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
36872Ah, but you say, how about the time when there is not a single rose in sight?
36872Who does not know its beautiful buds in their setting of mossy stems?
34893After all, is not the delight which belongs to a garden but a bit of borrowed glory from the Creator of sunlight, and of the kingdom of flowers?
34893In seeking the simpler life which many are now craving, if luxuries are blessings that we could do without, must we count the flower garden a luxury?
34893It would be a serious matter to attempt to name the best gardens in this State, for who could judge where such an infinite variety exists?
34893Our unwritten motto is:"If others can, then why not we?"
34893What would it be?
34885Gentlemen,he says,"what floure like you best in all this border?
34885For September and October blossoming why not use the Abendrote or Evening Glow?
34885For a larger garden, what is more alluring than a fountain sending forth a high, vapory stream, bursting into a cloud of filmy spray?
34885For a rustic seat, why not try the wild grape or Crimson Glory vine?
34885For a shady bit of garden, why not try out delphiniums?
34885For a small beginning of a water garden, why not try a pocket in the rock?
34885For the simple garden, why not make one yourself?
34885Fragrance is necessary in the planting of a sundial, then why not use the Honeysuckle?
34885Have you ever considered placing your sundial in the heart of a rose garden?
34885Have you ever considered the graceful effect of ornamental grasses?
34885If more than one tub is used, why not make a rockery between?
34885If you are looking for novelty, why not try cobblestones?
34885If your ground slopes to the garden edge why not design a rustic tea house to fit into the hillside?
34885In that case why not use half barrels or tubs?
34885We tire of the same idea continuously reproduced so why not work out a design of your own?
34885Why not give them a home by themselves in a rough rockery?
38829Are we not all wrong in adopting one degree, so to say, of plant life as the only fitting one to lay before the house? 38829 Canst thou catch Leviathan with a hook?"
38829That''s all, is it?
38829What is a garden?
38829What is a garden?
38829Why is a garden made?
38829_ What am I to say for my book?
38829( 2) What ornamental treatment is fit and right for a garden?
38829( 3) What should be the relation of the garden to the house?
38829( Why"needless,"then?)
38829(_ Spectator._) But who_ does_ apply the Art- standard to Nature, or value her products as they resemble those of Art?
38829And all goes to show, does it not?
38829And has not Sir Walter well said:"Nothing is more the child of Art than a garden"?
38829And where can we find a more promising sphere for artistic creation than a garden?
38829Are there, then,_ two_ arts of gardening?
38829How can this thing be?
38829How comes he to strain at the gnat of formality in the old- fashioned garden, yet readily swallow the camel at Stowe?
38829How, then, we ask--"How with this rage shall beauty hold a plea, Whose action is no stronger than a flower?"
38829Is it well to devote the flower- bed to one type of vegetation only-- low herbaceous vegetation-- be that hardy or tender?...
38829Is not modern garden- craft identical with the old, so far, indeed, as it hath art enough to stand any comparison with the other at all?
38829Is the position true or false?
38829Nay, what is one to make of even the logic of such argument as this?
38829Nay, what need of artificial lakes at all if there be a running stream hard by?
38829Or to the old Herbals of Wyer, and Turner, and Gerard, whom Richard Jefferies[14] pictures walking about our English lanes in old days?
38829Or why should not scarlet oak and scarlet acer be grafted on common species of these genera along the margins of woods and plantations?
38829The question now before us--"What ornament is fit and right for a garden?"
38829The ruthless clearance of these gardens of renown is sad to relate:"For what sin has the plough passed over your pleasant places?"
38829To what extent, we ask, may the forms of Nature be copied or recast?
38829Was this valley the valley of death for our friend, or were the seeds of death already within him?
38829What are the limits to which man may carry ideal portraiture of Nature for the purposes of Art?
38829What is more charming than the effect of hollyhocks, peonies, poppies, tritomas, and tulips seen against a yew hedge?
38829Where can our faculties find a happier medium of expression or a pleasanter field for display than the garden affords?
38829Who will not agree with me in this?
38829Why were the old- fashioned gardens destroyed?
38829Why"poorer"?
38829[ Footnote 4: Qu''est- ce l''expérience?
38829or two sorts of Englishmen to please?
38829says Newman,"what are we doing all through life, both as a necessity and a duty, but unlearning the world''s poetry, and attaining to its prose?"
39049Oh, far away in some serener air, The eyes that loved them see a heavenly dawn: How can they bloom without her tender care? 39049 What is this jolly smell all around here?
39049Who is he?
39049A friend says:"Do you think they will speak to you?"
39049An old Narragansett coach driver called out to me,"Ye set such store on flowers, do n''t ye want to pick that Blue- pipe in Pender Zeke''s garden?"
39049CHAPTER XXII ROSES OF YESTERDAY"Each morn a thousand Roses brings, you say; Yes, but where leaves the Rose of Yesterday?"
39049Can you not believe that we love them still?
39049Did you ever see a ghost in a garden?
39049Do they not"smell sweet to the ear"?
39049Do you care for color when you have such beauty of outline?
39049Do you like its touch as well as its perfume?
39049Do you like to bury your face in a bunch of Roses?
39049Do you love to feel a Lilac spray brush your cheek in the cool of the evening?
39049Do you suppose it can be natural?
39049Edward Fitzgerald writes to Fanny Kemble:"Do n''t you love the Oleander?
39049Have you ever smelt civet?
39049Have you pleasure in the contact of a flower?
39049Having this list of the names of these sturdy old annuals and perennials, what do you perceive besides the printed words?
39049How many garden pictures have Hollyhocks?
39049In answer to the question, What is the bluest flower in the garden or field?
39049Is heliotrope a pale bluish purple?
39049Is this because it is an herb instead of a purely decorative flower?
39049Its readoption is advised with handsome dwellings in England, where ground- space is limited,--and why not in America, too?
39049My contemplative girl lives in the city, how can she know that spring is here?
39049No?
39049S. was to indicate Black or Sable, and what letter was Scarlet to have?
39049See the white Peony on page 44; is it not a seemly, comely thing, as well as a beautiful one?
39049Some kind of a flower?"
39049Sow Thistle| 5 A.M.| 11- 12 P.M. Yellow Goat- beard| 3- 5 A.M.| 9- 10(?)
39049Still, who could write of sun- dials without choosing to transcribe these words of Lamb''s?
39049The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table says:"Did you ever hear a poet who did not talk flowers?
39049Then he said to his Mother,_ What Diet has Matthew of late fed upon_?
39049Thus in the leaves of plants every shade of green is pleasing; then why is there no charm in a green flower?
39049Was she of real life, or fiction?
39049What could we send to the blind?
39049What shall I say?
39049When I visit the garden I always ask"Where is Job?"
39049Where in all English verse are fairer flower hues?
39049Who plants the seeds of Lupines in the barren soil?
39049Who watereth the Lupines in the field?"
39049Why are all the old appliances for raising water so pleasing?
39049Why is it almost everywhere banished?
39049Why should they live when her sweet life is gone?"
39049You remember how commonplace their clothes were?
39049You''ve read_ Lavengro_?
39049all pink flowers near each other?
39049all red flowers side by side?
39049and what place has the Violet?
39049is n''t this Crown- imperial a glorious plant?
39049or shall we plant severely by colors-- all yellow flowers in a border together?
39049the Flower de Luce?
39049whence came thy dazzling hue?
39049with Abundance and Variety?
19408''Step lively''?
19408Can you tell me what shrub this is?
19408Well,demanded one brave urchin,"what made''em go and plant a lot of bushes right on first base?"
19408Where are you going?
19408Why should I?
19408Why?
19408Also, how much will your purse allow?
19408And if so, do you love only those parts of it which you never see and the appearance of which you have no power to modify?
19408And if you are young and a lover of your country, do you not love its physical aspects,"its rocks and rills, its woods and templed hills"?
19408And where did_ civitas_ get its name, when city and state were one, but from citizen?
19408Because a garden should not, any more than my lady''s face, have all its features-- nose, eyes, ears, lips-- of one size?
19408Because they belong to you?
19408But of the really good sorts are there shrubs enough, you ask, to afford new lists year after year?
19408But our home gardens, our home gardeners, either professional or amateur, where are they?
19408But to have no garden is a distinct poverty in a householder''s life, whether he knows it or not, and-- suppose he very much wants a garden?
19408Can you imagine a young man or woman without it?
19408Do n''t they do it?"
19408Does this seem hardly fair to the first garden?
19408For what says the brave old song- couplet of New England''s mothers?
19408For who was there to tell them or him that he was not one?
19408How could they without tools?
19408How much subserviency of nature to art and utility is really necessary to my own and my friends''and neighbors''best delight?
19408How much, then, of nature''s subserviency does the range of your tastes demand?
19408I lately heard a lady ask an amateur gardener,"What is the garden''s foundation principle?"
19408If I describe it I must preface with all the disclaimers of a self- conscious amateur whose most venturesome argument goes no farther than"Why not?"
19408If I should, where were my climax?"
19408Is the term merely comparative?
19408Is the world already artificial enough?
19408May I repeat it?
19408No?
19408Oh, say, can you_ see_--?
19408Or do you love the land only and not the people, the nation, the government?
19408Or shall we make our plea to an"art impulse"?
19408Or, loving these, have you no love for the nearest public fraction of it, your own town and neighbors?
19408Otherwise, why do you let us call them yours?
19408Shall we summarize?
19408To say nothing of prizes, was not the garden itself its own reward?"
19408Was he not right?
19408Was it not Ruskin himself who wanted to butt the railway- train off the track and paw up the rails-- something like that?
19408What makes a man rich?
19408What maxim is?
19408What shall we do about it?
19408Whence comes civilization but from_ civitas_, the city?
19408Where to Plant What?
19408Whereupon he shrewdly pleads not for the sward but for the flowers,"You have those there to show off at their best?"
19408Why is it so often right that a rich college, for example, should, in its money- chest, feel poor?
19408Why should New Orleans so exceptionally choose to garden, and garden with such exceptional grace?
19408Why should it?
19408Will he know the smallest fact about it or yield any echo of your interest in it?
19408Would n''t you?"
19408You see the difference?
19408[ Illustration:"''Where are you going?''
31265Ai n''t she in the house?
31265And grow to be a regular tramp?
31265And since she could n''t move, would n''t she have been burned to death?
31265And you are really afraid of poor old White- Face? 31265 Anything gone wrong?"
31265Are you hurt?
31265But what am I to do afterward?
31265But where''d I go?
31265Can you read, dear?
31265Dear me, why did n''t you say so at first?
31265Did Aunt Hannah tell you that, or are you tryin''to stuff me?
31265Did she really?
31265Did she say it in them very same words?
31265Did you earn enough to provide you with food, and clothes, an''a place to sleep?
31265Do n''t you think I could do that?
31265Do n''t you think Snippey would like some milk?
31265Do n''t you think the house would have burned if some one had n''t put out the fire very quickly?
31265Do you mean the cow?
31265Do you really want to leave us, Seth?
31265Do you remember of ever hearing that you had an uncle in California?
31265Goin''to give up business?
31265Got friends out this way, I take it?
31265Got what down?
31265Had to what?
31265Have I earned the breakfast Snip and I ate?
31265Have n''t you any parents, or a home?
31265Have you been here all night?
31265Have you got anything else to eat?
31265He ai n''t really yours,Tim said after a brief pause, whereat the lame boy cried fiercely:"What''s the reason he ai n''t?
31265How do I know?
31265How far are you going?
31265How is she?
31265How many of them cakes will you sell for five cents?
31265How much have you got now?
31265How would it be if I should sneak off an''leave you with''em? 31265 I hope you do n''t think I''d tell a lie?"
31265I suppose you became discouraged with that way of living?
31265I wish I did,Seth replied with a sigh, and Gladys said quickly:"You ca n''t keep walkin''''round all the time, for what will you do when it rains?"
31265I would n''t be one if I was willin''to work, would I? 31265 If there''s anything wrong, why do n''t you come out with it like a man, an''not stand there like a dummy?"
31265Is Aunt Hannah burned very much?
31265Is it because you ca n''t tell me why you left the city?
31265Is it something you''re ashamed of?
31265Is that animal dangerous, little boy?
31265Is there anything more for me to do?
31265Mean?
31265Out swellin'', are you?
31265She said to me those very same words----"What ones?
31265Snip an''I will have to earn money enough to keep us goin'', an''how can it be done while I''m hidin''?
31265Snip an''I''ll stay here; an''if we get sleepy, what''s to hinder our takin''a nap on the couch?
31265Teddy Dixon says he''s got good blood in him----"Look here, Tim, do you think I''d sell Snip, no matter how much money I might get for him? 31265 Tell her what?"
31265Then what''s that advertisement there for?
31265Then what''s the notice about?
31265Then why not stay?
31265Then you ca n''t sell things?
31265Then you came from the city?
31265Then you have no idea where you''re going?
31265There''s Pip Smith, an''what do you s''pose he''s got in his ear now?
31265Was n''t she kind''er out of her head?
31265What can I do? 31265 What does it mean?"
31265What kind of a game have you been up to, Limpy?
31265What of that? 31265 What of that?"
31265Where are you going, Seth dear?
31265Where are you going, my child?
31265Where does Mis''Dean live?
31265Where''ll I go?
31265Where''s the lead nickel Mickey Dowd says somebody shoved on you the other day?
31265Who-- what animal? 31265 Who?"
31265Why ca n''t I take her to the pasture; that is, if you''ll tell me where to find it?
31265Why did n''t you tell me at supper- time?
31265Why did the man in Jersey City allow you to live with him?
31265Why did you come into the country?
31265Why did you jump so?
31265Why do you think she counted on talkin''to me?
31265Would you be willin''to let me try?
31265Would you rather go away?
31265And you''ve been frightened out of your wits because of that counterfeit nickel?"
31265Are you hurt?"
31265Besides, who knows but there are bears?
31265But how could we give him a home here, my dear?"
31265Did he come with you?"
31265Did n''t I find him''most froze to death more''n a year ago, an''have n''t I kept him in good shape ever since?
31265Did you tell her why you and Snippey ran away?"
31265Did you walk all the way from the city?"
31265Do n''t boys like me do something to earn money out this way?"
31265Do you know what they are worth?"
31265Do you own this barn?"
31265Do you want a saucer of milk?"
31265Gladys joined him half an hour later, and asked abruptly:"What did Aunt Hannah say to you?"
31265Have you seen anything of Gladys?"
31265I wonder if that little bit of a woman expects I''ll pay for breakfast?"
31265Is n''t he a perfect beauty?
31265Is n''t this your story just as you have repeated it to me?"
31265Oh, what can I do?"
31265Oh, you mean Snip?
31265Say, it''s mighty fine, ai n''t it?"
31265Say, why ca n''t I get the cow?"
31265Seth''s face reddened, and he stammered not a little in reply:"I reckon that cow would make it kind''er lively for strangers, would n''t he?"
31265That they were a very happy family goes without saying, for who could be discontented or fretful in Aunt Hannah''s home?
31265Then the little woman gave free rein to her curiosity, by asking:"Where are you going, my boy?"
31265What can I do?"
31265What do you think of settling down to being a farmer?"
31265What''s he swingin''that newspaper''round his head for?"
31265Where can Snip an''I go?
31265Why did you leave the city, my child?"
31265With three spare rooms in the house and hardly ever a visitor to use one of them, why could n''t he have a bed here?"
31265Wo n''t you please hurry?"
31265Would you be contented to stay here for a while, my dear?"
43127A very, very long time? 43127 Alix,"he was saying,"do n''t you see where we are?"
43127And who can tell,she would say now and then,"how better things may come about for the poor creatures?
43127And who knows,he said to himself,"but that such love as mine may find out a way to release her from the spell?"
43127Are you going to be giants again?
43127Are you going to_ knit_ the story?
43127Are you sure of that?
43127Are you there? 43127 But,"began Alix, rather timidly,"please do n''t mind my interrupting you, but does n''t Mrs Caretaker look after you?
43127Ca n''t you remember any stories about them?
43127Can you not understand, you who are yourself a child of the north? 43127 Chloe, have you wished for anything without telling me?"
43127Chloe,she said,"did you hear that?"
43127Could it be for a hen- house?
43127Did you know our grandmother?
