? |
26088 | Is it the law? |
26088 | Is it to be to- morrow? |
26088 | Is it to- day you''re to gang for him? |
26088 | Is it you, Mercy? |
26088 | Is n''t he a darling, father? |
26088 | Is n''t he after me? 26088 Is n''t it well that you should see that she shall have a husband that can fight it with her side by side?" |
26088 | Is she married, do you know? |
26088 | Is that Mister Paul Ritson and Mistress Lowther just run in for shelter? |
26088 | Is that all? |
26088 | Is that good enough? |
26088 | Is that lawyer man back from Scotland? |
26088 | Is that the lady who lodged with you at Pimlico-- the mother of Paul? |
26088 | Is that the last? |
26088 | Is that thee, Mercy? |
26088 | Is that true, my lad? |
26088 | Is the gentleman who struggled with him still staying there-- Mr. Paul Ritson? |
26088 | Is the laal man ever coming? |
26088 | Is there an attic in the other gable? |
26088 | Is there not something between you? |
26088 | Is this all? |
26088 | Is this my fault? |
26088 | Is this our parting? |
26088 | Is this the fourth or fifth mortgage that has been drawn? |
26088 | Is this the truth? |
26088 | Is this your answer, little one? |
26088 | Is your son back? |
26088 | Ista ever gaen to begin? |
26088 | Ista theer, Mister Paul? |
26088 | It was a bad change, was n''t it? |
26088 | It''s nothing, father-- only--"Only-- what? |
26088 | Job, what do you say to that? |
26088 | Keep clear of him-- see the blue cap? |
26088 | Landlady,he said,"when does your last train go up to London?" |
26088 | Let me see, how old are you? |
26088 | Lord A''mighty, whativer''s this? |
26088 | Love him? |
26088 | Love? 26088 Luke,"he said, abruptly,"I suppose there will be many to follow you when your time comes?" |
26088 | Maizelt-- why? |
26088 | Married her? 26088 Maybe I may finish drying it, sir?" |
26088 | Me, father? |
26088 | Mercy?--London? 26088 Middling weel, Job,"answered the blacksmith;"and what''s your errand now?" |
26088 | Missis? 26088 Mother, what do you mean?" |
26088 | Mr. Bonnithorne,said Hugh Ritson, holding out his hand,"you and I have been good friends, have we not?" |
26088 | Mr. Christian at home? |
26088 | Mrs. Drayton, is it certain that he will come? 26088 Mrs. Drayton,"he said,"did n''t you say you had something urgent for Mercy to do? |
26088 | Mrs. Drayton,said Hugh,"have you ever seen this face before?" |
26088 | My brother Paul slept here a few nights ago, I hear? |
26088 | My features, my complexion, my height, and my build, you say? |
26088 | My good girl, and why? |
26088 | My missis, she said to me last back end,''Gubblum,''she said,''dusta mind as it''s allus summer when the cuckoo is in the garden?'' 26088 My wife?" |
26088 | Nay, any trouble-- trouble''s common, is n''t it? |
26088 | Nay, man, what? |
26088 | Nay, who was it? |
26088 | Never talked to you? |
26088 | Never went out? 26088 Never?" |
26088 | No; but I say, what is it worth? 26088 No? |
26088 | No? 26088 No?" |
26088 | None what? |
26088 | Not well, Mercy-- is that it? |
26088 | Nothing new? 26088 Now, did n''t I tell you never to do it again?" |
26088 | Now, my man, easy-- heavy, eh? 26088 Odd, is n''t it?" |
26088 | Odd? 26088 Of course, if you say so--""You''ve heard nothing about Paul?" |
26088 | Of what nature? |
26088 | Of what-- the brass? |
26088 | Oglethorpe,said Hugh,"how many of the gangs are below to- night?" |
26088 | Oh, Mother Shipton, and is that yourself? 26088 Oh, it ai n''t, eh? |
26088 | Oh, so you''re the young party as drowned herself, are you? 26088 Oh, that''s it, eh? |
26088 | Oh, where have they taken him-- where, where? |
26088 | Oh, why did n''t you leave me alone? |
26088 | On the day of your marriage you accompanied your husband to London, and the same night he left you at the Convent of St. Margaret, Westminster? |
26088 | On what business? |
26088 | Ot is it-- knitting-- stockings for oo little boy? |
26088 | Ot''s oo doing? |
26088 | Parson Christian at home now? |
26088 | Parson Christian? |
26088 | Parson Christian? |
26088 | Paul''s? |
26088 | Paul, did you tell Greta she was marrying a bastard? |
26088 | Paul, what has happened? |
26088 | Paul-- what? |
26088 | Paul? |
26088 | Pigeon- livered blatherskite!--that''s what I call ye-- d''ye hear? |
26088 | Porter, can you keep a bed for me here? 26088 Post not come?" |
26088 | Punished? |
26088 | Ready? |
26088 | Removed-- shifted? |
26088 | Reuben Rae, who nursed your sick wife? 26088 Revenge? |
26088 | Reverend mother, has Sister Grace ever spoken of the past? |
26088 | Robert Lowther was the father of Grace Ormerod''s child? |
26088 | Room, sir, room? 26088 Safe?" |
26088 | Say? 26088 See the old file in the gaiters by the eleven up?" |
26088 | Seeing that I shall marry her, I think it will be expected that you should give her to her husband; but if you have an objection--"An objection? |
26088 | Seen us afore? 26088 Send him?" |
26088 | Shall I speak the word? |
26088 | Shall I tell you your name? |
26088 | Sista, my lad, wadsta like me to lend thee a shilling? |
26088 | So he has returned? |
26088 | So soon, my daughter? |
26088 | So that''s the time o''day, is it? |
26088 | So that''s your sweetheart-- not the lawyer man, eh? |
26088 | So you fire to- night, Matthew? |
26088 | So you were my angel, Tommy, eh? |
26088 | So you''re not sleeping on the fell to- night, Matthew? |
26088 | Some pettifogger? |
26088 | Speak, mother,he said;"is it something about my father?" |
26088 | Sure of that? |
26088 | Sure of that? |
26088 | Sure you forget? |
26088 | Surely not past forgiveness? |
26088 | Take me away, will you? |
26088 | Tears? 26088 Tell me,"said Hugh,"what passed at the Ghyll on Monday night?" |
26088 | Thank you, Peter; and how''s the meeting- house, and who preaches there next Sunday, Peter? |
26088 | That''s a job for two men, ai n''t it, missis? |
26088 | That''s good enough, ai n''t it, Master Hugh Ritson? |
26088 | The Ghyll? 26088 The Pack Horse? |
