Questions

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

identifier question
45885At last a man ventured to propose:"Shall we go out from the church?"
45885He gave it a kick, whereupon a voice called out from beneath,''What be you a- doin''to my''at?''
45885The man replied,''Be there now a chap under''n?''
34543''What are ye doing?'' 34543 Afraid you wo n''t get your fifteen shillings a week, are ye?"
34543Ai n''t he a booty?
34543And if you were left alone what would you do?
34543And my father, Canon Lascelles-- really? 34543 And my mother-- where is she?"
34543And you know what he goes there for? 34543 Any rabbit- skins, miss?"
34543Are you going to deny it?
34543Are you really living here alone?
34543Are you sure?
34543Are you telling us the minister has n''t given you the money?
34543At the Barton?
34543Aw, Peter, will''em du it?
34543Aw, Peter, wun''t the volks look yaller when they sees''en?
34543Aw, bain''t''em dafty?
34543Aw, my dear, what be ye doing?
34543Aw, my dear, what have ye done?
34543B''est hungry?
34543B''est sure that''s right?
34543Bain''t he a proper young gentleman?
34543Bain''t him a cruel noisy thing?
34543Bain''t that artful now?
34543Be I, sir?
34543Be t''other train going to run into we?
34543Be ye going down under?
34543Be yew a criminal tu?
34543Be yew going back?
34543Be yew going far?
34543Be yew going to break the mommet?
34543Be''ye alright, Gran''vaither?
34543Been here long, my jewel?
34543Been to Lewside Cottage, has he? 34543 Boodles, what shall we do?"
34543But I want to know if he is going to give me up?
34543But as you are only an old daddy- man?
34543But do n''t they know? 34543 But how did it get there?"
34543But if he does come?
34543But what are we going to inspect?
34543But what is the rain doing now?
34543Butter?
34543Ca n''t us do nought?
34543Ca n''t ye mix bread in my house?
34543Can us hang''em up, du''ye reckon, Peter?
34543Could n''t ye mak''one o''they? 34543 Could you meet me on Friday morning at eleven o''clock in Tavy woods?"
34543Did ever see such a goosie?
34543Did it hurt, Boodle- oodle?
34543Did n''t I tell ye?
34543Did you ever catch one?
34543Did''st du it?
34543Do angels have red hair?
34543Do n''t the words pinch? 34543 Do n''t they do that?
34543Do n''t this old place smell mucky?
34543Do n''t you know what the policeman wants you for?
34543Do you care?
34543Do you know a drunken man when you see one?
34543Do you suppose he had fallen from his horse and stunned himself?
34543Do you think that is the carriage?
34543Do you want Aubrey to marry this nameless girl?
34543Does it require any answer?
34543Does that hurt?
34543Does that''dear''mean expensive? 34543 Du ye reckon they''ll know I be a criminal?"
34543Du''ye feel like that, Peter?
34543Du''ye mean Old Sal, my dear? 34543 Du''ye say he bain''t your husband?"
34543Du''ye want master, sir? 34543 Edith?"
34543Fine, and how be yew?
34543Given him no tea?
34543Going beyond?
34543Going to chapel Sunday night?
34543Going to the fair?
34543Got a stick?
34543Got any money? 34543 Got any money?"
34543Got any promises?
34543Happy, are ye?
34543Has n''t he?
34543Haunted water, daddy?
34543Have a drop o''cider, will ye? 34543 Have we got anything for supper, Boodle- oodle?"
34543Have we the right to work a mine upon the moor?
34543Have ye got a home?
34543Have ye purty nigh done?
34543Have you no one to look after you?
34543He was dead drunk?
34543How are you going to answer this?
34543How be I to mix bread''and get supper? 34543 How be I to work in dimsies?"
34543How be us to stop''em?
34543How be ye, Master? 34543 How be ye, my dear?"
34543How can I?
34543How could you say that you picked me up on your doorstep, and never knew where I had come from?
34543How did I come to you?
34543How did he know? 34543 How did you do it?"
34543How did you get those clothes?
34543How do ye come home? 34543 How is the old goose, Mary?"
34543How many miles is that?
34543How much have ye got in the money- box?
34543How old is she?
34543How would you like to come to the Barton, and be my married wife? 34543 I suppose he had n''t got it on that night?"
34543I suppose those men were enjoying themselves, but what right have they to an enjoyment which makes other people suffer? 34543 I suppose you would n''t accept it?"
34543I thought you said she was born in Lausanne at the Hotel Gibbon?
34543I wants to know how yew be telling to I?
34543If I ca n''t find out, Aubrey?
34543If you ai n''t got the blooming oof, who has?
34543In what condition was he when you found him lying upon the road?
34543Is it all over?
34543Is it his nature?
34543Is it the Brute, daddy?
34543Is that clock right?
34543It made you cry?
34543Look ye here, will ye? 34543 Made a mommet, ha''ye?
34543May I laugh now?
34543Milk? 34543 My poor child, how can you sit here in the cold?
34543Need we proceed at this present''igh velocity, Mr. Pendoggat? 34543 No guardians?
34543Not men?
34543Nothing''bout Varmer Pendoggat and Chegwidden''s maid?
34543Now I must find out all about them?
34543Now?
34543Pretty, ai n''t they? 34543 Put''en right, will ye?"
34543Remember-- what?
34543S''pose yew bain''t feeling good?
34543See all that carved wood on the front of him? 34543 Shall I beat him?"
34543Shall us dig up the pills and tak''some?
34543Shall us get on?
34543Shall us get on?
34543Shall us get on?
34543She said:''Aw, my dear, be ye sot by the window?'' 34543 Should you have cared very much, sweetheart?"
34543So my name is really Lascelles?
34543Stugged was he? 34543 Swear you''ll do it?"
34543The carriage is there, I think?
34543The child was baptised at St. Michael''s, Cornhill?
34543The happiness or hell?
34543Then how about Father Lascelles?
34543Then what does he mean by saying I am of low birth and have no name?
34543Thursday evenings usually?
34543Tita?
34543Was he drunk?
34543Was it because I did n''t talk proper about''ell?
34543Was it the same piece of jelly? 34543 Was''em all born dead?"
34543Well, Mary, how are you?
34543Well, my lad, how much do you want for your goose? 34543 Well, what about business?"
34543What about my blooming money, though?
34543What about that dirty mine?
34543What about that sample you gave me when I came down before? 34543 What about the nickel that you said was going to make our fortunes?"
34543What am I to do with it?
34543What are those things in your basket?
34543What are you a- saying? 34543 What are you talking about?"
34543What be I to du?
34543What be I to du?
34543What be that?
34543What be the matter?
34543What be yew doing?
34543What be yew going to du?
34543What be yew going to du?
34543What be yew leaving me? 34543 What be yew talking about?"
34543What be''em getting away from?
34543What can I do?
34543What do he know about nickel? 34543 What do you mean, Mr. Pendoggat?
34543What do you suppose she is doing now? 34543 What does that mean, Aubrey?"
34543What du''ye call''en?
34543What du''ye know''bout Varmer Pendoggat?
34543What du''ye mean?
34543What du''ye tak''for''en, Peter?
34543What ha''I done, sir?
34543What has he done?
34543What have you been doing-- quarrelling?
34543What is it?
34543What is that light, over in the corner?
34543What were they?
34543What would I want to come wi''yew for, woman?
34543What''s all that about bees?
34543What''s that, woman?
34543Whatever does it mean?
34543When will you come?
34543Where are you going, little radiance?
34543Where are you taking me?
34543Where be the oil?
34543Where be the old goose yew was so fond of?
34543Where be ye going?
34543Where be yew going?
34543Where be yew?
34543Where be''em?
34543Where have you come from?
34543Where was I?
34543Where will''em put the gold?
34543Where''s the mine?
34543Where''s your dog- licence?
34543Where?
34543Who be the mommet, Peter? 34543 Who be ye?"
34543Who be ye?
34543Who be ye?
34543Who killed that old goose?
34543Who told you that?
34543Who was that a telling to I?
34543Who''s to tell her?
34543Who? 34543 Why am I not a humpback, or diseased in some way, or hideous, if I am an illegitimate child?
34543Why ca n''t you stand up, man?
34543Why did n''t ye tell me?
34543Why did n''t ye tell to I avore?
34543Why did n''t''em tak''he then?
34543Why did you make up that queer story about finding me one night at your door?
34543Why did you say just now he was not drunk when you found him?
34543Why do n''t us get out and run away?
34543Why do n''t ye burn''en, woman?
34543Why du''ye call''em angels?
34543Why ever could n''t you have told me all this before? 34543 Why has n''t he told me then?"
34543Why have you told me? 34543 Why not marry?"
34543Why not? 34543 Why not?"
34543Why, Where''s Peter?
34543Why, daddy?
34543Why?
34543Will us get hurt?
34543Will ye give us a bite o''bread? 34543 Will you come and spend Christmas with us?"
34543Wo n''t the butiful young gentleman come and live wi''ye?
34543Would you like to show me over the cottage?
34543Wun''t ye come tu?
34543Yew stoled''en?
34543Yew''m sick?
34543You did not kiss her, I think?
34543You have always meant it? 34543 You have n''t told any one about our meetings?
34543You have often seen him galloping over the moor, in what some people might call a reckless way?
34543You know the story of your birth then now?
34543You mean my old daddy- man is my grandfather?
34543You think Farmer Chegwidden had reached that stage? 34543 You were not astonished, as you know he is an habitual drunkard?"
34543You will never kill her?
34543You''d like to come to the Barton, would n''t you, my maid?
34543You''ll live honest?
34543You''ll live honest?
34543You''ve been yetting too many worts?
34543You''ve done with young Pugsley?
34543Young Pugsley?
34543A change for the worse?
34543A real canon, a man with a sort of title?"
34543Ai n''t ye got a pin to give''en?
34543All the time she could hear Annie''s furious laughter and her mocking voice:"Why do n''t ye stand up to she, man?
34543Am I to say to every one:''I am an illegitimate child, and therefore I am as black as the devil himself?''
34543And how be yew, my dear, and how be the old gentleman?
34543And the others-- Katherine, Mary-- what are the rest?"
34543And there was another Boodles coming towards him with the pleasant words:"Be this your little dog, mister?
34543Animals have to be killed for food; but what would be done to a butcher who slaughtered his beasts in the middle of the street?
34543Are n''t you worrying your dear old head about another queer puzzle?
34543Are you ashamed of me?"
34543Are you my mother''s father?"
34543At last it said to the rain,''Where do_ yew_ come from?''
34543Aubrey is not coming home for Christmas then?"
34543Aw now, did n''t I?
34543Aw, my dear life, if I ca n''t tell a goosie when I sees him who can?"
34543Bain''t it a shocking waste o''time?"
34543Be I a liar, man?"
34543Be it early next?"
34543Be ye going, man?
34543Be''ye mazed, my dear?"
34543Bellamie?"
34543Bellamie?"
34543Bellamie?"
34543Boodles?"
34543Bread?"
34543But what about their pastimes?
34543But what am I to do?
34543But what can ye du wi''dead babies, my dear,''cept get''em out o''the way?"
34543But why had that face and voice suggested death, the death of a man who has used his power to deprive a poor wretch of his vineyard?
34543By the road or moor?"
34543Ca n''t you tell me what to do?''
34543Can us buy''em?"
34543Can you buy a suit of clothes for half- a- crown?
34543Cheese?
34543Chegwidden comes off pretty often, I believe?"
34543Chegwidden pushed closer, and asked hoarsely,"What do''ye think of it, varmer?"
34543Coming wi''me, Mary Tavy?
34543Did ever hear of trying to get a baby up wi''an ash- stick, woman?"
34543Did n''t I whack they old breeks o''yourn?
34543Did n''t your brother find''en wi''Chegwidden''s maid?
34543Did n''t''en, Master?
34543Did you ever see such a blaze?"
34543Did you see her turn then?
34543Did your-- did Mr. Weevil leave no will?"
34543Do I deserve it?
34543Do n''t I know he''s been wi''she for months, and used she as he''ve used me?
34543Do n''t ye hear she, Ben?"
34543Do n''t ye mind ole Will Chanter what had a fiddle like thikky one?
34543Do n''t you feel surprised that Chegwidden has never hurt himself badly?"
34543Do n''t you think it rather a good sermon for a babe and suckling?"
34543Do you know why?
34543Do you really know who my mother was?"
34543Do you recognise the portrait?"
34543Do you think I''d be such a fool as to give this find of mine away for nothing, as you might say, unless I''d got to?"
34543Does anybody know of it?"
34543Does it pinch here, Pezzack?
34543Drag him in by the neck, du''ye?
34543Du''ye hear, Peter?"
34543Du''ye mind, Peter?"
34543Du''ye understand that?"
34543Du''ye understand what I be telling?"
34543Du''ye understand what I mean?"
34543Eightpence a pound, is it?"
34543Every week the question came:"Why do n''t you write?"
34543Father,"she laughed,"why do people ask idiotic questions, like I''m doing now?"
34543For trampesing on the line a sum not exceeding forty shilluns--""Bain''t that better than getting smashed to pieces?"
34543Found out what it''s worth a ton?
34543Friday, day of regeneration, came clothed in a white mist, and found the girl asking herself:"Shall I try and make myself look older?"
34543Got permission from the Duchy?
34543Got your clothes ready?"
34543Had he been drinking?
34543Had it analysed yet?
34543Had n''t he made any notes on that subject?
34543Have a drop o''milk, will ye?"
34543Have you been cruel and caught a wee mousie and hurt it so much that you could n''t let it go?
34543He condescended, however, to observe in the severe tones which his uniform demanded:"Best be moving on, had n''t ye?"
34543He could hardly have been more intoxicated than he was when you found him?"
34543He had the same question for every one: might he have his little dog and talk to her for a bit?
34543He made no reply, only moved away, but she followed, saying:"How about that letter yew had this morning?"
34543He put down his pen, assumed the mantle of Nestor, and asked:"Can I oblige ye, Peter?"
34543He put up his sharp face, and chirped pathetically:"Wun''t ye buy''em, gentlemen?
34543He sat down in the dark, and as soon as the child entered began to quaver his usual grievance:"What right have they to make me suffer?
34543He will be invited to sit by a smouldering peat- fire, and the proposal,"Have a drop o''cider?
34543He would stare him in the face and say:"How be ye?"
34543Her name-- let me see-- what was her name?
34543How can I get at that treasure?''
34543How can you expect me to tell him to go away, and leave me, when I love him?
34543How could a man be said to enjoy a fair if he went home sober?
34543How could any story end unhappily on such a morning?
34543How could it be thirty years ago, when I''m only just eighteen?"
34543How could my mother be drowned before I was born?"
34543How could you?
34543How did he find that out?"
34543How is it that Canon Lascelles had the same name as you?
34543How would you feel if people found out you were n''t honest?
34543How would you feel if you were sentenced for robbery?
34543I do n''t know anything about nickel, except that I have some spoons and forks--""Do n''t you see we must get money to work it?
34543I hope you have n''t been stealing anything?"
34543I know that the sins of the parents are visited upon the children, but why should the children stand it?
34543I may get her a ring, mother, may n''t I?"
34543I think his name was Philip?"
34543If I ca n''t mak''a living what be I to du?"
34543If it is his nature to be gentle and affectionate, why should he be cruel too?"
34543If matrimony is what people say it is, a sort of sacrament, how is it that children can be born without it?"
34543If they did not protect law- abiding people from highwaymen and robbers, of what use were they?
34543Is it true you are my grandfather?"
34543Is n''t it butiful?"
34543Jewels, Mr. Pendoggat?
34543Ju had come to the cave gladly and found it homelike, so why not Thomasine?
34543Killed him, have ye?
34543May I get you a cup of tea?"
34543Must they, poor little fools?
34543Not hurt, are ye?"
34543Now I want you to use your memory, and tell me if you have ever seen him more drunk than he was that night?"
34543Now what shall I sing about?
34543Oh, Aubrey, was it you and I who used to walk here-- years ago?"
34543Oh, Mr. Pendoggat,''ow can you talk like this, and uncle listening?"
34543Only one, I think?"
34543Pendoggat?"
34543Pendoggat?"
34543Peter toddled off, got before the old clock, and inquired with solicitude:"How be''ye, Gran''vaither?"
34543Pretty good stuff, ai n''t it?
34543Sha n''t I look nice?"
34543Shall I light the lamp and find it?"
34543Shall I say weather permitting or God willing?
34543Shall I tell you all that, darling?"
34543She could not let him, but how was she to resist?
34543She too looked ill and miserable, and when celestial beings suffered what chance was there for him?
34543Suppose one of those rough men broke into her cottage?"
34543Suppose the mine fails, where are you?
34543Telled to ye same as Master might?"
34543That was another suspicious feature; why should the clock be unable to talk then when it had chatted so freely a few minutes before?
34543The answer was what might have been looked for, and ended with the usual question:"Why not?"
34543The dog shrank back, frightened at such roughness, so the man promptly kicked her with his big boot and growled angrily,"Bite me, will ye?"
34543Then she added:"Does Mr. Bellamie wish it?"
34543Then what interest could he feel in Pendoggat that he should plead for the destruction of the mommet?
34543There was a letter for you just now?"
34543There''s nothing remarkable about that, but still you are well aware of it?"
34543They do n''t know at Town Rising?"
34543This is Thursday, is n''t it?
34543Was he a relation?"
34543We had a daughter, or was it a son?
34543Were there not, upon every side, evidences of the existence of precious minerals in the shape of abandoned mines?
34543Were you never in love when you were eighteen?"
34543What am I to do when he comes home?
34543What am I to do?
34543What are all these things for-- pins, coins, coppers?
34543What are you going to say for yourself?
34543What chance had Brightly against a metallic creature like that?
34543What could she say that the child would like to hear?
34543What do they think of me?
34543What do you mean?"
34543What do you think of it?"
34543What do you think of the nickel down under?
34543What does he do with them?
34543What du us want wi''another?"
34543What else did he tell your father?"
34543What happens to we if they blows on the trumpets?"
34543What have I done?
34543What have the ignorant, passionate, selfish creatures in common with the freshness and purity of the wind and rain?
34543What have yew been a- doing of?"
34543What have you been doing?"
34543What have you done?"
34543What is it?
34543What is the matter with it?"
34543What right have the brutes to torment me so?"
34543What shall us du if it be judgment, Peter?"
34543What was my mother like?
34543What was the use of belonging to some one who did nothing for him?
34543What was the use of such a defenceless creature, this sort of human rabbit whom any one could attack?
34543What will the butiful young gentleman say when he sees you white and thin getting?"
34543What would an unmarried girl du wi''dree babies?"
34543What would you think, I''m asking ye, if you were found guilty of robbery and sent to prison?
34543What''s a few furze- prickles?"
34543What''s my tongue for?
34543Whatever be the matter wi''us?"
34543When are we going to start on the new chapel, minister?
34543Where be the pills, then?"
34543Where be us, Peter?"
34543Where be ye going, my dear?"
34543Who be going wi''ye?"
34543Who be the mommet?"
34543Who could explain these things?
34543Who do they think I am?"
34543Who is it to be?"
34543Who shall tell?
34543Who was my mother?
34543Why ca n''t people invent something for small girls to do upon a rainy day?
34543Why could n''t ogres leave them alone so that they could finish the story properly?
34543Why did n''t he ask him?"
34543Why did you tell Mr. Bellamie you are my grandfather, if you''re not?"
34543Why do n''t ye du the like to she?"
34543Why do n''t ye get away?
34543Why do n''t ye get up?"
34543Why do n''t ye get up?"
34543Why do n''t ye throw her off, man?"
34543Why do n''t you have a fire?"
34543Why does n''t he write to me?
34543Why ever should n''t I know?
34543Why had he not accepted the story which she was so ready to believe?
34543Why had he remained so long a mute inglorious scholar?
34543Why have n''t I seen him?
34543Why have n''t you ever told me?"
34543Why is a girl as black as the devil just because no clergyman has jabbered some rubbish at her parents?
34543Why may I not go a walk without being tortured?
34543Why should I give up my liberty?
34543Why should these people be outside the law because they are commoners?
34543Why turn him out feeble and half blind when he had his living to make?
34543Why, what''s the matter?
34543Will ye please to step inside, Varmer Chegwidden?"
34543Will you stand in with me, share the risks, and share the profits?
34543Wun''t ye get up?
34543You are a very generous man, but why do you let me into the secret?"
34543You are not deceiving me?"
34543You are not playing with me?
34543You are the girl''s grandfather on the mother''s side?"
34543You do n''t say they are jewels?"
34543You go to get beer, do n''t you?"
34543You know the Scorhill Rocks, my dears?
34543You told your uncle that?
34543You will be true to your little maid of the radiant head?
34543You wo n''t kill her, will you, Mary?"
34543You''re thinking of getting married?"
3070A beard?
3070A large scale map, I presume?
3070A lawyer, is he not, gray- headed, and walks with a limp?
3070A man''s or a woman''s?
3070A spy?
3070About what?
3070Ah, Wilson, I see you have not forgotten the little case in which I had the good fortune to help you?
3070Am I right?
3070And found nothing?
3070And have no doubt searched all the huts until you came to this one?
3070And have you made your will, Sir Henry?
3070And he made you swear to say nothing about your appointment with Sir Charles?
3070And how do you propose to do so?
3070And how much was the residue?
3070And how would you describe Mr. Sherlock Holmes?
3070And the dog?
3070And the hound?
3070And the one beyond, which shines so brightly?
3070And the woman''s name?
3070And then after you had sent the letter he dissuaded you from keeping the appointment?
3070And then?
3070And this Cavalier opposite to me-- the one with the black velvet and the lace?
3070And what is your theory of this poor fellow''s death?
3070And what marks did you see by the wicket- gate?
3070And when she is undeceived?
3070And when?
3070And where did he say that he lived?
3070And why were you holding a candle to the window?
3070And why were you so pressing that Sir Charles should destroy your letter?
3070And yet we manage to make ourselves fairly happy, do we not, Beryl?