43127Did you send the wren?
43127Do you hear that bird, Alix? 43127 Do you love the sea?"
43127Do you mean you''ve got stories to tell us?
43127Do you remember, Rafe, the story of a white lady, up, up in a room at the very top of a castle somewhere, who was always spinning stories? 43127 Do you think, dear Mrs Caretaker, that_ perhaps_ we may see Chryssa some day when we are bathing?"
43127Do you wish to kill her?
43127Do you, Miss Meadows?
43127Have n''t we been here a great while? 43127 Have you broken any bones, do you think?"
43127Have you ever seen a fairy, nurse?
43127Have you got a story quite ready for us?
43127Have you?
43127How can it have come about?
43127How could I blame you?
43127I do n''t think there_ could_ be; do you, Miss Meadows?
43127I know,cried Alix;"Mrs Caretaker-- will that do?
43127It''s like something papa told us the other day about legends; do n''t you remember, Rafe?
43127May I ask you one or two things,he said,"before you begin telling us the stories?"
43127Oh, I say, Alix, would n''t you like to understand what they''re saying?
43127Perhaps it is too soon to settle about school feasts just yet, but have you no presents to get ready for any one?
43127Princess,he said,"can you not give me another answer?
43127Rafe,she cried,"there''s a sort of handle inside; shall I try to turn it?"
43127Rafe,she said,"do you think perhaps we should have waited for her at the ilex tree?
43127Robin,said Alix, clearly though softly,"robin, have you come to see us?
43127Shall we go on now?
43127Shall we go to church like last Christmas, Joyce?
43127Suppose,he said,"that we make stories for each other-- you for me, Alix, and I for you?"
43127That I can not tell you,he said, as he shook his head;"and what does it matter?
43127We''ve been so happy lately, Rafe; have n''t we? 43127 Well,"he said,"have you found out what the Queen means by a rose?
43127Were we very late of coming in last night?
43127What are they talking of? 43127 What can it be?"
43127What could we do in such a case?
43127What does it mean?
43127What is it? 43127 What is it?"
43127What is there we are equally in want of? 43127 What will become of her after we are dead and gone?"
43127What would he think if he heard us beginning to quarrel already? 43127 What?"
43127When do you think we had best come? 43127 Who will care for and protect our darling?
43127Whom did the old house belong to? 43127 Why did n''t they, nurse?"
43127Why do n''t you think of a better plan, then, if you do n''t like mine?
43127Why not?
43127Will you tell us one of them? 43127 ),but why do n''t you find something that_ will_ do?"
43127And if so, how is one to be procured?"
43127But how am I to get there?
43127But now she looked at Rafe-- he felt a little nervous; was she going to take offence at his speech?
43127But was she safe?
43127But what have you got in your basket?
43127Did you ever hear tell of mermaids?"
43127Do n''t you think it is, Miss Meadows?"
43127Do woodpeckers tap inside a wall?
43127Do you know about the white lady?"
43127Does n''t it seem funny, Rafe, to think there have_ always_ been children in the world?"
43127Had you, Miss Meadows, at your own home?"
43127Have you always lived here-- even when the old house was standing and there were people in it?"
43127Have you got a message for us from Mrs Caretaker, perhaps?"
43127Have you hurt yourself?"
43127Have you no trust?
43127How can I ever dare to face the King and Queen?
43127How can it have happened?"
43127How did you get the rose?"
43127How did you know we were coming?"
43127How should I have known that this year would be different from other years?
43127If the mere sight of a dwarf brought ill- luck, what might not they expect from the visit of one of the spell- bound race?
43127If there have never been any, what began all the fairy stories?
43127If you are so wonderfully wise, why did you not bring Strawberry indoors a month sooner than usual?
43127Is n''t it lovely?
43127It''s your dinner, is n''t it?
43127Let me see-- what were the dwarf''s exact words?"
43127Long before the old house was pulled down?
43127May n''t we call you something?"
43127Need we go, Miss Meadows?
43127See, what is that sack in the corner?
43127Was it morning, or evening, or night, or what?
43127Was it not already too late?
43127What can it be?"
43127What could it be?
43127What had she been saying?
43127What had she done?
43127What is the matter?
43127What is there about me different from others?
43127What is this thing she is longing for?--what is a rose?"
43127What shall we do, Chloe?
43127What shall we do?"
43127What should you say to strawberries and cream?"
43127What was the matter?
43127What was to be done?
43127What_ will_ nurse say?"
43127Where does it grow?
43127Who are you?"
43127Who is lying there?"
43127Who knows what might happen to one astray there?"
43127Who lived there?"
43127Who will help her to rule over our nation?
43127Why did I not think of her before?
43127Why should I so often hear of what others seem to understand, and not have it explained to me?
43127Would n''t you like to eat something while the story''s getting ready?"
43127and how should I find the flower if I were there?"
43127she said;"and may we come every day, and may we stay as long as we like, and will you sometimes invite us to tea, perhaps?
38438How far can a Fairy see? 38438 How the leaves are scalloped out; Where''s the den of Dragon Fly?
38438In its first radiance I have seen The sun!--why tarry then till comes the night? 38438 Nay!--You are wrong in your planting,"said he,"Have we not grass and the weeds and a tree?
38438Pray are you within there? 38438 Pray, are you within there, Mistress Who- were- you?"
38438What heart but fears a fragrance?
38438What''s he look like, mother?
38438Where have you been, you naughty child?
38438''Tis well for little buds to dream, Dream-- dream-- who knows-- Say, is it good to be a rose?
38438***** Love, need we more than our imagining To make the whole year May?
38438-- I asked her--"In the fountain?"
38438A garden full of fragrances, Of pauses and of cadences, Whence come they all?
38438A seed''s so very small, And dirt all looks the same;-- How can they know at all The way they ought to aim?
38438A sudden wind-- the pale rose- petals blow Hither and yon-- or are they flakes of snow?
38438ADELAIDE CRAPSEY JEWEL- WEED Thou lonely, dew- wet mountain road, Traversed by toiling feet each day, What rare enchantment maketh thee Appear so gay?
38438ARTHUR UPSON THE BLOOMING OF THE ROSE What is it like, to be a rose?
38438Ah, who shall say What vast expansions shall be ours that day?
38438Ah, who shall say?
38438All perfect?
38438And I whispered,"Alas, Little Brother, why must it befall That the passing of angels but cripples and leaves us to die?
38438And I who gaze On the dark border here, Drawn like a ribbon round the pasture- ways, Embroidered with the glory of the year,-- Do I not like the wall?
38438And I, how can I praise thee well and wide From where I dwell-- upon the hither side?
38438And how shall the soul of a man Be larger than the life he has lived?
38438And whence thy blue amid the corn, O Corn- flower?
38438And whence thy red beside the stream, O Cardinal- flower?
38438Are there not violets And gods-- To- day?
38438BLANCHE SHOEMAKER WAGSTAFF COBWEBS Who would not praise thee, miracle of Frost?
38438BLISS CARMAN THE TREES There''s something in a noble tree-- What shall I say?
38438Beloved, who wert with me there, How came these shames to be?-- On what lost star are we?
38438Brave little cuttings of laughter and light?
38438Brother Bird: Why do you sing and sing?
38438Brother Stream: Why do you run and run?
38438But what new thing could you find to sing More rare than the same little rose?
38438But would you guess that it was the tiny shadow of your little child?
38438CATHERINE PARMENTER(_ Eleven years old_) SPRING PLANTING"What shall we plant for our Summer, my boy,-- Seeds of enchantment and seedlings of joy?
38438Can I bear the beauty of this day, Or shall I be swept utterly away?
38438Can ye-- if ye dwelt indeed Captives of a prison seed-- Like the Genie, once again Get you back into the grain?
38438Charity, eglantine, and rue And love- in- a- mist are all in view, With coloured cousins; but where are you, Sweetwilliam?
38438DOUGLAS MALLOCH IDEALISTS Brother Tree: Why do you reach and reach?
38438Dere''s fina beeg wheel- barrow dere on da floor, But w''at do you s''pose?
38438Did your gossips gold and blue, Sky and Sunshine, choose for you, Ere your triple forms were seen, Suited liveries of green?
38438Do all the seeds make noises When they start to grow?
38438Do n''t the buzzards ooze around up thare jest like they''ve allus done?
38438Do n''t you know why they are in such a hurry?
38438Do peonies blush as deep with pride, The larkspurs burn as bright a blue, And velvet pansies stare as wide I wonder, as they used to do?
38438Do you dream some day to fill the sea?
38438Do you dream some day to touch the sky?
38438Do you know anything about the spring When it comes again?
38438Do you remember?
38438Does the medder- lark complain, as he swims high and dry Through the waves of the wind and the blue of the sky?
38438Does the quail set up and whissel in a disappointed way, Er hang his head in silence, and sorrow all the day?
38438EDGAR LEE MASTERS SEEDS What shall we be like when We cast this earthly body and attain To immortality?
38438EDWIN MARKHAM CONSCIENCE Wisdom am I When thou art but a fool; My part the man, When thou hast played the clod; Hast lost thy garden?
38438EDWIN MARKHAM THE SECRET O, little bird, you sing As if all months were June; Pray tell me ere you go The secret of your tune?
38438ELSA BARKER A SONG IN A GARDEN Will the garden never forget That it whispers over and over,"Where is your lover, Nanette?
38438FLORENCE EARLE COATES THE WALL"_ Something there is that does n''t like a wall._"( ROBERT FROST)"Not like a wall?"
38438GERTRUDE HUNTINGTON MCGIFFERT SUN, CARDINAL, AND CORN FLOWERS Whence gets Earth her gold for thee, O Sunflower?
38438HELEN HAY WHITNEY IF I COULD DIG LIKE A RABBIT If I could dig holes in the ground like a rabbit, D''you know what I''d do?
38438Has Spring for you Wrought visions, As it did for her In a garden?
38438Hath hellish Proserpine Her needs lent to arm thee That mischief- loving gods, Pricked sorely, may not harm thee?
38438Have n''t you seen how eager they are to get there?
38438Have you only this to say When I pray you for comforting?
38438How are cobweb carpets made?
38438I asked her--"In the tree?"
38438I have mourned with you year and year, When the Autumn has left you bare, And now that my heart is sere Does not one of your roses care?
38438I look at dees Tony an''say to heem:"Wal?"
38438I say to heem:"Tony, why don''ta you gat Som''leetla wheel- barrow for halp you weeth dat?"
38438I wonder if it_ is_ a bird That sings within the hidden tree, Or some shy angel calling me To follow far away?
38438Is it a dream or ghost Of a dream that comes to me, Here in the twilight on the coast, Blue cinctured by the sea?
38438Is it good?
38438Is that the sting Masked in gay dress and whirring wing?
38438Is the chipmuck''s health a- failin''?--Does he walk, er does he run?
38438Is they anything the matter with the rooster''s lungs er voice?
38438JOSEPHINE PRESTON PEABODY THE MESSAGE When one has heard the message of the Rose, For what faint other calling shall he care?
38438LIZETTE WOODWORTH REESE DAFFODILS There flames the first gay daffodil Where winter- long the snows have lain: Who buried Love, all spent and still?
38438Little masters, may I stand In your presence, hat in hand, Waiting till you solve for me This your threefold mystery?
38438MARJORIE L. C. PICKTHALL"WHAT HEART BUT FEARS A FRAGRANCE?"
38438Mute, said I?
38438Night, and a flame in the embers Where the seal of the years was set,-- When the almond- bough remembers How shall my heart forget?
38438Now that I walk alone Here where our hands were met, Must you whisper me everyone,"Where is your lover, Nanette?"
38438O Voice!--what is thy necromantic word That all Granada waits adown the years?
38438O daisy mine, what will it be to look From God''s side even of such a simple thing?
38438OLIVER HERFORD DA THIEF Eef poor man goes An''steals a rose Een Juna- time-- Wan leetla rose-- You gon''su''pose Dat dat''s a crime?
38438Oh, help me forget-- forget, Nor question over and over,"Where is your lover, Nanette?
38438Oh, roses I helped to grow, Oh, lily and mignonette, Must you always question me so,"Where is your lover, Nanette?"
38438Or do they show a paler shade, And sigh a little in the wind For one whose sheltering presence made Their step- dame Nature less unkind?
38438Or, was it the charm of remembered words, That set my heart singing through somber days?
38438Ort a mortul be complainin''when dumb animals rejoice?
38438Outside the great world comes and goes-- I think I doubt, to be a rose--_ Old Roses_,"Doubt?
38438Quiet lane, and an irised meadow...(_ How many summers have died since then?_)...
38438RABINDRANATH TAGORE IN AN EGYPTIAN GARDEN Can it be winter otherwhere?
38438Said Tulip to the Lily white:"About the Rose-- what do you think?-- Her color?
38438She-- has she quite forgotten?
38438Should you say it''s quite-- Well, quite a natural shade of pink?"
38438Since you looked on my joy one day, Is my grief then a lesser thing?
38438The Rose into the Tulip''s ear Murmured:"The Lily is a sight; Do n''t you believe she_ powders_, dear, To make herself so saintly white?
38438The tender things that would not blow Unless I coaxed them, do they raise Their petals in a sturdy row, Forgetful, to the stranger''s gaze?
38438The world was gold and azure The air was sweet with birds; My garden laughed with rapture How could I hear her words?
38438Thou little veil for so great mystery, When shall I penetrate all things and thee, And then look back?
38438To Messrs. Duffield& Co. for"The sweet caresses that I gave to you,"Elsa Barker, from_ The Book of Love_; for"What heart but fears a fragrance?"
38438Was it a bird?
38438Was it all planned,--or just some lovely blunder?
38438Was it the bloom of the laurel sprays, That wakened remembrance of singing birds?
38438What can I say to make him listen?
38438What do You s''pose about that?
38438What do crickets chirp about?
38438What do you know that we humans miss?
38438What he may be, who knows?
38438What heart but fears a fragrance?
38438What need to sing?
38438What of the soul of the rose?
38438What sermon can you preach, Oh, mushroom-- mentor pert and new?
38438What shall we be like then?
38438What spirals of sharp perfume do they fling, To blur my page with swift remembering?
38438What though The wind be Winter if the heart be Spring?
38438What transformations of this house of clay, To fit the heavenly mansions and the light of day?
38438What was thine answer, O thou brooding earth, What token of re- birth, Of tender vernal mirth, Thou the long- prisoned in the bonds of cold?
38438What we may be, who knows?
38438What?
38438Where do flowers go when they die?
38438Where is your lover-- your lover?"
38438Where is your lover-- your lover?"
38438Where shall we turn for joy when flowers are dead, When birds are silent, and the cold winds blow?
38438Who but a God Could draw from light and moisture, heat and cold, And fashion in earth''s mold, A multitude of blooms to deck one sod?
38438Who but a God?
38438Who calls, little rover, Bird or fay?
38438Who lives in the hollow tree?
38438Who shall build bowers To keep these thine?
38438Why are woodsy things afraid?
38438Why do I seem to hear Cries as lovely as music?
38438Why do I think of you?
38438Why does my soul awaken and shudder?
38438Why does your name remorselessly Strike through my heart?
38438Why, scarce it seems an hour ago These branches clashed in bitter cold; What Power hath set their veins aglow?
38438Wild and free as the wild thrush, and warier-- Was ever a bee merrier, airier?
38438Wings folded so, a second or two-- Was ever a crow more solemn than you?
38438Yet, where the moonlight makes Nebulous silver pools, A ghostly shape is cast-- Something unseen has stirred... Was it a breeze that passed?
38438You would call,"Baby, where are you?"
38438a soul?
38438little brown brother, Are you awake in the dark?
38438little brown brother, What kind of flower will you be?
38438tell me whence do you come?
38438w''at?
38438w''at?
38438you''re a sun- flower?
14859A REAL store?
14859A green bug; eh?
14859A new game? 14859 Ah, so you have brought the flail?"
14859Am I doing it right?
14859And do we eat them?
14859And do you only plant one chunk?
14859And how did you like being taken to the garden, instead of after flowers or to the woods?
14859And how do they cook''em?
14859And may we help?
14859And my corn?
14859And sell things for REAL money?
14859And then will we know who gets the prize?
14859And what about my corn?
14859And what am I going to plant?