26088 | The beacon? 26088 The darling is talking in his sleep, is n''t he?" |
26088 | The deuce we have-- where? |
26088 | The gentleman? 26088 The missis? |
26088 | The mount''ins? 26088 The one without the other?" |
26088 | The train?--master? 26088 Then I may look for you at the Hawk and Heron?" |
26088 | Then one may take a man''s inheritance without qualm or conviction? |
26088 | Then the secret rests with you and me, Bonnithorne? |
26088 | Then the shaft is clear? |
26088 | Then they have chosen to work on? |
26088 | Then what about Mrs. Ritson-- Miss Greta, I mean? |
26088 | Then what for did he say it worn''t true as I found young Ritson yesterday morning wet to the skin in the church- yard? |
26088 | Then where is your shame, that you can look me in the face? 26088 Then why are you here?" |
26088 | Then why did you propose it? 26088 Then why the legacy?" |
26088 | Then you are the young fellow whose wife died last week? |
26088 | Then you do n''t intend to give him much grace? |
26088 | Then you forgive me? |
26088 | Then you know his name? |
26088 | Then you were guilty of perjury at that time, or you are guilty of perjury now? |
26088 | Then your eyes are really worse? |
26088 | They''re weel matched, mother, eh? |
26088 | This time with an heiress? |
26088 | To London? 26088 To London?" |
26088 | To live with him? 26088 To marry a woman under a false pretense-- is it the act of an honorable man? |
26088 | To the Ghyll? |
26088 | Twelve o''clock at St. Pancras, and you have the luggage in a cab at the door, you say? |
26088 | Upstairs?--the bed-- airing--"The girl? 26088 Very conscientious, no doubt; but what about him?" |
26088 | Was B 2001 with him as usual? |
26088 | Was Paul alone when you saw him? |
26088 | Was he told what items he had to find, or did he make a general search? |
26088 | Was it best to be a living lie-- and all for the sake of honor? 26088 Was it best to be a perjured liar?" |
26088 | Was it best to be a thief? |
26088 | Was it best to be an impostor? |
26088 | Was it best to hold my place until my place was no longer worth holding, and then to leave it with an empty show of generosity? 26088 Water? |
26088 | We are to infer that you visited the house of the Draytons at Hendon? |
26088 | We might have waited for the maister afore shearing-- eh? |
26088 | We? |
26088 | Weel, it''s no''but naturable, after all that''s happent.... Easy now... be quiet, wilta... dusta want another snip, eh?... 26088 Weel, man, weel?" |
26088 | Well, Peter, and how did the brethren at the meeting house like the discourse yesterday afternoon? |
26088 | Well, it is rather, ai n''t it? |
26088 | Well, my child? |
26088 | Well, sir, I ca n''t say-- being as I saw the gentleman-- wherever''s Paul? |
26088 | Well, well? |
26088 | Well, what of it? 26088 Well? |
26088 | Well? |
26088 | Well? |
26088 | Well? |
26088 | Were these copies made at Somerset House? |
26088 | Were you alone in the compartment? |
26088 | What about her? |
26088 | What ails Paul Ritson? |
26088 | What ails you? |
26088 | What am I in my father''s house? 26088 What are we doing?" |
26088 | What are you about? |
26088 | What are you doing? |
26088 | What are you sniggering and mocking at? |
26088 | What are you thinking? |
26088 | What bell is that? |
26088 | What brought you here, Mercy? |
26088 | What call had he to sleep at Keswick? |
26088 | What call has she for a man? 26088 What d''ye mean, man?" |
26088 | What d''ye say to it, eh? |
26088 | What d''ye want? 26088 What did Lowther then?" |
26088 | What did he do? |
26088 | What did he say about being ill? |
26088 | What did he say? |
26088 | What did that steward mean? 26088 What did you do, my daughter?" |
26088 | What did you do? |
26088 | What did you do? |
26088 | What do the folks say? |
26088 | What do you mean, my friend? |
26088 | What do you mean? |
26088 | What do you mean? |
26088 | What do you mean? |
26088 | What do you say to that? |
26088 | What do you think, my lad? 26088 What do you think? |
26088 | What do you want for your twenty pounds? 26088 What do you wish me to do?" |
26088 | What do you wish me to say? |
26088 | What does it all come to? |
26088 | What does this man want with me? |
26088 | What dusta mean, Gubblum? |
26088 | What dusta say? |
26088 | What dusta think you of yon wrestling, ey, man? |
26088 | What ever did they do with thee then? |
26088 | What ever put that in your head, little one? |
26088 | What face? |
26088 | What further lie is this? |
26088 | What happened to you, Gubblum? |
26088 | What has happened to the mill? |
26088 | What have you to- day, Gubblum? |
26088 | What honor, and what justice? |
26088 | What hotel, sir? |
26088 | What if I brought you for a day, and you remain for a year, for life? |
26088 | What if I say I am sorry for the past? |
26088 | What if I show you how to escape the consequences of to- night''s work altogether? |
26088 | What if he does? 26088 What if to- morrow, and to- morrow, and to- morrow brings no light to unravel this mystery?" |
26088 | What is it, Oglethorpe? |
26088 | What is it, dearest? |
26088 | What is it, mother? |
26088 | What is it? 26088 What is it?" |
26088 | What is it? |
26088 | What is it? |
26088 | What is it? |
26088 | What is it? |
26088 | What is it? |
26088 | What is it? |
26088 | What is it? |
26088 | What is it? |
26088 | What is the message, my child? |
26088 | What is the time? |
26088 | What is your name, my man? |
26088 | What is your remorse worth now? |
26088 | What name? |
26088 | What night was it? |
26088 | What night? 26088 What now? |
26088 | What pity had you for me? 26088 What possible interest of anybody''s could it be to go hunting for the son of the fool''s deserted wife?" |
26088 | What puzzles you? |
26088 | What reasons? |
26088 | What right have you to say so? |
26088 | What secret? |
26088 | What see a post? |
26088 | What shall I care if other mothers see my child? 26088 What simpleton says fortune favors the brave?" |
26088 | What then? 26088 What then?" |