3070And you said nothing?
3070And you say you can penetrate it?
3070And you, a trained man of science, believe it to be supernatural?
3070Any orders, sir?
3070Anything good?
3070Are you armed, Lestrade?
3070Are you armed?
3070Are you coming up?
3070Are you? 3070 But Dr. Mortimer was no doubt already stopping there?"
3070But I understand that it is something more modern and practical upon which you wish to consult me?
3070But are you sure of this, Holmes? 3070 But how about his food?"
3070But how about the case?
3070But how about the chance of his holding someone up before he goes?
3070But how?
3070But how?
3070But if you saw him so seldom and wrote so seldom, how did he know enough about your affairs to be able to help you, as you say that he has done?
3070But it had not approached the body?
3070But not actually raining?
3070But what do you intend to do?
3070But what is it that alarms you?
3070But what is it?
3070But what is the danger?
3070But why a rendezvous in the garden instead of a visit to the house?
3070But why at such an hour?
3070But why keep me in the dark?
3070But why should you wish to go into so horrible a place?
3070But why this elaborate deception?
3070But your family have been with us for several generations, have they not? 3070 But, hark, what is that?"
3070But, surely, you said that it was a new brown boot?
3070But, tell me, Watson, what do you make of our visitor''s stick? 3070 By the way, Dr. Mortimer, who is this Barrymore, anyhow?"
3070By the way, I do n''t suppose you appreciate that we have been mourning over you as having broken your neck?
3070Can you not tell when a warning is for your own good? 3070 Can you see anything?"
3070Can you tell me anything about him? 3070 Caught cold, Watson?"
3070Certainly, but how?
3070Colour of his eyes?
3070Did Barrymore profit at all by Sir Charles''s will?
3070Did any see it after?
3070Did he ever strike you as being crazy-- this brother of hers?
3070Did he give any explanation of his conduct?
3070Did he say anything more?
3070Did he say so?
3070Did it do you any good?
3070Did n''t he get the telegram? 3070 Did the boy deliver it into your own hands?"
3070Did you answer it yourself?
3070Did you correspond with Sir Charles?
3070Did you correspond with him?
3070Did you ever write to Sir Charles asking him to meet you?
3070Did you see him then?
3070Did you, for example, happen to hear someone, a woman I think, sobbing in the night?
3070Do n''t you think that is an admirable sentiment?
3070Do none suggest themselves? 3070 Do you know how he died?"
3070Do you know the names?
3070Do you mean danger from this family fiend or do you mean danger from human beings?
3070Do you mean that your wife and you wish to leave?
3070Do you not find it interesting?
3070Do you see anything there?
3070Do you see that Black Tor over yonder? 3070 Do you think a woman could go alone at that hour to a bachelor''s house?"
3070Footprints?
3070For example?
3070From Charing Cross Hospital?
3070Going out, Watson?
3070Had Sir Charles reached this?
3070Had Sir Charles received any other letters in the same writing?
3070Has Mr. Sherlock Holmes?
3070Has anything escaped me?
3070Has he escaped?
3070Have you any better explanation?
3070Have you any objection to my looking at your register?
3070Have you been on the moor already?
3070Have you ever met him?
3070Have you made anything out of the tangle? 3070 Have you seen him?"
3070Have you the dates of those letters?
3070He being the heir?
3070How can he see the guiding wands to- night? 3070 How can you do that?"
3070How can you say that, sir?
3070How can you say that?
3070How did you know that?
3070How did you know what I was doing? 3070 How do you explain it?"
3070How do you know of him then?
3070How do you know that?
3070How does she live?
3070How high was it?
3070How in the world can you say that?
3070How long will it take you to make up your mind?
3070How on earth did you do that?
3070How so?
3070How was it that no one else saw it?
3070How was that?
3070I guess we are aiding and abetting a felony, Watson? 3070 I hope your visit has cast some light upon those occurrences which have puzzled us?"
3070I presume that the reason he gave was that you would receive help from Sir Charles for the legal expenses connected with your divorce?
3070I presume, Doctor, that you could tell the skull of a negro from that of an Esquimau?
3070I say, Watson,said the baronet,"what would Holmes say to this?
3070I trust that there is nothing of consequence which I have overlooked?
3070I trust that they do not mean that I have done anything to forfeit your confidence?
3070I understand that the yew hedge is penetrated at one point by a gate?
3070If this woman is in truth his wife, where does Mrs. Laura Lyons come in?
3070If you did n''t see him, how do you know he was in the loft?
3070If you have never worn them, why did you put them out to be cleaned?
3070In spirit?
3070In your opinion there is a diabolical agency which makes Dartmoor an unsafe abode for a Baskerville-- that is your opinion?
3070Into his own hands?
3070Is he safe?
3070Is it hard to know?
3070Is it like anyone you know?
3070Is it not the very picture of an old family home? 3070 Is it ready?"
3070Is that convenient to you, Watson?
3070Is that serious?
3070Is there any other opening?
3070Is there anything between the hedges and the walk?
3070Is there no such thing as a gentleman?
3070Is this true, Barrymore?
3070It is he, then, who is our enemy-- it is he who dogged us in London?
3070It seems natural, does it not? 3070 It suggests-- halloa, my dear fellow, what on earth is the matter?"
3070May I ask if he is going to honour us with a visit himself?
3070Might I trouble you for it-- the inside page, please, with the leading articles?
3070My God, what''s that, Watson?
3070My dear Watson, clumsy as I have been, you surely do not seriously imagine that I neglected to get the number? 3070 My dear fellow, how can you possibly be so sure of that?"
3070My footprint, I presume?
3070No doubt,said I;"but how do you know that he is anywhere upon the moor?"
3070No,said Holmes;"did you?"
3070Not on the very day of Sir Charles''s death?
3070Nothing more that you can remember?
3070Now, tell me, Dr. Mortimer-- and this is important-- the marks which you saw were on the path and not on the grass?
3070Of course you know the legend of the fiend dog which haunts the family?
3070Oh, John, John, have I brought you to this? 3070 Oh, he mentioned his name, did he?
3070Oh, you return to- morrow?
3070On the second floor?
3070Or more astonished, eh?
3070Queer spot to choose, is it not?
3070Quite in the back row, eh? 3070 Running from what?"
3070Shall I run on and stop them?
3070Shall we move farther back upon higher ground?
3070Shall we turn back?
3070So that to reach the Yew Alley one either has to come down it from the house or else to enter it by the moor- gate?
3070Some poaching case, no doubt?
3070Still looking for your boot?
3070Surely you are mistaken about his trade?
3070Surely you will stay and have some dinner?
3070The devil''s agents may be of flesh and blood, may they not? 3070 Then I understand that on your arrival in London yesterday you went out at once and bought a pair of boots?"
3070Then anyone could have got over it?
3070Then had you not better consult him?
3070Then he was certainly there?
3070Then how is it that you did not go?
3070Then, how can I assist you?
3070There are many sheep- dogs on the moor?
3070There is no other claimant, I presume?
3070To London?
3070To see Mrs. Laura Lyons?
3070To walk across the moor?
3070Was ever such bad luck and such bad management, too? 3070 Was it here?"
3070We are to wait here?
3070Well, Watson, what do you make of it?
3070Well, Watson, what do you think of this new light?
3070Well, then, to- night?
3070Well, what happened when you did get there?
3070Well, you see the hills beyond? 3070 Well,"said I,"has this precious relation of yours departed, or is he still lurking out yonder?"
3070Well?
3070Well?
3070Well?
3070Were they on the same side of the path as the moor- gate?
3070What are they? 3070 What are you doing here, Barrymore?"
3070What are your questions?
3070What business?
3070What can I tell you about him?
3070What can we do?
3070What did he do?
3070What do they call this sound?
3070What do you make of it yourself?
3070What do you make of it, Dr. Mortimer? 3070 What do you make of it?"
3070What do you mean, then?
3070What do you say, Watson?
3070What do you think about it, Mr. Sherlock Holmes?
3070What do you think is the cause of so strange a sound?
3070What does it suggest?
3070What effect do you think it will have upon his plans now that he knows you are here?
3070What have I withheld?
3070What is it? 3070 What is it?"
3070What is that?
3070What is the Alley like?
3070What is the next move?
3070What is the object of these questions?
3070What is this, Perkins?
3070What new conditions?
3070What shall we do now?
3070What sort of facts?
3070What sort of night was it?'' 3070 What then?"
3070What then?
3070What was it you wanted to ask, sir?
3070What was it? 3070 What was that?"
3070What was the use?
3070What, are you coming, Watson?
3070When did he say this?
3070When do you desire to go?
3070Where can she be, then, since there is no light in any other room except the kitchen?
3070Where is it, Watson?
3070Where is it?
3070Who delivered it?
3070Who is he, then?
3070Who is she?
3070Who is the gentleman with the telescope?
3070Who knew that you were going to the Northumberland Hotel?
3070Who was the man?
3070Who-- who''s this?
3070Who?
3070Whom would you recommend, then?
3070Why about Sir Henry in particular?
3070Why in thunder should anyone follow or watch me?
3070Why should I go back?
3070Why should I not go?
3070Why should I stay here alone?
3070Why should he not go to the home of his fathers?
3070Why should we not arrest him at once?
3070Why should we not seize him at once?
3070Why so?
3070Why then, did you not write to Sir Charles and explain this?
3070Why was it bad?
3070Why, Dr. Watson, that''s not you, is it? 3070 Why, who do you think this is?"
3070With a wood round it?
3070Would it not be well in the first place to get rid of this Barrymore couple?
3070Would you wish dinner to be served at once, sir?
3070You do n''t mean that you know where he is?
3070You do n''t mean to say that you came after me in spite of all?
3070You do n''t mind my driving straight home, Sir Henry?
3070You have always kept together, I presume?
3070You have arms, I suppose?
3070You have lost one of your boots?
3070You have not observed anyone follow or watch you?
3070You knew him, did you not?
3070You know it well, then?
3070You know that there is another man then?
3070You know the story of the hound?
3070You mean that the thing is supernatural?
3070You saw this?
3070You say it was large?
3070You say, Watson, that the lady is not there?
3070You think that he was waiting for someone?
3070You think, then, that some dog pursued Sir Charles, and that he died of fright in consequence?
3070''Do We Progress?''
3070''Is all ready for Sir Henry?''
3070A sheep- dog of the moor?
3070Am I right?"
3070And Stapleton, where is he?
3070And anyone else?"
3070And from what?
3070And have I not cause for such a feeling?
3070And how did you localize me?
3070And then you heard nothing until you read the reports of the death in the paper?"
3070And why did she weep so bitterly?
3070And why-- why?
3070And you saw no more of him?"
3070Are you strong enough to stand?"
3070Are you sure of what you say?
3070Barrymore?"
3070Beneath it were signed the initials L. L.""Have you got that slip?"
3070Besides, besides--""Why do you hesitate?"
3070But I want to know why the word''moor''should have been written?"
3070But how could I know-- how could l know-- that he would risk his life alone upon the moor in the face of all my warnings?"
3070But how did you know me?"
3070But how in the name of wonder did you come here, and what have you been doing?
3070But supposing, for argument''s sake, that we had him arrested to- night, what on earth the better off should we be for that?
3070But the marks?"
3070But where could such a hound lie concealed, where did it get its food, where did it come from, how was it that no one saw it by day?
3070But you had your suspicions?"
3070But you were very young when you last saw Baskerville Hall, were you not?"
3070But you will come on, will you not, and see Merripit House?"
3070But, dear me, what''s this?
3070By the way"--his eyes darted again from my face to Holmes''s--"did you hear anything else besides a cry?"
3070By whom?"
3070Can you tell the position of the rooms?
3070Come now, Watson, did n''t you think yourself that it was the cry of a hound?
3070Could he-- could he be the stranger whom I saw upon the tor?
3070Could this be my stern, self- contained friend?
3070Could you swear to that man''s face within the cab?"
3070Did I think that because I was a baronet I could do what I liked?
3070Did he find out where he hid, or what he was doing?"
3070Did no one examine?"
3070Did the composer fear an interruption-- and from whom?"
3070Did the pale, watchful Barrymore know more than he cared to say?
3070Did they know that they would receive this?"
3070Did you ever hear a bittern booming?"
3070Did you get your other boot?"
3070Did you see him come out on us?"
3070Do I understand you to say that you have yourself had some remarkable experience since you arrived in London?"
3070Do my eyes deceive me, or is there at the present moment something moving upon that hill- side?"
3070Do n''t you see now whence these words have been taken?"
3070Do n''t you think, Watson, that you are away from your charge rather long?
3070Do you observe anything remarkable about that?"
3070Do you see?"
3070Do you think that I should intrude if I were to call this afternoon and make the acquaintance of Sir Henry?"
3070Even the best of us----""You thought it might injure his reputation?"
3070Good heavens, are you mad?"
3070Halloa, Watson, what''s this?
3070Has he remained in London, or has he followed us down here?
3070Has it never struck you that the way to catch that man was to find out where he got his food, and so trace it to him?"
3070Have you among your neighbours or acquaintances on Dartmoor any man with a black, full beard?"
3070Have you heard the De Reszkes?
3070Have you met Mr. James Desmond?"
3070Have you turned the case over in your mind?"
3070Have you yesterday''s Times, Watson?"
3070He passes along the same path at the same hour, and to whom should he be going except to the convict?"
3070He?"
3070Her initials were L. L.""How do you know this, Barrymore?"
3070Holmes?"
3070Holmes?"
3070How about that hour of darkness in which the power of evil is exalted?"
3070How could I settle the point forever?
3070How could he claim it without causing suspicion and inquiry?"
3070How could he have permitted Sir Henry to fall in love with her?"
3070How dared I offer her attentions which were distasteful to her?
3070How did he die?"
3070How did he know?"
3070How did you do it?"
3070How do you know that the woman is his wife?"
3070How else could it be known so quickly that it was the Northumberland Hotel which he had chosen?
3070How far do you think it is?"
3070How is the owner going to restore the glories of the Baskervilles if he has not money enough to keep up the property?
3070I suppose that by Saturday all might be ready?"
3070I trust that Sir Henry is none the worse for his journey?"
3070If I could only use it to detach his wife----""His wife?"
3070If you hold these views, why have you come to consult me at all?
3070If you meant no more than this when you first spoke to me, why should you not wish your brother to overhear what you said?
3070If your position is innocent, why did you in the first instance deny having written to Sir Charles upon that date?"
3070Is he safe?"
3070Is it not obvious?"
3070Is it possible that I am really in danger from so dark a cause?
3070Is it, then, stretching our inference too far to say that the presentation was on the occasion of the change?"
3070Is n''t that the direction of the great Grimpen Mire?"
3070Is that a place where a shepherd would be likely to take his station?
3070Is there anything that would prevent me from making a good husband to a woman that I loved?"
3070James, you delivered that telegram to Mr. Barrymore at the Hall last week, did you not?"
3070L.?"
3070May I inquire who has the honour to be the first?"
3070Might I trouble you then to be ready in half an hour, and we can stop at Marcini''s for a little dinner on the way?"
3070My God, can there be some truth in all these stories?
3070Never been there?
3070Now, Mr. Holmes, what would you advise me to do with him?"
3070Now, you rascal, do you deny that it is a signal?
3070Old Frankland the crank?"
3070On what occasion would it be most probable that such a presentation would be made?
3070Or a spectral hound, black, silent, and monstrous?
3070Shall I have a cab called?"
3070Sheep- pens?"
3070Sir Henry has, I suppose, no superstitious fears in the matter?"
3070Sir Henry?
3070So his name was Sherlock Holmes, was it?"
3070So you actually thought that I was the criminal?"
3070So you have been to Coombe Tracey, have you?"
3070Somebody hurt?
3070Supposing that anything happened to our young friend here-- you will forgive the unpleasant hypothesis!--who would inherit the estate?"
3070The one is whether any crime has been committed at all; the second is, what is the crime and how was it committed?
3070The question now is, what shall we do with this poor wretch''s body?
3070The sending of this letter was suggested to you by Stapleton?"
3070Then, again, whom was he waiting for that night, and why was he waiting for him in the Yew Alley rather than in his own house?"
3070There is one very singular thing, however: How came Selden, in the darkness, to know that the hound was on his trail?"
3070They are all family portraits, I presume?"
3070This article, you say, contains all the public facts?"
3070Was he also out in that deluged-- the unseen watcher, the man of darkness?
3070Was he our malignant enemy, or was he by chance our guardian angel?
3070Was he the agent of others or had he some sinister design of his own?
3070Was it possible that it was Barrymore after all whom we had seen in the cab in Regent Street?
3070Was it possible that this stolidly respectable person was of the same blood as one of the most notorious criminals in the country?
3070Was that his work or was it possibly the doing of someone who was bent upon counteracting his schemes?
3070Was the wicket- gate closed?"
3070Was there a human agency in the matter?
3070Watson?"
3070Well, do you see the low hill beyond with the thornbush upon it?
3070Well, have you got it?
3070What about the convict on the moor?"
3070What are those latticed windows at this end?"
3070What became of the hound when its master was in London?"
3070What did Selden say?
3070What do they say of it?"
3070What do you advise that we do now?"
3070What do you make of that?"
3070What do you make of those?"
3070What do you propose to do?"
3070What do you think of that, Watson?"
3070What do you think of that?
3070What do you think we should do?"
3070What does it mean?
3070What does it mean?"
3070What does it mean?"
3070What does man want more?
3070What has he against me?
3070What interest could he have in persecuting the Baskerville family?
3070What is he after?"
3070What is the meaning of it all?
3070What is the nearest telegraph- office?
3070What is the use of troubling Mr. Holmes with trifles of this kind?"
3070What signs are there of a hound?
3070What then?
3070What was I doing with the lady?
3070What was he, then?
3070What was the name that he mentioned?"
3070What were you doing at that window?"
3070What would you recommend?"
3070What''s he waiting for?
3070What''s the game now?"
3070What''s the matter with me, anyhow?
3070What''s this paper?
3070What''s this?"
3070What, in heaven''s name, was it?"
3070When he dragged himself here one night, weary and starving, with the warders hard at his heels, what could we do?
3070When was it inhabited?"
3070When would his friends unite to give him a pledge of their good will?
3070When you pass Bradley''s, would you ask him to send up a pound of the strongest shag tobacco?
3070Where are the marks of its fangs?
3070Where do you think that I have been?"
3070Where had you engaged a seat?"
3070Where have you dropped from?"
3070Where is Barrymore?"
3070Where is that friend or enemy now?
3070Where is this brute of a hound which drove him to his death?
3070Where, then, could he have been?
3070Who is your confederate out yonder, and what is this conspiracy that is going on?"
3070Why had he done this?
3070Why should I deny it?
3070Why should I preserve faith with him who never kept any with me?
3070Why should I try to shield him from the consequences of his own wicked acts?
3070Why should a man walk on tiptoe down the alley?"
3070Why should he wish to live at the place of danger?"
3070Why should she fight against every admission until it was forced from her?
3070Why should she have been so reticent at the time of the tragedy?
3070Why should she turn so pale?
3070Why should you mind what they call it?"
3070Will you come upstairs, Dr. Watson, and inspect my collection of Lepidoptera?
3070Will you remember to give them that message?"
3070Winner of the Jackson prize for Comparative Pathology, with essay entitled''Is Disease a Reversion?''
3070Would you have any objection to my running my finger along your parietal fissure?
3070Would you mind getting that orchid for me among the mares- tails yonder?
3070You acknowledge now that you wrote it?"
3070You and I know that he died of sheer fright, and we know also what frightened him; but how are we to get twelve stolid jurymen to know it?
3070You are aware, perhaps, that a close intimacy exists between this lady and the man Stapleton?"
3070You could easily recognize it, could you not?"
3070You did not know, Dr. Mortimer, that you were followed this morning from my house?"
3070You do n''t believe it, do you, Watson?"
3070You do n''t believe such nonsense as that?"
3070You have been inside the house, have you not, Watson?
3070You have lost one of your boots, you say?"
3070You have nothing else to report to us before we go into this matter?"
3070You must allow that there is nothing supernatural about this, at any rate?"
3070You notice those bright green spots scattered thickly over it?"
3070You saw me, perhaps, on the night of the convict hunt, when I was so imprudent as to allow the moon to rise behind me?"
3070You say that before Sir Charles Baskerville''s death several people saw this apparition upon the moor?"
3070You say that your fare told you that he was a detective?"
3070You understand me?
3070You understand?"
3070Your marriage, you say?"
3070cried Dr. Mortimer,"what is this?"
3070does stand for''Charing Cross Hospital,''what further inferences may we draw?"
3070is?"
3070you do n''t mean to say----?"
21357A good word for you-- for one who has been ready to risk his life again and again to help me? 21357 About Pete, father?"
21357Afraid? 21357 Ah, that puzzles you, do it, zir?
21357Ah, who knows?
21357Ah, why indeed, when you''re getting better?
21357An''s''pose these two poor men wanted to hurt you; what then?
21357And as that''s impossible, father--"We must grin and bear it, Nic-- eh?
21357And did he see you, father?
21357And leave you there?
21357And round and round?
21357And the dogs, Pete?
21357And they''d want it here just the same as they would at home, though it is a foreign country?
21357And we''re to be messmets reg''lar sarving under Captain Revel and Master Nic?
21357And what about a fish- hook?
21357And what about the guns?
21357And who would believe us at a place like this, where we know that poor wretches are brought to go up to the plantations?
21357And you''d have woke me if you had known?
21357And you''ll trust me, zur?
21357And you''re going to try if you can find where they keep the boat to- night?
21357And you''re sure the dog has n''t hurt you much?
21357And you?
21357Any one in her?
21357Are n''t drowned, I suppose?
21357Are n''t we?
21357Are n''t you a bit hard on me, Master Nic?
21357Are you better?
21357Are you mad?
21357Are you one of this fellow''s comrades?
21357Are you there, Pete Burge?
21357Are you two going to keep on talking till to- morrow morning?