14859And what is a mole trap?
14859And what will we sell?
14859And who will we sell the things to?
14859And why ca n''t we plant''em anywhere?
14859And will it really pop?
14859Are n''t they, Daddy?
14859Are n''t you going to work in your gardens a little while?
14859Are there bugs on them?
14859Are there tomatoes in the air?
14859Are they nice and fresh, children?
14859Are we going to have another store and sell them?
14859Are you going to bring Roly- Poly back to me to keep?
14859Are you going to build a bridge, Daddy?
14859Are you going to poison bugs too?
14859Are you really going to make a cucumber grow in a bottle?
14859Are you sure?
14859Are you sure?
14859But if you poison the beans wo n''t they poison us when we eat them?
14859But what are we going to sell?
14859But why do n''t you plant the tomato seeds right in the garden?
14859But will people give us real money for our garden truck?
14859But wo n''t he spoil the garden?
14859Ca n''t she come with me after Roly- Poly, Mother?
14859Ca n''t we help too?
14859Ca n''t we make him stop, Daddy?
14859Can you keep tomatoes all Winter?
14859Caught how?
14859Could I make a scare- crow for my beans, Daddy?
14859Could I over one of my beans?
14859Could you plant anything in them?
14859Daddy, but what is a flail?
14859Dat no snake?
14859Did Daddy come home with you?
14859Did Hal or did I?
14859Did I hurt Roly when I stepped on him?
14859Did Roly- Poly come home and scratch in your garden?
14859Did a mole spoil them, Daddy?
14859Did he come home early?
14859Did n''t Daddy Blake tell you that the ground must be plowed or chopped up, and then finely pulverized or smoothed, so the seeds would grow better?
14859Did n''t we have fun, Hal, when Daddy took us hunting flowers?
14859Did the cows hurt the egg plants?
14859Did you come over to see how my garden is growing?
14859Did you do it?
14859Did you grow them in a little box down at your office, Daddy, as we did the tomatoes here?
14859Did you upside down my beans, Daddy Blake?
14859Do Mothers?
14859Do plants eat?
14859Do seeds have hearts?
14859Do the worms and bugs and weeds fight the things in the garden?
14859Do they die, too, like the potato vines?
14859Do they hoe on big farms?
14859Do they taste like eggs just like oyster plant tastes like stewed oysters?
14859Do you play sides?
14859Do you think I''ll win the prize?
14859Does a towel soak up water?
14859Does corn only grow on a hill?
14859Does it go around with wheels?
14859Else how could they see to get out of their brown skin- jackets when they want to go swimming in the kettle of hot water?
14859Has anything happened?
14859Has anything happened?
14859Has our little poodle dog been scratching up your plants?
14859Have you got your garden started yet?
14859Hear him howl?
14859How am I going to harvest my beans?
14859How are we going to keep the crows away?
14859How are we going to make our garden?
14859How are you going to do it?
14859How could a green garden burn?
14859How do I plant my corn?
14859How do you start to make a garden?
14859How long before my beans will grow?
14859How many can play it?
14859How much are your tomatoes?
14859How''s your poodle dog?
14859How?
14859I wonder how it happened?
14859I wonder if he could have run out in the storm?
14859I wonder if they''ll win that ten dollar gold piece prize, Hal?
14859I wonder what he means?
14859I wonder what he will do?
14859I wonder what we''ll see when Daddy takes us to the farm?
14859I wonder where he was?
14859In fly paper?
14859In the trap?
14859Is a mole a worm?
14859Is he all right now?
14859Is he hurt?
14859Is he?
14859Is it all gone, Daddy?
14859Is it some kind of a puzzle?
14859Is my corn all eaten up?
14859Is that the only way to drive away the potato bugs?
14859Is that what the farmers do?
14859Is the house on fire?
14859Is the whole garden spoiled?
14859It was fun, was n''t it?
14859Make a cucumber grow in a bottle?
14859Make celery grow white?
14859May I stir it myself, and put the dough in the pans? 14859 No, I am going to make my celery grow white?"
14859Now who won the prize?
14859Oh, I wonder if he brought anything?
14859Oh, I wonder if we''ll sell anything?
14859Oh, Roly- Poly, where have you been?
14859Oh, are YOU going to play it, too?
14859Oh, have I got three kinds of corn?
14859Oh, he''s only fooling us; is n''t he Aunt Lolly?
14859Oh, what has happened to him?
14859Oh, what is it?
14859Oh, what is it?
14859Oh, what''s that in our garden?
14859Oh, whatever is the matter with him?
14859Or is it like a potato bug?
14859Put collars on cabbages-- how?
14859See him crawlin''?
14859So he was in your garden; eh?
14859So you think you want to try corn; eh?
14859The potato eyes must see a little, else how could they find their way to grow up out of the dark ground?
14859Was he in the mole trap?
14859Well, how are you all to- day?
14859Well, where are your hoes, toodlekins?
14859What about my prize?
14859What are you doing?
14859What are you doing?
14859What are you going to do now?
14859What are you going to do?
14859What can we do?
14859What comes after Summer?
14859What do people do who have gardens where it does n''t rain as often as it does here, Daddy?
14859What do the weeds do to the beans?
14859What does a farmer do when his whole crop is spoiled by a big storm?
14859What does the name mean?
14859What does thresh mean?
14859What for?
14859What has happened?
14859What have we too much of, Daddy?
14859What have you lost, Mab?
14859What is hail?
14859What is he barking at now?
14859What is it for?
14859What is it? 14859 What is it?"
14859What is it?
14859What is the matter?
14859What is the prize going to be?
14859What made you think of this game for us?
14859What makes it Spring?
14859What makes it?
14859What makes pop- corn?
14859What makes seeds grow?
14859What makes the seeds grow and green leaves come out?
14859What makes them call''em egg plants?
14859What other kind of corn, Daddy?
14859What shall we do with it?
14859What trap?
14859What will bring it to life and make it wake up?
14859What you doin''Uncle Pennywait?
14859What''s Paris Green?
14859What''s he doing?
14859What''s that?
14859What''s the matter? 14859 What''s the matter?"
14859What''s the matter?
14859What''s the prize for?
14859What-- Cows or_ egg_ plant?
14859What? 14859 What?"
14859When are we going to beat out my beans?
14859When can I plant my beans?
14859When will we have anything to eat from our garden?
14859When''s Daddy coming home, Mother?
14859Where did you get the cabbage plants?
14859Where is Hal?
14859Where is he going?
14859Where is he, Sammie?
14859Where will we keep the store?
14859Where you going, Hal?
14859Where you going?
14859Where''s Hal?
14859Where''s the snake, Sammie? 14859 Where?"
14859Where?
14859Where?
14859Which one starts?
14859Who did it?
14859Who would win it?
14859Who?
14859Whose cows were they?
14859Why ca n''t we do that?
14859Why ca n''t we raise wheat?
14859Why do n''t you get Roly- Poly and play with him?
14859Why do n''t you play doll and doctor?
14859Why do n''t you play some games?
14859Why do we want to save it?
14859Why does n''t he come?
14859Why not?
14859Why?
14859Will my beans be spoiled, Daddy?
14859Will my corn grow upside down like Mab''s beans?
14859Will we have to throw them away?
14859Will you get the tomatoes, Daddy?
14859Will you take us to a farm some day?
14859You mean good for fishing?
14859You never want to do anything I want to play?
14859And what comes after Autumn or Fall?"
14859Are you hurt?"
14859But we got you out; did n''t we Roly- Poly?"
14859But why is it so warm; do you know?"
14859Ca n''t Mab come out and hold an umbrella, too?
14859Ca n''t you both play something here until Daddy comes home?
14859Did he scare you very much, Sammie?"
14859Did you bring us anything, Daddy?"
14859Do n''t you remember how we went fishing with Daddy, Mab?"
14859Has Hal been shooting his pop gun at them?"
14859How would you like to help me bake a cake, Mab?"
14859I wonder if Daddy is going to whip Roly- Poly for getting in the mole trap?"
14859I wonder if you can tell me the others?"
14859If you keep the light from anything green will it turn white, Daddy?"
14859Is little Sammie hurt in our garden?"
14859Is there anything else that can happen to things in a garden, Daddy?"
14859May we play it now?"
14859Now, Mother, what will you grow in the garden?"
14859Oh, do n''t tell me the garden is on fire?"
14859Porter?"
14859So you think it is warm to- day because it is Spring; do you, Hal?"
14859So your boy and girl are going to have gardens; are they?"
14859There''s a lot to know about a garden; is n''t there?"
14859What are you trying to do?"
14859What can we do, Mother?"
14859What comes next?"
14859What in the world are doing?"
14859What is it; a message-- a telegram?"
14859What will you choose, Hal?"
14859What''s the matter?"
14859What''s the matter?"
14859Where IS that little tyke?"
14859Who can be calling this time of night?"
14859Why do n''t you play bean- bag?"
14859Why do they, Mother?"
14859Will they straighten up again?"
14859You want come my''mato store?"
14859asked Hal in delight"Wo n''t that be fun, Mab?"
14859asked Hal,"Ca n''t we eat it?"
14859cried Hal and Mab, while the little girl, as she took hold of her uncle''s hand, asked:"Is there really an egg plant?
14859cried Hal"I wonder if I could grow an ear of corn in a bottle?"
14859cried Mab, running out to him,"What are you doing with those tomatoes?"
17396Am I queer?
17396Am I rude?
17396And the nurse, of course?
17396And you will have to go too, wo n''t you?
17396Are all the flowers dead, or do some of them come again in the summer? 17396 Are n''t you glad, Father?"
17396Are n''t you glad? 17396 Are there any flowers that look like bells?"
17396Are there rose- trees?
17396Are things stirring down below in the dark in that garden where he lives?
17396Are you a ghost?
17396Are you going to be my servant?
17396Are you making Magic?
17396Are you one?
17396Are you sure you are not chilly, Master Colin?
17396Are you surprised because I am so well?
17396Are you well?
17396Art tha''goin''to take to diggin''? 17396 Art tha''sure?
17396Art tha''th''little wench from India?
17396Art tha''thinkin''about that garden yet?
17396Because what?
17396Both of them?
17396But how could it have been done?
17396But if you wanted to make a flower garden,persisted Mary,"what would you plant?"
17396But why did he hate it so?
17396C- could you?
17396Ca n''t you bear me?
17396Can I go in them?
17396Can I trust you? 17396 Can he do that?"
17396Can not tha''smell it?
17396Can tha''knit?
17396Can tha''read?
17396Can tha''sew?
17396Can you show me?
17396Can you tell? 17396 Colin,"she began mysteriously,"do you know how many rooms there are in this house?"
17396Could I ever get there?
17396Could it be possible that she sees that I may be able to do him good and control him?
17396Could you keep a secret, if I told you one? 17396 Could you?"
17396Did Dickon teach you that?
17396Did he remember thee that much?
17396Did he say you were going to die?
17396Did they quite die? 17396 Did you feel as if you hated people?"
17396Did you get Martha''s letter?
17396Did you hear a caw?
17396Did you know about it?
17396Did you know about the garden?
17396Did you see either of them, Weatherstaff?
17396Do bulbs live a long time? 17396 Do n''t you like hiding the garden?"
17396Do n''t you?
17396Do they take good care of you?
17396Do you believe in Magic?
17396Do you go and see those other roses now?
17396Do you hear any one crying?
17396Do you know Dickon?
17396Do you know anything about your uncle?
17396Do you know who I am?
17396Do you know who I am?
17396Do you like roses?
17396Do you mean Magic?
17396Do you never catch cold?
17396Do you remember that first morning you brought me in here?
17396Do you see that rose- colored silk curtain hanging on the wall over the mantel- piece?
17396Do you think he is?
17396Do you think he really likes me?
17396Do you think he remembers me?
17396Do you think he wants him to die?
17396Do you think he will die?
17396Do you think he will?
17396Do you think the experiment will work?
17396Do you think you wo n''t live?
17396Do you think,said Colin a little awkwardly,"that will make my father like me?"
17396Do you think-- I could-- live to grow up?
17396Do you understand everything birds say?
17396Do you want anything-- dolls-- toys-- books?
17396Do you want him to be fond of you?
17396Do you want me to kiss you?
17396Do you want to live?
17396Do you want toys, books, dolls?
17396Do you?
17396Does Dickon know all about them?
17396Does he like the moor?
17396Does he really understand everything Dickon says?
17396Does n''t tha''know? 17396 Does she think Mrs. Medlock would let me go?"
17396Does tha''like it?
17396Does tha''like me?
17396Does tha''think,said Colin with dreamy carefulness,"as happen it was made loike this''ere all o''purpose for me?"
17396Does tha''want to see him?
17396Does your father come and see you?
17396Has Medlock to do what I please?
17396Has it?
17396Has n''t tha''got any yet?
17396Has n''t tha''got good sense?
17396Have you a garden of your own?
17396Have you been here always?
17396Have you to do what I please or have you not?
17396How can he when it''s such a great, bare, dreary place?
17396How could I remember you? 17396 How did you know about Colin?"
17396How did you know he brought them?
17396How do you know all that?
17396How do you know that?
17396How do you know?
17396How does he look?
17396How does tha''like him?
17396How does tha''like thysel''?
17396How is Master Colin, Medlock?
17396How is he?
17396How long has tha''been here?
17396How many things she knows, does n''t she?
17396How much would a spade cost-- a little one?
17396How old are you?
17396How shall I get the things when Dickon buys them?
17396How''s thy Missus?
17396How-- how?
17396I never knowed it by that name but what does th''name matter? 17396 I shall?"
17396I wonder if we shall see the robin?
17396I wonder why you did n''t scream and bite me when I came into your room?
17396I would n''t want to make it look like a gardener''s garden, all clipped an''spick an''span, would you?
17396I''m not?
17396If it was out of the way and no one wanted it, no one_ could_ mind my having it, could they?
17396If tha''was a missel thrush an''showed me where thy nest was, does tha''think I''d tell any one? 17396 If you do n''t like people to see you,"she began,"do you want me to go away?"
17396If you had one,said Mary,"what would you plant?"
17396Is Colin a hunchback?
17396Is he going to die?
17396Is it all a quite dead garden? 17396 Is it really calling us?"
17396Is it so very bad? 17396 Is it?"
17396Is it?
17396Is it?
17396Is she-- is she Martha''s mother?
17396Is that one quite alive-- quite?
17396Is the spring coming?
17396Is there any way in which those children can get food secretly?
17396It''s quite dead, is n''t it?
17396It''s-- it''s not the sea, is it?
17396Look at th''lad''s legs, wilt tha''? 17396 Martha knew about you all the time?"
17396Martha,she said,"has the scullery- maid had the toothache again to- day?"
17396Martha,she said,"what are those white roots that look like onions?"
17396Mary,said Colin, turning to her,"what is that thing you say in India when you have finished talking and want people to go?"
17396May I take it from anywhere-- if it''s not wanted?
17396May I?
17396Might I,quavered Mary,"might I have a bit of earth?"
17396Mistress Mary, quite contrary, How does your garden grow? 17396 My mother?"
17396Never heard your father and mother talk about him?
17396Oh, you are Roach, are you?
17396Only five folk as tha''likes?
17396Out? 17396 Shall I go away now?
17396Shall I see it? 17396 Shall we sway backward and forward, Mary, as if we were dervishes?"
17396She?
17396Tha''--tha''has n''t got a crooked back?
17396Tha''--tha''has n''t got crooked legs?
17396Tha''got on well enough with that this mornin'', did n''t tha''?
17396Tha''s got a bit o''garden, has n''t tha''?
17396That one?
17396That there?
17396That''s a very old tree over there, is n''t it?
17396The garden?
17396Then why does n''t tha''read somethin'', or learn a bit o''spellin''? 17396 This was her garden, was n''t it?"
17396To me?
17396Together?
17396Was he?
17396Well, if tha''does n''t go out tha''lt have to stay in, an''what has tha''got to do?
17396Well, sir,she ventured,"could you have believed it?"
17396Well, then, if I order you to bring Miss Mary to me, how can Medlock send you away if she finds it out?
17396Well, well,he said to himself as he hurriedly changed his coat,"what''s to do now?
17396Well-- do you know about Colin?
17396Were they?
17396What are bulbs?