26088 | What then? |
26088 | What trouble, father? |
26088 | What was her behavior to the child? 26088 What was his name, my daughter?" |
26088 | What was that? |
26088 | What were you looking at, Natt? |
26088 | What would you do if you had a little girl? |
26088 | What''s a stiffener? |
26088 | What''s die- spensy? |
26088 | What''s going on? |
26088 | What''s he a- doing to ye, my dear, eh? |
26088 | What''s his address in the country? |
26088 | What''s his dose? |
26088 | What''s now, Reuben? |
26088 | What''s o''clock? |
26088 | What''s ta snertan at, eh? |
26088 | What''s that to me, thou poor shaffles? 26088 What''s that?" |
26088 | What''s that? |
26088 | What''s that? |
26088 | What''s the fence got in his other pockets, eh? |
26088 | What''s the lay? |
26088 | What''s this? |
26088 | What''s yon daft thingamy aboot? |
26088 | What''s your message? |
26088 | What''s your train, miss-- twelve to the north? |
26088 | What, and the governor read it, and me get a bashing, and the crushers pinch the old moll? 26088 What, did I tell you?" |
26088 | What, lass, dusta think as he wad do owt at the durdum to- neet? 26088 What, man, but you mind the days when you were a bit boy and went a- rushing yersel''?" |
26088 | What, man, did you never hear of the day I bought it? |
26088 | What, man, dusta mean as the pit''s not paying? |
26088 | What, woman, thoo''s surely heard what happen''t at the Ghyll this morning? |
26088 | What? 26088 What? |
26088 | What? 26088 What?" |
26088 | What? |
26088 | What? |
26088 | What? |
26088 | Whatever ails Master Paul? |
26088 | Whatever ails the old lady? |
26088 | When did this begin? |
26088 | When did this happen? 26088 When did this happen?" |
26088 | When did you see her last before to- day? |
26088 | When do you close the house? |
26088 | When do you return? |
26088 | When you come back, get yourself out of the way-- do you hear? |
26088 | When you see this man in his place, wasting his substance and mine, do you ever think of him where he is? |
26088 | When? 26088 When?" |
26088 | When? |
26088 | Where abed? |
26088 | Where are the men? |
26088 | Where are we, my girl? |
26088 | Where are you going? |
26088 | Where are you going? |
26088 | Where are you? |
26088 | Where are you? |
26088 | Where did you say you would stay in London? |
26088 | Where does he sleep? |
26088 | Where does it come from? |
26088 | Where have you been since? |
26088 | Where is Parson Christian? |
26088 | Where is he now-- in bed? |
26088 | Where is he? |
26088 | Where is he? |
26088 | Where is the sand running? |
26088 | Where were old Reuben and his gang stationed? |
26088 | Where were you going, Mercy-- back to your poor friends? |
26088 | Where''s Parson Christian? |
26088 | Where''s Paul? |
26088 | Where''s Ralphie? 26088 Where''s the boy?" |
26088 | Where''s the master off to? 26088 Where''s your ladder? |
26088 | Where, sir? |
26088 | Where? |
26088 | Whereiver does that lead to? |
26088 | Wherever has mistress gone? |
26088 | Who am I that I should presume to pardon you? 26088 Who are the mortgagees?" |
26088 | Who are you? |
26088 | Who did-- Mistress Calvert? |
26088 | Who do they want? 26088 Who else? |
26088 | Who has more right? |
26088 | Who indeed? |
26088 | Who is at the convent at Westminster? |
26088 | Who is he? |
26088 | Who is it? |
26088 | Who is it? |
26088 | Who is she? |
26088 | Who is the sister? |
26088 | Who is this Drayton? |
26088 | Who knows but the scoundrel is here now? |
26088 | Who said that? |
26088 | Who shall say that I am acting a base part? |
26088 | Who sleeps in the pigeon loft? |
26088 | Who spoke about the gas? 26088 Who talks of incrimination?" |
26088 | Who took you the message? |
26088 | Who was it I hailed on the road? |
26088 | Who were they? 26088 Who would have believed it?" |
26088 | Who would have thought that this calamity could wait for you at the very steps of God''s altar? |
26088 | Who''s that-- the Methodee man? |
26088 | Who''s the fat''un in the choir? 26088 Who''s the man on the ladder-- dusta know?" |
26088 | Who''s there? |
26088 | Who''s there? |
26088 | Who''s yon tatterdemalion flinging by the newspaper and bawling,''The country''s going to the dogs?'' |
26088 | Who? 26088 Whose clothes are these?" |
26088 | Whose daughter? |
26088 | Whose then? 26088 Why d''ye mean to do?" |
26088 | Why did he ask? |
26088 | Why did he not come himself? |
26088 | Why did you go? |
26088 | Why did you leave Hendon? |
26088 | Why did you not tell her? |
26088 | Why did you send for him? |
26088 | Why do n''t you speak, some on you? 26088 Why do you come here? |
26088 | Why do you want to know? |
26088 | Why does he not crouch down? |
26088 | Why not? 26088 Why should I tell you what is false?" |
26088 | Why strange? |
26088 | Why there? |
26088 | Why to- day more than yesterday or to- morrow? |
26088 | Why, Gubblum,said Paul, smothering a laugh,"what was I doing at Hendon?" |
26088 | Why, Mattha, it is thee? |
26088 | Why, how''s that, Gubblum? |
26088 | Why, indeed? 26088 Why, man, and wherever hasta been since Whissen Monday?" |
26088 | Why, man, how''s that? |
26088 | Why, my good lass, what''s this? |
26088 | Why, what do you mean? |
26088 | Why, what do you think? |
26088 | Why, when did you come back to these parts? |
26088 | Why? |
26088 | Why?--what of that? |
26088 | Wife? 26088 Will Mrs. Ritson come forward again?" |
26088 | Will he not be saved, Greta? |
26088 | Will the defendant stand side by side with him? |
26088 | Will you now? 26088 Will you sign-- yes or no?" |
26088 | Will you sit in the waiting- room, miss? |
26088 | Will you swear that your voices were not raised in angry dispute while you were at the inn at Hendon? |
26088 | Willy- nilly, ey? |
26088 | Wilta be meeting Master Hugh in the forenoon, Natt? |
26088 | With me, father? |
26088 | Without a marriage? |
26088 | Wo n''t to- morrow do, sir? 26088 Wo n''t you say good- night, Greta?" |
26088 | Wo nt oo, eh? |