21357As ever came out of it-- eh, Nic?
21357Awake, Nic?
21357Ay, is this all, Master Nic?
21357Bean''t dead, be he?
21357Been so bad?
21357Been to sea before?
21357Beg pardon, sir,he said;"speaking respeckful like--""What is it?"
21357Begun, lad? 21357 Better?
21357But I say, do you ever think about running away?
21357But after he was on board the other vessel?
21357But do you think it likely that my poor boy was among the prisoners?
21357But do you think the sailors will find their way here in the dark?
21357But do you think we can reach the mouth of the river without being stopped?
21357But food-- provisions?
21357But he''ll get it off, wo n''t he, zir?
21357But how are we to get a fire, Pete?
21357But look here, Nic-- did you change your things?
21357But quite well again now?
21357But the dogs?
21357But the high ground yonder, or the woods?
21357But the hook, man-- the hook?
21357But these two?
21357But we are not on board ship?
21357But what about these men-- are they going to stay in the neighbourhood?
21357But where are the dogs?
21357But where are we?
21357But why did n''t he speak out and tell him?
21357But would you dare to swim across the river-- the alligators?
21357But you are better now?
21357But you were not bitten?
21357But you will make some inquiries, sir?
21357But your side won, then, and I''m a prisoner?
21357But-- but why? 21357 Ca n''t I?
21357Ca n''t you see that now''s your time?
21357Can you hear the hounds now?
21357Can you two fellows row?
21357Captain Revel?
21357Could we make sure by trying to see whether there is any one on guard at the barrack- door?
21357Dare we?
21357Dead, Pete?
21357Dear lad?
21357Dessay it is, zir; but I do n''t care what they calls it-- Ah, would you?
21357Did I?
21357Did Pete Burge jump in to save my life?
21357Did n''t you hear me telling you, sir? 21357 Did you ever see anything like it, Nic, my boy?"
21357Did you see somebody yesterday, then, father?
21357Did you speak to him, father?
21357Did you, father?
21357Do n''t it zeem strange what a differ a black skin makes in a man?
21357Do you hear? 21357 Do you think you''ve come out here for a holiday, you insolent dogs?"
21357Do you want to shut us up there, and keep us prisoners till your neighbour comes?
21357Do you, zir? 21357 Eh, my lad, what is it?"
21357Eh? 21357 Eh?
21357Feel better?
21357For what?
21357For who knows what she may have aboard, or what good ship may have been wrecked?
21357Game?
21357Getting hot, are n''t it?
21357Go back? 21357 Going to zhake hands?"
21357Grins?
21357Had a good night, Pete?
21357Harm, Pete?
21357Has any one been down to the river?
21357Have they bitten him?
21357Have they killed you, Master Nic?
21357Have you your whip with you, Saunders?
21357Have you-- have you escaped from up yonder?
21357Heah dat, Zerk?
21357Hear something, Bill?
21357Hear''em?
21357Here are the others coming, Bill,cried Nic.--"What are you going to do this time?"
21357Here, Mary, what is there that can be cooked for Captain Lawrence''s breakfast?
21357Here, Saunders,he said,"why is that boy not in irons?"
21357Hot work hoeing the rows, eh? 21357 How are you going to get me avore the Justice, Master Nic?"
21357How can that be? 21357 How can that be?"
21357How dare you say that?
21357How do I know, sir?
21357How do you know?
21357How do you like that?
21357How long will it be?
21357How would it be, then, if you sent me word in good time in the morning? 21357 How, father?"
21357How, my lad? 21357 How, then?"
21357Hullo, Nic, my boy; been overboard?
21357Hungry too, eh?
21357Hurt?
21357I did n''t say it was to kill men with, did I? 21357 I said, are they your dogs?"
21357I say, father,said Nic merrily,"is n''t that making troubles, and fancying storms before they come?"
21357I see, I see,said Captain Lawrence;"but do you think they''ll fight well?"
21357I take in de light, sah, and den go fetch de irons?
21357I zay, though; could n''t get to be more friends still wi''the dogs, and make''em fight for uz, could we?
21357I''m glad they escaped, poor fellows,said Nic;"but is that scoundrel Dee with them?"
21357If we find our way? 21357 Into the jaws of the great alligators, Pete?"
21357Is it?
21357Is the frigate in sight?
21357Is this all on us?
21357It ca n''t be; can it, dear?
21357Just now?
21357Knife, has he?
21357Know where they keep the boat, Master Nic?
21357Know why, do n''t you?
21357Light- hearted, zir? 21357 Likely, are n''t it?"
21357Looked at what?
21357Make friends?
21357Makes quakers?
21357Master Nic,he whispered excitedly,"what do you think of that?"
21357Me, zir? 21357 Mind shaking hands, mate?"
21357No disease, have you?
21357No go_ wob_,_ wob_, sah?
21357No''top clap irons on dese two, sah?
21357No, sir; cert''n''y not, sir,faltered the frightened girl, turning wonderingly to Nic, her eyes seeming to say,"Please, sir, is master going mad?"
21357Not much in his way, father, is it?
21357Not now, boys; lie down.--Ah, what''s that?
21357Now then, can we crawl to it under cover? 21357 Now then,"muttered the overseer,"how long is he going to be with that lanthorn?
21357Of what?
21357Oh yes, father, I see; but are the sailors coming?
21357Oh!--Here, what''s the matter with you, boy?
21357Oh, why did n''t I watch it?
21357On our grounds?
21357Our side won?
21357Pete Burge, father?
21357Pete,he said quickly,"why not take the head off the pole?
21357Please me, boy? 21357 Prisoners been quiet?"
21357Quarrelling among themselves?
21357Ready, my lads?
21357Ready, then?
21357Risk getting zeen and shot?
21357Run away? 21357 Say what agen?"
21357Shake-- hands, sir-- with you, cap''n?
21357Silence, you scoundrel!--How dare you?
21357So now then, you promise?
21357So you''re both runaways?
21357Some of our men too?
21357Speak-- sensible-- why should n''t I?
21357Start?
21357Take''em with us?
21357Taken bad-- aboard ship?
21357Them dogs bite, master?
21357Then they are coming to- night?
21357Then what are you going to do?
21357Then why did n''t you call me up?
21357Then you found out nothing?
21357Then you pretty well know when to expect them?
21357Then,said Captain Revel,"you have sent them away?"
21357There now, are n''t it zummat like one of our big pike at home? 21357 There, Nic,"he cried triumphantly;"what did I say?
21357There, what did I tell you?
21357There, you see what they''re like, and know what you have to expect-- What?
21357They only come when the pool''s full of salmon, you say, after a bit of rain in the moors?
21357They thrash you, then, because you are not strong enough?
21357Think he''ll come round again?
21357Think of what, zir?
21357Think they''ll do it?
21357Thinking of food, Pete?
21357Tie big''tone to um head first, massa?
21357To run?
21357To try for our salmon again?
21357To- night, was n''t it?
21357WHAT''LL MASSA SAY?
21357Waiting to sail?
21357Was I nearly drowned, zir?
21357Was n''t that something moving on the right bank?
21357Well, Nic, my boy,cried the visitor,"how''s the dad?
21357Well, old fellow,he said gently;"whose dog are you?"
21357Well, sir, why do n''t you answer?
21357Well, there''s plenty, are n''t there, master? 21357 Well, what of that?"
21357Well, what sort of a lot do they seem?
21357Well, why do n''t you take it?
21357Well, your honour, why not?
21357Well,cried the overseer,"is he quite dead?"
21357Well,said Nic sharply,"have you repented?"
21357Were you nearly drowned?
21357What about, zir?
21357What about-- our escaping?
21357What about?
21357What are you going to do?
21357What are you laughing at, Bill?
21357What bit of''possum?
21357What can I do, lad?
21357What did he say, father?
21357What do you mean by that?
21357What do you mean-- in the colour?
21357What do you mean?
21357What do you mean?
21357What do you say, my men?
21357What does it all mean?
21357What for, Master Nic?
21357What for, sir? 21357 What for?"
21357What for?
21357What good can it do him till he can think?
21357What is it, Pete? 21357 What is it, Solly?"
21357What is to prevent me creeping in and getting them, Pete?
21357What is, father?
21357What sort of fellows are they?
21357What vor?--pulling you out when you was drownding?
21357What was that you were saying to me just now?
21357What zay?
21357What''s that?
21357What''s that?
21357What''s the matter with you?
21357What''s the row about?
21357What, sir? 21357 What, sir?
21357What, sir? 21357 What, sir?"
21357What?
21357What?
21357What?
21357What?
21357Where are we now?
21357Where are we, then?
21357Where shall I find you, zir?
21357Where''s Solly?
21357Where''s that there moog o''zyder, lads?
21357Where''s the huff- cap?
21357Where? 21357 Which way?"
21357While you are gone?
21357Who goes there?
21357Who said that?
21357Who wants to lead?
21357Who''s going to run?
21357Who''s going to try to escape?
21357Who''s that?
21357Why am I here? 21357 Why did n''t I think of it before?"
21357Why did n''t they iron you?
21357Why did n''t you bring some, you black fool?
21357Why did n''t you call me?
21357Why did n''t you get hold o''me and pull me in? 21357 Why did n''t you tell me?"
21357Why do n''t you speak-- why do n''t you speak?
21357Why does n''t Pete say something?
21357Why have I been so bad? 21357 Why not wait for a good opportunity?"
21357Why not?
21357Why, Master Nic, you are n''t never gone and let me sleep all night?
21357Why, Nic?--why?
21357Why, a- mussy me, Master Nic?
21357Why, sir, why?
21357Why, what is it, old lad?
21357Why, you are n''t going to sneak out of it, are you?
21357Why?
21357Why?
21357Why?
21357Why?
21357Will ye?
21357Will you give me your word that you will leave the fish alone?
21357Wo n''t die, will he, sir?
21357Wrong? 21357 Yes, and sold-- perhaps eaten by this time, eh?"
21357Yes, yes,cried Nic querulously;"but who is it?"
21357Yes; where could he run to-- back to Africa? 21357 You do n''t believe me, sir?"
21357You do n''t want to kill nobody in a fight such as we''re going to have, do ye?
21357You here?
21357You mean the boat?
21357You remember us, then?
21357You tell Mass''Saunder? 21357 You will let me write to my friends?"
21357You''ve been bad, have n''t you?
21357You-- you will not forsake me?
21357Zay, Humpy, how is it with ye? 21357 Zay, Master Nic, why do n''t you join in chorus?
21357Zee Humpy Dee look at me, Master Nic?
21357Zee um, zir?
21357''Most got to that t''other zattlement, are n''t uz?"
21357An''if dogs not catch um, where run to?
21357And do you notice what a peculiar gleam there is in the air, and how the flies bite?"
21357And s''posing we got the boat, what then, zir?
21357And who minds that?"
21357Any idee where we be?"
21357Are n''t you hurt, then?"
21357Are you afraid?"
21357Are you keeping a good, sharp lookout?"
21357Are you one of this fellow''s comrades?"
21357But I zay, master, you wo n''t die now, will you?"
21357But I zay, you are better now, are n''t you?"
21357But I zay, you''ll show fight if they should catch up to uz?"
21357But as they moved off towards the house, one thought was in both minds as presenting the greatest obstacle they had to dread: Where were the dogs?
21357But what about that treacherous hound?
21357But what are you thinking about?"
21357But would you mind telling me, sir, where we''re going?"
21357But-- I say, Master Nic, what did you do with that bacon and bread?"
21357Ca n''t you wean him from it?
21357Ca n''t you zee what I mean?"
21357Can you stand like that and see the man drown before your eyes?"
21357Captain Lawrence there?"
21357Could n''t we try to escape again?"
21357Did n''t you hear''em?"
21357Did n''t you tell me he was alive?"
21357Did they take yourn?"
21357Did you?"
21357Do him good-- do all on us good, and we''re all glad to ha''got with such a good master; are n''t we, lads?"
21357Do n''t you see it means rain?
21357Do you hear?"
21357Do you say that what he tells me is not true?"
21357Do you see?"
21357Do you see?"
21357Do you think we could tie a few leaves together for hats?"
21357Do you?"
21357Durst us jump down?"
21357Feel better?"
21357For, just when the dogs were free of the shed and were baying their loudest, the settler, at the head of his men, turned to Saunders:"Hear that?"
21357From the plantation?"
21357Going to give me a noo steel hook?"
21357Had n''t we better deal with them as they deal with us?
21357He''s a sharp un, Master Saunders, are n''t he?"
21357Hear that?"
21357Hear the fall?"
21357Heard the thunder, of course?"
21357Heavy boat?
21357Here''s our chance; shall we take it?"
21357Here, Pete, old man, how are you now?"
21357Here, what are you doing?"
21357How dare you speak to me like that?"
21357How dare you?"
21357How is this to end?"
21357How long did Jack Lawrence say that he was going to stop about Plymouth?"
21357How many men can we muster?"
21357How to make Pete grasp the fact that he was coming to join him?
21357How will that do?"
21357How''s the Gaffer?"
21357I do n''t mean Humpy Dee and his lot when I zay` we,''because you will go off wi''me if I zee a chance?"
21357I say, Master Nic, you are n''t offended at me for making so bold?"
21357I say, my boy, I-- that is-- er-- was n''t I a little bit crusty this morning to you and poor old William Solly?"
21357I say, you do n''t think Jack Lawrence has gone yet?"
21357I suppose I have some papers to sign?"
21357I zay, how far do you make it to the landing- place where we come aboard the boat?"
21357I zay, though, you do n''t think they got another boat and passed us while we were asleep, do you?"
21357Is anything wrong?"
21357It''s dreaming, are n''t it, and we did n''t get away?"
21357Just then one of the other men said, in the broad Devon burr:"Zay, lads, bean''t they going to give uz zum''at to eat?"
21357Look at his eyes; he can hear what we say.--Coming round, then, my lad?"
21357Look here; did n''t we have a fight with you and your men to- night?"
21357Look here; do you dare to reach out your hand and pat him?"
21357Not thuzty, are you?
21357Now, what am I to do?"
21357Oh, I zay, it do n''t mean tasting me first to zee whether I''m good, do it?"
21357Oh, here''s Solly.--Here, you, sir, what about those two signal flags?
21357Oh, wheer be ye?
21357Pete Burge made no reply, and there was silence again, till it was broken by Nic, who said suddenly:"Have you been very bad too?"
21357Pete came close to him, placed his lips nearly to his ear, and shouted,"Cap?"
21357Pete snored again, moved uneasily, and began to mutter in a low tone:"Could n''t throw Humpy Dee?"
21357Quick, sir; do you hear?"
21357Ready?"
21357Ready?"
21357S''pose one of them dogs had you by the throat, would n''t it be useful then?
21357Say, lads, we''re going to have a night of it, eh?"
21357See that bit of silvery cloud yonder over Rigdon Tor?
21357See that river as we come up here?"
21357Seen any of the others?"
21357Shall I cut you some bread?"
21357Shall I give a whistle?"
21357Should he help, or should n''t he?
21357So suppose we shakes hands agen?"
21357Some one had come up, and in a low whisper Nic heard the words:"All right?"
21357Surely you did n''t go?"
21357Surely you do n''t mean that we''ve had poachers again?"
21357That would make him speak-- eh?"
21357That zounds queer, Master Nic, do n''t it?
21357That''s tumbling into the hole you made for zomebody else, is n''t it?
21357The big black took the fetters and balanced them in his hand, looking at his superior as much as to say,"Will these do?"
21357The falls will not come on my head any more, will they?"
21357The plantations?
21357Then all at once he said:"What do you zay to our going quietly down to the water some night, dropping in, and zwimming for it?"
21357Then they''ll hand us over to a judge o''some kind, and as soon as he hears your story you''ll be all right; and-- and--""Yes, Pete?"
21357Then, loudly,"king''s men?"
21357They was going to bring a cart up the road yonder, waren''t they?"
21357Think Humpy Dee and them others will get away and come back again?"
21357Think I''m one, mates?--think I''m going to do as I said, and let him go and blab, so as to get into favour here?
21357Think he''s got a boat?"
21357Think you could ha''made him keep back when there was a fight, Master Nic?"
21357This announcement, though almost a repetition, seemed to stun Nic for the time; but he began again:"We had a desperate fight, did n''t we?"
21357Took the boat, I s''pose, and rowed down?"
21357Understand that, master?"
21357Was I-- er-- a bit irritable?"
21357Was that the doctor whom I heard talking yesterday?"
21357Was there a storm?"
21357We''re ready to fight, all on us-- eh, mates?"
21357Well, I''ve thought a deal about them dogs, and dogs is dogs-- eh, Master Nic?"
21357Well, what are you staring at?
21357Well, why not?
21357Well,"he continued,"why do n''t you go in?
21357Well?
21357What are we going to do now?"
21357What are you going to do this morning-- read?"
21357What can the dear old dad have thought when he found me gone?
21357What did you go and stop zo long under water for?"
21357What do you mean by giving the young master the lie?"
21357What do you mean?"
21357What do you say to that, zir?"
21357What do you zay now to lying down and having a nap while I take the watch?"
21357What do you zay to trying, then?"
21357What does it mean?"
21357What for?
21357What is it?"
21357What is it?"
21357What makes you think that?"
21357What place is this?
21357What say you?"
21357What then?
21357What then?"
21357What to do?
21357What will massa say?"
21357What you looking at, zir?"
21357What''s the good o''saying that?"
21357What''s the matter?"
21357What''s the skipper thinking about?
21357What''s to be done now, zir?"
21357Where are the others?"
21357Where are we going to be took?"
21357Where are we, zir?
21357Where did you tie it up?"
21357Where it is hidden?"
21357Who are these-- the two who have been in hospital, Mr Groves?"
21357Who is it?"
21357Who is to believe your word?
21357Who wants music?
21357Why ca n''t the rascals leave me and mine alone?"
21357Why not try for a salmon?
21357Why not, pray?"
21357Why should I die now?"
21357Why waren''t I born clever?"
21357Why was not Pete there to join him, and they might all get away together?
21357Will you risk it, zir?"
21357Will you tell him he is to stay?"
21357Would n''t it be possible to hear from him where the boat was kept?
21357You came with the men after the salmon?"
21357You got out?"
21357You will have it?
21357You''ll put in a good word for a poor fellow, wo n''t you?"
21357You''ve got zome''at to tell me?"
21357You, Zerk, what you go and done wid de oder man?"
21357Zay, Master Nic, are n''t the water nice and cold?"
21357Zay; they are n''t got another boat anywhere, have they?"
21357and that means I was like a bear-- eh, sir?"
21357and them zee us go, Master Nic?"
21357arguing again?
21357cried Pete,"what did you do that for?"
21357cried the Captain, catching his son by the shoulder;"then you knew of it too, sir?
21357cried the Captain.--"And you, Solly, you mutinous scoundrel, how dare you laugh?"
21357cried the girl;"ca n''t you see what he meant?"
21357ejaculated Solly;"that was it, sir?
21357fever stronger.--Has he been talking to you-- sensibly?"
21357he cried,"whar dem oder white fellow?
21357he cried;"this man is not one of you-- one of the gang taken that night?"
21357he said to himself;"how''s he going to take it when he knows all?"
21357laughed Pete savagely;"just found that out?"
21357or skin a''possum?
21357or to kill a deer out in the woods?
21357said the man quietly as he looked from one to the other;"where are the dogs?"
21357that poacher who used to defy us all?"
21357those scoundrels after the salmon?"
21357what''s that?"
21357where we rested for the night, Pete?
21357where''s my cap, and--?"
21357who minds a trifle like that, Solly?"
21357you heard news?"
58355''Going to take him''? 58355 ''Quite the gentleman''--eh?
58355''Twasn''t farming, anyway?
58355''Why not?'' 58355 About mother?"
58355And Heathman?
58355And d''you know what she thought?
58355And do n''t I know it?
58355And gave?
58355And he said----?
58355And how do''e like being married?
58355And if the man dies?
58355And still you try to make out you''re not a fool?
58355And very much interested in tenor bell, no doubt?
58355And what does Miss Gollop do?
58355And what was your news?
58355And what''s your gown going to be, Phyllis?
58355And what''s your luck, then? 58355 And when I''ve got work,"continued Rupert,"then I shall just look round and take a house and marry; and why not?"
58355And when all''s said, if mercy be such treacherous ground, who can deny that justice may give way under us too now and again?
58355And who might he be, Uncle Nat?
58355And why not? 58355 And why?"
58355And you pass for an understanding man, I suppose? 58355 And you swear that you''ve proved that?"
58355And you''d like driving better still, perhaps?
58355Are you going to the wedding breakfast?
58355Away too?
58355Ban''t it? 58355 Be Jack Head here?"
58355Be they more to you than he was?
58355Be you going to charge at the doors?
58355Be you going to drive the black gig? 58355 Be you on the downward path then, Susan?
58355Be you sure?
58355Be your old party going to do anything or nothing?
58355But he''s not done it, you say?
58355But his wife and children?
58355But it would be better if he did n''t? 58355 But not such a bad one as his death?"
58355But not wrong to lengthen it?
58355But she did talk with''em and you did think twice? 58355 But would n''t free an immortal soul from its perishing dirt?"
58355By the way, who is to be the Doctor?
58355Ca n''t you go up along, like any other chap with summat to sell, and get rid of your beasts yourself? 58355 Ca n''t you help him out of it, then?"
58355Can you let down your food easy?
58355Christ Almighty would have done-- what?
58355D''you know what you''ve done?
58355D''you mean to say that you refuse to remove this outrageous thing?
58355D''you swear that?
58355D''you want him to?
58355D''you want to murder him? 58355 Did he say so?"
58355Did the ponies go off well?
58355Did this here fire fail afore you comed, Abraham?
58355Do I hear John Head saying that he do n''t meddle with other people''s business?
58355Do n''t I tell you that I''ve proved it? 58355 Do n''t you think this might be an excellent opportunity to get rid of him?"
58355Do n''t you?
58355Do you abide along with your brother, miss, or be you just settling him into the vicarage?