17396What are hysterics?
17396What are they? 17396 What are you doing here?"
17396What are you doing?
17396What are you laughing at?
17396What are you looking at me for?
17396What are you thinking about, Ben Weatherstaff?
17396What are you thinking about?
17396What are you?
17396What art sayin''?
17396What did Colin say when you told him I could n''t come?
17396What did I tell you?
17396What did he do that for?
17396What did he say?
17396What did she say?
17396What do they make of it at th''Manor-- him being so well an''cheerful an''never complainin''?
17396What do you do in your cottage when it rains like this?
17396What do you mean? 17396 What do you mean?
17396What do you mean?
17396What do you think of it?
17396What do you want me to tell you?
17396What do you want to do?
17396What do you want to say?
17396What does it mean?
17396What does it want?
17396What does tha''know about him?
17396What does that mean?
17396What for, i''Mercy''s name?
17396What garden door was locked? 17396 What garden?"
17396What garden?
17396What garden?
17396What happened to the roses?
17396What is a moor?
17396What is it doing?
17396What is it for?
17396What is it like? 17396 What is it tha''s got to tell me?"
17396What is it you smell of? 17396 What is it?
17396What is it?
17396What is that scent the puffs of wind bring?
17396What is that?
17396What is that?
17396What is that?
17396What is the matter with him?
17396What is the matter?
17396What is the matter?
17396What is this place?
17396What is this?
17396What is your name?
17396What kind of a bird is he?
17396What makes thee ask that?
17396What sort of a garden is it?
17396What will Dr. Craven say?
17396What will they be?
17396What work do you do in the gardens, Weatherstaff?
17396What would Mrs. Medlock do if she found out that I had been here?
17396What''s the matter with thee?
17396What?
17396Whatever does tha''want a spade for?
17396Whatever happens, you-- you never would tell?
17396When they have no leaves and look gray and brown and dry, how can you tell whether they are dead or alive?
17396When?
17396Where did he get it?
17396Where did the rest of the brood fly to?
17396Where did you come from?
17396Where do you go?
17396Where do you live now?
17396Where do you play?
17396Where has tha''been, tha''cheeky little beggar?
17396Where has tha''been?
17396Where is Master Colin now?
17396Where is home?
17396Where is it?
17396Where is she now?
17396Where is the green door? 17396 Where was Master Colin?
17396Where''s that robin as is callin''us?
17396Where? 17396 Who are you callin''names?"
17396Who did tha''ask about it?
17396Who did that there?
17396Who is Colin?
17396Who is Dickon?
17396Who is coming in here?
17396Who is going to dress me?
17396Who is it?
17396Who is th''other four?
17396Who said I were? 17396 Who tha''art?"
17396Who thought that?
17396Who will go with me?
17396Who-- What? 17396 Why did Mr. Craven hate the garden?"
17396Why did he hate it?
17396Why did n''t you get up?
17396Why did you come?
17396Why do n''t you put a heap of stones there and pretend it is a rockery?
17396Why do n''t you take it to them?
17396Why do you keep looking at me like that?
17396Why do you look at me like that?
17396Why does it make you angry when you are looked at?
17396Why does n''t tha''put on tha''own shoes?
17396Why does nobody come?
17396Why does tha''care so much about roses an''such, all of a sudden?
17396Why is that?
17396Why was I forgotten?
17396Why?
17396Why?
17396Why?
17396Why?
17396Why?
17396Why?
17396Why?
17396Why?
17396Will he always come when you call him?
17396Will there be roses?
17396Will you come again and help me to do it?
17396Will you show the seeds to me?
17396Will you?
17396Worse?
17396Would n''t they give thee a bit?
17396Would you hate it if-- if a boy looked at you?
17396Would you like me to sing you that song I learned from my Ayah?
17396Would you make friends with me?
17396Would you?
17396You are real, are n''t you?
17396You''ll get plenty of fresh air, wo n''t you?
17396''Can not tha''see a chap?''
17396''Praise God from whom all blessings flow''?"
17396( the gardeners?)
17396--_Page 157_]"Who are you?"
17396Am I a hunchback?
17396An''I says,''Could a delicate chap make himself stronger with''em, Bob?''
17396Are there ever any roses?"
17396Are you going somewhere?"
17396Are you so weak as that, poor Colin?''
17396But he has got a big mouth, has n''t he, now?"
17396But he says to me when I went into his room,''Please ask Miss Mary if she''ll please come an''talk to me?''
17396CHAPTER XII"MIGHT I HAVE A BIT OF EARTH?"
17396Can I trust you-- for sure--_for sure_?"
17396Can tha''guess what I was thinkin''?"
17396Did Dickon and your mother like to hear you talk about me?"
17396Did no one ever tell you I had come to live here?"
17396Did tha''do anythin''extra to make thysel''so strong?''
17396Did you take your bromide last night, Colin?"
17396Do n''t you care?"
17396Do n''t you see?
17396Do n''t you want to see it?"
17396Do roses quite die when they are left to themselves?"
17396Do you hear a bleat-- a tiny one?"
17396Do you know Martha?"
17396Do you suppose that instead of singing the Ayah song-- you could just tell me softly as you did that first day what you imagine it looks like inside?
17396Do you think I could ever skip like that?"
17396Does it hurt you so much?
17396Does it make him feel like that?"
17396Does n''t tha''understand a bit o''Yorkshire when tha''hears it?
17396Does tha''know how to print letters?"
17396Had she never asked the gardeners?
17396Had she never looked for the door?
17396Has tha''begun tha''courtin''this early in th''season?
17396Has tha''never seen them?"
17396Has tha''noticed how th''robin an''his mate has been workin''while we''ve been sittin''here?
17396Have I got crooked legs?"
17396Have you been locked up?"
17396Have you-- do you think you have found out anything at all about the way into the secret garden?"
17396His appetite, sir, is past understanding-- and his ways--""Has he become more-- more peculiar?"
17396How can we know the exact names of everything?
17396How could I?
17396How could a garden be shut up?
17396How did he look?
17396How did tha''find out about him?
17396How did tha''like th''seeds an''th''garden tools?"
17396How does it begin?
17396How does tha''like thysel''?''
17396How much are they?''
17396How''d tha''like to plant a bit o''somethin''?
17396I keep saying to myself,''What is it?
17396I mean ca n''t you put on your own clothes?"
17396I wonder,"staring at her reflectively,"what Dickon would think of thee?"
17396If he had liked his wife so much why did he hate her garden?
17396Is n''t everything nice?
17396Is n''t the sun nice?
17396Is n''t the wind nice?
17396Is there anything you want?"
17396Oh, do n''t you see how much nicer it would be if it was a secret?"
17396Oh, is it?"
17396Shall I get into it?
17396Shall I?"
17396Shall I_ live_ to get into it?"
17396Shall us begin it now?"
17396She has n''t handed much of it down, has she, ma''am?"
17396She said,''Has n''t Mr. Craven got no governess for her, nor no nurse?''
17396Th''gentry calls him a athlete and I thought o''thee, Mester Colin, and I says,''How did tha''make tha''muscles stick out that way, Bob?
17396Tha''did give it him last night for sure-- didn''t tha''?
17396Tha''does n''t mind it, does tha''?''"
17396There?"
17396They sang--''Mistress Mary, quite contrary, How does your garden grow?
17396Was he losing his reason and thinking he heard things which were not for human ears?
17396Was it possible that perhaps he might find him changed a little for the better and that he might overcome his shrinking from him?
17396Was it that the far clear voice had meant?
17396Was this the right corner to turn?
17396Were there a hundred really?
17396Were you crying about that?"
17396What are you thinking about now?"
17396What could you do for a boy like that?
17396What did tha''shut thysel''up for?"
17396What did they say to each other?"
17396What in heaven''s name was he dreaming of-- what in heaven''s name did he hear?
17396What is his name?"
17396What is it?"
17396What is it?''
17396What sort of a place was it, and what would he be like?
17396What was a hunchback?
17396What was it-- what was it?
17396What was there for her to say?
17396What was this under her hands which was square and made of iron and which her fingers found a hole in?
17396What were you crying for?"
17396What''s tha''been doin''with thysel''--?
17396When do you think Dickon will come?"
17396Where is tha''garden?"
17396Where was it?
17396Where was the key buried?"
17396Where?
17396Who are you?"
17396Who did it?
17396Who else could have been charming rabbits and pheasants as the natives charm snakes in India?
17396Who is he?
17396Who wishes you would?"
17396Whose is he?"
17396Why did n''t they?"
17396Why did n''t you come?"
17396Why does nobody come?"
17396Why does tha''want''em?"
17396Why had Mr. Archibald Craven buried the key?
17396Why is the curtain drawn over her?"
17396Why should I go out on a day like this?"
17396Why should n''t she go and see how many doors she could count?
17396Will you go, Miss?"
17396Will you help, Ben Weatherstaff?"
17396Would tha''really do that, Miss?
17396Would they live years and years if no one helped them?"
17396[ Illustration:"''WHO ARE YOU?--ARE YOU A GHOST?''"
17396an''he laughed an''says,''Art tha''th''delicate chap?''
17396cried Mary,"is he going away to- morrow?
17396he said,"he''s got a fine lordly way with him, has n''t he?
17396hidin''out o''sight an''lettin''folk think tha''was cripple an''half- witted?"
17396said Martha delightedly,"that was nice of him was n''t it?"
17396she cried out,"is it you-- is it you?"
17396tha''young nowt,"--she could see his next words burst out because he was overpowered by curiosity--"however i''this world did tha''get in?"
17396was he-- was he-- was he only a wood fairy?"
17396where are you?"
28524''And what agreement hath the temple of God with idols? 28524 ''If ye love them that love you, what thank have ye?''"
28524A Bible?
28524A cup of coffee then?
28524A few minutes ago? 28524 A man''s life, or a woman''s life?
28524A sort of unapproachable tea- rose?
28524A wife?
28524A_ school_, my dear? 28524 About drawin''in a yoke with one that do n''t go your way?"
28524About drinking wine?
28524About what?
28524About-- what?
28524About_ all_ of them?
28524Ah!--And what else is here then, that anybody should come here for?
28524Ah!--What are you going to do about it? 28524 Ah!--What took you to the shores of the Adriatic, anyhow?"
28524Ah? 28524 Ai n''t it professin'', when you say what the hymns say?"
28524Ai n''t singin''sayin''?
28524Ai n''t the air good in New York?
28524Ai n''t the world big enough?
28524All your fishing done on the high seas, eh?
28524Along with all the others?
28524Always?
28524Am I?
28524An''nary one that you liked?
28524And I say, what''s the use of all that?
28524And I''ll wager you have not seen the Tintorets in the Palace of the Doges?
28524And Lois, have you seen a great many people? 28524 And Lois?"
28524And Tom, you think, does not?
28524And ages-- proximately?
28524And all the sport too; hey, Tom? 28524 And among these comfortable inhabitants, who would want to be troubled with me?"
28524And an ignorant, country- bred, untrained woman would n''t help him, would she?
28524And are you bound to think well of no man but one who lives after this exalted fashion? 28524 And be all your stores got in for the v''yage?
28524And did you like to talk to him?
28524And do all the men gamble?
28524And do you mean to say that_ you_ have been planting potatoes? 28524 And have n''t I a right to be happy in my own way?"
28524And here you think things are not what they are meant to be?
28524And how am I going to set the table with them all there?
28524And how are you goin''to be the salt o''the earth, then, if you wo n''t touch nothin''?
28524And how does that care work?
28524And if he asks, will he be told?
28524And is Miss Lothrop your teacher?
28524And is all of what is called the great world, no better than that?
28524And is that important?
28524And is this place built and arranged just for the sake of having supper, as you call it, down here once in a while?
28524And is_ that_ what makes folks''time valeyable?
28524And it is not?
28524And it wo n''t worry you, grandmother, will it?
28524And may pretend to as much?
28524And now the young one has made a great match? 28524 And now you_ do_ think of me so?--What do you say to me?"
28524And one worth as much as another, I suppose you mean? 28524 And people-- hey?
28524And so, I suppose you would like to have_ your_ vegetables in silver dishes? 28524 And so, without education?"
28524And sow seeds, and dress beds?
28524And suppose a person falls in with these plans, as you say, step by step?
28524And take what you can find at the little inns?
28524And that is what you are going to Florida for?
28524And the Murillo is to fill up the vacant space?
28524And the conversation we held under the umbrella, without simulation or dissimulation?
28524And the digging?
28524And then--?
28524And therefore you condemn accomplishments?
28524And therefore you think you are forgiven?
28524And these other people-- we need not meet them at Zermatt, need we?
28524And these things take your morning and her morning?
28524And they wish for such instruction?
28524And this new Fate of Tom''s-- this new Fancy rather,--as I understand, she is quite out of the world?
28524And to that end--?
28524And to whom?
28524And what a place do you think it is?
28524And what are you going to do now?
28524And what does Lois find here to delight her? 28524 And what does your silver spade expect to do there?"
28524And what should we cost you?
28524And what special door offers most attraction to your view, of them all?
28524And what then?
28524And what will become of her?
28524And what will your mother and sister say?
28524And who was kindest to you? 28524 And who will look after you, you silly boy?"
28524And why just the diamonds?
28524And why not? 28524 And why should n''t they?"
28524And without cups and saucers?
28524And would you marry no one who was not a Christian, as you understand the word?
28524And yet he pleased you, Lois?
28524And you are satisfied?
28524And you are sorry to be home again?
28524And you are the only one who keeps a map of the garden in your head?
28524And you can smile at that, you wicked girl?
28524And you enjoy the variety?
28524And you had to stay too, to nurse her?
28524And you know something, I suppose, about many of them; something about their families and conditions?
28524And you like that sort o''way better''n this''n?
28524And you like that? 28524 And you really can not afford a servant?"
28524And you really enjoy it?
28524And you think his plans and purposes could be overthrown?
28524And you think it too late?
28524And you think she liked you?
28524And you think_ we_ are doing nothing?
28524And you will answer me also frankly?
28524And you''ve got all you want?
28524And you''ve got everythin''you want in the world?
28524And, in the comparison, you think you are the gainers?
28524And-- pray forgive me for asking!--but, are you happy in this exclusive sense?
28524Any way open to me? 28524 Appledore?"
28524Are New York folks better cooks than we be?
28524Are n''t they? 28524 Are radishes and lettuce the first thing you plant in the spring, then?"
28524Are the Caruthers here?
28524Are the dear shops any better?
28524Are there no March winds in Florida?
28524Are there no other restaurants but that one?
28524Are there so many?
28524Are these your work, Miss Charity?
28524Are they all men?
28524Are they always connected?
28524Are they any the better for that?
28524Are they different from Shampuashuh people?
28524Are they going to turn the church into a playhouse?
28524Are they not the usual sort?
28524Are they so dangerous?
28524Are those powers which ought to be called into play?
28524Are we to go in_ there?_said Mrs. Lenox, with perceptible doubt.
28524Are you alone? 28524 Are you collecting broken shells?"
28524Are you comfortable here?
28524Are you comfortable?
28524Are you coming? 28524 Are you doing that elm tree?"
28524Are you fond of flowers, Miss Caruthers?
28524Are you goin''with bare feet?
28524Are you going for a walk? 28524 Are you much different now from what you were before?"
28524Are you not going on, Miss Lothrop?
28524Are you not well, Lois?
28524Are you one of the few women who can keep to the point?
28524Are you sure about it?
28524Are you the housekeeper?
28524Are you wet?
28524Are you''interested in glaciers?
28524As long as I can say it, do n''t you see that is enough?
28524Ask children to step in and see fairyland, and why should n''t they go? 28524 Ask him for his tobacco?"
28524Ask?--_Pray_, you mean?
28524At what o''clock does she go?
28524At what o''clock?
28524At whose expense?
28524Aunty!--Whatever has brought you here, to the Isles of Shoals?
28524Awkward?
28524Ay, but how''re you goin''to fix what''s moderately? 28524 Be tempted?
28524Be there two on''em-- a big and a little?
28524Be they?
28524Beautiful?
28524Because she do n''t like it?
28524Beef?
28524Ben here afore?
28524Better, I hope?
28524Black? 28524 But I believe you are one of that kind yourself, are you not?"
28524But any common person could do that?