26088 | Would it be anything to you to inherit five thousand pounds? |
26088 | Would it be so fearful a thing if you were not a second son? |
26088 | Would oo? 26088 Would you ever think a foot could be so tiny, Greta?" |
26088 | Would you tell me that he is my husband? |
26088 | Would you,said the lawyer,"like to know the business on which I have been called here?" |
26088 | Yes, yes; but wo n''t he ask me questions? |
26088 | Yes; will he catch it? |
26088 | You ai n''t going to give a man away? |
26088 | You ai n''t gone and rounded on a fellow, after all? 26088 You are happy now, Mercy?" |
26088 | You are the only child of the late Robert Lowther? |
26088 | You can not mean it? |
26088 | You could tell summat, an''you would, ey, Tom? |
26088 | You did not question her? |
26088 | You do n''t believe me? 26088 You do n''t say so? |
26088 | You found the door of my mother''s room standing open? |
26088 | You hear what they say? 26088 You heard a bad account of B 2001, I judge?" |
26088 | You know Covent Garden-- not fur from Leicester Square and the Haymarket? |
26088 | You mean with your father? |
26088 | You must know I met young Mr. Ritson this morning? |
26088 | You saw my brother-- Paul, you know-- when he slept at your house last Wednesday night? |
26088 | You say that on the night following the morning of your marriage your husband left you at a convent? |
26088 | You think so? |
26088 | You told him nothing of any one calling? |
26088 | You went to the station? |
26088 | You were going to give me the go- by, eh? 26088 You''ll wait till I ax for it, wo n''t ye, missy? |
26088 | You''ve just missed it, Natt,said John Proudfoot;"where have you been?" |
26088 | You''ve lost your spirits-- what''s come of them? |
26088 | Young to be wagranting about, ai n''t ye, miss? |
26088 | Your baby''s name is Paul, is n''t it? 26088 Your best nag, Willy?" |
26088 | Your child died before her, did it not? |
26088 | Your father and mother are gone, too? |
26088 | Your inheritance? |
26088 | Your own marriage with Greta? |
26088 | ''And what can you do?'' |
26088 | ''Do?'' |
26088 | ''Off for a spogue?'' |
26088 | ''Summat on,''eh? |
26088 | ''The what?'' |
26088 | ''Well,''she said,''dusta not think it wad allus be summer if the cuckoo could allus be kept here?'' |
26088 | ''What d''ye mean?'' |
26088 | ''What''s a spogue?'' |
26088 | ''Who''s laughing?'' |
26088 | A fortune out of hand-- how?" |
26088 | A minute later he called again:"Where''s the key to this door? |
26088 | A simple creature, all heart and no head? |
26088 | A year and a half? |
26088 | Ai n''t that the part as the young missy comes from?" |
26088 | Am I so much a child? |
26088 | And after all, what did this question of honor amount to? |
26088 | And against that last, that first, that highest arbiter, do you ask me to take the evidence of these poor, pitiful papers? |
26088 | And has Master Paul been along of the mount''ins?" |
26088 | And how lang hasta been here?" |
26088 | And how was his birth base? |
26088 | And if you should ever remove it--""Not for an instant? |
26088 | And in what turgid melodrama does not just such an episode occur?" |
26088 | And is not my honor his honor?" |
26088 | And let him go to meet daddy coming home at night, and ride on daddy''s back?" |
26088 | And lift him on daddy''s shoulder, would oo?" |
26088 | And now again, was the disaster of this very night a link in the chain of destiny? |
26088 | And was it he who had brought her husband? |
26088 | And what did that mean? |
26088 | And what did you say then?" |
26088 | And what do you offer me-- twenty pounds? |
26088 | And what possible inducement could they have to sleep in Hendon when they would be so near to London? |
26088 | And what solace would it be then that the same suit would be worn by the impostor also? |
26088 | And what, after all, boots my praying? |
26088 | And would oo let him go out to play with the big boys, and get birds''nests and things, would oo?" |
26088 | And would you take her to market and to church, and to see the dolls in Mrs. Bicker''s window?" |
26088 | And would you tell them all?" |
26088 | And young Mistress Greta-- it''s like she''ll be mistress now?" |
26088 | Any chance? |
26088 | Any hotel, inn, lodging- house?" |
26088 | Anybody know?" |
26088 | Are they worse?" |
26088 | Are you Paul Ritson, the eldest son of the late Allan Ritson?" |
26088 | Are you a friend?" |
26088 | Are you angry with me?" |
26088 | Are you mad? |
26088 | Are you not ashamed of such mockery? |
26088 | Are you satisfied? |
26088 | Are you satisfied?" |
26088 | Are you that person?" |
26088 | Are you the debtor bound hand and foot, and is your brother the astute steward?" |
26088 | At what time was he here last night?" |
26088 | Before death a man may be brave; but in the face of a calamity like this, what man could be brave?" |
26088 | Better that his child should lie there cold and lifeless than that it should fill this desolate house with joy and love? |
26088 | Bonnithorne reached over and whispered:"Mad man, what are you doing? |
26088 | Bonnithorne replied with phlegm:"But what about the feelings of the man who is so soon to be turned out of the house?" |
26088 | Bonnithorne?" |
26088 | Bonnithorne?" |
26088 | Bonnithorne?" |
26088 | Bonnithorne?" |
26088 | But did you never guess that I could have wished another name?" |
26088 | But her husband, God bless him, had always said:"What''s bite and sup for a child? |
26088 | But how? |
26088 | But that was not true, was it?" |
26088 | But the little one of all was not interested in this turn of the conversation:"Well, why do n''t oo have a little boy?" |
26088 | But they are poor, and I had no money, and I was afraid to be a burden to them; and besides-- besides--""Well?" |
26088 | But what do we know of the law at the foot of the Cross? |
26088 | But what if it can not be disproved?" |
26088 | But what was to prevent him from going out again at the entrance from Latrigg? |