58355Does Mr. Humphrey go? 58355 Does it?
58355Drunk too? 58355 Even when Ned went out rather vexed because we took it so calm, and said he''d end his life, we did n''t do anything-- did we, mother?"
58355Even you was in love once?
58355Fancy meeting; and I might ask what brought you, Cora?
58355Fill your glasses-- just a drop more, Hester, you must drink-- isn''t it to your own husband? 58355 Fooling up here with a girl-- you?
58355For why? 58355 Go in a crowd like that and barter my things like a huckster?"
58355God will explain-- eh? 58355 Going to be married and live up to your knees in clover, eh?
58355Got what? 58355 Has she forgiven parson for turning her out of the choir?
58355Have he said anything to you about a pension?
58355Have n''t I seen her there o''Sundays ever since she growed up? 58355 Have n''t you got over that yet?"
58355Have you found anything to do?
58355Have you got pen and ink ready?
58355He did n''t confide in you?
58355He gave?
58355He has-- the drunken dog? 58355 He humbly bows to me, do n''t he, reverend Masterman?"
58355He preaches, does he?
58355He said that?
58355He''d built on her coming round, poor fellow-- eh? 58355 He''s a fraudulent trustee, then?"
58355He''s dying-- you grant that?
58355He''s told you so, I suppose?
58355How be you, then? 58355 How can I best please him, Susan?"
58355How can that man be clever at anything?
58355How dare this infidel man up and say the parish be in a Jakes of a mess? 58355 How did you guess that?
58355How do we stand now?
58355How do you do, Mr. Baskerville? 58355 How does Luscombe view it?"
58355How if parson be no good, and squire a drinker or a rascal?
58355How if they deny it and have you up for libel?
58355How is it brother Ned ban''t married a''ready?
58355How is it none have n''t handed me back my money? 58355 How long?"
58355How old was he then?
58355How the mischief can a man pretend to be what he is n''t? 58355 How was it?"
58355How would this answer?
58355How''s this, father?
58355How''s your father?
58355How''s your throat?
58355How''s''the Hawk''?
58355How?
58355I can mend, I suppose? 58355 I hope I see you pretty middling?"
58355I suppose it would n''t be possible for me actually to see the bells?
58355I was full of contrivances; however, if you say so----"Be I to dance?
58355I''ve signed the pledge, however, and not another drop----"How many of''em did you tell?
58355If I should n''t talk for my father, who should?
58355If evolution is going to set all right and the unborn will come into a better world, why get so hot?
58355If you could bring it up from the innards,''twould sound more awful, would n''t it, reverend Masterman?
58355If you feel that, why do n''t you stand up before the people and tell''em?
58355In a word,''tis natural that young Lintern-- you swear, Jack-- on your Bible you swear that you wo n''t squeak? 58355 Is it because you think''twould be a wrong thing, or because you know''tis unlawful?"
58355Is it? 58355 Is n''t she my first favourite of our three?
58355Is n''t that rather hitting a man when he''s down?
58355Is that Head?
58355Is that all?
58355Is that so? 58355 Is that you, Jim?"
58355Is that young Mark Baskerville?
58355Is there to be nought declared in the pound?
58355Is your mother here?
58355It is to be understood I must not ask you to help me?
58355Jack? 58355 Kill this blasted fly, will''e?
58355Like it better than walking, I dare say?
58355Lord, man alive, what are you frightened of?
58355Might we sit down?
58355My physic, Eliza, for your humanity, Eliza-- the clock''s struck-- I heard it-- I swear-- oh, my merciful Maker, why ca n''t I have it?
58355My word, what''ll Ned say?
58355Nathan was your father?
58355Nathan would have given him a job-- eh? 58355 Nathan would n''t?
58355Ned here would fancy himself a lot in that black and silver toggery the yeomanry wear, would n''t you, Ned?
58355No doubt; but who can help it that''s made on a human pattern?
58355Not Jack Head?
58355Not that I''d mind; but whatever would my master say?
58355Not with a face like hers? 58355 Of course; but what is it?
58355Oh, Cora, and do n''t you please me? 58355 Oh, uncle, be you sure?"
58355Or for any other?
58355Or shall I tell''em to send?
58355Perhaps, in strict justice, he do n''t deserve it; but----"Did you ask your Uncle Nathan for him?
58355Running myself out of breath-- eh? 58355 Shall I put the cheese on the table for you??
58355Shall I put the cheese on the table for you?? 58355 Shall we bring Mark back to- night, or shall the funeral start from the church?"
58355Shall you be giving Polly Bassett her money soon? 58355 Shall you come on and play it like a four- footed thing, or get up on your hind- legs, Jack?"
58355Shall you say anything about being champion of the west country at wrestling?
58355Should n''t I know if''twas another man? 58355 So you like that boy very much-- eh?"
58355So your Cora is trying a third, she tells me?
58355Suppose you was to marry me even now, Nat, would that help?
58355Take this to my brother Vivian, will you? 58355 That was n''t all they told you?"
58355That''s a certainty for me and Heathman and Phyllis?
58355That''s a good healthy bit of Christian charity-- eh? 58355 That''s acting, and what d''you think of it?"
58355That''s the pert way childer speak to the old folk now-- is it?
58355That''s the sort of stuff that''s got you a great name for a sympathetic and feeling man, I suppose? 58355 The devil flew away with somebody?"
58355The family of which you are now head----?
58355The grievance is that you do n''t get your bit back? 58355 The money, dear father?"
58355The parish clerk and his sister-- I wonder if you''d mind, Alice?
58355The thing that''s most difficult to me be this: How do you get any good out of helping these poor folk all underhand and unknown? 58355 The way of justice and mercy together, I suppose you mean?"
58355Then surely you can not shorten it, either? 58355 Then what''s the good of trying?"
58355Then why do they pretend they''m Christians? 58355 Then why do you ask me to be thoughtful to live?"
58355There was no will?
58355They people at Cadworthy?
58355Thomas do n''t want to make''em cry, do he? 58355 To enlist?
58355Very surprised to find you there-- eh?
58355Was n''t Christ''s first and last message hope?
58355We all thought when poor old Nathan was took off that he''d come forward with his money bags-- knowing the man, did n''t we, souls?
58355We''ve shown Free Trade is a fine thing-- single- handed we''ve shown it, and why? 58355 Well, what d''you want of me?"
58355Well, why not? 58355 Well, why not?"
58355Well,he broke out at length,"jolly good, I think, for a first attempt-- eh, Alice?"
58355Well-- as to reason-- I ask no more, but where is it?
58355What about Jack Head?
58355What about t''other names-- all rubbed out, I suppose?
58355What about the Linterns?
58355What about the wedding?
58355What are the strangles?
58355What are you laughing at?
58355What are you made of to say such vile things of an innocent man? 58355 What are you saying?
58355What be you doing in here?
58355What d''you make of that?
58355What d''you mean by that?
58355What did he do with his own money? 58355 What did he say?"
58355What did n''t he say? 58355 What did the doctor say to- day?"
58355What did you do if it was n''t that? 58355 What do it matter?"
58355What do you know and what do n''t you know?
58355What do you think? 58355 What does Mrs. Baskerville say?"
58355What good can come of it? 58355 What have you come here for?
58355What is there against that?
58355What is there to forget? 58355 What reasons?"
58355What the devil does he want with it?
58355What the hell''s the matter with you?
58355What used you to pay?
58355What was I?
58355What was it you wanted to speak to me about?
58355What will your father do? 58355 What would she have you do?"
58355What''s going to happen?
58355What''s his name, please?
58355What''s his name?
58355What''s money? 58355 What''s the good of being respectful to those you do n''t respect and ought not to respect?"
58355What''s the good of that if I''ve got to go?
58355What''s the meaning of this?
58355What''s the use of a man that goes under the thumb of his father? 58355 What''s this I hear?"
58355What''s this then?
58355What''s this?
58355What''s toward now?
58355When did this happen? 58355 When is Mrs. Lintern coming?"
58355When is he to have the medicine?
58355Where are all the joanies? 58355 Where be you, Mark Baskerville, and who''s dead?"
58355Where did he get the money?
58355Where do the people at Undershaugh worship? 58355 Where should he strike?"
58355Where''s May?
58355Where''s Mr. Baskerville gone to?
58355Where-- why----?
58355Who are you digging for here? 58355 Who did tell you?"
58355Who is she? 58355 Who is that?"
58355Who knows anything about it? 58355 Who knows what my duty would be if Ned was going to marry Cora?
58355Who sent me? 58355 Who told Jack Head?"
58355Who was the Black Hunter, if you do n''t mind telling me?
58355Who was your father?
58355Who wo n''t?
58355Who''d have thought of seeing you?
58355Who''ll play the brass music?
58355Who''s ago?
58355Why am I here?
58355Why ban''t she along with you to- day?
58355Why ban''t you more dashing then?
58355Why d''you keep growling in your throat, like a brute, and not answering my questions? 58355 Why did n''t you wear a bunch of''em then?
58355Why did you think so?
58355Why do n''t she come? 58355 Why do n''t you buy''em, uncle?
58355Why do n''t you go away then? 58355 Why do n''t you speak out like a man, then?"
58355Why do that yet?
58355Why do you say''tis reason? 58355 Why do you wish that?"
58355Why for not? 58355 Why for should I be?"
58355Why go and have an expensive move when you can live at Shaugh Prior?
58355Why have you told me that you have found this out?
58355Why not, if I choose? 58355 Why not?
58355Why not? 58355 Why not?
58355Why not?
58355Why seek for it, if there''s no such thing, uncle?
58355Why should I care a button for the old man, anyway?
58355Why? 58355 Why?"
58355Will he come to his consciousness again?
58355Will you be Doctor, Joe?
58355Will you be so good as to proceed?
58355Will you do the rest?
58355Would it, Ned?
58355Would n''t he suffer it if you promised him to do as he done, and not marry for five years?
58355Would you do different if you could go back?
58355Yes; and I suppose Mr. Waite knows too?
58355You can ask me such a thing?
58355You can ask that and know me, even so little as you do? 58355 You design to lie here-- is it not so?
58355You do n''t recognise any obligation?
58355You do n''t suffer, I hope?
58355You have n''t told anybody?
58355You know Milly Luscombe, do n''t you? 58355 You leave Undershaugh, then?"
58355You mean-- you mean we can all stop, and Rupert can go on here?
58355You might have knocked me down with a feather when-- but there, what am I saying?
58355You must surely know how things have fallen out? 58355 You playing truant too-- eh?
58355You ride a pony, do n''t you?
58355You say that of your future son- in- law?
58355You side with him, of course?
58355You will have it, will you? 58355 You wo n''t do that?"
58355You''d call that murder?
58355You''ll keep a man, of course?''
58355You''ll not desert us, Mark? 58355 You''ll wonder how I come to talk so much about my own affairs, perhaps?
58355You''re ashamed of it?
58355You''re the fair- weather sort too, then? 58355 You''re the joker who calls himself the''Duke of Drake''s Island,''are n''t you?"
58355You''ve met him?
58355''And who might that be?''
58355''Be that the man that sang the song about locking his mother- in- law into the coal- cellar?''
58355''How is it with him?''
58355''My betters''--eh?"
58355''What do a healthy man want to waste every seventh day for?''
58355''What''ll Mr. Humphrey do without you?''
58355''What''s the name?''
58355''Where be you taking they mint plants?''
58355''Who be you?''
58355''Who ever will ring your bell when you''re gone?''
58355''You do n''t boil thistles for a donkey,''says she,''so how was anybody to know you boil nettles for a duck?''
58355A voice will teach you a lot, but the eyes are the book for me-- eh, Nathan?"
58355A wise man hedges, and never will be shocked at anything-- why?
58355All those interested are here, so why not let me read through the old play as it stands?
58355All very well for you; but what about me?
58355Am I to work for us both?
58355And as for Nathan Baskerville, he was a double serpent, and I shall tell the truth out against him when and where I please; and why for not?"
58355And did n''t I always say you were crammed up with cleverness?
58355And did you tell her what was writ on the bell?"
58355And how d''you reckon?
58355And if charity should n''t begin at home, where should it?"
58355And if you''re well out of it, what am I?
58355And now-- what?
58355And talking of the font----""Yes, of course, you''ve marked the famous font- cover over the holy basin, I suppose?"
58355And then what happens?
58355And what does Cora think of it all?
58355And what of Ned?"
58355And what power is going to root out the rich?
58355And what will it soon show''em?
58355And who was it, d''you think, told me?"
58355And who was your grandfather?
58355And why for should n''t they laugh?"
58355And why not?
58355And why not?
58355And why should Humphrey Baskerville waste his money on a lot of silly people?
58355And why was n''t I told?
58355And why?
58355And why?
58355And why?
58355And will all his affairs come down on your shoulders?"
58355And would I have done this?
58355And yet, why not?
58355And you ask me to take my money and help that sort of man?
58355And you did n''t like it?
58355And you in the midst of it-- eh?"
58355And you quarrelled-eh?
58355And you-- what in the name of wonder brings you to a revel?"
58355And you?"
58355And, when all''s said, who''s the worse, except what be called public morals?"
58355Are you going to live on the money I make out of women''s bonnets?"
58355Are you going?"
58355Are you mad?
58355Are you sure of that?"
58355Are you that sort?
58355Are you the only one?"
58355At any rate, you''ll come and see them married, Humphrey?"
58355Ban''t all life picking and choosing?
58355Ban''t he saving and prospering?
58355Ban''t that strange?"
58355Ban''t there anything deeper I can do-- for you yourself and your peace of mind?"
58355Ban''t there nothing better to do with ourselves and our wits than dress up like a ship- load of monkeys and go play- acting?
58355Ban''t we all to be as funny as ever we can, reverend Masterman?"
58355Baskerville?"
58355Baskerville?"
58355Baskerville?"
58355Baskerville?"
58355Baskerville?"
58355Baskerville?"
58355Baskerville?''
58355Be Ned clever at anything on God''s earth but spending money, Mr. Baskerville?
58355Be the meal to be sarved with no sauce but all this blasted nonsense?
58355Besides, what''s the use?
58355But Mark-- did I forbid?
58355But did n''t it ought to make you give me ten shillings for Coombes?"
58355But how about it when he was alive?"
58355But how does he get his hold on the heart?
58355But how is it that wise men and understanding men hold aloof and say hard things and look t''other way when I pass by?"
58355But perhaps you do n''t hold with such old wife''s tales?"
58355But that wo n''t trouble you much-- eh?"
58355But there-- what''s the use of talking?
58355But who shall blame any living creature that they thought me an enemy and not a friend?
58355But why?
58355Ca n''t an old man of seventy find nothing better and wiser to do than run after childish things like that?"
58355Ca n''t we hide?"
58355Ca n''t you get him your side?
58355Can I be of any comfort to him?"
58355Can a father choke a girl off a man if she loves the man?
58355Can you break stones?
58355Can you do it?
58355Can you sink down to me, or is it too much of a drop?
58355Can''e give me a job?"
58355Come now, ban''t dinner ready?"
58355Come now, speak up; who was he?"
58355D''you know where that comes from?
58355D''you mean it, or is it just the natural flow of words, as the rain falls and the water rolls down- hill?
58355D''you think I''m----?
58355D''you think you could get me one of they king ferns?
58355D''you want to drive me mad?"
58355D.T.''s?"
58355Did n''t I hide the scant good that was in me, more careful than the bird her nest?"
58355Did n''t father leave him fifty pounds to be trustee, or whatever''tis?"
58355Did n''t he tell you?"
58355Did they help beggars?
58355Did they keep paupers?
58355Do n''t I like being about among''em better than anything else?
58355Do n''t I pay him good money?
58355Do n''t I worship the ground she goes on, and love her better than anything in the world after you yourself?"
58355Does it hurt them to say it?
58355Everything be safe and proper in his hands; but suppose he fell ill?
58355For we''ve got some originals among us, and I''m not going to deny it, have n''t us, Eliza?"
58355For why-- for why?
58355For why?
58355Give me half a pint of the mild, will you, Baskerville?
58355Had her there-- eh?"
58355Has Milly Luscombe said she wants me to come to it?
58355Has anybody seen Ned Baskerville?
58355Has that last dozen of parish port all gone yet?"
58355Have he told you of aught that''s fretting him?"
58355Have n''t I beheld''em with these eyes?
58355Have n''t I suffered all that man can suffer?"
58355Have n''t you paid all the creditors to the last penny?"
58355Have you ever heard tell of the Black Hunter, Cora?
58355Have you ever looked into the figures?"
58355Have you found work, Rupert?"
58355Have you heard any more said about his death and my hand in it?"
58355Have you marked that?
58355Have you, Eliza?"
58355He devoured widows''houses and stole the bread of the poor-- what worse can any man do?"
58355He had nothing to leave; therefore-- unless you''ve saved money during his lifetime----?"
58355He''s a fraud; but I remembered what Travers said last year-- you recollect?
58355He''s in hospital with both legs broke and may not recover, and his wife and four children----""What about his club?"
58355He''s taking his time, and if he wants a wife,''tis only in reason that the future head of the family should have a wife; and why not?
58355Heathman here be growing as strong as a lion-- ban''t you, Heathman?"
58355Here''s Joe Voysey-- he''s doctored a lot of things in his time-- haven''t you, Joe?"
58355His mind''s above the land, and why not?
58355How about next Friday?"
58355How are you clever folk going to alter human nature, and say to this man you sha n''t save your money and to this man you shall save yours?
58355How can I dance, and the rheumatism eating into my knees for the last twenty year?"
58355How can I go on digging and delving while father withstands me and wo n''t hear a word about her?"
58355How can a child help its own father, or see whether its parents be properly married?
58355How did he spend that?"
58355How did it go-- the words, I mean?"
58355How did you know in every drop of your blood, as you say, that you''d failed to please me?"
58355How does it come, and why?
58355How does that sound?"
58355How is Timothy Waite your inferior?
58355How much did you get for that big bright bay?"
58355How old are you?"
58355How should they know?
58355How''s Masterman getting on?
58355How''s Mr. Baskerville faring?"
58355How''s that, Nat?
58355How''s the poor man going on?
58355How''s your young woman?"
58355However, that''s the money; and who d''you think they''ve took on?
58355I ca n''t talk so loud as once I could, and I ca n''t eat easy; but what''s the odds as long as I can drink?
58355I did n''t go to my wife''s, did I?"
58355I hope you''re not taking after your good- for- nothing brother?"
58355I said it out in the kitchen after supper to mother-- didn''t I, father?"
58355I say let''em bow simultaneous-- how would that serve?"
58355I stand to work same as father himself, and he knows that; and when there''s anything calling to be done,''tis always,''Where be Rupert to?"
58355I suppose my brother is up on the tor?"
58355I suppose they''m awful difficult to ring?"
58355I suppose you ban''t one of they godless ones that say ghosts do n''t walk?
58355I suppose you want to get back into the hive-- like t''other drones when the pinch of winter comes-- and the world wo n''t let you in?"
58355I suppose your father would n''t do it, Mark?
58355I was thinking that bare, dark corner in the garden at Undershaugh might do very nice for ferns-- if you''d care----?"
58355I''ll pierce him through, he shall not fly; I''ll cut him-- cut him-- cut him----""How does it go?"
58355I''m a lovely woman, you old fool, do n''t you understand what that means?
58355I''m an old woman now, and if I''ve not got patience at my age, when shall I get it?
58355I''m hardly likely to trouble him, am I?"
58355I''ve got nothing against him; but----""But t''other suits you better?
58355If Cadworthy''s to be handed over to Rupert and you''re going to live in Plymouth, as I hear,"he said,"then why not business?
58355If it was n''t a case for a scorching sermon, when was there one?
58355If living knaves see us condoning and forgiving dead ones, will they turn from their knavery any the quicker?
58355If not me, who?
58355If she''d clung to him through all, would I have turned him away or refused him?
58355If you''d been going to lend a hand yourself and do a bit for charity, would n''t you pick and choose?
58355In fact, we never got into it, did we, Edward?"
58355In fact, you might say she scored off me proper, for I told her that no decent chap would ever look at her again, and what does she answer?
58355In the old days it was all done by the lads, but why not have some lasses in it as well?
58355Is it ever fatal to them?"
58355Is it infectious?
58355Is n''t it time for the medicine yet?"
58355Is n''t she a beauty?
58355Is n''t that what you Socialists are all wanting to do?
58355Is there anything more that''s particularly important, Gollop?"
58355Is there anything more?"
58355Jack scoffed, Abraham Elford grew warm; for who is there that can endure to hear his depositions brushed aside as worthless?
58355Let me see, how shall the stone read?
58355Lintern?"
58355Luscombe?"
58355Masterman?"
58355Men do the big things and alter the face of the earth and all that, but what becomes of their clever greatness without our clever littleness?"
58355Monkeys do n''t pretend, and what''s the result?
58355More money rolling in, I suppose?"
58355My Ned, I may tell you, have found----"Work, I hope?"
58355My father was parish clerk afore me, and a very remarkable man, was n''t he, Eliza?"
58355My head is big, my body is bigger: Do n''t you think I be a handsome old figure?"
58355Nathan Baskerville belike?"
58355Not your work, I hope, Alice?
58355Now St. George, St. George, where are you?"
58355Now what are you going to do?
58355Now"--Mr. Masterman smiled and looked at Jack Head--"will Mr. Head play the Bear-- to oblige us all?"
58355Now, the question is, shall I let these two of the same blood breed and maybe bring feebler things than themselves into the world?"
58355Now, who''ll be Father Christmas?
58355Now, who''s for Doctor?
58355Of course, I''m not speaking for us, but for the younger generation, and if they can prosper by tact and civility to their betters, why not?
58355Ought I to sit by and let Cora marry Ned?
58355Pretty peart that-- eh?"
58355Shall you write your own verse according to our old custom?"
58355She do n''t wear out many chairs, do you, Eliza?"
58355She was Mr. Valletort''s right hand, was n''t you, Eliza?"