28524But different, I suppose, from the varieties you are accustomed to at home?
28524But do not?
28524But do you call that girl pretty?
28524But do you never find people a bore as it is?
28524But do you travel without any baggage?
28524But does she think all who belong to the''great world''are evil? 28524 But grandmother, you do not dislike to have him in the house these two days, do you?"
28524But he ai n''t a Christian?
28524But her work might be elsewhere? 28524 But how were the people?
28524But if I had the care of you-- you would not be there?
28524But if I were; suppose I had no other?
28524But if Tom Caruthers had married as you say he wanted to marry, his wife would have come at once into his circle, and made one of it?
28524But is Mrs. Wishart gone there?
28524But is it true?
28524But is not that all true?
28524But it is philosophy that makes you not drink wine? 28524 But like her?"
28524But not inconsistent enough to build them on nothing, I hope?
28524But something is the matter?
28524But suppose the case of people who have no ground, nor hens, nor pork, nor cow? 28524 But surely you can not do that last?"
28524But that is not the right way to think, is it?
28524But that is not what a''Puritan''generally means, is it?
28524But the sick one is well again?
28524But they were like her in other things?
28524But we hindered you from taking care of your friends?
28524But we? 28524 But what about the English middle class?
28524But what do you find, Miss Lothrop, that can attract you so much before breakfast? 28524 But what good can you do her?"
28524But what good does_ your_ not drinking it do? 28524 But what good is that to us?"
28524But what is Abazzia?
28524But what is being''yoked together''? 28524 But what_ is_ right?
28524But where are you going to be? 28524 But where do you want to go, Tom?
28524But who respects them?
28524But why do you walk?
28524But why must I put such a force upon my imagination?
28524But why not? 28524 But why should he care what becomes of us?"
28524But will nobody be there?
28524But you do not think, I hope, that one is a pattern for all?
28524But you have crossed them, have you not?
28524But you have nothing to call you out?
28524But you sing?
28524But you think we ought to let this lady come, mother, do n''t you?
28524But you will not come to-- what is the name of the place-- where I am going?
28524But your application of it?
28524But your work there was broken up?
28524But, Lois!--what are you talking about? 28524 But, Lois!--wouldn''t_ you_ like to be rich, and have pretty things about you?"
28524But, again, what sort of food, and what sort of raiment?
28524But,said Philip, returning to the charge,"why should not you, Mrs. Caruthers, do what you like?
28524But--"Well? 28524 But_ du_ ye?"
28524But_ necessary_ things, grandma?--we may do necessary things?
28524By the power of what secret talisman?
28524By the way,said he, when the talk had rambled on for a while,"how did you get on at the Isles of Shoals?"
28524By what train?
28524By''that sort of person''I suppose you mean Mr. Dillwyn? 28524 Ca n''t one be in love with one''s grandmother?"
28524Ca n''t somebody else do it for you?
28524Ca n''t they call good victuals by English names?
28524Ca n''t what?
28524Came by water?
28524Can a man do better than marry an angel?
28524Can not you ask Lois in, on some pretext?
28524Can not you go on with the hymn, dear Mrs. Barclay? 28524 Can not you make some excuse for getting her in here?"
28524Can not you work, as you call it, in town?
28524Can one have too much pleasure?
28524Can she play?
28524Can she speak French?
28524Can the garden not be made without you?
28524Can the work be done without you?
28524Can they go no faster?
28524Can you get them yourself?
28524Can you make a soufflé, aunt Anne?
28524Can you repeat the last lines?
28524Can you walk?
28524Can you_ see_ it, my dear? 28524 Caught_ by_ her?
28524Certainly it is,said Lois;"but is it gay?
28524Charity, will you not understand? 28524 Christmas eve?"
28524Coming to the inn?
28524Could the world be managed,he said, with very gentle deference;"could the world be managed on such principles of truth and purity?
28524Could you live just right there, Lois?
28524Cymbals?
28524Danger of what?
28524Dead and gone?
28524Dear Mrs. Barclay, can I help you?
28524Did I?
28524Did all that help you?
28524Did he-- did the painter-- always paint like this?
28524Did n''t I tell you I was interested in both of them?
28524Did n''t they?
28524Did n''t you enjoy it?
28524Did n''t you see none, savin''that one?
28524Did she get it?
28524Did she give reasons for such advice?
28524Did she like it?
28524Did yon ever see such lovely white violets?
28524Did you consult her?
28524Did you drink any, Lois?
28524Did you ever hear anything so ridiculous?
28524Did you ever see_ such_ a white violet? 28524 Did you give aunt Anne''s invitation?
28524Did you hear he had made a great match?
28524Did you like him best of all the people you saw?
28524Did you look at the mare''s foot?
28524Did you see my strawberries?
28524Did you see the carpenter?
28524Did you think that little girl had come out of any but a respectable house?
28524Did you? 28524 Did you?"
28524Did you?--Who did you think it was?
28524Did, hey? 28524 Did_ she_ say they were puritanical?"
28524Different from what you mean?
28524Dillwyn, where are you going?
28524Dillwyn? 28524 Dislike?
28524Do I act discontented?
28524Do I know her?
28524Do I not owe everything to you?
28524Do n''t everybody, that''s got any sense?
28524Do n''t get married?
28524Do n''t it sometimes work the other way?
28524Do n''t you always know what''s right to do or say, with the Bible before you?
28524Do n''t you always speak truth?
28524Do n''t you know, the English middle class is the finest in the world?
28524Do n''t you like Mrs. Barclay''s friend?
28524Do n''t you like him?
28524Do n''t you like it?
28524Do n''t you like pretty things?
28524Do n''t you think I could take care of you?
28524Do n''t you want to buy a farm here, and settle down?
28524Do n''t you want to see Switzerland?
28524Do n''t you?
28524Do not_ you_, then, reckon the years of childhood the happiest?
28524Do people go there just for health?
28524Do they have the best singing in the Episcopal church?
28524Do you believe in such things? 28524 Do you call_ their_ talk amusing?
28524Do you come here often?
28524Do you enjoy this, Miss Lothrop?
28524Do you feel satisfied with that prospect?
28524Do you get along any better for it?
28524Do you have time to read much yourself, sir?
28524Do you hear how the wind moans in the chimney?
28524Do you hear that wind?
28524Do you know how much a man or a woman would give who gave_ all_ he had?
28524Do you know the story?
28524Do you know what that would end in?
28524Do you know, she is not a happy woman?
28524Do you like that?
28524Do you like the truth?
28524Do you like them?
28524Do you mean it is the place you prefer?
28524Do you mean manure? 28524 Do you mean that I am to teach your Dulcinea to play?
28524Do you mean that Tom do n''t, my dear?
28524Do you mean that you have given up drinking wine?
28524Do you mean that you were ordered to go to that place, and then to nurse those children through the fever?
28524Do you mean them?
28524Do you mean to say,said the latter,"that the hymn- writers do not use the minor key?
28524Do you mean, they run away_ under ground?_"So I am told.
28524Do you not know everybody? 28524 Do you often come to visit her?"
28524Do you put none? 28524 Do you remember Bryant''s''Thanatopsis''?"
28524Do you remember my telling you once about my old house at home?
28524Do you say he''s comin''again?
28524Do you see all that corner? 28524 Do you see that old schoolhouse, a little further on?
28524Do you think I am going to spoil my best pair of shoes for vanity''s sake?
28524Do you think I may presume upon Miss Lothrop''s good nature, and carry it further?
28524Do you think a good watchmaker would carefully make and finish a very costly pin or wheel, and put it in the works of his watch to do nothing?
28524Do you think anybody ever did live so?
28524Do you think folks will see an umbrella walkin''up street in the rain, and not look to see if there''s somebody under it?
28524Do you think he will understand having a cold dinner, Sunday?
28524Do you think so?
28524Do you think so?
28524Do you think the hawks all live in cities?
28524Do you think there is such a place in the whole world?
28524Do you think there would be danger?
28524Do you think there''s any use in all that, Lois?
28524Do you think they''d go?
28524Do you think_ I_ am going to ask him to turn about, before he is ready? 28524 Do you want them to be always going''deep''into things?"
28524Do you want them to go deep in an evening party?
28524Do you? 28524 Do you?"
28524Do''ee? 28524 Does Miss Lothrop live here?"
28524Does anything?
28524Does he hold as high a position as you?
28524Does he tell you his plans, Miss Lothrop?
28524Does he?
28524Does it matter where?
28524Does it pay to come here?
28524Does it? 28524 Does much come that way?"
28524Does n''t the lady in question wear a hoop?
28524Does not everybody agree in that judgment, Miss Lothrop?
28524Does not everybody say so?
28524Does not your mother generally speak truth?
28524Does she leave any of her work for you to do, Charity?
28524Does she really think that_ all_ the people who like pretty things, lead useless lives?
28524Does she sing?
28524Does the epithet apply to the place? 28524 Does the old proverb not hold good then in Shampuashuh, of''All work and no play''--you know?
28524Doos, hey? 28524 Drudgery?"
28524Duty? 28524 England?"
28524English or French, what''s the odds?
28524Enough for what? 28524 Enough of what?"
28524Especially in winter, I suppose?
28524Even at Shampuashuh?
28524Ever read it?
28524Excuse me-- but what makes you think they do not gain their end?
28524Fair hair?
28524Florida, for instance?
28524Flowers? 28524 Food?"
28524For doing what, do you mean?
28524For market?
28524For what good properties?
28524For what, Miss Lothrop? 28524 Forbids what?"
28524Friend? 28524 From her standpoint?"
28524From what?
28524Giving all what?
28524Glad?
28524Gold?
28524Gone whither?
28524Good work for them there, I suppose?
28524Grandmother, it''ll do for you to talk; but what are we girls going to do without bonnets?
28524Had the lady any objection? 28524 Had_ he_ much to talk about?"
28524Has he? 28524 Has she got that girl with her?"
28524Have I found you, Miss Lothrop?
28524Have I?
28524Have n''t Shampuashuh folks got horses? 28524 Have n''t you a Christian among all your friends?"
28524Have n''t you any drinking in Shampuashuh?
28524Have n''t you taught him already?
28524Have we got to stay here?
28524Have you a hymn- book? 28524 Have you any idea how this news will touch Miss-- the other lady you were talking about?"
28524Have you asked her?
28524Have you been led to believe something false about me, Lois?--Lois?
28524Have you been out to- day?
28524Have you been to Brett''s Collection?
28524Have you changed your mind?
28524Have you ever questioned it? 28524 Have you given up your cigars too?"
28524Have you got anything better, Miss Lothrop?
28524Have you got where you can see_ air?_inquired Mrs. Marx sharply.
28524Have you heard_ that_ story?
28524Have you scruples?
28524Have you the names?
28524Have you? 28524 Help?
28524Hey? 28524 How about ways and means?"
28524How am I to understand that?
28524How are they all at home?
28524How are you goin''to deal with''em?
28524How are you going to help it?
28524How came anybody to think of coming here at first? 28524 How came he to write proverbs, then?"
28524How can I help all that?
28524How can I help you?
28524How can I like it too well?
28524How can one be''separate''always, grandma, in the midst of other people?
28524How can that be mistaken? 28524 How can they help seeing shadows?"
28524How can they? 28524 How can work be play?"
28524How can you speak with such certain''ty, Lois? 28524 How can you?"
28524How come you to be here at this time of year?
28524How come you to be such a philosopher?
28524How could they_ mis_understand it?
28524How could you be mistaken?
28524How could you, Mrs. Barclay? 28524 How did he show his folly?"
28524How did they get it in such shapes?
28524How did you find your way?
28524How did you get back so soon, Tom?
28524How did you get him away at last?
28524How did you know what there was for dinner?
28524How did you know?
28524How do I find you?
28524How do I know that is any good? 28524 How do you catch her?"
28524How do you do, Mr. Hotchkiss? 28524 How do you do, ma''am?"
28524How do you do, this evening?
28524How do you do, this evening?
28524How do you draw the line between them?
28524How do you get along?
28524How do you get them?
28524How do you know all that?
28524How do you know it?
28524How do you know she is?
28524How do you know that? 28524 How do you know, my child?
28524How do you like New York, Lois? 28524 How do you like my programme?"
28524How do you mean, a different world?
28524How do you mean,''a good family''?
28524How do you mean,''serious''?
28524How do you propose that I shall meet the increased expenditures of your Connecticut paradise?
28524How do you women get along without cigars? 28524 How do_ they_ go?"
28524How does home look to you, Lois, now you''re back in it?
28524How does it strike you? 28524 How does that appear?"
28524How does that hurt you, I want to know?
28524How early? 28524 How else?
28524How far can you go in a day? 28524 How have you tried?"
28524How is he to find it, then?
28524How is it in your part of the world?
28524How is the experience to be obtained?
28524How long are you thinking to stay on this side of the water?
28524How long did you stay?
28524How long has that man been here?
28524How long is this sort of thing going on?
28524How many could a woman make in a day, Madge, of those silk scarfs?
28524How many did you get to- day?
28524How many people in the world do you suppose are married on that principle?
28524How many people live there?
28524How many people?
28524How much do you mean, I wonder, by''giving all''? 28524 How much money?"
28524How much pork are you goin''to want this year, mother?
28524How much would she pay? 28524 How old are these two persons?"
28524How should I not? 28524 How should a man have presentiments o''what''s comin''?"
28524How should it be wicked? 28524 How so?"
28524How soon does she want to come?
28524How soon may I begin?
28524How soon will you be at Zermatt?
28524How soon?
28524How then, Julia? 28524 How will he get the answer?
28524How will the answer come to me?
28524How''s he goin''to lose''em?
28524How, if the salt loses its saltness, daughter?
28524How, my dear?
28524How,_ be_ Santa Claus?
28524How? 28524 How?
28524How?
28524How?
28524How?
28524How_ can_ they play cards all night?
28524Human language? 28524 Humph!--You suppose I can find that rare bird, my equal, do you?"
28524I am afraid to talk about it,she said at length,"Why?"
28524I am not caught, as you call it, neither by her nor with her; but if you want to discuss her, I say, what''s the matter with her?
28524I am sure you are aware that I was speaking honestly, and that I do_ not_ know better?
28524I am very glad you succeeded in preventing it But allow me to ask if you are sure you_ have_ succeeded? 28524 I believe you remarked, this sport is your substitute for our Central Park?"
28524I do n''t believe he has done the half of what he had to do, Tom, what brought you home?
28524I do n''t want it to''mean anything,''as you say; but what has our being country girls to do with it?
28524I do n''t want to help it?
28524I do n''t; but, however-- Are you going to be alone to- morrow morning, or will you take another sleigh ride with me?
28524I have given it up?
28524I suppose the people are all fishermen?
28524I suppose they thought you were a real country girl, because you did n''t?
28524I surmise the society also was good there?
28524I think you know my brother?
28524I think you objected to two rival trees?
28524I think you said you would not be averse to doing something in the line of giving instruction?
28524I thought Tom was_ your_ friend?
28524I thought,--said Lois,--"I thought they said the music was so good?"
28524I thought--"What?
28524I understood her to assume that under no circumstances could you marry one of the great world she was talking of?
28524I understood''twas her company; but you saw him?
28524I wonder if I could walk?
28524I? 28524 I?"
28524If a friend may ask, how came you to do what is so unsatisfactory to you?
28524If it was your name once, why is n''t it your name now?
28524If the people want to have this celebration,--and they will,--hadn''t we better make it a good one? 28524 If you do not dislike me, then,"said he,"what is it?
28524If you like.--Do you see her as I see her?
28524If you mean what Lois has told me--"Are not you going to wish me joy?
28524In a cook- book, likely?
28524In what part of the world did you learn to make toast?
28524In what particulars, do you mean?
28524In what sense?
28524In what way?
28524In- doors?
28524Is Miss Lois at home?
28524Is Mrs. Barclay ready?
28524Is he a Christian?
28524Is he not? 28524 Is he one of your high- flyers?"
28524Is it always in a small way?
28524Is it any use to offer him advice?
28524Is it cheerful?
28524Is it necessary?
28524Is it otherwise with church singing?
28524Is it? 28524 Is it?"
28524Is it_ better_ not? 28524 Is n''t it enough for to- night?"
28524Is n''t it glorious?