26088 | But will he be sure to come to- night?" |
26088 | But you will try not to hate me,... your own mother.... You will try, will you not?" |
26088 | Can anything be clearer?" |
26088 | Can he do it? |
26088 | Can he do it?" |
26088 | Can this business wait until my return?" |
26088 | Can this business wait?" |
26088 | Christian?" |
26088 | Christian?" |
26088 | Christian?" |
26088 | Cloven hoof? |
26088 | Cold wark, eh?" |
26088 | Could it be possible that Paul, her Paul, had once been that? |
26088 | Could it be possible that he had arrived? |
26088 | Could it be possible that his mother was dead? |
26088 | Could it be possible? |
26088 | Could it be true that there had been an impediment? |
26088 | Could it occur that he would not be believed? |
26088 | Could she escape? |
26088 | Could there be time for it to get back? |
26088 | Could you do it?" |
26088 | Counsel continued,"Is there any one in court who recognizes him?" |
26088 | D''ye say it ai n''t right?" |
26088 | D''ye think I''m going to be taken? |
26088 | Delivering himself to justice as a perjurer? |
26088 | Did any one get into it here, porter?" |
26088 | Did he lack gall to make such a climax bitter? |
26088 | Did it come from the loft? |
26088 | Did it seem at that moment as if God had been very good to these two women? |
26088 | Did n''t I tell you before? |
26088 | Did n''t I tell you that your sight was failing you--- ey, did n''t I, now?" |
26088 | Did n''t he look frightened-- just a little frightened-- at first, you know? |
26088 | Did she seem fond of it?" |
26088 | Did she tell you that your husband had been ill?" |
26088 | Did you board her?" |
26088 | Did you say the convent, sir? |
26088 | Did you say you were expecting somebody? |
26088 | Do I come to you on my knees? |
26088 | Do n''t tell him that-- do you hear?" |
26088 | Do n''t you notice as folks as eat other folks''bread, and earn none for theirselves, never knows no more nor babbies which side the butter is on?" |
26088 | Do you hear? |
26088 | Do you hear? |
26088 | Do you hear? |
26088 | Do you hear?" |
26088 | Do you know what name they''ve given her?" |
26088 | Do you know who he is?" |
26088 | Do you like singing, sweetheart?" |
26088 | Do you remember what Parson Christian used to say? |
26088 | Do you say Drayton?--Drayton, who, as I hear, was to- day tried and sentenced?" |
26088 | Do you think I should have denied my self my inheritance, and let a bastard stand in my place, if I had not believed it?" |
26088 | Do you think I''ve taken your brass? |
26088 | Do you think that all this has been going on under our mother''s eyes without her seeing it?" |
26088 | Do you understand?" |
26088 | Does n''t he want to coddle it?" |
26088 | Draw up your chair-- but where''s the pot of ale, Greta?" |
26088 | Dusta know I thowt it were thy ghost?" |
26088 | Dusta know how many faults poddish may have? |
26088 | Eh?" |
26088 | Even if genuine, does it prove legitimacy?" |
26088 | First of all, which is your name-- Paul Drayton or Paul Ritson?" |
26088 | Following the upward direction of the animal''s nose, the gentleman said,"Whose sheep are those on the ghyll yonder?" |
26088 | From whom?" |
26088 | Gone where?" |
26088 | Got your ticket, miss?" |
26088 | Greta, do you know what it is to love without being loved? |
26088 | Greta, he''s a girt booby, is n''t he?" |
26088 | Greta, would it be a mockery to ask you to forgive me?" |
26088 | Had he not said in his wrath that passion was the demon of the world? |
26088 | Had he not said that he was above prejudice? |
26088 | Had he, then, no duty left in life that he must needs gratify his revenge in a kind of death? |
26088 | Had it been all a dream? |
26088 | Had she dreamed? |
26088 | Had they one?" |
26088 | Had you any misunderstanding with your husband?" |
26088 | Hain''t I a right to share it, eh?" |
26088 | Has he not even yet told you all?" |
26088 | Has n''t she two of''em as she is? |
26088 | Has she made any noise yet? |
26088 | Hasta never a master, then?" |
26088 | Hasta owt agenn it?" |
26088 | Have I not passed before our little world for a stern and callous man? |
26088 | Have I not sinned deeply?" |
26088 | Have you no shame?" |
26088 | Have you not done me wrong enough already?" |
26088 | He glanced quickly around the room, and said in a deep whisper:"How many know of this?" |
26088 | He leaped across the pit, his face red as his cock''s comb, and shouting,"Damme, what for did ye pick up my bird?" |
26088 | He looked at the reflection of his face-- could it be the face of a scoundrel? |
26088 | He put his head in at the door of an out- house and shouted,"Reuben, wheriver ista? |
26088 | He recalled his oath; could he pronounce six words and not violate it? |
26088 | He was a resolute man; he had given her a choice of two courses, and had she not taken a selfish part? |
26088 | He was asking himself, was it true that when the fire of the stars should be burned to ashes, still man would endure? |
26088 | He''s gone to London, ai n''t he? |
26088 | Him? |
26088 | His?" |
26088 | Home!--home? |
26088 | Home? |
26088 | How can you ask me to leave my father''s side at a moment like this?" |
26088 | How can you know? |
26088 | How could I confess to that sinful past and not loose the love of the only human soul that held me pure and true? |
26088 | How could I punish the guilty without revealing the secret sin that had been thirty years hidden in my heart? |
26088 | How did you find us here?" |
26088 | How is poor father, does he look much older does he fret for me now? |
26088 | How long since the attack began? |
26088 | How old is your sweetheart, Greta?" |
26088 | How should her love for him require that she should leave him? |
26088 | How''s your breathing to- day-- any easier?" |
26088 | How?" |
26088 | Hugh Ritson held himself stiffly, and merely said:"Where did you get it?" |
26088 | Hugh Ritson''s forehead contracted, and he said:"If I have wrecked my life by one folly, one act of astounding unwisdom, what matter? |