58355Should you say, speaking as an outsider, that I''m under any obligation to serve them?"
58355So you''ve got such a poor opinion of your Jehovah that you reckon to ax Him to take the wind out of the east be going too far?
58355Suppose he was to die?"
58355Surely you know that?"
58355Tell me this, sir: why would you poison a dog that''s dying, so that its misery may be ended?"
58355That''s a pretty good one to me-- eh?"
58355That''s cruel hard after----""How can you say that?
58355The first thing is, are we agreed?"
58355The moment you found things was contrary with his father, you was off him-- why?
58355The question is, are you going to rise to it?
58355Then he flickered and he flickered, and wandered in his speech, and the last words I could catch was,''What''s all this pucker about?
58355Then why do n''t He explain?
58355Then why for does he jump down my throat as if I was backbiting the dead?
58355There was no maiming of the rite-- eh?"
58355There''s legal difficulties-- so Uncle Nathan says; and he told Nicholas that there was a doubt in his mind whether-- what was it, Nick?"
58355Therefore, surely it''s clear as my wife ought to have her five hundred-- eh?"
58355They all think I''m a miser, do n''t they?
58355They wonder how''tis they do n''t understand me-- fools that they are!--and yet how many understand themselves?
58355They''ll want an ocean of beer presently, and where shall us get it from?"
58355This what?
58355Timothy Waite always was as good a man as you; and why not?"
58355To lie with his mother-- eh?
58355Waite?"
58355Waiting, waiting-- and what becomes of me while I''m waiting?
58355Waiting-- waiting-- and will time wait?
58355Was ever a better joke heard?"
58355Was it ever heard that mother or father stopped son or daughter from loving?
58355Was n''t it enough to upset such a frail, fanciful creature?
58355Was that the work of a sane man?
58355Was the end so near?
58355We come to you, Mr. Baskerville, and we trust you with our savings, for why?
58355We do n''t want our ministers to fly in the face of Providence, do we?
58355We know it; but who stands up between a young man and his youth to protect him therefrom?
58355We like the younger and humbler people to be civil to us; then why should n''t they be civil to parson and squire?"
58355We''ve got a cheerful conceit of ourselves, and why not?
58355Well, well; since when have Head made that fine rule?"
58355Well, why not?
58355Well, why not?
58355What about my darters?
58355What are you dawdling there for?"
58355What are you doing up here?"
58355What are you good for?
58355What are you saying?
58355What be talking of?"
58355What be you doing here all alone like this-- and you not a fisherman?"
58355What can you do?
58355What can you do?
58355What care you for nature to put a bit of a dead creature''pon top of your hair?
58355What d''you think she said?
58355What did he say only this morning in vestry?
58355What did n''t you dare to speak to my mother, and yet you can speak to me?
58355What did you hear?"
58355What do they all think?
58355What does Milly say?"
58355What does doctor say about your throat?"
58355What does he know about you?
58355What does that matter?
58355What does the doctor say?"
58355What for do we want to stir up a lot of silly dead foolishness that our grandfathers invented?
58355What has it been to you to hide the truth all your life?"
58355What have I done that''s set you against me?
58355What have he done?
58355What made you all you are?
58355What must it be to him?"
58355What peace shall he have that killed his own father?
58355What shall I forget next?
58355What should he tell me?
58355What sin have I committed?
58355What the deuce do he want to put a wife and children round his neck for till he''s learned to keep his own head above water?"
58355What the mischief sent them here, of all ways?
58355What was Nat to you, or you to Nat, that you can stand up for him and talk this nonsense in the face of facts?
58355What was it made you so cross that you ran away?
58355What''s a gentleman?"
58355What''s she going to do?"
58355What''s the good of telling that to me?
58355What''s the rich man done for me?
58355Whatever did he mean by that?
58355When does Eliza Gollop come back?"
58355When is your marriage going to be?
58355When you tell me that, I''ll tell you----""Who knows whether you''m forgot after all, Jack?"
58355When''s the wedding?"
58355Where be my son Nathan''s ship to now?"
58355Where is the man that now will me defy?
58355Where would you like to live?"
58355Where''s Ben North?"
58355Where''s Eliza Gollop?"
58355Where''s Ned to?"
58355Where''s my money?
58355Where''s the famous tomb with the music book and bass viol on it?
58355Which of you was right, Uncle Humphrey-- you or Uncle Nat?
58355Which of you would come forward and help him if he was hard up?"
58355Who are we to come between God Almighty and His laws?"
58355Who are you that people should make you offers?
58355Who be I to know my God will pat me on the back?
58355Who be we to question the Lord''s ordaining?
58355Who can deny''tis a noble idea?
58355Who did n''t?"
58355Who fed you and taught you and brought you up?
58355Who put it there?
58355Who shall say which comes out best?
58355Who the mischief be you to tell me to labour on the Lord''s Day, I should like to know?
58355Who wants carols?
58355Who with?"
58355Who''d be blamed if the child ate and died?
58355Who''d believe it of such a man as me?
58355Who''d believe it was me if they saw me?"
58355Who''ll think the worse of them?"
58355Who''s been telling you this trash?
58355Who''s got Cadworthy?"
58355Who''s like to care for you for yourself?
58355Who''s the wiser for a thing like that?
58355Whoever heard the like?"
58355Why do n''t she come?"
58355Why do n''t they try to answer''em instead of blackguarding''em?"
58355Why do n''t you put your fingers in your own pocket and lend a hand yourself?
58355Why do n''t you take a part in the play, and do as other men, and talk louder and look people in the face, as if you was n''t feared to death of''em?
58355Why do n''t you trust me?"
58355Why do this person-- I dare say you know who''tis-- do what he''s doing and pick and choose according to his fancy?
58355Why for do Lawyer Popham help one man and not help t''other?
58355Why for should n''t Mark be Doctor?"
58355Why for should n''t there be picking and choosing?
58355Why for should you ax so much credit for your side?
58355Why for?
58355Why must I keep in with a man like that, and get children for him, and kill myself for him, and go on the parish at the end?
58355Why not?
58355Why not?
58355Why not?
58355Why should n''t I?
58355Why should we not tell the truth about those who are gone?
58355Why should we pretend and give people the credit of what they stand for, if they do n''t stand for it?"
58355Why the devil should they?
58355Why was n''t I told?"
58355Why wo n''t you out with it and let them thank you?"
58355Why?
58355Why?
58355Will they wait?
58355Will you be Doctor, Saul?"
58355Will you do St. George, Ned?"
58355Will you have any more of this cherry tart?"
58355Will you propose it?"
58355Will you take a glass of the old sloe gin before you go?"
58355Wishful to please Phyllis and bring on the birds, what does Cora do but busy herself for''em?
58355Would n''t it be better if he died to- night?"
58355Would there be no final parenthesis of strength to deal with the manifold matters now tumbling to chaos?
58355Would you have done it when you came to think on your mother?"
58355Would you have quarrelled for nothing?
58355Would you like the play?
58355You be china to my cloam, I suppose?
58355You do n''t want their own children to do the same in the time to come?
58355You do n''t want to add another pang to my end, do you?
58355You do n''t want to have your son in the same case?"
58355You may be ready for work; but what sort of work is ready for you?
58355You may laugh, but Tommy Gollop here will bear me out, and Joe Voysey too, wo n''t you, Joe?
58355You think he''s fond of you, I suppose?"
58355You wish to marry me so soon as I please; but what do you mean to keep me on?
58355You wo n''t deny that?"
58355You''ll admit at least''tis a sacred secret, and you''ve no right whatever to breathe it to a living soul?
58355You''ll bid me covet my neighbour''s ass and take my neighbour''s wife next, perhaps?
58355You''ll find yourself more peaceful now, Hester, now you know the worst of it?"
58355You''ll like Ned to take Cora Lintern?
58355You''ll like that?
58355You''re a strong girl, are n''t you?"
58355You''re free then?"
58355You''ve come, because you think I can do you a turn-- eh?"
58355who d''you think you are, and who d''you think any man is?
14527''Martin,''is it?
14527''Once?''
14527''Tis you, Jan Grimbal, is it?
14527A nice li''l thing, wi''a wunnerful curly head-- eh, Phoebe? 14527 All right, all right with Phoebe?"
14527All well, I hope?
14527An''Will?
14527An''doan''t I love, tu? 14527 An''how do you find yourself now?"
14527An''how much has it brought, you auld fule?
14527An''mother, an''wife, an''Miller?
14527An''what better word should''e have?
14527An''what might he have answered?
14527An''what might you think o''doin, when you comes out o''prison?
14527An''why for should n''t''e?
14527An''you promise to say no word, whatever betides, an''whatever you hear?
14527An''you''ll keep these here buzzin''parties off me? 14527 And auld Lezzard will go to the Union?"
14527And how are Phoebe and her husband?
14527And still finds time to steal from the hives of his fellows?
14527And that does n''t wake you?
14527And then?
14527And why should God kill me? 14527 And you wo n''t give a reason?"
14527Are you coming in? 14527 Ban''t I tellin''of''e?
14527Ban''t it? 14527 Ban''t you never comin''to bed?
14527Ban''t you surprised I could turn it out?
14527Be Gaffer Lezzard come?
14527Be Maister Chappie here likewise?
14527Be you a fule? 14527 Be you come for your brother or yourself?"
14527Be you friends now, if I may ax?
14527Be you gwaine to give me up?
14527Be you mad? 14527 Be you?
14527Blanchard, is it? 14527 But a cross-- a clear cross?
14527But a leap in the dark even for the wisest, Will?
14527But be you sure he''m happy?
14527But no sign? 14527 But the real gude men,"pleaded Phoebe--"them as had no whisper''gainst''em, same as Will?
14527But you''m certain it caan''t be managed?
14527But-- but we shall be married at once, Clem?
14527Butivul; but do''e mean in all solemn seriousness to go out England? 14527 Caan''t''e see you''re breakin''faither''s heart all awver again just as''twas mendin''?"
14527Caan''t''e see''twas faither''s gert, braave, generous thought to give''e work, an''shaw a lesson of gudeness? 14527 Caan''t''e sing smaller, if''tis awnly for thought of me?
14527Caan''t''e think o''nothin''wiser than to see faither?
14527Can he taake you from me? 14527 Can''e picture Blanchard cleaning out the pigs''house?"
14527Canst get up- stairs wi''out help?
14527Canst punish this man for tryin''to taake her from me?
14527Come to think of it, she hasn''t-- eh?
14527D''you pretend that nobody has told you this? 14527 D''you think I would change Will for the noblest in the land?
14527D''you think I''m not grateful? 14527 D''you trust her?
14527Did n''t you know? 14527 Did you tell her what people were sayin''?
14527Did''e note Jan Grimbal theer?
14527Do he knaw you''m tokened to Clem?
14527Do these evidences of aboriginal races lead you to any conclusions of note? 14527 Do wasps ever get into the hives?"
14527Do''e mean it might even make the differ''nee between life an''death to the bwoy?
14527Do''e mean that Miller''s got nothin''for me to do but this?
14527Do''e think I doan''t knaw better? 14527 Do''e think I doan''t knaw my business?
14527Do''e think, you, as awnly rides awver the Moor, knaws more about soil than I as works on it? 14527 Doan''t you see, sonny, this ban''t a fair bargain?
14527Doan''t you wish you had the job? 14527 Doan''t''e knaw Blanchard better''n that?"
14527Does Will know?
14527Does your mother knaw, Will?
14527Done it?
14527Dreamin'', be I? 14527 Ess; an''pride''s a purty fulish coat for poverty, ban''t it?
14527Fairness, you call it? 14527 Fifty would n''t hardly do, p''r''aps?"
14527For how long?
14527For why? 14527 For why?"
14527Fortune at my gate? 14527 Go to un?
14527Gone for ever; and she-- my Chris-- my dear-- is she to dwell in the darkness for all time, too? 14527 Happiness, you call it?
14527Has he not? 14527 Hast thy fire- arm, Lezzard?"
14527Have a drop?
14527Have n''t I? 14527 Have you come back to stop?"
14527Have you forgotten your undertaking to see my hives once a month?
14527Have you seen my poor sister?
14527Have''e ever looked at the laddie close?
14527He being gone-- poor Clem-- do you think--? 14527 He could n''t bring an action for breach, or anything o''that, could he?"
14527Heard from your brother since he left?
14527How are you, Chris? 14527 How be Mrs. Hicks, my Clem''s mother?"
14527How came it that you were here?
14527How can you ask it? 14527 How could''e see it with a secret chap like him?
14527How did I knaw? 14527 How do''e come at that, then?"
14527How do''e like that, Peter Lamacraft?
14527How ever shall I begin? 14527 How is Will getting on?"
14527How many''s down? 14527 How prosper your profound studies?"
14527How shude I knaw? 14527 How the flaming hell should I knaw?
14527How''s Jan Grimbal, fust plaace?
14527How''s Monks Barton gwaine to fare without''e, Blee?
14527How''s Phoebe?
14527How''s your brother Jan?
14527I have n''t done it; and if I had, is a scavenger''s hand fit to touch hers?
14527I knaw you would, my awn Will; an''that''s bein''comical- tempered, ban''t it?
14527I may leave it, at any rate?
14527I suppose I''m laughed at still in Chagford, am I not? 14527 I was gwaine to say that out of all our happiness an''fortune we might let a little bubble awver for Chris-- eh?
14527If I ban''t full woman, who is? 14527 If I did take''e, you''d be a gude an''faithful husband, Billy, not a gad- about?"
14527If I gave you work you''d stand to it, Will Blanchard?
14527If a man that was a man, with a bit of land and a bit of stuff behind him, came along and asked to court her,''t would be different, I suppose?
14527If it ban''t a gypsy''s, whose be it?
14527If it ban''t your awn fault, then whose be it, Clem?
14527If not on hers, wheer should''e see it?
14527Is John Grimbal at home?
14527Is it a true swarm or a cast?
14527Is it not? 14527 Is it part of your duty to bully me here alone?
14527Is that the awnly way? 14527 Is that what you''ve walked over here to tell me?"
14527Is the hatred all on my side, d''you suppose? 14527 Is this true you''m tellin''?
14527Keep back, ca n''t you?
14527Kiss the li''l bwoy, will''e? 14527 Let''em believe or disbelieve, who cares?"
14527Look now, Miller Lyddon, why for should n''t you, the biggest man to Chagford, give me a bit of work? 14527 Make me, my young moorcock?
14527Marnin'', sir; have''e heard the news? 14527 Matter?
14527Maybe you doan''t kuaw that chaps whose last job was on the treadmill finds it uncommon hard to get another?
14527Might''e get ten shillings for it, like t''other?
14527More talk''bout me? 14527 More trouble?"
14527Must I, by God? 14527 Never was a better one, I know; but happy?
14527No cause to be''feared?
14527No money at all? 14527 Not all wasted work, surely?"
14527Not even if I wait patiently? 14527 Not feared to speak to me?"
14527Not right, Phoebe?
14527Not to do no rash thing, Will? 14527 Nothing wrong at Newtake?"
14527O Christ, why for do''e hold back? 14527 Oh, my dear, my lovey, how can''e say or think it?
14527Or she with you, perhaps?
14527Or worse?
14527Plenty, plenty, I''sure''e; but that ban''t your business, be it? 14527 Say you''ll forgive me, will''e?
14527Shake hands, will''e? 14527 Shoot a fox?
14527So us must; an''I be allus doin''it; so why the hell doan''t they make allowance for me? 14527 Supposing I asked if I might try to win Phoebe?"
14527Tell un_ you_ sent me?
14527That Will may?
14527That''s brave talk, but what have''e saved, lad?
14527That''s it, Damaris Blanchard; who''s gwaine to b''lieve that a bwoy an''gal, like Will an''Phoebe, do knaw theer minds? 14527 That''s your last word then?"
14527That''s your opinion, is it? 14527 That?
14527The Governor? 14527 The li''l bwoy?"
14527Theer''s allus wickedness hid under a alias notwithstanding,declared Billy, rather disappointed;"have''e found Jan Grimbal?"
14527Then I''ve got you on my side?
14527They call the man Jack- o''-Lantern, do n''t they? 14527 Wants me?"
14527Was it a woman stung you?
14527Well, is n''t that what has happened?
14527Well, no man''s hate can outlive his reason, surely? 14527 Well, what''s the best news?
14527Well, why not? 14527 What are you doing here, William Blanchard?
14527What be talkin''''bout?
14527What be talkin''about?
14527What be these blasted hookem- snivey dealings, then?
14527What be''bout, delving theer?
14527What can I do there?
14527What can she want me for?
14527What coorious- fashion job be that then?
14527What d''you mean?
14527What determination?
14527What do I care? 14527 What do this mean, Will Blanchard?"
14527What do you know, you grey, dreamin''fule, as to whether I''m successful or not so? 14527 What do you mean?"
14527What do''e say, Phoebe?
14527What do''e say, mother?
14527What for? 14527 What has happened?"
14527What have you done?
14527What in God''s name be that for? 14527 What in thunder do it mean?"
14527What luggage? 14527 What matter for that?
14527What might you want, Miller?
14527What more''s to do?
14527What mother could? 14527 What ought us to do, I wonder?"
14527What the deuce be doin''now?
14527What the deuce d''you mean by naming Phoebe, then?
14527What the devil''s the gude of this eternal bleat? 14527 What the hell d''you knaw''bout the river?"
14527What then? 14527 What will you do?
14527What would he get?
14527What would you do, Billy, if the gal was yourn?
14527What''ll faither think then?
14527What''s amiss, then? 14527 What''s become of Morgan?"
14527What''s hard labour to him?
14527What''s her done?
14527What''s that to do with it?
14527What''s the good? 14527 What''s the main interest of life for you now?"
14527What''s the matter? 14527 What''s the use of cryin''''peace''when us knaws in our hearts''tis war?
14527What''s the use of that if he ban''t true to himself? 14527 What''s the wisdom o''talkin''like that?
14527What''s this? 14527 What''s wrong now?
14527What''s wrong?
14527What, Will? 14527 What, in God''s name, have I done to''e you should treat me like this?"
14527What? 14527 Whatever''s the mischief, Will?
14527Whatsoever it might be?
14527Wheer is he now? 14527 Wheer''s his ticket to then?"
14527Wheer''s the maiden as caan''t wait for her weddin''bells?
14527Wheer''s the paper an''ink to? 14527 When is he coming back again?"
14527Where did he come from when he dropped out of the clouds to marry Phoebe Lyddon?
14527Where is it? 14527 Where''s the letter I left upon my desk?
14527Where''s your target?
14527Whether Will liked it?
14527Who are you, to judge me and my motives?
14527Who dares to say my life is ruined?
14527Who said they believed it, Will? 14527 Who says I be a failure?"
14527Who told you, and how dare you foul my ears and thoughts with such lies?
14527Who''s to Newtake, Gran''faither Ford''s auld plaace, I wonder?
14527Why are you so hot, Billy Blee? 14527 Why ca n''t you ring the bell instead of making that fiendish noise, and waking the whole house?
14527Why d''you say that?
14527Why d''you say''duty''?
14527Why did n''t they send soldiers for un? 14527 Why do n''t Will write to her and keep her heart up and give her a little news?
14527Why do n''t you?
14527Why doan''t he strike me down if I''ve angered Him-- not this innocent cheel?
14527Why for d''you say you was wrong in what you done? 14527 Why for did n''t he marry her?"
14527Why for did you chaange so sudden?
14527Why for do_ you_ cry an''wring your hands so hard?
14527Why for not? 14527 Why for not?"
14527Why for should I? 14527 Why for?
14527Why for?
14527Why not go back? 14527 Why not try another way, an''see if you can get the auld gentleman to forgive''e?"
14527Why not, you doddering fools? 14527 Why not?"
14527Why should n''t He? 14527 Why the devil should I heed your letters?
14527Why, how could I, Martin?
14527Why, my dear, what is this? 14527 Why, we promised, did n''t us?
14527Why? 14527 Will''e read it to me?"
14527Will-- eh? 14527 With that gun?"
14527Wonder if Uncle Joel be so warm a man as he''d have us think sometimes of an evenin''arter his hot whiskey an''water?
14527Wonder if''t would better him to see me?
14527Would you object to me lighting my pipe, Jan Grimbal?
14527Would''e like me to read it just wance more wi''out stoppin'', Phoebe?
14527Would''e like to see passon, dear sawl?
14527You ban''t feared o''the world, be you? 14527 You ban''t here on that fool''s errand, bwoy, surely?
14527You believe as he went''pon the Moor an''found that bwoy in a roundy- poundy under the gloamin''?
14527You came to fight me, then?
14527You can say that? 14527 You can speak like that-- you, my awn wife-- you, as ought to be heart an''soul with me in everything I do?
14527You dare to say that, do''e? 14527 You did n''t come to see Sam Bonus, I suppose?"
14527You do n''t like your future brother- in- law?
14527You have found no wife in your wanderings?
14527You mean as you wo n''t tell me?
14527You mean that gate- stone brought this upon us?
14527You never doubted it?
14527You really mean it? 14527 You want to go giving them money?"
14527You wo n''t go to him, Will?
14527You wo n''t love me no less, eh, Will?
14527You wo n''t tell Billy, faither, will''e? 14527 You would n''t go-- not while I lived, sure?
14527You''d rip that up again-- you, who swore never to open''your mouth upon it?
14527You''ll be patient, Will? 14527 You''ll keep the gal, I reckon?"
14527You''re going away from Chagford? 14527 You''ve come back''mazin''rich they say, Jan Grimbal?"
14527You''ve found out that, have you?
14527You''ve taken it all for granted, then-- you, who know more about what''s in my mind than I do myself? 14527 ''Cause she''ve borne a damned fule?
14527''Cause why?
14527''Cause why?
14527''T is in the autumn of life a man''s brain be worth plucking like-- eh?"
14527''Tis like this, come to look at it: who should work for''e same as what I would?
14527''Tis this: have''e noticed heads close together now an''again when you passed by of late?"
14527''Who be you?''
14527About Chagford, Chris?