28524Is n''t it?
28524Is n''t our family as respectable as anybody''s? 28524 Is n''t she pleasant?"
28524Is n''t that an open question?
28524Is n''t that pride?
28524Is n''t that story true?
28524Is not most of the work of the world done in corners? 28524 Is that all, Lois?"
28524Is that an answer?
28524Is that the hull of ye?
28524Is that the way they play it?
28524Is that what the Bible says? 28524 Is the New York world like this?"
28524Is the other room ready?
28524Is the question to be understood in a physical or moral sense?
28524Is there a hotel there?
28524Is there a library here?
28524Is there a_ right_ place to look then?
28524Is there any harm in making it as much like a fairy tale as we can?
28524Is there no one but you to do all the weeding, by and by, when the garden will be full of plants?
28524Is there not service-- true service-- that is given wholly to one''s needy fellows of humanity? 28524 Is there not some unworthy bondage about that?"
28524Is this the place where a lady is lying sick and another lady is tendin''her?
28524It is Mrs. Barclay, I suppose? 28524 It is hardly a sufficient object to fill a man''s life worthily; do you think so?"
28524It is terrible when you have to sweep the carpet, is n''t it? 28524 It is wet ground I suppose, where you find the clams?"
28524It was not all like that, I suppose?
28524It''s actin'', ai n''t it?
28524It''s what you''ve been trying to do to me all my life, ai n''t it?
28524Jealous already?
28524Jest shelves? 28524 Just as soon as we are ready for her; did n''t you hear what I read, grandmother?
28524Less disguise about them?
28524Let me see; What think you of falling in love?
28524Like it better?
28524Like it? 28524 Like it?
28524Like what?--sweat on a man''s forehead?
28524Liking horrors?
28524Live on hymns and long clams?
28524Lois Lothrop,said the old lady, suddenly sitting upright,"what''s the Lord''s will?"
28524Lois!--What did you say to him?
28524Lois!--is that you? 28524 Lois, Charity ai n''t at home-- How much beef are you goin''to want?"
28524Lois, ai n''t them words plain?
28524Lois, are mantillas fashionable? 28524 Lois, is_ she_ like the people you used to see in New York?
28524Lois, my dear, have you been out already?
28524Lois, my dear, what are you doing?
28524Lois, what is the Lord''s will about it?
28524Lois, what will you wear to this luncheon party?
28524Lois, what''s brought these folks here?
28524Long?
28524Looking- glass to set the hot dishes on?
28524Love_ all sorts?_said Mrs. Barclay.
28524Madge, suppose Mrs. Wishart should not be here to meet us? 28524 Madge?
28524Make them yourself?
28524Makes_ what_ so? 28524 Manner?
28524May I ask for an explanation?
28524May I ask, why you ask?
28524May I ask, why?
28524May I ask,he then said, and his voice was curiously clear and composed,--"if that is your_ only_ objection to me?"
28524May I come up where you are?
28524May I look at it?
28524May he come?
28524Miss Lois has been to the great city, then?
28524Miss Lois, do you never use dissimulation?
28524Miss Lothrop was there, was n''t she?
28524Miss Lothrop!--are you going for a walk? 28524 Miss Lothrop, do you find something here in which you take pleasure?"
28524Miss Lothrop, what can you be doing?
28524Miss Lothrop,said their entertainer here,"will you allow me to give you some grapes?"
28524Missed what?
28524Money? 28524 More difficult for a woman than for a man?"
28524Mother, do you like it?
28524Mother, do you think it will worry you to have her?
28524Mother,she said one evening to the old lady, whom they often called so,"do n''t it seem to you that Lois is gettin''turned round?"
28524Mother,she said when Mrs. Marx was gone,"are you afraid these new things will make me forget my duties, or make me unfit for them?"
28524Mr. Caruthers? 28524 Mr. Dillwyn, what shall we do with him?"
28524Mr. Dillwyn,she said softly,"will you take a seat by the stove, as far from us as you can; and make believe you have neither eyes nor ears?
28524Mr. Dillwyn? 28524 Mrs. Barclay, you are not comfortable here?"
28524Mrs. Marx, do you think she would have me if I asked her? 28524 Mrs. Marx,"said Tom suddenly,"you are a good friend of Miss Lothrop, are n''t you?"
28524Mrs. Wishart, what is to be done with the poor of our city?
28524Much other company?
28524Music-- painting-- architecture---- I am afraid, Miss Madge, that is check- mate?
28524Must I suppose that Miss Lothrop has forgotten me?
28524Must one be a gardener, to have such enjoyment?
28524Must you catch your wife?
28524My dear Lois, do you know that you are talking the profoundest mysteries?
28524My dear, are we such a set of masqueraders in your eyes?
28524My dear, do you know what would become of society?
28524My dear, do you want people to be always serious?
28524My dear,said Mrs. Wishart, much vexed at last,"you do not think it is_ wicked_ to go into society, I hope?"
28524My heart? 28524 My minister?
28524My mother and sister, you mean?
28524My question is this: How is a man to find his work in the world?
28524No better?
28524No danger, is there?
28524No neutrals?
28524No other company?
28524No, child,said the old lady;"why should it worry me?"
28524No, indeed; how could I be? 28524 No, no,"said Lois, laughing;"do you think I am so insatiable?
28524No, would you? 28524 No,"said Lois, smiling;"why should I?
28524Nobody has that; you have n''t, and I have n''t; why should Lois?
28524Nor disaster?
28524Nor t''other one? 28524 Not at money?"
28524Not for a great while? 28524 Not go?
28524Not long, aunt Anne? 28524 Not seriously?"
28524Not soon?
28524Not the first time?
28524Not the people themselves?
28524Not to happiness, is it?
28524Now? 28524 O Lois,"cried Madge,"are the people very nice?"
28524O no, not the New York people; though they are different too; quite different from Shampuashuh--"How?
28524O, do you ask that? 28524 O,_ that_ is where you are, is it?
28524Of those two? 28524 Of what kind?"
28524Of what?
28524Of what?
28524Or I either?
28524Or biscuit glacé?
28524Or will you tell me your plans?
28524Or would you like to come out at once, and see the rest of the family?
28524Or you yourself, Charity? 28524 Overslept, Lois?"
28524Oxen included?
28524Pardon me,--what things do you mean?
28524Pay? 28524 Peculiar how?"
28524People are_ not_ all alike?
28524People who did not know their own minds?
28524Perhaps this is a new experience also to you?
28524Perhaps you will do that?
28524Perhaps you will let me teach you?
28524Phil, you are interested in one of these girls?
28524Phil,said Mrs. Barclay,"what is behind this very odd scheme?"
28524Philip, Philip, what is this?
28524Philip, what makes you ask such a question?
28524Philip, why are you not at that picture sale this minute, with me?
28524Philip, you have never lost your heart to one of these girls?
28524Philip? 28524 Plans?"
28524Pleasanter than here?
28524Pleasure? 28524 Pray tell me,--is the question of''ought''never affected by what should be legitimate hindrances?"
28524Pray what brought him to your remembrance just then?
28524Pray what would you substitute? 28524 Pray why should they go, if they do not find pleasure in it?"
28524Pray, at-- I forget the name-- your home in the country, are the people more happily constituted?
28524Pray, for what?
28524Pray, of what kind?
28524Progress?
28524Rather dismal, is n''t it?
28524Really? 28524 Rejected?
28524Right in what? 28524 Seclusion?
28524Shall I leave you here, then?
28524Shall I send you a piano?
28524Shall he come in? 28524 Shall we ask her to make her home with us?"
28524Shampuashuh!--Miss Lothrop!--Was that where she lived? 28524 Simulation and dissimulation?"
28524Sleigh- riding?
28524So I think; and I want to know, did you mean that? 28524 So did I once, did I not?"
28524So that is one of your fine people?
28524So that is your state of mind now, is it?
28524So the world is a great unopened book to you?
28524So you enjoyed that?
28524So you get them by digging?
28524So?
28524Some men,--but not you, Philip?
28524Songs?
28524Stakes?
28524Study what?
28524Studying what, pray? 28524 Sun''thin''I kin do here?"
28524Suppose I had helped the yellow church?
28524Suppose he were not; would you refuse him?
28524Suppose it ai n''t?
28524Suppose we take a gondola and go?
28524Suppose you invite them-- the two girls-- or her alone-- to make you a visit in New York?
28524Tempted to what, grandma?
28524Than this girl? 28524 That ai n''t no hymn in the book, is it?"
28524That do n''t hinder his knowing what was vanity, does it?
28524That is very wild, is n''t it?
28524That means custards?
28524That was the one that Tom Caruthers was bewitched with?
28524That''ll be kind o''lop- sided, wo n''t it? 28524 That''s French, eh?"
28524That? 28524 The Bible forbids it?
28524The Caruthers are rich, are n''t they?
28524The answer? 28524 The best part of it is the hunt, is n''t it?"
28524The clams must be good, to reward the trouble?
28524The handsomest, and the cleverest, and the kindest to me?
28524The old house? 28524 The people whom you see driving?"
28524The philosopher''s stone?
28524The river?
28524The shelves? 28524 The taste ai n''t somehow taken out o''things?
28524The way to what?
28524The''Cry of the Children''?
28524Them?
28524Then I s''pose there''s plenty to help nurse, and they have no call for me?
28524Then have you seen Murano?
28524Then he may come?
28524Then his name raises no tender associations in your mind?
28524Then it is not much of a reading community?
28524Then the affair is definitely concluded?
28524Then the person alluded to seemed to you something short of perfection?
28524Then they are coming to- morrow?
28524Then this is your first acquain''tance with New York?
28524Then we may be interrupted?
28524Then what are those tears for, my dear?
28524Then what''ll you do?
28524Then what_ are_ you doing? 28524 Then why is it strange?"
28524Then why not stay at home? 28524 Then why should I tell him?"
28524Then why_ should_ we be ashamed of it?
28524Then will you let an outsider help?
28524Then you are on my side, as far as I can be said to have a side?
28524Then you have found the philosopher''s stone?
28524Then you mean, the family must be a New York family?
28524Then you think I may ask her?
28524Then you will not join our drawing class, Miss Charity?
28524Then, do you think you ought to sing sech words, if you do n''t mean''em?
28524Then, pardon me, what would you substitute, Miss Lothrop, to fill up your life, and not have it a bare existence?
28524Then, to sum up-- the deficiencies of this lady, as I understand, are,--education and a hoop? 28524 There are no flowers there, I suppose?"
28524There are not roads and hotels?
28524There''s five meals anyhow,Charity went on.--"Wouldn''t it be a good plan to get uncle Tim to be here?"
28524They are beautiful this year, are n''t they, mother? 28524 They are coming, I hope?"
28524They do n''t approve, then?
28524Things?
28524This little girl, I understand, then, is awkward and inelegant?
28524This one particularly?
28524Thout any?
28524Tired out, Lois, are you? 28524 To be sure,"said Mrs. Marx;"who should do it?
28524To board?
28524To buy a Persian carpet?
28524To see_ you!_ Did he come to take you sleigh- riding again?
28524Tom, do you want to do any more fishing? 28524 Tom, what did you do at the Isles of Shoals?"
28524Tom, who was that girl you were so taken with last night?
28524Tom,said Mrs. Caruthers presently,"whom did Mr. Dillwyn marry?"
28524Tom,said his sister solemnly,"_ is_ Miss Lothrop going to be there?"
28524Tom,said the gentleman, as Tom at this minute came out of the house,"have you got enough of Appledore?"
28524Tom,she cried,"have you done everything?
28524Tom-- Tom!--what do you expect to find?
28524Trying to keep out of the water, do n''t you see?
28524Uncle Phil, if you had a wife, what would her name be?
28524Uncle Phil, mamma says her name usen''t to be Burrage-- it was your name?
28524Uncle Phil, you have n''t got a wife?
28524Vague distance?
28524Very well, why not learn? 28524 Victory-- over what?"
28524Was he a real godly man?
28524Was he not right, then?
28524Was he the cleverest, too, that you saw?
28524Was it always paid back?
28524Was it ever found anywhere?
28524Was it great fun?
28524Was it_ so_ that you went to teach school at that unlucky place?--what do you call it?
28524Was n''t he a better man?
28524Was n''t it very hard work?
28524Was n''t she well enough dressed the other day?
28524Was not that a mistake?
28524Was she?
28524Was that the case in this instance?
28524Was the poor man looking that way?
28524Was there anything remarkable about the scarf?
28524Was your''n in it?
28524We are not going to live to ourselves?
28524We, you mean? 28524 Wealth and position are good things at any rate, are they not?"
28524Well, Loissaid the lady, with the sleep still in her voice,"where have you been?
28524Well, ai n''t it true? 28524 Well, are people any happier for living in such a quiet way?
28524Well, are we fixtures too?
28524Well, artifice, then?
28524Well, my dear,said Mrs. Wishart on the drive home,"how have you enjoyed yourself?"
28524Well, then,--Miss Lois?
28524Well, what could be lower? 28524 Well, what is in the gravel?"
28524Well, what is it worth, Dillwyn? 28524 Well, what is, then?
28524Well, who was the handsomest? 28524 Well, why should we be like her?"
28524Well,said Mrs. Barclay, when the door was closed,"what do you think of our progress?"
28524Well,she said,"what then?
28524Well-- will our table suit her?
28524Well?
28524Well?
28524Well?
28524Were the dogs well?
28524Were the people brilliant too?
28524Were you meaning, now, what you were singing when you came in?
28524What I was singing?
28524What answer are you going to give me?
28524What are the duties?
28524What are they doing?
28524What are they going for?
28524What are those two figures yonder among the grass?
28524What are we going to have for dinner, Sunday? 28524 What are we to do with him?"
28524What are we to do, then, grandmother?
28524What are you bringing over? 28524 What are you coming to?
28524What are you doing here?
28524What are you doing?
28524What are you going to do about it? 28524 What are you going to do about it?"
28524What are you going to do next?
28524What are you going to do, aunt Anne?
28524What are you going to do?
28524What are you going to do?
28524What are you going to say to me this morning, Lois?
28524What are you looking for?
28524What are you studying, here beside your baskets? 28524 What are you thinking of?"
28524What are your eyes good for? 28524 What became of them?"
28524What brings him here, then?
28524What brought_ you_ here?
28524What can be done?
28524What can do more?
28524What can we do better? 28524 What can we do for her?"
28524What can you do else, as long as you have n''t your bread to get?
28524What can you do in a garden?
28524What can you find in that mud?
28524What colours?
28524What could I say to him?
28524What did Mrs. Burrage say to you?
28524What did he come for?
28524What did he do then?
28524What did he paint? 28524 What did he talk to you for?"
28524What did they come for?
28524What did you expect when you came here?
28524What did you have to eat, Lois, with so much to drink?
28524What did you see that you liked best?
28524What distinguishes me from the mass?
28524What do my diamonds cost anybody?
28524What do they crowd up so for, then?
28524What do they go for then?
28524What do they see? 28524 What do they stay here for, then, for pity''s sake?
28524What do they talk about?
28524What do we know of any other? 28524 What do you call work?"
28524What do you do the rest of the day?
28524What do you do with them?
28524What do you do with your poor at Shampuashuh, Miss Madge?
28524What do you expect to do for a bonnet, Lois?
28524What do you expect to find at Saratoga?
28524What do you find down at the shore?
28524What do you find?
28524What do you mean by knowledge of the world?
28524What do you mean by religion?
28524What do you mean by that, Lois?
28524What do you mean by''good,''Mr. Caruthers? 28524 What do you mean by''such men''?"
28524What do you mean by''too well''?
28524What do you mean by_ that?_ I saw some''gentlemen''last summer at Appledore-- and I do n''t want to see no more. 28524 What do you mean, Lois?
28524What do you mean? 28524 What do you mean?
28524What do you mean?
28524What do you mean?
28524What do you mean?
28524What do you mean?
28524What do you propose to do?
28524What do you require?
28524What do you say to my plan?
28524What do you see in the rain?
28524What do you think of Philip Dillwyn? 28524 What do your eyes see?"
28524What does Lois do in the garden?
28524What does he want with it?
28524What does it mean?
28524What does it mean?
28524What does it signify, my dear, whether he understands it or not?
28524What does not exist?