26088 | Hugh Ritson''s heart leaped within him, but he preserved an outward show of indifference, and drawled:"Well, what was it?" |
26088 | Hugh smiled, and answered with composure:"Whose will be the loss?" |
26088 | I am a little childish sometimes, but I can be brave, ca n''t I?" |
26088 | I am not so bad a man as perhaps I seem; but of what avail is it to defend myself now? |
26088 | I had fifteen white shillin''in my reet- hand breek pocket, and where are they now?" |
26088 | I mean if the law recognizes him as my husband?" |
26088 | I reckon tha knows it''s been here afore?" |
26088 | I spoke angrily to you the other night, but it''s over now, is it not?" |
26088 | I''m a licensed victualer and a gentleman--""What do I want? |
26088 | If Circumstance was the evil genius of a man''s life, should it be made the god of it also? |
26088 | If Greta had been my half- sister, would she have stood by and witnessed our love?" |
26088 | If I have no claim to your love, have I no right to your pity? |
26088 | If so be as the lady axes why her husband did n''t come for her hisself-- what then?" |
26088 | If you have no pity for me, have you none for him?" |
26088 | In fact, Hugh said--""Well, what did he say?" |
26088 | In that wilderness of London, more desolate than the trackless desert, what was she? |
26088 | In the morning? |
26088 | In this old church where they sung, other men had sung before them, and where were they now? |
26088 | In what quarter of the sky was the light dawning for him? |
26088 | Is he awake now? |
26088 | Is he gaining color? |
26088 | Is he in court?" |
26088 | Is he not my son? |
26088 | Is he watching it, father? |
26088 | Is it a cheat? |
26088 | Is it free? |
26088 | Is it in perjury and robbery that honor lies?" |
26088 | Is it not a palpable imposture?" |
26088 | Is it so guilty a thing that I have loved you-- to all lengths and ends of love? |
26088 | Is it so much that I ask of you? |
26088 | Is it so, Greta?" |
26088 | Is it the kitten? |
26088 | Is she conscious?" |
26088 | Is she here?" |
26088 | Is she poor? |
26088 | Is that enough?" |
26088 | Is that how it goes?" |
26088 | Is the time short? |
26088 | Is there nothing the girl can do for you when she comes? |
26088 | Is this story credible? |
26088 | It was n''t you, Mrs. Ritson, was it?" |
26088 | It''s like you''ll bring him home in a car?" |
26088 | John Proudfoot,"to the blacksmith,"what about your child down with the fever?" |
26088 | Kentish Town Junction?" |
26088 | Let him see; how old? |
26088 | Let me see, ai n''t it once a year?" |
26088 | Let me see, it''s a kind of a harvest- home, ai n''t it?" |
26088 | Let me see, what do they say is the time of your last up- train?" |
26088 | London?" |
26088 | Manliness? |
26088 | Many of them, eh? |
26088 | Maybe tha''s reckoning on takin''a step wi''him, eh?" |
26088 | Mercy inclined her head aside, and added,"Ah, you young rogue you; you are there, are you? |
26088 | Monday? |
26088 | Mr. Bonnithorne nodded his head in the direction of the voice, and said softly:"So our friend Greta is here to- day?" |
26088 | Mr. Bonnithorne nodded his head twice or thrice, and said calmly:"You know that your brother hopes to marry Greta?" |
26088 | Mrs. Ritson, without shifting the determination of her gaze from the nervous fingers in her lap, said:"What condition?" |
26088 | Must I get it, think you? |
26088 | My kind mother, have I not told you yet?" |
26088 | Never been there-- and that near?" |
26088 | No errand?" |
26088 | No handsome young fellow who whispered that you were a pretty little thing, and had no right to go moping about by yourself? |
26088 | No? |
26088 | Nobody''s cow calved? |
26088 | None? |
26088 | Not at night?" |
26088 | Not raise it a little?" |
26088 | Nothing wanted? |
26088 | Odd, is n''t it?" |
26088 | Odd, is n''t it?" |
26088 | Odd, is n''t it?" |
26088 | Odd, you say? |
26088 | Oh, Mrs. Ritson, how selfish I am!--how can I ever repay you?" |
26088 | Oh, how shall I tell you? |
26088 | Oh, is it yourself in the dark, Paul? |
26088 | Oh, where was Mr. Christian? |
26088 | Oh, wretched man that I am, who shall deliver me from the body of this death?" |
26088 | On Windybrowe?" |
26088 | On the one hand revenge, on the other duty-- which was he to follow? |
26088 | On which side of the house does the attic lie?" |
26088 | Once more, can it wait?" |
26088 | Or is it the story of the cat in the adage? |
26088 | Or was it a vision, and not a dream, that came to him now? |
26088 | Ot''s a gentleman?" |
26088 | Pancras?" |
26088 | Pancras?" |
26088 | Paul glanced into his brother''s face a moment, and said:"What''s the use of breeding malice? |
26088 | Paul lifted his face, and in that luminous twilight it were an expression of peculiar horror:"In fact, myself-- in a glass?" |
26088 | Paul-- what?" |
26088 | Porter, have you put the luggage in the van? |
26088 | Presently Hugh turned to the doctor and said:"Do you happen to know the convict B 2001?" |
26088 | Revenge? |
26088 | Right? |
26088 | Ritson?" |
26088 | Ritson?" |
26088 | Rough? |
26088 | Say, now, if you will, which of us-- you or I-- has been the true guardian of our mother''s name?" |
26088 | Shall I keep my vow if I burden you with a black lie that will drive the sunshine out of your life? |
26088 | Shall I repeat it?" |
26088 | Shall I tell you where the collar of that coat is now? |
26088 | Shall I tell you who she is? |
26088 | Shall I tell you why you went to Cumberland?" |
26088 | She looked up from her knitting, and said:"What do you mean?" |
26088 | Should he love her less or more? |
26088 | Should she mention it to Paul? |
26088 | So foul a thing to love? |
26088 | So next day I says,''Got anybody outside as would like to send you summat by the Underground?'' |
26088 | So you had doubts?" |
26088 | Sometimes he sung in a drawling tone--"Bonny lass, canny lass, wilta be mine? |