14527All at least is well with you now?"
14527All that be theers; an''what was his-- my son''s?"
14527Am I one to gratuitously insult or offend another?
14527An''for that matter, if your faither saved gude money at Newtake, why caan''t Will?"
14527An''like our li''l angel, tu, in a way?"
14527An''the piano, Will?"
14527An''what be you doin''here?
14527An''what matter if he is?
14527An''what might you want?"
14527An''wheer''s that li''l dictionary what I gived un years ago?
14527An''who was it let''em keep the''Green Man''awpen two nights in wan week arter closin''time,''cause he wanted another drop hisself?"
14527And Will?"
14527And he knawed-- my son?"
14527And how can I thank you?
14527And is Phoebe as wise as you, Will?"
14527And this tremendous matter in hand?"
14527And to think such a man as me doan''t knaw wiser''n two childern who caan''t number forty year between''em is flat fulishness, surely?"
14527And you''d have me eat humble- pie to the man who''s wrecked my life?"
14527Anybody seen Farmer Endicott?
14527Are n''t your own eyes bright enough to see it?"
14527Are you afraid of it?
14527Are you married?"
14527As for her, she at least had respected him during the past years; but what must henceforth be her estimate of him?
14527Ax mother to step in from front the house, will''e?
14527Ban''t I a young woman still?
14527Ban''t I to count in an awful pass like this?
14527Ban''t a man to speak his mind to thieves an''robbers?"
14527Ban''t anything worth tryin''for your awn son?
14527Ban''t it?"
14527Ban''t that nothing?"
14527Ban''t the granite ours under Venwell?
14527Ban''t theer no ways o''meetin''him, now you knaw?
14527Ban''t your auld bones ready for bed yet?
14527Be Gaffer Lezzard nigh?"
14527Be I a chap as chaanges?
14527Be I a man as changes my mind like a cheel?"
14527Be any matter I can help''e with?"
14527Be it Blanchard or the ghost of un?"
14527Be that baaby gwaine to thank us for bringing him in the world, come he graw up?
14527Be the bwoy yourn or not?
14527Be the rushes ready for thatchin''of it?"
14527Be them the ways o''a plain- dealin''God, who knaws what''s doin''in human hearts?
14527Be you ever feared of un?"
14527Be you feared of anything the airth can do to you when you look at him?
14527Be you on his side or mine?
14527Be you shamed of him as he lies here?
14527Be you?
14527Blee?"
14527Blue murder?
14527But maybe a smaller man might serve your turn?"
14527But what''s a wamblyness of the innards, so long as a body''s sawl be ripe for God?"
14527But wheer shall''e turn now?"
14527But where were all those great and splendid pictures of the future?
14527But you''ll act just-- eh?
14527But--""Caan''t''e say what''s happened, you chitterin''auld magpie?
14527Caan''t you see it?
14527Caan''t your awn true wife help''e now or never?"
14527Caan''t''e think o''me so well as yourself-- you as be allus thinking o''me?
14527Caan''t''e treat a man civil?"
14527Can free things feel their hearts beat closer because they are chained to one another by an effete dogma?"
14527Can you let me labour all my life long to make your days good to you?
14527Can you still stand by her, cursed jade of lies?
14527Can''e do it?
14527Come for same reason, p''r''aps?"
14527Come to it, caan''t''e?"
14527Could Blanchard forget the past so quickly?
14527Could n''t it so fall out?
14527Could you let me stand between you and the world?
14527Could you, Chris?
14527Could you-- even now?
14527Could''e sell such a li''l auld funny thing as that for money?"
14527D''you hear me?"
14527D''you see this post?"
14527D''you think I caan''t read what your face speaks so plain?
14527D''you think I care a damn wan way or t''other?
14527D''you think I have n''t watched the young brute these many years?
14527D''you think self- respect is dead in me?"
14527De''e follow?"
14527Did he recollect that he, Clement Hicks, shared knowledge of it?
14527Did n''t they?
14527Did n''t us tell''e so from the very beginning?''"
14527Did n''t''e knaw?
14527Did you leave my faither cause other people did n''t love un?"
14527Did''e ever see aught like un?
14527Did''e hear anything of them rhymes''bout the auld days you sent to Lunnon?"
14527Did''e make it up after all?
14527Do you send soldiers for him or the police?"
14527Do''e catch heat from the fire?"
14527Do''e love me no better''n that?
14527Do''e love your mother less for bearin''you in a gypsy van?
14527Do''e see?
14527Do''e think Heaven''s allus hard?
14527Do''e think I want the whole of Exeter City to knaw my errand?
14527Do''e think I''ve nothin''better to do with my time than that?"
14527Do''e think my wife''s gwaine to be any differ''nt to lesser folks?
14527Do''e think waitin''''s sweeter for me than for you?"
14527Do''e think, Mr. Vogwell, as the Duchy might be disposed to give me a hand?"
14527Do''e want to be treated soft by what was allus hell- hard to him?
14527Do''e want to make me hate the sight of''e?
14527Do''e want to send me mad?
14527Doan''t you see how''t is?
14527Doan''t''e say you''ve runned away?"
14527Does it bring thoughts?
14527Duchy steals all the gude land from Venwell men; why for should n''t us taake a little of the bad?
14527Ess fay, he done that fearful thing, an''if''t weern''t enough to turn the Lard''s hand from un, what was?
14527For Christ''s sake, you wo n''t hurt yourself or any other?"
14527For a considerable time John Grimbal said nothing, then he began suddenly,--"I suppose you know the Applebirds are leaving my farm?"
14527For marryin''me?"
14527For why?
14527For why?
14527For why?
14527For why?
14527For why?
14527Forget?
14527Forgive''e?
14527Free-- do''e hear me?
14527Funny, is n''t it?
14527Gentlefolks would ax your help, would n''t they?
14527Gimme the key, quick-- the key, Will-- do''e hear me, child?"
14527Grimbal?"
14527Had''e thought o''that?"
14527Happy, are''e?--happy for wance?
14527Has it made a difference, Chris?
14527Have I so many flesh- and- blood friends to remember?
14527Have n''t you forgot him yet?"
14527Have you thought, I mean?
14527Have''e ever thought''twas coorious the way Blanchard comed by un?"
14527He done for them, why should n''t He do for you?"
14527He had, indeed, solemnly sworn to Will to keep his secret, but what mattered that before this more crushing, urgent duty to Chris?
14527He might serve to help-- eh?
14527He wagged and gasped and whispered to his grandson,--"Wheer''s the brandy to?"
14527He wants something of that sort-- eh?"
14527He''d stand to anything, eh?
14527He''ll get money and marry you, wo n''t he, when his aunt, Mrs. Coomstock, dies?"
14527He''s farming on the Moor now, is n''t he?"
14527His son, mind; who be you to take life, an''break the buds of Clem''s plantin''?
14527How be the poor little lad?"
14527How be you fearin''?
14527How can I escape it?
14527How can you say it?"
14527How can you speak so?"
14527How can you?"
14527How can''e dream it?
14527How could he win her?
14527How d''you like the thought of a damned good flogging-- fifty lashes laid on hot and strong?"
14527How do the lawyers an''p''licemen get their living?"
14527How do''e knaw this here''s a cross any more than t''other post the gate hangs on?"
14527How do''e like that, Phoebe?"
14527How do''e read that?"
14527How easily they fool us from their thrones, do n''t they?
14527How far''s such as her gwaine in life without some person else to lean upon?"
14527How fares it, John?
14527How long must it be?"
14527How many men''s all that to wance, Miller?"
14527How much longer be I to bide his pleasure?
14527How shall I break it to them, dearie?"
14527How should I?
14527How would it do to tell un right away an''put un''pon his honour to say nothing?"
14527How would you like it-- you and your mother?
14527How''s his sister?
14527I ban''t gwaine to sell the dogs-- eh?
14527I had her spoken word, had n''t I?
14527I might do worse than give up my life to un-- eh, Martin?"
14527I suppose he sent you to whine for him?"
14527I suppose you forgot you had a brother?"
14527I suppose you were only lying there dreaming?"
14527I told''e wance for all, did n''t I?
14527I took my awn anyway, an''you comed near killing me for''t, so we''m upsides now, eh?
14527I want bread, not a stone, eh?"
14527I was called to it, weern''t I?
14527I won''t-- I can''t-- Where is it, I say?"
14527I wonder if his mother ever looks hungry towards Newtake when she passes by?"
14527I''m a man to steal others''fur out of season, ban''t I?
14527I''ve done nothing surely to suggest--?"
14527I''ve gived that man as gude advice as ever I gived any man; but what''s well- thought- out wisdom to the likes of him?
14527I''ve took you fair an''square, anyways, an''will just ax if you be comin''wi''out a fuss, or am I to make''e?"
14527If He forgives''e, an''this here gude grey Martin forgives''e, who be I to fret?
14527If that ban''t a picter of the present plague o''rain, what should be?"
14527If the Duchy might spread greedy fingers and inclose"newtakes,"why not the Venville tenants?
14527If what?
14527If you''d speak to faither--""What''s the use bringing sorrow on his grey hairs?"
14527If''t was your duty, why did n''t you do it fust minute you found it out?
14527In a place of worship, where men prayed to the thunder and the sun and stars?
14527Indeed, had not the whole farm, of which he was now master, been rescued from the Moor in time past?
14527Is it all sweet?
14527Is it so?
14527Is it wise?"
14527Is n''t it enough?
14527Is n''t my heart broken so well as yours?"
14527Is she more to him than you are?"
14527Is she there?"
14527Is the moon made of the same stuff as the marsh lights?"
14527Is waiting so easy?"
14527Is your horse all right?
14527It is n''t my Will talking so?"
14527John Grimbal doubled up the letter and thrust it into the envelope, while Martin continued:"What do you reap?
14527Keep workin'', Chown, will''e?
14527Knaw what, Will?
14527Lezzard?"
14527Lyddon-- straight?"
14527Man alive, are you mad?"
14527May I ax that?
14527Might I?"
14527Mother or brother or other folk?
14527Must you?"
14527My little pearl of a Chris, can you care for such a bear of a man?
14527No word or anything left?"
14527Nothin''contrary happened to market?"
14527Nothing should be tu hard for un arter what he''ve done, eh?"
14527Nothing tames a man so quick as to see his woman and childer folk hungry-- eh?
14527Now, then, caan''t''e do the rest?"
14527Oceans o''work waitin'', but what can us be at?
14527Offer money to me, would''e?
14527Oh, my gude God, why for did''E leave me any childern at all?
14527Oh,''t is enough to-- theer, what''s the use of talkin''?
14527Only she''s so wonderfully beautiful-- don''t you think so?"
14527Or a council chamber?
14527Or a court of justice, that has seen many a doom pronounced, much red blood flow?
14527Or is it a grave?
14527Read it out, will''e?"
14527Sarah Watson will reap what he''s sawed; an''who shall grumble?
14527Seeing the provocation-- they might surely--?"
14527She''m comin''home to- day-- that''s knawn, ban''t it?"
14527So you knaw an''forgive-- what''s the rest?
14527So you might grow into friends-- eh, Clem?
14527So you''m to give me up?
14527So-- so shall us shake hands an''let bygones be, Jan Grimbal?"
14527Steal my gal, would''e?
14527Such a farm as yours?
14527Surely a little of this money--?"
14527Surely to God,''twas time I had my awn?"
14527Take un to the poorhouse?"
14527That I''d draw trigger on the man from behind a tree, p''r''aps?"
14527That''s auld history, surely?"
14527The bag of money?
14527The cheel''s movin''an''bracin''itself up an''makin''ready to come in the world, ban''t it?
14527The question is, should I take that into account now, or go ahead as if it never had failed out?"
14527Theer ban''t much left, surely?"
14527Theer''s money to it, I knaw, but what do that signify?
14527Them as ban''t enemies no more might grow to be friends-- eh?"
14527Then theer''s the singing of the auld song: who''s gwaine to say that''s the least part of it?"
14527Then what''s it to be between us, when I come back?
14527Then why for do''e send me messages?"
14527There, will that do?"
14527They could n''t be hard''pon them,''specially if they knawed all?"
14527They were passing at close quarters,--Blanchard on foot, John upon horseback,--when the latter said,--"How''s Mrs. Blanchard to- day?"
14527They will say, I am afraid, as they said to me:''Why did he wait until now if he meant to do the right thing?
14527This be County Gaol, ban''t it?"
14527Was I all wrong?
14527Was I out to push so strong for it?
14527Was I-- was I all wrong?
14527Was ever man and woman happier for being bound that way?
14527Was it probable?
14527Was it wrong to make the match, do''e think, seein''''t was all for love of my cheel?
14527Was n''t my cup full enough before but that my wan hope should be cut away, tu?
14527We can understand that, but where''s the joy of being a spirit?
14527We''ve worked it out in our minds-- me an''Billy; an''if two auld blids like us ca n''t hatch a bit o''wisdom, what brains is worth anything?
14527Weern''t Clem clean, tu?
14527Weern''t he all the world to me, tu?
14527Well, ban''t in reason she twald the naked truth''bout it, an''who''d blame her on such a delicate point?
14527Well, my son, and how can I serve you?"
14527Well, that''s all dead an''buried, ban''t it?
14527What Justice would give ear to un?
14527What about me, as have to go out''pon the Moor an''blast another new wan out the virgin granite wi''gunpowder?
14527What about that Blanchard girl?"
14527What are these lonely rings?
14527What be you gwaine to do, an''when be you gwaine to do it?
14527What d''you find to praise in the clown?
14527What d''you knaw''bout it?"
14527What did he make of it?"
14527What did''e fear?
14527What did''e get for that butivul fox wi''the goose in his mouth you painted''pon Mr. Lamacraft''s sign to Sticklepath?"
14527What do Clement knaw''bout farmin''?
14527What do Doctor say?"
14527What do I care?
14527What do Mrs. Blanchard the elder say?"
14527What do he want?
14527What do the man_ knaw?_ Nothin''."
14527What do''e expect from a fule but folly, or a crab tree but useless fruit, or hot blood but the ways of it?
14527What do''e find to be happy about?"
14527What do''e say, neighbour?"
14527What do''e say?"
14527What do''e think o''that?
14527What do''e think of that?"
14527What do''e want the New Year to bring to you, Billy?"
14527What end?
14527What gude deeds have he done to have life smoothed out, an''the hills levelled an''the valleys filled up?
14527What happiness could be achieved by flinging Blanchard into prison for a few months at most?
14527What have he done?"
14527What is it then?"
14527What message?"
14527What more do''e want?"
14527What odds if a babe''s got ringless under the stars or in a lawful four- post bed?
14527What right have you to fling away ten pounds like that, an''what''s the harm to earn gude money honest?
14527What salve could be won from thought of this man''s disgrace and social ruin?
14527What shall I do?
14527What the douce be talkin''''bout?"
14527What the plague''s the matter wi''us?"
14527What were some few months of vague uncertainty and girlish tears compared with a lifetime of prosperity and solid happiness?
14527What were you about last Christmas?"
14527What wise brain will think hard of you for followin''the chosen path?
14527What would Clem say?
14527What would Will Blanchard say if he woke some morning to find his secret in John Grimbal''s keeping?
14527What would you have me do?"
14527What''s a cross to me?
14527What''s a fix to you?
14527What''s amiss with''e, mother?
14527What''s amiss?
14527What''s brought''e, an''who do''e want?"
14527What''s crossed''e?
14527What''s eternity if you''re half a ghost, half a bird?
14527What''s it done for me?
14527What''s more bitter than toiling to no account, an''_ knawin_ all the while you be?"
14527What''s my days away from you?"
14527What''s put by to goody in the savings''bank, Will?"
14527What''s the business?
14527What''s the exact reason?"
14527What''s the matter now?"
14527What''s the procedure with a deserter?
14527What''s the stone to you if Grimbal wants it?
14527What''s the use?"
14527What''s the wisdom o''turning night hours into day like this here?"
14527What''s the world to you and why should you care for its word, Chris Blanchard?"
14527What''s the world to you, knawin''what you knaw?
14527What''s the worst or best?"
14527What''s theer to gape an''snigger at?
14527What''s to cross''em?"
14527What''s to do?
14527What''s wan girl against a parish full, an''a blustering chap made o''diamonds?"
14527What''s worst he can do?"
14527Wheer ever have''e bided?
14527Wheer to?
14527Wheer''s Will?"
14527Wheer''s justice to?
14527Wheer''s the man?
14527Wheerever was you born to?"
14527When you''ve been a lawful wife ten year an''more, who''s gwaine to mind this?
14527Where are we standing now?
14527Where are you going to, Chris?
14527Where are your butts?
14527Where can I wash and be clean?
14527Where is it?
14527Where is it?"
14527Where was his Christian charity-- that charity which should begin at home and so seldom does?
14527Where was the wife whose musical voice and bright eyes should welcome his daily home- coming?
14527Where were the laughing and pattering- footed little ones?
14527Where would he be to- day but for you?"
14527Where''s dinner?
14527Who be I that you should call on me to wallow in filth to please your sour spite?"
14527Who be I to be treated like that?
14527Who be you, or any other man, to offer me money for wasted time?
14527Who cares a brass button for him?
14527Who could know even a little of what this meant to her?
14527Who else did I care for?
14527Who else mattered to me?
14527Who have I got to care about but you?
14527Who is it?"
14527Who knaws a half of what you knaw''bout''em?
14527Who married Adam an''Eve?
14527Who should knaw but me?"
14527Who should think for my wife''s faither wi''more of his heart than me?
14527Who was it now?"
14527Who was it spoke for''e fifteen year ago an''got''em to make''e p''liceman''cause you was tu big a fule to larn any other trade?
14527Who would n''t, treated same as us?"
14527Who''d doubt if he''d got to choose between that or two year in gaol?
14527Who''ll read it?"
14527Who''s Martin Grimbal to offer me money?
14527Who''s callin''me?"
14527Who''s gwaine to hide the thing, even if they wanted to?
14527Who''s gwaine to pity a thief who loses the purse he''s stole, or a poacher that fires''pon another man''s bird an''misses it?"
14527Who''s he, to come at your bidding?"
14527Who''s his faither, Will, an''who''s his mother?"
14527Who''s the mother?
14527Who''s to help you if you''ve allus got the black monkey on your shoulder like this here?"
14527Why could n''t''e wait till marnin''?"
14527Why d''you harp an''harp''pon that, knawin''right well you''d do the same again to- morrow?
14527Why did he not give himself up long ago?''"
14527Why did n''t''E fill the cup of my sorrer to the brim at a filling an''not drop by drop, to let un run awver now I be auld?"
14527Why did n''t''E take this cross- hearted wan when t''other was snatched away?
14527Why do n''t you face him with it and make him tell you the truth?
14527Why do n''t you leave me, Chris?"
14527Why do''e stand glazin''like that?
14527Why doan''t he take my plough or wan of the bullocks?
14527Why doan''t they lock her up?
14527Why doan''t''e faace the man, like a man,''stead of blusterin''to me''bout it?
14527Why for should I be?
14527Why had he taken the advice of Blanchard and delayed his offer of work to Hicks?
14527Why has the man been silent so long if he meant to strike in the end?
14527Why let it run to rot when the Red House Farm wants a tenant?
14527Why not--?"
14527Why not?
14527Why should I starve, waiting for you, and--?"
14527Why should I wait your pleasure, an''me wi''a tongue in my head?
14527Why should he have been pitched into this here home?
14527Why should he?"
14527Why should n''t He kill you, or any other man, if He wants the room of un for a better?
14527Why should n''t my mother have a jubilee?"
14527Why should they?"
14527Why to- day?
14527Why to- day?
14527Why?"
14527Why?"
14527Why?"
14527Will thundered out,"an''who be you, you auld twisted thorn, to come here stealin''my stone in the dead o''night?"
14527Will you, for an old friend?"
14527Will''e have a drink?"
14527Will''e have bite or sup?"
14527Wo n''t nobody less do?
14527Would n''t''e reckon that grey hairs knawed better than to fancy words can keep lovers apart?"
14527Would you harbour a convict from Princetown if you found him hiding on your farm?"
14527Would you mind sitting down here, just for a moment?
14527You an''Phoebe be well, an''--an''dear mother?"
14527You could n''t get to love me?"
14527You could n''t marry me, dear Chris?
14527You do n''t know where he was during those months?
14527You got my letter all right?"
14527You looked the world in the faace bold as a lion, did n''t''e?
14527You made up that row over the gate- post when his first child died, did n''t you?"
14527You might have noticed that love- cheel by the name of Timothy''bout the plaace?
14527You see, Clem''s my close friend again now, an''Chris be my sister; so what''s more fittin''than that I should set up the young people?
14527You shall give me a helping hand-- eh?
14527You still think''twill serve, doan''t''e, Blee?"
14527You swear that?"
14527You want me to promise not to move in this matter,--is that so?"
14527You wo n''t be hard''pon my li''l bwoy if I come to''e, Martin?"
14527You wo n''t forget that poor auld blid, Lezzard?
14527You wo n''t let them starve?
14527You wouldn''t--?"
14527You''d think Chagford was most tired o''my name, would n''t''e?
14527You''ll bear witness I wanted to come, wo n''t''e?"
14527You''ll never tell-- never?
14527You''m Jan Grimbal-- eh?"
14527You?
14527Your daughter and the little children?"
14527an''how far''s that gwaine?"
14527be the Law a laughing- stock?"
14527burst out the old woman,"what''ll''e do next?
14527he exclaimed, while the young keeper approached his side;"who''s going to catch fish with your lanky shadow across the water?"
14527quiet, caan''t''e?"
14527said Will,"after''tis done?
14527what rigmarole''s this?
14527whatever will''e say next?
14527you''ve never killed nobody, Will?"
54304A long way down? 54304 A message?
54304About Julian? 54304 Am I to be set at defiance by you as well as by Anthony?
54304Am I to be the laughing- stock of the parish?
54304Am I to consult you as to whom I make my friends? 54304 Am I to desert my partners?"