28524What does that mean?
28524What does the cigar, to you, represent?
28524What does the village do, to amuse itself, in these quiet winter days and nights?
28524What drove you away from Newport? 28524 What else is she?
28524What else is she?
28524What else will there be?
28524What else, mother? 28524 What else?
28524What else?
28524What ever put this thing in your head?
28524What fanatics?
28524What flowers are they?
28524What for? 28524 What for?"
28524What for?
28524What for?
28524What for?
28524What harm in seeing him, Lois? 28524 What has berry- picking to do with it?
28524What has come to you? 28524 What has driven you to this little out- of- the- way nook?"
28524What have the other folks been about?
28524What have they left for your dinner?
28524What have you been reading, to put all this into your head?
28524What have you found, child?
28524What have you got in the house?
28524What have you heard? 28524 What have you in your head, Tom?"
28524What have you seen? 28524 What have you, where you have not strength?
28524What hindered you, old fellow?
28524What hinders your making up your own mind?
28524What if you had a wife?
28524What in the world has turned_ your_ attention that way? 28524 What is Eliza Wishart wantin''to go there for?"
28524What is a Puritan?
28524What is art?
28524What is in your line that you could study there?
28524What is it you find in this queer place?
28524What is it, Lois? 28524 What is it?
28524What is it?
28524What is one to do then?
28524What is poetry?
28524What is that?
28524What is the difficulty, then?
28524What is the first question?
28524What is the harm in what we are doing, Charity?
28524What is the matter with it?
28524What is the matter?
28524What is the necessity, Charity?
28524What is the philosopher''s stone?
28524What is the picture?
28524What is the question?
28524What is there to admire or respect in a person who lives only for pleasure?
28524What is there?
28524What is this for?
28524What is this girl, Julia? 28524 What is yours like?"
28524What is''manner''?
28524What is''much''?
28524What keeps you so mum?
28524What kept Tom?
28524What looks strange?
28524What made Tom want to stay?
28524What made her be Burrage?
28524What makes it so delightful?
28524What makes their time worth any more''n our''n?
28524What makes what you call a''great match''?
28524What makes you think so?
28524What makes you think they would be willing to pay for my services, then? 28524 What makes you think this girl wants-- I mean, desires-- education?"
28524What matter, if it is a good thing?
28524What mischief?
28524What now?
28524What on earth is the use of that?
28524What on earth shall we do with ourselves?
28524What on earth will_ you_ do at a place like that?
28524What order do you keep your wishes in?
28524What other is there?
28524What other things?
28524What others, grandmother?
28524What plans?
28524What pleasure does she confess?
28524What price?
28524What question?
28524What question?
28524What reason do you give me?
28524What shall I do about the party we were going to give? 28524 What shall I have for supper?"
28524What shall I read, grandma?
28524What should I know?
28524What should change me?
28524What should hinder you from staying in this pleasant house part of the summer, or all of the summer, if you find yourselves more comfortable here?
28524What should make it unneat? 28524 What silver are you thinking of?"
28524What sort are you?
28524What sort of a one?
28524What sort of a tree? 28524 What sort of a world have you been living in, Lois?
28524What sort of help?
28524What sort of necessity?
28524What sort of pleasures do you find, or make, at home, Miss Lothrop?
28524What sort?
28524What sort?
28524What then? 28524 What then?"
28524What then?
28524What then?
28524What then?
28524What things?
28524What tree?
28524What trifles?
28524What was his view? 28524 What was it like?"
28524What was that? 28524 What was the charm?
28524What was the matter? 28524 What was then?"
28524What was there?
28524What ways do you mean?
28524What were you studying, Lois? 28524 What were_ they_ all for?"
28524What wilderness?
28524What will make me change them?
28524What will the girls do? 28524 What will you say to me, if after all your aunt''s kindness in asking me, I do not go?"
28524What will_ they_ think then?
28524What would be left for himself?
28524What would fill it worthily?
28524What would happen, I wonder?
28524What would you have me do?
28524What would you have them do?
28524What would you have, better than that?
28524What would you have? 28524 What would you have?"
28524What would you have?
28524What would you like to do for her?
28524What would you say if I told you that I wanted to take care of you all your life?
28524What''ll they be? 28524 What''s Mr. Dillwyn got to do with it?"
28524What''s church singin''good for, then?
28524What''s going to be the upshot of it?
28524What''s he like?
28524What''s in all that? 28524 What''s left to a man when he ceases to be fashionable?"
28524What''s she doin''it for, that woman? 28524 What''s that?
28524What''s that?
28524What''s that?
28524What''s the matter with her?
28524What''s the matter with her?
28524What''s the matter, Philip?
28524What''s the matter? 28524 What''s the sense o''that?
28524What''s the use o''havin''your vegetables in silver dishes?
28524What''s the use o''poetry? 28524 What''s the use of having them in dishes at all?"
28524What''s the use of''em?
28524What''s the use? 28524 What''s the_ harm?_"said Lois.
28524What''s this?
28524What''s we to him?
28524What, my darling?
28524What, pray? 28524 What, then?
28524What? 28524 What?
28524What? 28524 What?
28524What?
28524What?
28524What?
28524What?
28524What?
28524What?--Lois, not_ that?_cried Madge, stopping with her bonnet only half off her head.
28524What_ could_ you find to do there?
28524What_ do_ you find in the water, Lois?
28524What_ do_ you mean, Lois? 28524 What_ is_ it like?"
28524What_ use?_ Can you make better use of it than you are doing, in taking care of Mrs. 28524 What_ was_ the price paid for making it?"
28524Whatever do you come here for?
28524When can I ask her? 28524 When did it happen?"
28524When should an umbrella be out walking, but in the rain?
28524When was that?
28524When''s he goin''?
28524When?
28524Where are you going after the AEggischhorn?
28524Where are you going, Philip?
28524Where at?
28524Where can one be better in summer?
28524Where could one have a better time? 28524 Where did you come from?"
28524Where did you discover that? 28524 Where did you get such charming friends to stay with you, Mrs. Wishart?
28524Where do you come from,said he,"that I find you here?"
28524Where do you get clams?
28524Where do you keep''em?
28524Where does the''sense of wrong''come in?
28524Where have you been all summer?
28524Where have you been, Tom, all this while?
28524Where have_ you_ been, Dillwyn? 28524 Where is it?"
28524Where is that old man gone to make his fire? 28524 Where is that?"
28524Where is this to go? 28524 Where is your leave to do wrong once?"
28524Where is your minister?
28524Where will you be?
28524Where will you be?
28524Where will you find such another girl?
28524Where''s she to get a man of education?
28524Where? 28524 Where?"
28524Where?
28524Where?
28524Where?
28524Where?
28524Which is which, I wonder?
28524Which is your place?
28524Which_ is_ she, by the way? 28524 Who are the others?"
28524Who are they?
28524Who does his duty, at that rate?
28524Who does?
28524Who else is to get her?
28524Who gets them? 28524 Who has read to you while I have been gone?"
28524Who is Ruth?
28524Who is he? 28524 Who is it?
28524Who is she, Tom?
28524Who is the lady? 28524 Who is the lady?"
28524Who knows? 28524 Who lives there?"
28524Who said she was n''t? 28524 Who says that?"
28524Who told you?
28524Who wants her to speak French? 28524 Who wants them broken?"
28524Who was he?
28524Who was he?
28524Who was that?
28524Who would be Santa Claus?
28524Who''ll be Santa Claus?
28524Who''ll talk to him?
28524Who''s Hugh Miller?
28524Who''s he after? 28524 Who''s he?"
28524Who? 28524 Whom did he marry?"
28524Whom did you like best, then?
28524Whose plan is this?
28524Whose will do you now? 28524 Why ai n''t they here now?"
28524Why are you not there, let me ask, this minute without me?
28524Why can not you credit other people with as much curiosity as you have yourself?
28524Why did n''t you keep him?
28524Why did not Mrs. Wishart take you?
28524Why did you never say anything about it, then?
28524Why do n''t she ask you?
28524Why do n''t you cook your chickens and have them cold too?
28524Why do n''t you go?
28524Why do n''t you speak of some of the indulgences of the men? 28524 Why do n''t you talk at meal times?
28524Why do n''t you talk, as other folks do?
28524Why do you say that?
28524Why do you suppose so?
28524Why do you suppose they talk it then?
28524Why have n''t we as good a right to have a tree as they have?
28524Why have n''t you?
28524Why is it impossible?
28524Why is it strange?
28524Why must there? 28524 Why not to us, as well as anybody else?"
28524Why not, Lois?
28524Why not, if one can,--as you can?
28524Why not, if the fashion does not agree with me?
28524Why not, pray? 28524 Why not?
28524Why not? 28524 Why not?
28524Why not? 28524 Why not?"
28524Why not?
28524Why not?
28524Why not?
28524Why not?
28524Why not?
28524Why not?
28524Why not?
28524Why not?
28524Why not?
28524Why not?
28524Why not?
28524Why not?
28524Why not?
28524Why not?
28524Why not?
28524Why not?
28524Why not?
28524Why should Mrs. Burrage have all that, and you and I have only yellow painted floors and rag carpets?
28524Why should it be a mis- match?
28524Why should it be?
28524Why should it?
28524Why should n''t I hear it?
28524Why should n''t I know?
28524Why should n''t I?
28524Why should n''t Shampuashuh be elegant, I do n''t see? 28524 Why should n''t he come again, mother?"
28524Why should n''t it be looked at?
28524Why should n''t one have the pleasure, then, and the good, if he is n''t a Christian?
28524Why should n''t they understand it?
28524Why should she, Lois?
28524Why should she?
28524Why should that be?
28524Why should they?
28524Why should you go out of our world? 28524 Why should you want to help it, after all?"
28524Why so?
28524Why so?
28524Why was he talking to_ you?_ Warn''t Mrs. Wishart there?
28524Why was he talking to_ you?_ Warn''t Mrs. Wishart there?
28524Why, Lois? 28524 Why, aunt Anne,"said Lois at this,"whom can you possibly mean by the hawks?"
28524Why, grandma, you want to treat a stranger well?
28524Why, grandmother?
28524Why, grandmother?
28524Why, one must do as everybody does?
28524Why, the train do n''t go any further, does it?
28524Why, yes, grandmother; several; but of course--"What of course?
28524Why, you know what that phrase expresses, do n''t you?
28524Why? 28524 Why?
28524Why? 28524 Why?
28524Why? 28524 Why?"
28524Why?
28524Why?
28524Why?
28524Why?
28524Why?
28524Why?
28524Why?
28524Why?
28524Why?
28524Why?
28524Why?
28524Why?
28524Why?
28524Will it do to assume that as quite certain?
28524Will the committees like that?
28524Will they come to- night?
28524Will ye mind''em?
28524Will you ask for their hospitality?
28524Will you be here?
28524Will you go to Europe next spring?
28524Will you stay, Mrs. Marx, to help in the care of her, till she is able to move?
28524Will you?
28524Wine?
28524With whom, child?
28524Worse?
28524Worth what?
28524Would she come?
28524Would that be not right?
28524Would that be wrong?
28524Would you bid me not join in singing such words, then?
28524Would you not like the country?
28524Yes indeed, why not?
28524Yes, but you see, the month will be half over before she gets ready to be off; and what''s the use? 28524 Yes, grandma, and so am I; but why?"
28524Yes, is n''t it?
28524Yes; and who''s going to make coal fires and clean the grate and fetch boxes of coal?
28524You agree then, that one is not bound by duties_ unknown?_Lois hesitated.
28524You agree to my plans, then?
28524You ai n''t a goin''for clams, Lois? 28524 You are fond of reading?
28524You are gathering your apples?
28524You are going to the Lothrops''house, ai n''t you? 28524 You are n''t equal to playing chess yet?"
28524You are never going up?
28524You are not going to repeat it?
28524You are not going to take care of me?
28524You are not going_ there?_ for the winter at least?
28524You are not going_ there?_ for the winter at least?
28524You are not talking of_ Switzerland_ for next summer?
28524You are not thinking of_ that?_said he.
28524You are sure of that?
28524You are thinking of help to the poor? 28524 You are very quiet, are you not?"
28524You came for sea air?
28524You can not have what you want?
28524You do n''t like to talk about it? 28524 You do n''t mean that you are going to cook all those?"
28524You do n''t mean that you--_you!_--have become one of those fanatics?
28524You do n''t mean, I hope, that the rest of us are not ladies, do you?
28524You do n''t think so?
28524You do n''t think that is a difficulty? 28524 You do n''t want to learn the ways of the world, Lois?"
28524You do n''t?
28524You do not call this a pleasant place?
28524You do not drink wine?
28524You do not know what I mean?
28524You do not mean that?
28524You do not want to see him now?
28524You enjoy digging in the dirt and wearin''that outlandish rig you put on for the garden?
28524You got home comfortably?
28524You have been spoiling Appledore?
28524You have n''t lost your heart, have you?
28524You have no rocks at home?
28524You have no umbrella?
28524You have not this room to yourself?
28524You have partly missed your end, have n''t you?
28524You know all about it?
28524You know what it means now?
28524You like the large water so much the best?
28524You mean Appledore?
28524You mean, something that satisfied her, and would satisfy me?
28524You mean,she said then,--"you think, that some of these people I have been seeing here, would think less of me, if they knew how we do at home?"
28524You mean--?
28524You prefer the new ones?
28524You profited by them with pleasure, or otherwise?
28524You remember Mr. Caruthers, Lois?
28524You saw a great deal of them, dear?
28524You staid for sympathy?
28524You think it will_ not_ be given him?
28524You think it?
28524You think she would not have me?
28524You think that is a recommendation? 28524 You think that?"
28524You think the child''s spirit might have been in the mouse?
28524You think there is no attraction?
28524You think you could not have made a lady of her?
28524You think, one who is a Christian ought never to marry another who is not a Christian?
28524You want me to go on, grandmother, do n''t you?
28524You will except the digging?
28524You will let me be one of them to- day? 28524 You will let me come in?"
28524You will let me speak to you frankly?
28524You wish they were nearer?
28524You would always give a true answer to a question?
28524You would like it, then?
28524You would like it?
28524You''ve been to school, have n''t you?
28524You? 28524 You?"
28524You?
28524You_ do n''t_ mean anything honest and religious?
28524Your experience does not agree with that of Miss Caruthers?
28524_ Afraid_ of him?
28524_ Always?_"Yes, always. 28524 _ Biskwee glassy?_"repeated the indignant Shampuashuh lady.
28524_ Do?_said Tom, flaring up.
28524_ Do_ you expect them, to come out to- day?
28524_ Does_ it shut them out?
28524_ Everything!_ Was everything beautiful?
28524_ Must_ one? 28524 _ Only_ to theirs and mine, Phil?"
28524_ Santa Claus_, mother?
28524_ She_ gone to the Isles of Shoals?
28524_ She_ has been in New York before?
28524_ Then_ how is a man to find his work?
28524_ This_ weather?
28524_ Tout lasse, tout casse, tout passe!_ do n''t you know? 28524 _ True!_ What is it?
28524_ Two cents_, did you say? 28524 _ What?_""O grandma, I can never tell you so that you can understand!
28524_ What_ are they, then?
28524_ What_ did she want to protect us from?
28524_ What_ is he, then?
28524_ Who_ is going to do_ what?_inquired Mrs. Armadale here.
28524_ You?_said his sister, turning sharp upon him.
28524''For a_ what?_''says I.
28524''I would just like to know,''says I,''what the fire is made of that you blow with a satin and gold bellows?''
28524''The poor ye have always with you''?"
28524''The time for such trifles''--is it over with you, sure enough?"
28524''Well, you may,''says she;''what is it?''
28524( O Philip, Philip, where are you?
28524--"Therefore you doubt?"
28524--"Thought_ so?_--about what?"
28524--What do you think o''that?
28524--addressing a man who was going along the side way--"hold on, will you?
28524--said Philip--"will you hold me responsible?
28524A young man?"
28524About what I said?
28524Accomplished?"
28524Ai n''t he good?"
28524Ai n''t it a dangerous kind o''pleasure, Lois?
28524Ai n''t it a pity to get their heads so filled with the other things that they''ll be for ever out o''conceit o''their own?"
28524Ai n''t our victuals as good here, as what comes out o''those silver dishes?"