26088 | St. Margaret''s, Westminster, sir?" |
26088 | Tears? |
26088 | That was the night he slept at Janet''s, was n''t it?" |
26088 | That was very childish, was n''t it? |
26088 | That''s a big haystack to find a needle in, ai n''t it?" |
26088 | That''s very silly, is n''t it? |
26088 | That''s what I want to know-- where''s it going to go?" |
26088 | The coat with the torn lapel-- where is it? |
26088 | The doctor? |
26088 | The doctors did n''t hurt you before, did they?" |
26088 | The driver rapped at the door with the end of his whip, and shouted from his seat:"Heigho, heigho-- ready for Kentish Town? |
26088 | The landlady glanced back with a puzzled expression, and began in a blundering whimper,"The poor gentleman--""The old lady''s son?" |
26088 | The lawyer glanced at the chairs, and said:"Then you have invited other friends?" |
26088 | The lawyer, when he came to the end, handed the letter back with the simple comment:"Came this morning, you say? |
26088 | The look of amazement returned to her eyes; he saw it and went on:"Is it possible that you have not read my secret?" |
26088 | The mare not lost her hindmost shoe-- nothing?" |
26088 | The old parson muttered, as if to himself,"Wilt thou break a leaf driven to and fro? |
26088 | The time is near when I shall trouble the world no more, and it will be but a poor wounded name I shall leave behind me, will it not? |
26088 | Then Mercy said, in a stronger voice,"Will it be soon-- the trial?" |
26088 | Then his son was his heir?" |
26088 | Then the steward said within himself,''What shall I do?''" |
26088 | Then what am I? |
26088 | Then, coming behind the old man, and glancing over his shoulder at the book on his knees,"What are you looking for?" |
26088 | Then, surely, this present trouble was not that which Hugh Ritson has threatened?" |
26088 | Therefore, I ask again: What does it all come to?" |
26088 | These throngs of men, whose great voice swelled like the sea, what were they? |
26088 | To be tied down for life to a mindless piece of physical prettiness-- what man of brains could bear it? |
26088 | To me? |
26088 | To what lengths might not passion, unrequited passion, defeated passion, outraged passion, lead a man like Hugh Ritson? |
26088 | Turn me out- o''-doors, eh? |
26088 | Uneducated? |
26088 | Wad ye credit it, John? |
26088 | Wait-- night afore last? |
26088 | Was he playing a base part? |
26088 | Was he, then, so black a villain? |
26088 | Was it in a fly? |
26088 | Was it really necessary that the defendant should be called? |
26088 | Was it so cruel a thing to be just? |
26088 | Was it your suggestion or mine? |
26088 | Was n''t it, Greta?" |
26088 | Was that a flash of lightning?" |
26088 | Was the dead fruit to hang about his neck forever? |
26088 | Well-- where was I? |
26088 | Well?" |
26088 | Were these as nothing against the humiliation of a proud spirit? |
26088 | Were you more prudent with the girl?" |
26088 | What a sad little soul-- crying again?" |
26088 | What alternative was left to him? |
26088 | What are you going to do for a fellow? |
26088 | What atonement is there for a wrong like that?" |
26088 | What body?" |
26088 | What could be better? |
26088 | What did he mean? |
26088 | What did he wear that night?" |
26088 | What did it matter to Greta whether he were high or basely born? |
26088 | What did it mean? |
26088 | What did she say? |
26088 | What do you drink-- brandy?" |
26088 | What do you mean? |
26088 | What do you mean?" |
26088 | What do you mean?" |
26088 | What do you think? |
26088 | What does he say?" |
26088 | What excuse for going? |
26088 | What had he meant? |
26088 | What had he thought of doing? |
26088 | What happened then?" |
26088 | What harm could he do them? |
26088 | What has he done to earn your love that I have not done? |
26088 | What has he sacrificed?" |
26088 | What has he suffered? |
26088 | What has it done for me? |
26088 | What have I sacrificed to it? |
26088 | What have I suffered for your love? |
26088 | What hidden reason had he for moving like a shadow where he knew no one and was known of none? |
26088 | What if he allowed everything to take its course? |
26088 | What if it is another man? |
26088 | What if the lie had then been outfaced? |
26088 | What is education likely to do for me? |
26088 | What is he doing?" |
26088 | What is he? |
26088 | What is his business here? |
26088 | What is it, I wonder? |
26088 | What is my little baby boy to Him? |
26088 | What is your love for him, or his for you?--what is it, can it be? |
26088 | What is your name, sir?" |
26088 | What is your name, sir?" |
26088 | What matter if it is a land of rain, and snow, and tempest? |
26088 | What matter?" |
26088 | What of the broken heart and the wretched home? |
26088 | What of the woman who had suffered for him? |
26088 | What passed? |
26088 | What place is this?" |
26088 | What power had words to express a sorrow like this? |
26088 | What purpose could be served by sending her to the convent for the gentleman''s wife, when the gentleman himself might have been driven there? |
26088 | What right have you to expect that I will take that from you? |
26088 | What rite, what jabbering ceremony, what priestly ordinance, what legal mummery, stood between him and his claim to his father''s name? |
26088 | What sayst tha, Reuben?" |
26088 | What then? |
26088 | What think you will come of it? |
26088 | What train?" |
26088 | What unseen power had drawn him there? |
26088 | What was life itself now without Greta''s love? |
26088 | What was man? |
26088 | What was the good of going to the station for a man who was not coming by the train? |
26088 | What was the thought that had risen unbidden within him? |
26088 | What was the use of pretending to bring home a person who had never been away? |
26088 | What was this strange illness that had come upon her in his absence? |
26088 | What were they like?" |
26088 | What will he do? |
26088 | What will he do? |