54304Am I to tell Squire Cleverdon of Hall that you will not favour his suit, being already too deep gone in attachment to the son?
54304And Fox, what is he going to do?
54304And Sir Edmondbury Godfrey-- weren''t he cruelly and bloodily murdered by''em?
54304And he agrees to this?
54304And he can say nothing of Anthony?
54304And he has promised that?
54304And he-- where is he?
54304And his hand slipped when your fingers were cut?
54304And his place of residence?
54304And how can your Heavenly Father forgive you your trespass if you remain at enmity with your earthly father?
54304And if I gave you opportunity?
54304And if she refuses?
54304And is it for the son to bid the father do this?
54304And lost your way?
54304And must you cross the seas?
54304And now about your posie of golden cups?
54304And she consents?
54304And that----?
54304And the rope ready?
54304And then?
54304And this is what my father is to be cajoled into finding? 54304 And to what do they bear testimony?"
54304And under my name?
54304And what about Bessie?
54304And what allowance will you make Bessie when she marries?
54304And what did he say?
54304And what did the Captain mean,he added,"when he said-- he who has stepped into another man''s shoes must wear his cravat?"
54304And what if I did see her? 54304 And when the West is roused, what is it to do?
54304And where did you find them? 54304 And who are you that you plead for him so vehemently?"
54304And you are----?
54304And you expect him to come to you, beating his breast; and then you will kill the fatted calf and embrace and forgive him?
54304And you threaten me? 54304 And you will defy me-- and marry them?"
54304And you will remain unbent, unbroken-- to continue here in the wilderness?
54304And you, that you draw the rein so short and make the mare rear?
54304And your father?
54304And, again, what induced you to come forth on the moor at such a season as this?
54304And, by Heaven!--why not wear his cravat? 54304 And, if Anthony does not come within three days, all remains as heretofore?"
54304And, pray, what are you doing in my house? 54304 And, pray, why come to blows?"
54304And, pray,said Bessie, colouring,"how do we stand to each other?"
54304And-- he is not hurt?
54304Answer me,she said:"What do you mean by those words,''And this for Julian?''"
54304Answer me-- what did you mean? 54304 Anthony!--not to-- to death?"
54304Anthony-- is he really coming to Hall?
54304Anthony?
54304Are not his own hard- heartedness and his hatred of Richard Malvine, the cause of all this misery?
54304Are these wedding- guests invited to help to make merry?
54304Are we to hold our hands when treated by you as it has pleased you? 54304 Are you Anthony Cleverdon?
54304Are you his wife?
54304Are you ill, dear cousin?
54304Are you ill? 54304 Are you mad?
54304Are you mad?
54304Are you repentant for your action afterwards?
54304Are you still such a fool as to think that when I say a thing I shall change about? 54304 As to Bessie?"
54304Away? 54304 Be a soldier?"
54304Because one man is a fool, is that reason why his friend-- as you choose to term me-- should not be wise? 54304 Bess, you are glad?"
54304Bessie,said he,"has it never been observed by you that Anthony had an affection for Urith?"
54304Both!--what Anthony and Bess?
54304But I shall see you again-- soon?
54304But can not you go without me?
54304But do you suppose that Urith will go in opposition to her mother''s dying wish?
54304But if I will?
54304But if he should come and solicit thy hand?
54304But what brought her on to the moors?
54304But what does the grave of Richard Malvine matter to you?
54304But what if Anthony refuses your offer?
54304But what is it, then? 54304 But what where they?"
54304But why not?
54304But, Tony!--for how long?
54304But, if it is still free, may I not put in a claim for it?
54304But, my good father, what other are you?
54304But-- how, father?
54304By what way then will you take me?
54304Can I not? 54304 Can not your sister assist you?"
54304Can you not say it as we ride on-- it is late?
54304Can you not? 54304 Can you say that, with the rare look- out you keep?"
54304Come!--who are you?
54304Come, answer me, why did you run away?
54304Did Anthony never cease to love me? 54304 Did Bessie say that?"
54304Did I lever him out of his place?
54304Did I not tell you, sister Magdalen, that your_ buts_ were an offence to me? 54304 Did I show her more attention than you showed to one I do not name?
54304Did n''t the Duke of York marry Mistress Ann Hyde? 54304 Did not your grandfather suffer for his visit?"
54304Did you first strike Fox?
54304Did you hear my words?
54304Did you hear that? 54304 Do I not carry about with me a mark of friendship-- a pledge to be redeemed?
54304Do they think that I have a head of dough, to be moulded into what shape they list?
54304Do they?
54304Do you dare me to it?
54304Do you hear? 54304 Do you intend to drag me off my horse?"
54304Do you know what has happened? 54304 Do you know what night it be?"
54304Do you know what she meant by giving you those flowers?
54304Do you know, Mr. Cleverdon,pursued Julian,"why it was that poor Tony caught me by the neck and kissed me?
54304Do you mean to hint that I am a coward?
54304Do you not feel, Julian, that it is unfitting? 54304 Do you not know that your Anthony was engaged, or all but engaged-- had been for some fifteen years-- to my sister?
54304Do you not see, Urith, that this life of seclusion is intolerable to me? 54304 Do you not see,"exclaimed Anthony, impatiently,"that it is I who should support my wife, and not my wife who should find me in bread and butter?
54304Do you reckon?
54304Do you see any way in which your brother can be received again into favour?
54304Do you see that pile o''stones with one piece o''granite atop standing up? 54304 Do you suppose I am to be cajoled against my judgment?"
54304Dos''t fancy it was ever summer- time with thy father and mother after they were we d? 54304 Dost see, though it be night, I am ready for a journey?
54304Dost think because I have married the niece that I am abased to be the uncle''s serving- man? 54304 Enough of that,"she said;"you know the conditions on which I take you?"
54304Find her heavy, eh?
54304Five hundred guineas,said the Captain, and thrust his hand into his pocket,"and some of them five- guinea pieces?"
54304For his grave?
54304For what else should I come?
54304Forbidden you going there?
54304Found what?
54304Full?
54304Has any accident happened?
54304Has he done so?
54304Has he hurt thee, child?
54304Has my friend Cleverdon said aught to justify you?
54304Have you been to Hall lately? 54304 Have you no apology to offer for your misconduct?"
54304Have you no word?
54304How a lesson, Julian?
54304How about your father? 54304 How are you, Julian?
54304How came you by them? 54304 How can I dance when I have never practised the measures and the paces?"
54304How can I measure my words when I have to throw them at you from a furlong off? 54304 How can you forget me, Urith?
54304How can you take delight in this?
54304How can you without my cob?
54304How could you do as you have done concerning the headpiece?
54304How dare you-- who have eaten of my bread, and whose back I clothed, take the part of Anthony against me?
54304How do you know that?
54304How far from home?
54304How far?
54304How if the venture fails?
54304How long am I to wait? 54304 How long has Urith been ill?"
54304How mean you?
54304How should I know, when your father never took the trouble to let me know that my own, my dear and only child, was dead? 54304 How should I know?"
54304How should I know?
54304How so?
54304How were you received?
54304How would Urith relish you taking the pike for any cause?
54304How, the earth?
54304How? 54304 I ask you to forgive Anthony, will you do so?"
54304I ax,said one of the miners, throwing out his arm as if proclaiming defiance,"how it came about that London was burnt?
54304I beg your pardon?
54304I ca n''t see him-- I am busy---- State secrets? 54304 I desire to know for certain whether you intend to give Bessie to Fox Crymes?"
54304I do not care what be his name, but what his business?
54304I have bought your life, with gold and----"And with what?
54304I hope nothing serious is the matter with her?
54304I meant no harm, brother-- all I ask is, has Bessie given her consent?
54304I say, Tony,said Fox, into his ear,"what do you think of Kilworthy now?
54304I suppose you were angry with me when I snatched you off Devil Tor, and you strove to free yourself?
54304I suppose, father,continued Fox,"that you will hardly let me go penniless out of the house?
54304I want then to know what has brought you here? 54304 I would n''t have done it,"said one of the miners, nudging his fellow;"would thou, Tummas?"
54304If you care nothing for what people say, how is it you fell out with and struck Fox? 54304 If you marry Tony,"said his sister,"what are you going to do with Elizabeth?
54304If you will not ask your father''s pardon----"What for? 54304 Indeed-- to come and see his scratch, and a drop of blood from it; and then to clasp each other and weep, and make friends?"
54304Is Urith here?
54304Is Urith worse?
54304Is he unhappy?
54304Is he your son?
54304Is it not a sin to love a man who has sworn before heaven that he will be true to one, and one only, and that not yourself? 54304 Is it so?"
54304Is it so?
54304Is it true,she asked,"what I have been told, that he has fallen out with his father, and is driven from Hall?"
54304Is that all you have to say?
54304Is that final?
54304Is there anything in this, Anthony?
54304Is there no means of raising the requisite money?
54304Is this jest, or is it earnest?
54304Is your sister here?
54304It is as well, Tony,she said,"for I want to have a talk with you; I am thinking----""What?
54304It was Fox Crymes who urged you to do it?
54304It was your mother?
54304Julian is here, is she to be left without an escort?
54304Luke!--who defied me by marrying Anthony to that hussy?
54304May I enter?
54304Mine?
54304Much gold and many acres stick to thy hand when thou puttest it forth to her, eh?
54304Must I account to you for all my acts?
54304Nay,laughed Julian;"who can sound thy dark and deep thoughts, and thread thy crooked mind?
54304Nay? 54304 No condition?"
54304Nor about some village girl?
54304Not desire it?
54304Not-- to Urith?
54304Now, pray step in,my Lady saith,"Why shouldst thou trudge afoot?"
54304Now-- what say you to that?
54304O-- how can you ask? 54304 Of what good canst thou be in an army-- in a battle-- if unable to mount a horse?
54304Oh, danger? 54304 Oh, father-- at once?"
54304On my account this has happened?
54304On what grounds?
54304One word, shall I say it here, or within?
54304Or else, what, father?
54304Returns to me?
54304Save him? 54304 Sergeant,"said Fogg,"is the beam run out?"
54304Surely Justice Crymes knows of----"How can I accept any help from him when I refuse his daughter, and when I have blinded his son?
54304Surely you do not dream of making Luke your heir, and marrying him to Julian Crymes?
54304Tell me-- can you deny that?--can you say that it is a lie? 54304 That is true-- and your mother had no relatives?"
54304Then how can you expect forgiveness for your transgressions? 54304 Then if she takes Fox, do you intend to take him into Hall?"
54304Then it was not about Julian?
54304Then what is to be done?
54304Then what was it about? 54304 Then what_ can_ he do?
54304Then where is he? 54304 Then why are you here?"
54304Then why has she not been near me?
54304Then would you stand to be torn yourself?
54304Then you determine to give up Anthony, wholly?
54304Then you have no good news to bring me?
54304Then you will come and see her at Hall?
54304They told you so? 54304 To whom?
54304Unsay the promise at once-- do you hear? 54304 Urith,"said Julian,"how stands the game?"
54304Urith-- what about Urith?
54304Urith?
54304Was I bound to let you know I was going home?
54304Was it not indiscreet that thy father should come in and find thee and Julian locked in each other''s arms, exchanging lovers''kisses?
54304We are quite alone?
54304We men,said Anthony,"when we are angry, hurt each other, but you women, I suppose, hurt your own selves?"
54304Well, and why not? 54304 Well,"retorted Julian,"what of that?
54304Well,said he, roughly,"what do you want?
54304Well-- what is it?
54304What about?
54304What ails her?
54304What are the Malvines?
54304What are you suffering from?
54304What avails all this reckoning and debating over a matter that can not be settled till the main person concerned has been consulted? 54304 What brings you here?"
54304What can be the matter?
54304What can he do?
54304What concern me the quirks and hints I hear concerning Jule?
54304What did I mean?
54304What did you mean when you said''This for Julian?''
54304What did you mean, when you said--''This for Julian?''
54304What do I want it for? 54304 What do I want?"
54304What do you mean by this?
54304What do you mean?
54304What do you mean?
54304What do you say to that, Master Crymes?
54304What do you want with me? 54304 What do you want, Urith, with this wretched bit of rummage?"
54304What does it signify?
54304What dost say to Anthony coming home?
54304What dost want? 54304 What for?"
54304What harm has she done you? 54304 What has been cast into thankless soil?"
54304What has been told you about Julian?
54304What has he done?
54304What has he to forgive?
54304What has the small- pox to do with my interests?
54304What have we here?
54304What have you to do with this grave?
54304What he did? 54304 What in the name of the seven stars do you mean by your buts thrown in whenever I speak?
54304What is he aiming at?
54304What is his name?
54304What is it, Anthony?
54304What is it, Luke?
54304What is it, father? 54304 What is it?
54304What is it?
54304What is that you say, Master Gibbs, about your niece? 54304 What is that you say?"
54304What is that? 54304 What is that?"
54304What is that?
54304What is that?--what is that? 54304 What is the charge against him?"
54304What is the meaning of the strange talk that is about concerning thee and Elizabeth Cleverdon?
54304What is the meaning of this decoration?
54304What is the meaning of this?
54304What is the meaning of this?
54304What is the meaning of this?
54304What is the meaning of this?
54304What is the meaning of this?
54304What is there to fear on the moor? 54304 What is this about?
54304What is this about?
54304What is this that makes you bicker now?
54304What is this, father?
54304What is this?
54304What makes him go there?
54304What makes you suppose that?
54304What shall I sing?
54304What shall we talk about?
54304What was it all about?
54304What will satisfy you? 54304 What would you have me say?"
54304What!--Fox for Bessie? 54304 What!--busy?"
54304What!--forgive and reinstate him?
54304What, no real debt?
54304What, the high road to Tavistock?
54304What,laughed Anthony,"Then it is Fox whom you would have bitten, had he allowed you to fasten your teeth on him?"
54304What-- from Willsworthy?
54304What-- of Luke?
54304What-- would you tear and bite me?
54304What? 54304 When the Duke of Savoy was persecuting the Protestants, did not Old Noll hold up his finger, and at the sight of his nail the Duke stayed his hands?"
54304Where am I?
54304Where are you hidden? 54304 Where have you come from?"
54304Where is Anthony? 54304 Where is Mr. Crymes now?"
54304Where is he? 54304 Where is money to be had?
54304Where is that?
54304Where to?
54304Where will you look? 54304 Whither?"
54304Whither?--To whom?
54304Who are they?--what are they? 54304 Who are you?
54304Who are you? 54304 Who are you?"
54304Who gave it you?
54304Who is here?
54304Who is that creating such an uproar?
54304Who is that yonder?
54304Who is this fellow in the hands of my men?
54304Who is without?
54304Who it was who did this? 54304 Who touched me?
54304Whom are you seeking?
54304Whom do you mean?
54304Whose horse are you riding?
54304Why did you run away?
54304Why do you refuse my guidance?
54304Why do you vex me?
54304Why least of all now?
54304Why may I not speak to-- why not dance with an old, old friend?
54304Why not, Bess?
54304Why not, grandmother?
54304Why not? 54304 Why not?
54304Why not? 54304 Why not?"
54304Why should I respect them? 54304 Why should I, when even dogs are open- mouthed?
54304Why should he not have married her?
54304Why should you call Anthony Cleverdon''my friend?'' 54304 Why so?
54304Why so?
54304Why so?
54304Why the last that you would have see you, Urith?
54304Why the last?
54304Why, how came you here?
54304Why, well, now, is not this strange?
54304Why,said he,"what do you reckon it all weighs?"
54304Why?
54304Will you allow me to go forward?
54304Will you give over-- and pull off my boots?
54304Will you tell my father?
54304Would that be a fair field in which all the skill, all the strength is on one side? 54304 Would you have him sit down at her side and twiddle his thumbs, like a disgraced child in a corner?"
54304Would you hurt me-- bite and mangle me?
54304Yes, and whom does Bessie resemble most? 54304 Yes, what if he throws up all connection with Willsworthy?
54304Yes-- of course-- who else could be here?
54304You are a coward?
54304You are an impudent scoundrel,said Captain Fogg;"an impudent scoundrel to dare insinuate-- but, who are you, what is your name?"
54304You are not ill, then?
54304You ask that? 54304 You ask that?"
54304You came back from the moor along the Lyke- Way, did you?
54304You came to scare me with thoughts of small- pox, and want me to draw my will, and provide for you?
54304You came to the moors alone?
54304You do seek marriage?
54304You flare forth unprovoked; or is it that you are angry with me because I have refused to have anything to say to your brother?
54304You give me authority to tell him this?
54304You have given your heart to another?
54304You have had my message?
54304You have not fulfilled my commission?
54304You have not spoken to Urith on this matter?
54304You know what they are called by the people?
54304You suffered her to throw herself away?
54304You think it possible that my father may never come round-- even on his death- bed?
54304You think not?
54304You want to find your way back? 54304 You will be persecuted by suitors,"Fox continued,"and I ask you is there any you know about here whom you would prefer to me?"
54304You will live there?
54304You will not be deterred by your father''s refusal to give consent to this marriage?
54304You will not refrain from reading these banns?
54304You will try your strength against me-- wild cat?
54304Your final answer is-- you will not help?
54304''Tis enough to make angels weep?
54304--to Urith--"what is your name, and who are you?"
54304A Drift?
54304A life-- whose life?"
54304A shaveling like he----""Then, who would have it?"
54304About any new folly or violence?"
54304After a long and painful silence, Julian asked, in a low voice,"What is Urith about?"
54304Against the rocks?"
54304Against whom would you trail a pike?
54304An old cradle thrust away there?
54304And Anthony?
54304And for that only?"
54304And if so-- to what would this lead?
54304And wherefore wear them?"
54304And you came here to fetch me?
54304And you treating her as your true love?"
54304And your peat earth, sour and barren, does that sink your scale heavier than all the bags of gold and rich warm soil of Kilworthy and Hall combined?"
54304And, again, was it to the welfare of his cousin, and, above all, of Urith, that it should take place?
54304And, gentlemen, what more rare news could he bring than a tale of who was doomed to die within the year?
54304And, if they fought, which would win?
54304Answer me; hast thou not been this very day with Julian?"
54304Any nearer a reconciliation?"
54304Are the soldiers drawing near?"
54304Are these papers?
54304Are we not free to question why we are thus treated?"
54304Are you aware that the boot- flap behind is down?"
54304Are you crafty?
54304Are you deaf?"
54304Are you engaged?"
54304Are you in bodily pain?"
54304Are you in charity with all the world?
54304Are you in danger?"
54304Are you mad to think of such a thing?"
54304Are you mad?"
54304Are you really going to take my brother?
54304As her knight?
54304Aye?"
54304Because I particularly desire it?"
54304Because one man throws away a diamond, why his comrade should not pick it up and wear it on his finger?"
54304Below stood the text from Proverbs:--"Who can find a virtuous woman?
54304Besides, where is the money to come from?"
54304Bessie, have you seen her?
54304Bessie?"
54304Bless my soul, you''re not going to make us drink unlemoned punch?
54304But Anthony was not a man to brood over any sensation or experience, and when Urith asked,"Did you find your father''s colts?"
54304But against whom?
54304But how had Anthony escaped?
54304But how stands it now betwixt you and Fox?"
54304But how was it to be altered?
54304But how?"
54304But what ails your hands?
54304But what if it were so?
54304But what of that?
54304But where was Julian?
54304But, my child, what is that?
54304But, supposing he did hear, and in time, what was menaced, was it likely that he would give himself up for his father?
54304By the way, Tony, how is it that we never see you at the Hare and Hounds?
54304CHORUS: Why should we be all the day toiling?
54304CHORUS: Why should we be all the day toiling?
54304Can I not help you in any other way?"
54304Can I withdraw the promise made yesterday?
54304Can not a poor, ugly girl love a man-- noble, wise and good-- and never let him know it, and never expect that it will be returned?
54304Come, now-- what if Anthony returns to you?"
54304Dare he-- he, Luke-- think of her, love her, once more?
54304Did I not name him?
54304Did Urith''s eyes burn his heart now?
54304Did he challenge me when he struck me with the gloves in the face and hurt my eye?
54304Did he lie?"
54304Did he tell you that he went to Hall with the end of persuading your father to forgive you?"
54304Did not that trouble your mother, and occasion greater perturbation of feeling?"
54304Did not the blame attach to such as had dared him to the reckless deed?
54304Did she ever seek him out?
54304Did she not know that glow in his countenance?
54304Did she want to find occasion to reproach him?
54304Did you come up the other way?
54304Did you ever hear tell how Philip Lang came by his death there?
54304Did''st ever hear me sing the song about Trinity Sunday?
54304Do you belong to the house?
54304Do you dare tell me you have chosen without consulting me-- without regard for my wishes?"
54304Do you desire to be burnt?"
54304Do you forgive all those who have trespassed against you?"
54304Do you hap to have any cider that can be got at?
54304Do you hear me?
54304Do you hear?"
54304Do you know what she said?
54304Do you mark me?"
54304Do you mistrust me?
54304Do you not fear to take me when I go, when crossed, into such mad passion as these hands show?"
54304Do you not feel as cramped by it as must have felt Noah in the Ark?"
54304Do you not know me?"
54304Do you not know that Anthony always loved me?
54304Do you not recall how I had you in my arms, and leaped with you through the fire, on Devil Tor?"
54304Do you not see what it is?"
54304Do you not suppose that already tongues are busy concerning the cause of your quarrel with your father?"
54304Do you outweigh Julian and all the rest?
54304Do you recall what I said when we were dancing together at Wringworthy?"
54304Do you see what has fallen on her?
54304Do you see-- Urith?"
54304Do you see?
54304Do you suppose it is because he cares so greatly for the Protestant cause?
54304Do you suppose that I countenance such rebellious conduct?"
54304Do you think I am telling lies?
54304Do you understand that he is not, and never shall be, yours?
54304Do''st know, Bess, what notion came on me?
54304Does it hold?
54304Does it hold?"
54304Does it lead to happiness to live separated from me-- for I will never see him if he marries that hussy?