26088 | What would you say if I could put you in Paul Lowther''s place, and get you Paul Lowther''s inheritance?" |
26088 | What''s it you say? |
26088 | What''s that?" |
26088 | What''s the use of wrangling over doctrine? |
26088 | What, after all, was the old god of the river to the Juggernaut of the city? |
26088 | What?" |
26088 | What?" |
26088 | When I''ve made my will, and put Paul on the same footing with t''other lad, who knows owt mair nor we choose to tell?" |
26088 | When are you coming to me? |
26088 | When had he left? |
26088 | When had the parson arrived? |
26088 | When your red- hot rubbish is shot down your bank, where''s it going to go, ey? |
26088 | Where does he come from? |
26088 | Where had half the world''s titled great ones sprung from? |
26088 | Where is the lawyer?" |
26088 | Where is your husband?" |
26088 | Where should she look? |
26088 | Where was it? |
26088 | Where was she now? |
26088 | Where was she to go? |
26088 | Where will Hugh go? |
26088 | Where? |
26088 | Where?" |
26088 | Where?" |
26088 | Where?" |
26088 | Where?" |
26088 | Where?" |
26088 | Wherefore had he come? |
26088 | Which is the train-- the left?" |
26088 | Which room?" |
26088 | Which shall it be? |
26088 | Who is he? |
26088 | Who is this man? |
26088 | Who is this man?" |
26088 | Who said that? |
26088 | Who should say they had not perished? |
26088 | Who sleep in this house beside yourselves-- and the girl?" |
26088 | Who then would have said that he was a villain? |
26088 | Who was a- saying as our Paul was like some one? |
26088 | Who was he? |
26088 | Who was her lawyer?" |
26088 | Who?" |
26088 | Who?" |
26088 | Why a lie?" |
26088 | Why did he not come openly? |
26088 | Why did not the woman speak? |
26088 | Why did you not come before?" |
26088 | Why did you not tell me so before? |
26088 | Why didna he brag of some rich uncle in Austrilly?" |
26088 | Why didsta not speak to Paul?" |
26088 | Why do n''t you go?" |
26088 | Why had his mother shut herself in a convent? |
26088 | Why had not that coxcomb told him what had occurred? |
26088 | Why had the gentleman been brought out to Hendon? |
26088 | Why need it trouble me?" |
26088 | Why should he play the fool, and leap the life to come? |
26088 | Why was the lady in a convent? |
26088 | Why, being ill, was he so soon to be removed? |
26088 | Why, being removed, was he not put back into this cab, and driven to the station for Cumberland? |
26088 | Why, bless my soul, who''s this? |
26088 | Why, in God''s name, had he ever gone away? |
26088 | Why, of all places on this wide earth, does he, of all men alive, haunt my house like a shadow?" |
26088 | Why? |
26088 | Why? |
26088 | Why?" |
26088 | Why?" |
26088 | Will he be well enough to come?" |
26088 | Will it last?" |
26088 | Will you not bear it?" |
26088 | Will you order that a message be left for the clergyman?" |
26088 | Will you remember-- Sister Grace? |
26088 | Will you remember?" |
26088 | Will you?" |
26088 | Wilt thou pursue the dry stubble?" |
26088 | Would he be less or more worthy of her love? |
26088 | Would his mother be worse? |
26088 | Would it go quickly? |
26088 | Would she be still conscious? |
26088 | Would sleep never come? |
26088 | Would you like to know the name of Grace Ormerod''s child by Robert Lowther?" |
26088 | Yet why prate of solace in a matter like this? |
26088 | You ai n''t told him as I''m here?" |
26088 | You always say people are busybodies, do n''t you, father?" |
26088 | You for this convent, or your husband for lifelong imprisonment?" |
26088 | You have heard what has happened?" |
26088 | You have something to say-- what is it?" |
26088 | You say he is ill? |
26088 | You shake your heads-- what does that mean?" |
26088 | You shall be happy again-- you are happy now, are you not?" |
26088 | You suspect me of that, d''ye? |
26088 | You to live with him?" |
26088 | You understand?" |
26088 | You understand?" |
26088 | You understand?" |
26088 | You understand?" |
26088 | You would and you would n''t?" |
26088 | You would n''t be angry with me, would you?" |
26088 | You would sacrifice something for me, would you not?" |
26088 | You''ve got the gift of the gab, hain''t ye? |
26088 | You''ve not rounded on a fellow, eh?" |
26088 | Young person''s baby ill? |
26088 | Your husband?" |
26088 | am I to be a prisoner in my own house?" |
26088 | and take to him the dregs and rinsings of my life? |
26088 | and what''s the women to me?" |
26088 | and who would believe me? |
26088 | and whoever is it?" |
26088 | asked the parson;"the money to begin?" |
26088 | can this thing be?" |
26088 | had he not said that Paul Ritson kept this inn? |
26088 | haw!--so I''m to leave her at the station, eh? |
26088 | he cried, in an affrighted whisper, and with a mighty tragical start,"and is that thee? |
26088 | he said,"do you know what you are doing?" |
26088 | he said;"the sneck of a gate, eh?" |
26088 | how gone?" |
26088 | is n''t your own key on the inside?" |
26088 | muttered Hugh,"ca n''t he keep his tongue in his mouth?" |
26088 | repeated Hugh, and added, absently,"who can tell?" |
26088 | said Hugh, dryly"They disturbed your sleep, perhaps?" |
26088 | said Mercy, timidly;"Covent Garden-- is that London?" |
26088 | said the blacksmith, observing for the first time the second of the new- comers;"and how fend ye?" |
26088 | she asked, and smiled;"a prescription for envy?" |
26088 | thoo''s heard how the taistrel killed poor auld Fan? |
26088 | what are they lugging into the pigeon loft?" |
26088 | what did he get?" |
26088 | what did he mean?" |
26088 | what foolery is this? |
26088 | what had I done to you-- what, what?" |
26088 | what is it? |
26088 | what matter?" |
26088 | what should I know about your brass? |
26088 | what was about to be done? |
26088 | what''s this?''" |
26088 | whatever ails her? |
26088 | whatever ails the gentleman? |
26088 | where is Mr. Christian-- Parson Christian?" |
26088 | who''d have thought of this? |
26088 | will nobody come?" |