54304Does not her blood run in his veins?
54304Does not the apron- string extend so far?
54304Does she not so resemble me at that time that you would say she had taken nothing of the Penwarnes, that she was altogether and only Cleverdon?
54304Does that prevent her liking him?
54304Dost mark me?"
54304Dost think that Fox cares a rush for thee?
54304Doy''hear?
54304For what is the inn, my boys, but the very focus and acme to which all gather, and from which all radiate?
54304Fox started to his feet when Luke came in, but said nothing till Bessie left the room, then hurriedly,"You, raven-- what news?
54304Fox-- should he go and see Fox at Kilworthy?
54304From the yard?"
54304Gibbs?"
54304Gibbs?"
54304Had Anthony finally decided to reject his offer, why had he not said so in words?
54304Had Julian made good her threat?
54304Had he not looked at her in the same way before they were married?
54304Had he on leaving Willsworthy gone direct to Julian to pour out into her sympathetic ear the story of his domestic troubles?
54304Had he written their initials on the glass, and united them by a true lovers''knot?
54304Had not her own flaming passion seen in the reflection it called up in him a real reciprocal flame?
54304Had she mistaken that attention for love?
54304Had she not been gradually estranged from him, till she had declared to him that she hated him, that she wished she had never seen him?
54304Had they laughed at her awkwardness in the opening dance?
54304Has any rope broken?"
54304Has he aught there now to retain him?"
54304Has he had good cheer at Willsworthy?
54304Has he not her eyes and hair-- all the upper part of his countenance?
54304Has she been informed of that?
54304Hast come to see me or Master Gibbs?"
54304Hast thou won her consent?"
54304Have I not a cause to take out this knife?
54304Have you aught against that?"
54304Have you come here to see your mother''s grave?
54304Have you heard the tidings?
54304Have you heard?"
54304Have you heard?"
54304Have you made your will, or a settlement of the property?"
54304Have you no pity?
54304Have you seen her?"
54304Have you seen how a little dog is mended of lamb worrying?
54304Have you seen my father?"
54304He asked himself, had he any right to interfere to promote this union, which was so strongly opposed by the father-- so utterly distasteful to him?
54304He could remove them only at night, and if he removed them, where should he hide them?
54304He had been away a long time; with whom had he been tarrying?
54304He has been over at Hall two and three times a week, and----"she laughed,"will you believe it?
54304He is your son?"
54304He swore before God to hold to her in poverty or in wealth till death, and thou wilt make him forswear himself?"
54304He take my name, my place, my rights, my inheritance, my everything?"
54304Here is that fellow-- that man from Exeter-- here again at the door, with two others-- and----""And what?"
54304His mother stood between me and my happiness-- between me and your father''s heart; and, after what I have endured, shall I forgive that?
54304His world-- was that to be the little two- hundred- acre estate of Willsworthy?
54304Home?--To Willsworthy?
54304How am I to find the money?
54304How can I forget what he has done to Bess?"
54304How can I have peace and rest whilst Toby is under the bed, and I know the state his hair is in?"
54304How can you know that?
54304How could he appear in church, at market, now that it was known that he was a ruined man?
54304How could he be brought to silence?
54304How could one who loves think to advance his suit by an outrage on the father''s memory?
54304How could she let him die, when, by an effort, she might save him, and bear to live an hour longer?
54304How could she love him, and let him die an ignominious death?
54304How dare he appear before them, after having committed such an offence?
54304How did you come here?"
54304How did you injure your knuckles?"
54304How do you know that?
54304How do you suppose she will like that?
54304How is it that you did not go as well as your father and my Anthony, to draw a sword for the good cause?"
54304How is this to end?"
54304How long have you been here?"
54304How long was it since that night?
54304How many men do you want?
54304How many more of you are there?"
54304How stood he?
54304How will she find herself placed under my management?"
54304How will you agree with a girl equally wilful and unbending?"
54304How would she-- Urith-- be tortured between them?
54304I dare stake my word that Anthony has rued his act almost daily; and is all his regret to count for nothing?"
54304I little suspected that Fox was cast aside because you were questing him who is mine-- is mine, do you hear?
54304I suppose you were in risk of being sent to the Tower?"
54304I understood that you had been bundled out of Hall without any of your belongings; but your father, I suppose, allowed you to ride off on the roan?"
54304I will make you a bet-- what will you take?"
54304I work like a slave?"
54304If I thought he did not love me----""Well,"said Bessie,"what?"
54304If I withdraw my''Never,''will you withdraw yours about Anthony?--never to forgive him-- never to see him in Hall-- never to count him as your son?"
54304If Julian were to snatch him away, were to cast him down under foot and crush him-- what would she do?
54304If Urith succeeded in drawing him away from me to whom he was all but assured, must I not feel it?
54304If he puts his neck into the noose, who is to blame if the rope be pulled and he dangles?
54304If her life were spared, it would be to what?
54304If men might call each other out and fight, why not women also contend on their own special ground, in their own manner?
54304If she did succeed in saving it, it was for whom?
54304If you did not strike him, why did he aim at you?"
54304If you do, who is to stand surety for you that you go where I say-- to the churchyard of Peter Tavy?"
54304In three days he gives me his answer, but who can doubt what that answer will be?
54304Is a man to be cast out of every home because he has committed one folly?
54304Is he a footpad?"
54304Is he not wearied with his toy?
54304Is it not a sin to endeavour to make him false to his oaths?"
54304Is it so that Fox has been drawn on to take me without any knowledge of how matters stand with regard to the property?"
54304Is it true that you see Elizabeth Cleverdon?
54304Is it true?
54304Is not Anthony the very image of his mother?
54304Is not that a reason?"
54304Is not that a slap in the face for Anthony that will make his cheek tingle?"
54304Is not that enough?
54304Is she like you?
54304Is she really so ill?"
54304Is that you, Luke?"
54304Is there any immediate prospect of his coming to a better mind?"
54304Is there aught I could do-- any change that I could make-- that would give thee pleasure?"
54304Is there forgiveness if there be no repentance?"
54304Is there no way of it coming, nevertheless, to be joined to Hall?"
54304It goes with Julian; but who will take her?"
54304It is high time for us to have the arrangement with Julian Crymes----""What arrangement?"
54304It was that, was it?"
54304It will drive me crazed-- where can the money be?
54304Julian had been refused by him with all her wealth, her rank, her accomplishments, her beauty, and what had he acquired instead?
54304Luke, and you, Bess, too?
54304Madame, will you honour my poor roof by taking up your abode therein?
54304May I not resent it?
54304Me, whom you threatened with the stick should I venture through your doors to see my daughter?"
54304Must I lose you?
54304Must I not stand as her guardian?
54304Must we banish every other topic that arises?"
54304Must you go from hence?"
54304My act was, if you will, an act of folly-- but have you never committed acts of folly?
54304No words of the burial office would be said over him; but what cared he?
54304No-- he never warned me, and why should I forewarn him?"
54304Not Julian?"
54304Not if she dies?"
54304Now, as the carriage is not hers, but yours, and instead of the Lady wi''the Ashen Face it is the Right Worshipful Justice Crymes, what say you?
54304Now, as to Bessie----""Well, what as to Bessie?"
54304Now, will you let me see Bessie?
54304Now-- will you fear an idle threat?"
54304On the moor?"
54304Only another maid''s gloves?"
54304Or are you Cleverdons too great and fine now for that?
54304Or are your legs so clogged with the honey in the pot into which you are dipping for you to be able to crawl so far?"
54304Or was its redness due to the reflection on the pure white of the advancing blood?
54304Our brothers lie drowned in the depths of the sea, Cold stones for their pillows, what matters to me?
54304Please the Lord nothing may happen; but suppose that he were carried off, who would have Hall?
54304Presently she turned, hearing his steps, with a gesture of surprise, and said,"What, not gone yet?"
54304Prisoner, do you know that fellow there, with his hair on end and his mouth stopped?"
54304Quarrelled already with your bride?"
54304Shall I see if there be room in the poorhouse at Peter Tavy?
54304Shall I tell you what he did?
54304Shall we be the same now, and confide in each other?"
54304Shall we toss?
54304She began to grapple in the air with uplifted hands--"Where is the knife?
54304She can not endure violent emotion, and your behaviour----""I have said I am sorry; what can I do more?
54304She caught his arm, and said, in a low tone,"Brother, why do you make so much now of Urith Malvine?
54304She had cause to be proud-- reason to feel her heart swell with the sense of victory: and who that has won a victory does not desire a public triumph?
54304She had done a great deal for him, and what had he done for her?
54304She has the property-- and when old Justice Crymes dies-- where will he be?
54304She is not in any danger?"
54304She-- this Julian, had been playing with him-- she, for her own ends, had been making mischief between him and his wife-- and what had he done?
54304Should he go on to Peter Tavy, and visit his cousin Luke?
54304Since when?
54304So Fox agreed to the proposal?"
54304So we see you again?"
54304So you came for me?
54304So, my friends, let us agree, Always keep good company, Why should we not merry, merry be When we''re met together?
54304Stretch itself, and lie down to sleep again?"
54304Talk first and think after?
54304Tell me the truth-- captive-- captive if you will, tell me what brought you out on the moor?
54304That a horse should go mad when burning touchwood is set in his ear?"
54304That fire in his eye?
54304That is the meaning of all the hurry and scramble of the marriage?"
54304The attitude, her manner was so full of entreaty, that Julian halted in her walk, turned to her, and asked,"What is it that you want, Bess?"
54304Then Bessie rode forwards beside Urith, and asked,"Tell me, how came you here?"
54304Then he called to the united assembly,"What say you all-- shall we have a punch- bowl?
54304Then out at the door came Anthony, shouting,"Where is Julian?
54304Then, Luke?"
54304They were not unwilling to draw to us, or else why did Squire Crymes bid you to be his son''s godfather?
54304This dejected, sad man, with his head bowed, his face pale, and lined with trouble?
54304To her?"
54304To the reproaches of Urith, to the tedious jests and drawled- out songs of Mr. Gibbs?
54304To what was he returning?
54304To whom else could he leave Hall?"
54304To whom would Hall go then?"
54304To whom?
54304To- morrow-- What think you?
54304Urith Malvine?"
54304Urith-- is it true?"
54304Warn''t them Poperies seen a doing of it-- a firing it in several places?"
54304Was Anthony in all things to be preferred to him?
54304Was Anthony so weak that his conscience would suffer him to be thus attracted from the place of duty?
54304Was he sure that he could ever be on the same terms as before with Urith?
54304Was he telling her of his wife''s shortcomings?--of her temper?--her untidiness?--her waywardness?
54304Was he to sit still as a stone to receive the salutation of a pretty girl?
54304Was he to treat them with distance and coldness?
54304Was it I?
54304Was it Luke?
54304Was it an act of a friend-- a dear, considerate friend-- to strike me in the eye and half blind me?
54304Was it conceivable that they could become so tempered and altered as to agree?
54304Was it his sister''s?
54304Was it not enough that he was scourging himself with the whips of his own thoughts for his precipitate folly in marrying her?
54304Was it to be-- even as Luke said, that in losing Hall he was to find something he had not prized hitherto?
54304Was it to see the fires?"
54304Was she justified in pursuing her advantage?
54304Was she really, deliberately, with determinate malice, winding Anthony off Urith''s hand on to her own?
54304Was that a fitting work to occupy his mind and powers of body?
54304Was that the occasion of the dispute?"
54304Was that the same Anthony she had loved and admired?
54304Was the result she would arrive at one to fill her with content?
54304Was this a justification for Anthony?
54304We shall have the board spread shortly, and how can we eat off it when it is slopped over by the drainage of your dirty beaver?"
54304Well, was he to be cut off from all his old acquaintances because he was the husband of Urith?
54304Were they jeering together in confidence at poor little moorland Willsworthy?
54304Were they laughing over that scene when Anthony led out Urith for the dance at the Cakes?
54304Were they such as would be likely to recognise her?
54304Were they talking over the great mistake Anthony had made in taking Urith in the place of Julian?
54304Were you allowed to take off oats and hay as well?"
54304What about?"
54304What against him?"
54304What ails you?"
54304What am I to do?
54304What am I to him?
54304What are you about?"
54304What are you doing here?"
54304What are you, Urith Malvine, but a half- savage moor- girl?
54304What brings you here, Anthony Cleverdon?"
54304What but love induced me to submit myself to your will?
54304What can I do?
54304What can he say or do after I am married?
54304What care I?"
54304What could be his purpose?
54304What could have been Anthony''s object?
54304What could he do?
54304What delayed his return?
54304What did she say to me, but--''You should not be here, be at any entertainment in a neighbour''s house without Urith?''"
54304What did the Squire care for the scrap of life still his?
54304What do you bring?
54304What do you here?"
54304What do you mean?"
54304What do you mean?"
54304What do you want?"
54304What does he here?"
54304What does he want with me?"
54304What does it all mean?"
54304What does it matter that there are obstacles?
54304What dost think?
54304What drawn on the glass?"
54304What good do we know of Fox?
54304What had he done?
54304What had she to yield?
54304What has brought you back?
54304What have you there?"
54304What if Bessie should set her heart on some one of whom you would not approve?"
54304What if I threaten to do it?"
54304What if Urith were left a widow?
54304What if all goes wrong, and the land be given up to the Jesuits?
54304What if he did not yield to the glad news that he was grandfather to a new Anthony Cleverdon?
54304What if he had appeared there with Julian as his bride?
54304What if it were to take him off?
54304What if the old Squire were to remain obdurate to the end?
54304What is Anthony to me?
54304What is Fox?
54304What is Tony to me?
54304What is a Drift?
54304What is he beside you?
54304What is his body to you when you have driven out of it the soul?
54304What is it?
54304What is that compared with Julian''s inheritance?"
54304What is that in your hand?"
54304What is the good of a wife, unless she sets herself to make home agreeable to her husband, when he is unable to go out- of- doors?
54304What is the matter?
54304What is the meaning of this?"
54304What is your colour?"
54304What is your livery?
54304What is your name?"
54304What more do you require?
54304What must have taken place?"
54304What of that?"
54304What other youth would have ventured into the churchyard on such a night?
54304What prospect of happiness opened before her?
54304What right had Urith to take offence at that?
54304What say you?
54304What sort of life could he live with no one to care for him-- with nothing to occupy his mind and energies?
54304What then was the use of repining, and fretting over the past?
54304What then with thy neck?
54304What then would the spider do?
54304What think you of that, Julian?
54304What was he doing all this while?
54304What was it----?"
54304What was to be done with the fellow?
54304What was to be done with the halter?
54304What was to become of Urith if she lived?
54304What will my father say when he knows this?
54304What with thy money?
54304What would Fox do?
54304What, another?
54304What, if they knew her, would they think of her being at such a time, and in such a place, alone with Anthony Cleverdon?
54304What-- must I?"
54304When I am not there, do you return here, or go elsewhere?
54304When the room was cleared of all save Julian and Fox, the Captain said,"Now, then, what is the meaning of this?"
54304Where are the gloves?
54304Where else have you been?
54304Where is Fox?"
54304Where is Fox?"
54304Where is Urith?
54304Where is he?"
54304Where is he?"
54304Where is my wife?
54304Where is the old brightness-- where the old pride?
54304Where is there such a lad as my Tony?
54304Where shall I find you?"
54304Where the foul fiend did you get it?
54304Where was Anthony now?
54304Where was Anthony?
54304Where was Solomon Gibbs?
54304Where was Urith?
54304Where will you go-- you and your beggarly daughter?
54304Where''s a silver knife to cut them with?
54304Where''s the lemons?
54304Which is the better in heart?
54304Which is the most worthy representative of the Cleverdons, of whom you are so proud?
54304Which is to come first?
54304Which of you thinks of the mother, and has set flowers on the grave-- see, it is alight with primroses?"
54304Which shall it be?
54304Whither gone?"
54304Whither would it lead her?
54304Who among the neighbours is old enough or young enough?
54304Who are you to come between us?
54304Who can tell?
54304Who can trace a piece of gossip?
54304Who could they be?
54304Who dreamed of magnetic currents till the magnetometer registered their movements?
54304Who drew your initials on the glass beside hers, and bound them together with a true lover''s knot?"
54304Who first sought to bring it about?
54304Who is he?
54304Who to observe them?
54304Who was to interfere?
54304Who were the people that made of Dartmoor at a remote period a scene of so much activity?
54304Who would?
54304Who''ll draw the sword against Popery and Jesuitism?"
54304Whom could he make his heir but me?
54304Whom was she likely to encounter in such a spot, save him after whom the Tor was named, and which was traditionally held to be his throne?
54304Whose name came up between you?
54304Why did Urith remind him of that ride?
54304Why did not he come?
54304Why did you come forth on the moor, but because you were aware that he was here?
54304Why do you never come to Hall?"
54304Why do you say to me,''Come, Urith?''
54304Why dost thou not go on?
54304Why else has he rid this day to the moor?
54304Why had Anthony marred her life, blistered her soul?
54304Why had Luke mentioned that place by name?
54304Why has he gone off to join the Duke of Monmouth?
54304Why here?
54304Why need he have done that?
54304Why not at the side of Bessie at table answering the toasts?"
54304Why not give your consent?
54304Why should I respect an old rogue?
54304Why should I shout across the hall to you, and you stand with your back turned to me, as though we were on opposite sides of the Cleave?"
54304Why should he not kiss an old friend and comrade whom he had known from childhood?
54304Why should he?
54304Why should not Urith have yielded at once to his wishes about the cradle?
54304Why should this girl-- this girl who had poisoned his life-- come to torment and disturb him at the last hour?
54304Why should you spend all your life in the loneliness of this-- this Willsworthy?
54304Why then should not Anthony surrender?
54304Why was the old grudge against Richard Malvine to envenom the life of the son and grandchildren of the Squire?
54304Why were you not here at the proper time?
54304Why, how come you by so much down here?
54304Why, who will stay us?
54304Will anything make of him a generous and open- hearted man?"
54304Will either be spared?
54304Will it be to his happiness to see Hall pass away into other hands?
54304Will she give her consent?"
54304Will she have me-- me, an old grey- headed father, kneel at her feet?"
54304Will that content you?"
54304Will that do?
54304Will that do?"
54304Will that satisfy you?
54304Will you go to Hall as soon as you can in the morning?"
54304Will you join with Anthony in resistance and rebellion against me--_me_, the head of the house?
54304Will you stay now?"
54304Will you throttle me to prevent them from coming out of my lips?"
54304With whom come to blows?"
54304With you?"
54304Won''ty all drink to the Protestant Duke?"
54304Would his son ever set him at defiance, as he had defied his father?
54304Would it be advisable to step aside, and let these travellers pass without seeing her?
54304Would it have been manly had he declined the challenge?
54304Would it not be a relief to be rid of him, to be spared any more domestic broils?
54304Would it swing and catch at him, and proceed to construct a cobweb between him and the side of the pit?
54304Would not every one point at him, and sneer and laugh at his misfortunes?
54304Would not two such headstrong natures, when brought together, be as flint and steel?
54304Would she stoop to him?
54304Would she wear him again?
54304Would that approve itself to you?
54304Would that please you?
54304Would the reluctance of the one be overborne?
54304Would the threat of the first lead to action?
54304Would they come into real conflict?
54304Would they recognise her?
54304Would this threat be as vain as her former defiance?
54304Would you have me dismount to search the grass for them?
54304You a rebel?"
54304You are not afraid of work, are you?"
54304You ask that?
54304You beggar, whom I raised from the dunghill, fed, and clothed?"
54304You bit your hands?"
54304You came out here on the terrace after me?"
54304You can eat, I suppose?"
54304You do n''t suppose I married Bess for her beauty, do you?
54304You do not suppose he would leave all to you?"
54304You have acquired a right over me?"
54304You have not robbed the Exchequer?"
54304You have thrown it away for the sake of a pair of sulky eyes-- aye, and Hall, too?
54304You will knock out my eye with your tags?"
54304You will pray God to guard him in danger, will you not?"
54304You will tell me something about Anthony?"
54304You would not have had it slip upwards?"
54304You would not have me endure an insult tamely?"
54304and how he came to lie there?
54304and whose doing is it that that worthy gentleman, my Lord Russell, has been done to death?
54304and why will you not speak to me?"
54304asked Anthony,"that you pull at my belt so roughly?"
54304at night?
54304because I will not leave you on the moor to perish?
54304called Julian, imperiously and impatiently,"dost hear what I say?
54304do you know?
54304exclaimed Bessie, becoming crimson with shame and annoyance;"who can have set such a wicked story afloat?"
54304has she given you any-- hopes?"
54304he said, and then added,"But why away at once, and Urith so ill?"
54304how canst thou speak thus?"
54304is that you?
54304is there no way of saving him?"
54304laughed Anthony;"will you teach me how to manage a horse?"
54304make yourself champion of a beggar brat like that?"
54304or rather, about whom was it?"
54304pass my house without a step inside?"
54304said he, as he set her down,"which is the strongest-- your will or mine?"
54304she cried-- there was pain and despair in her tone--"where are you going?
54304she said,"what have you been doing here?
54304she said,"what is it?
54304shouted Anthony,"will you now believe I have been in the churchyard?"
54304shouted the old man;"how goes the suit, Tony Crymes?
54304the lemons at last?
54304through my eyes?"
54304tired of keeping him, are you?"
54304what am I to do?
54304what are you standing there agape for?
54304what did you promise me?"
54304what do you understand of business-- of money concerns-- mortgages, and the like?
54304what does he mean, running away, hiding where none can find him, when Urith is so ill?"
54304what else could I expect?
54304what is the matter?"
54304what is the meaning of this?"
54304what troubles?"
54304when joined-- to be again separate?"
54304will it not be best to have all the horses harnessed?
54304will they take me and let him go?
54304will you do violence to me to stay my words?
54304within a few minutes must I go forth to him and withdraw the''Never?''"
54304without a farewell?
54304you do not mean what you say?
54304you have come after me?"
54304you take up the single- stick to fight in his defence?"