28524Ai n''t that curious?"
28524Ai n''t that what you call comfortable?
28524Ai n''t this elegant enough for anybody?"
28524Ai n''t you sorry to be back and out of''this world''s vain store''--out of all the magnificence, and back in your garden work again?"
28524Am I not disturbing you?"
28524And I have lost-- uncle Tim says,"she broke off suddenly,"he says,--can it be?--he says you say you must go from us in the spring?"
28524And O, Lois, the flowers!--""Where were they?"
28524And after all, why_ should_ she say no?
28524And are you near the river?"
28524And did n''t a half- dozen of''em, or more, come over in the''Mayflower''?"
28524And do you think_ that''s_ a nice way o''livin'', Lois?"
28524And have you noticed how deep and rich the colours are?
28524And his mother do n''t either, does she?
28524And how do you know all this so accurately?"
28524And if they do--""What then?"
28524And if we do not enjoy ourselves, pray what in the world should we live for?"
28524And if you had it, who knows how to fix a Christmas tree?
28524And if you were,--Madge, you would not, you_ could_ not, marry a man that was not a Christian?
28524And is n''t it wonderful that it should not be broken?
28524And of course they all knew when they came out of the ark"--"Who-- the Persians?"
28524And the face,--but what was it in the face which so struck Mrs. Barclay?
28524And the question is, where shall we stop?
28524And truly, what with laughter and some other emotions, tears were not far from Lois''s eyes; and how could the kisses be wanting?
28524And what are the hats like?"
28524And what do you say to those white violets, Mr. Caruthers?
28524And what doos they sound like?"
28524And what gave the walk its new character?
28524And what had possessed him to tie her hood strings for her, and to do it in that leisurely way, as if he liked it?
28524And what have they all amounted to?
28524And what would Mr. Caruthers think, if he could see me now?
28524And where does she come from?"
28524And where have you passed it?"
28524And who cares how much they know?
28524And who is it that has come after me?"
28524And who was that?"
28524And why did_ she_ like it?
28524And why had she not gone?
28524And why not, seeing that she met him constantly where she was?
28524And why should she not?
28524And why should she think about it at all?
28524And yet, if you stop to think, what_ does_ anybody''s life amount to?
28524Are n''t you ready to go?"
28524Are there more folks in the house?"
28524Are there_ no_ amusements?
28524Are they fond of music?
28524Are they sheltered in any degree from the storms that come upon the rest of the world?
28524Are those the Isles of Shoals?"
28524Are we like the sparrows, or like the gulls?"
28524Are you not?
28524Are you studying political economy?
28524Armadale?"
28524As a friend, wo n''t you tell me?"
28524As they were going up the steps he asked softly,"Is that_ all_ you are going to say to me?"
28524Barclay?"
28524Barclay?"
28524Barclay?"
28524Barclay?"
28524Barclay?"
28524Barclay?"
28524Barclay?"
28524Barclay?"
28524Barclay?"
28524Be the New York folks so queer, then, Lois?"
28524Besides-- do we know what_ are_ small details?"
28524Burrage?"
28524Burrage?"
28524Burrage?"
28524But Lois''s question--"The Bible?"
28524But are you serious?"
28524But can not a good woman use her influence to induce a man who is also good, only not Christian, to go the right way?
28524But do n''t you_ see_, George, what an unhappy thing it would be for Tom to marry this girl?"
28524But from New York?"
28524But go on; which of these two do you like best?"
28524But how could it be mended?"
28524But how should those old Persians know so much, with out knowing more?
28524But how was she going to hold out until spring?
28524But how would you help, Lois?"
28524But how?"
28524But if you have, what else is to be waited for?"
28524But in such weather as this, surely they would not expect you?"
28524But is every body wearing them?"
28524But is everybody wearing them in New York?"
28524But it occurs to me to ask, Why should there be any match in the case here?"
28524But later, when the visitors were gone, she opened the door of her room, and said,"Madge and Lois, can you come in here for a few minutes?
28524But now the other question did ask for consideration;--Why she winced at the idea that it might come to Madge?
28524But now, what was she going to bring forth to him out of the Bible?
28524But she grew enthusiastic; she wished she was going all the way over, and I told her she would have to drop_ me_ at some wayside station--""Where?"
28524But suppose I find a way, and suppose I succeed; what then?
28524But suppose it so; still, what of it?
28524But then, if the question of conscience could be so got over,_ why_ was she troubled?
28524But to return-- Miss Lothrop, what has experience done for you in the Isles of Shoals?"
28524But was she not going to a distance herself?
28524But what do I say?
28524But what do you do for pleasure then, up there in Shampuashuh?"
28524But what made the girl so provokingly happy?
28524But what makes her look so unhappy, Lois?"
28524But what proof is there that the young lady of whom we were speaking has no family?"
28524But what shall I tell him?
28524But what then?
28524But what''s in''em all?"
28524But whatever did bring you here?
28524But when is human nature consistent?
28524But when you have got''em on the shelves, what next?
28524But where did_ you_ learn that?"
28524But where is she?"
28524But why did his friends not want him to marry her?
28524But why do you say so?"
28524But why should I regret it?"
28524But why should she, Lois?"
28524But why with her?
28524But why, better not?
28524But will it not be at all inconvenient?"
28524But wo n''t you come back again?"
28524But, beside having the bread sweet, is it not allowed us to have the best we can get?"
28524But-- what?"
28524But--""If I add to it the crossing of a glacier?"
28524But--""Would you like it all, my darling?"
28524But--""You will let me say what you shall do?"
28524But_ how_ do you mean it, Lois?
28524By way of illustrating Mrs. Armadale, or me?"
28524By''good family''you mean--?"
28524Can she be in love?
28524Can you say of yourself that you are truly_ happy?_"Lois met his eyes in a little wonderment at this questioning, and answered a plain"yes."
28524Caruthers?"
28524Caruthers?"
28524Charity spoke up and asked,"To draw what?"
28524Clergyman, you mean?
28524Could anything be more practical?
28524Could both be life?
28524Could it be that he had prematurely brought things to a decision, and so got them decided wrong?
28524Could it be?--and what if?
28524Could not somebody else be found to do it?"
28524Could she unlearn these ways, perhaps?
28524Could that be the absolute fact?
28524Dangerous?"
28524Decidedly too much for a picture not meant to be looked at?"
28524Did I tell you, mother, what that lady was doing?"
28524Did Tom Caruthers know?
28524Did he come to_ you_ for help too?"
28524Did he know no better than that?
28524Did he, possibly, care about Madge?
28524Did it never strike you, Miss Julia, that there is a certain degree of sameness in our world?
28524Did n''t you never get tempted?"
28524Did ye learn anything, Lois, while you was away?"
28524Did you ever hear that Miss-- Lothrop''s family were strictly religious?"
28524Did you ever read the''Rape of the Lock''?"
28524Did you ever see such bright pimpernel?
28524Did you feel miserable?"
28524Did you mean it?"
28524Did you say six feet?"
28524Did you take care of the milk, Lois?
28524Dillwyn''s?"
28524Dillwyn?"
28524Dillwyn?"
28524Dillwyn?"
28524Dillwyn?"
28524Dillwyn?"
28524Dillwyn?"
28524Dillwyn?"
28524Dillwyn?"
28524Dillwyn?"
28524Dillwyn?"
28524Dillwyn?"
28524Do n''t it look as if nobody ever did anything here?
28524Do n''t it take a good deal?"
28524Do n''t they think themselves, all those grand folks, do n''t they think themselves a hitch or two higher than Shampuashuh folks?"
28524Do n''t you have breakfast?
28524Do n''t you know how they roar up and down?
28524Do n''t you know what they are?''
28524Do n''t you like him?
28524Do n''t you like it out here this morning?"
28524Do n''t you see a great many people in New York that are in want of some sort of help?"
28524Do n''t you see it will save them all expense?
28524Do n''t you see, Tom, you must give it up?"
28524Do n''t you see?
28524Do n''t you see?
28524Do not you?"
28524Do not you?"
28524Do you dislike me, Lois?"
28524Do you draw?"
28524Do you find anything here to like now, really?"
28524Do you know him?"
28524Do you know him?"
28524Do you know?
28524Do you like no one but me?"
28524Do you like this queer place, I want to know?"
28524Do you mean what you say?
28524Do you mind going up two flights of stairs?"
28524Do you notice how neat everything is?
28524Do you observe the neatness of this broad street?"
28524Do you recollect a certain walk in the rain?"
28524Do you recollect a friend of mine, for whom you negotiated lodgings at a far- off country village?"
28524Do you see any harm in it?"
28524Do you set much valley on professions that mean nothing?"
28524Do you spend your evenings alone?"
28524Do you suppose she will be contented with our ways of going on?"
28524Do you think that''s enough?"
28524Do you use the words soberly?"
28524Do you want something of me?"
28524Do you want to go, Lois?"
28524Do you want to talk to me,''_ unter vier Augen_''?"
28524Do you wonder that I seize a chance?"
28524Do you, possibly_ like_ me, Lois?"
28524Do_ you_ think she is very pretty, George?"
28524Does Mrs. Wishart say?"
28524Does not the lady in question like Appledore as well as you do?"
28524Does she know anything?"
28524Does she think of you as you think of her?"
28524Does the girl know you are an admirer of hers?"
28524Drawing was a simple thing enough; but how was she to propose teaching languages, or suggest algebra, or insist upon history?
28524Else what mean Christ''s lamentations over Jerusalem?
28524For Lois and Madge, now?
28524From what?"
28524George, do n''t you think he_ deserves_ something better?
28524Greville?"
28524Ha''you got your old appetite for common doin''s?"
28524Had Philip given up his fancy?
28524Had he?
28524Had he?
28524Had she some of that preternatural intuition, plain old country woman though she was, which makes a woman see the invisible and hear the inaudible?
28524Handsome?"
28524Has anybody been here?"
28524Have I done any good-- or only harm-- by acceding to that mad proposition of Philip''s?
28524Have n''t we had governors and governors, of Massachusetts and Connecticut both; and judges and ministers, ever so many, among our ancestors?
28524Have you a Bible here?"
28524Have you a voice?"
28524Have you ever been to Torcello?"
28524Have you forgotten already what that means?
28524Have you gone and said yes to that man?"
28524Have you not a corner to yourself?"
28524He is a weak character; do you know it, Philip?"
28524He was Miss Caruthers''property; how came he to busy himself at all with her own insignificant self?
28524Height is nothing, and money is nothing; but family-- and breeding-- and habits--""What is her family?"
28524Hey, Tom?
28524His wife demanded to know what he was laughing at?
28524How am I ever to be any wiser?"
28524How am I to know the person in whom I am to be interested?"
28524How can you ask?
28524How can you say so?
28524How could he spend his life so in doing nothing?
28524How could it be else?
28524How could there be a cloud of unrest and discontent on her brow, and those displeased lines about her lips?
28524How different?
28524How do they dig them?"
28524How do they live-- by keeping boarders?"
28524How do you all do, Tom?"
28524How do you do, old boy?"
28524How do you know she speaks good grammar, Mr. Dillwyn?
28524How do you like him, Lois?"
28524How do you mean?"
28524How far, George?"
28524How is it?
28524How is that?"
28524How long has Mrs. Wishart been laid up now?"
28524How long has the town been so distinguished?"
28524How many children does your school number?"
28524How many sorts did they have, at one dinner?"
28524How much, do you suppose, do girls in general know?
28524How some people tried to be interested--""Like you?"
28524How then?
28524How was Solomon''s view mistaken?
28524How was anybody to know what he was eatin''?"
28524How was the wooing to be done?
28524How will you ever get married, Lois?"
28524How''s the sick lady?
28524How?
28524I am afraid I am putting you to great inconvenience?"
28524I am all protected, do n''t you see?
28524I am supposing that this man, your friend-- Do I know him?"
28524I do n''t know whether we''re any_ better_ than other folks, but we''re religious; and your men of accomplishments ai n''t, be they?"
28524I have the girl''s image before my eyes, mentally, but words have neither form nor colour; how shall I paint with them?
28524I mean, how do you like_ us?_""Mrs. Wishart, I like_ you_ very much,"said the girl with a certain sweet spirit.
28524I mean, not always_ sober;_ did you think I meant that?
28524I mean, were they all like her?"
28524I mean, why ai n''t the village here, and the people?
28524I must tell you--""You never knew a wish bring fair weather?"
28524I never say nothin''I do n''t know, nor deny nothin''I_ du_ know; ai n''t that a good principle?"
28524I rise from my prayer,--there is no voice, nor writing, nor visible sign; how am I the wiser?"
28524I should like to know why things are any better for looking pretty, when all''s done?"
28524I suppose we might go straight in?"
28524I suppose you found out?"
28524I suppose you have another corner, where to sleep?"
28524I thought you were going to Europe?"
28524I was saying only the other day-- three days ago; this is Friday, is n''t it?
28524I watched her a while, and then, says I,''What are you doin'', if you please?
28524I wo n''t give you the whole of it--''Is thy earthly house distressed?
28524I wonder if one can get anything to eat in this place?"
28524I wonder if she will keep that seat opposite us?
28524I wonder why?"
28524If enjoyment would make them smile, where could more means of enjoyment be heaped up, than at this feast?
28524If he has got something to say, why do n''t he_ say_ it, and be done with it?"
28524If life is worth nothing, why should one work to keep it up?"
28524If they are tired, why do n''t they go away?"
28524In the words?
28524Inconsistent!--but who is not inconsistent?
28524Is a man ever a match for a woman, do you think, Dillwyn, if she takes something seriously in hand?"
28524Is all the world gone yet?"
28524Is he fond of pickles?"
28524Is it a general characteristic of Shampuashuh?"
28524Is it at my stupidity?"
28524Is it quite certain Tom will not have his head after all?
28524Is it really a bad thing?"
28524Is it that you do not enjoy these occasions yourself?"
28524Is it the black- haired beauty, with her white forehead and clean- cut features?
28524Is music intended to be in the programme?
28524Is n''t he a handsome fellow?
28524Is n''t it beautiful?
28524Is n''t it extraordinary how they do?
28524Is n''t it lovely?"
28524Is n''t it ten o''clock?"
28524Is n''t that an idea?
28524Is n''t that enough?"
28524Is n''t that good?"
28524Is she educated?
28524Is she handsome?"
28524Is she pretty?"
28524Is that all?"
28524Is that all?"
28524Is that what you''re after?
28524Is the frost well out of the ground yet?"
28524Is the tea made?
28524Is there no desolation anywhere else, that men should come to the Isles of Shoals?"
28524Is this Puritanism?"
28524Is this my room, did you say?
28524Is this the house we are coming to?
28524Is_ this_ what the highest society in England is like?"
28524It begins about''this world''s vain store;''ha''you done with the world?"
28524It has been pleasant?"
28524It is the business of clergymen, is n''t it, to tell us what is in it?
28524It took away my breath at first""You got it again, I hope?"
28524It was cloudy with unhappiness; and she ought to be very happy, Mr. Lenox thought; had she not everything in the world that she cared about?
28524It was impatience, in part, he guessed, which made it so;_ but_ why was she impatient?
28524It was inconvenient; and why was it inconvenient?
28524It was pleasure that raised that delicious bloom in her cheeks, she decided; was it anything more than pleasure?
28524It''ll be country ways she''ll be treated to; and the question is, how she''ll like''em?"
28524It''s better''n a book, to hear that girl talk, now, ai n''t it?"
28524Lenox, Miss Lothrop.--What have you found in this desert?"
28524Lenox?"
28524Lenox?"
28524Let me see-- we came over in November, did n''t we?
28524Lifton, wo n''t you have the goodness to get this into my buggy?
28524Listening to Mrs. Barclay''s music at first was an absorbing pleasure; then Mrs. Barclay asked casually one day"Shall I teach you?"
28524Livin''shut up, you mean?
28524Lois could have laughed, for did she not handle everything?
28524Lois got the Bible and obeyed,"''Be ye not unequally yoked together with unbelievers: for what fellowship hath righteousness with unrighteousness?
28524Lois queried again and again what brought him there?
28524Lois said to herself; what did it concern her, whether such a marriage were permissible or no?
28524Lois, do you hear me?
28524Lois, have n''t you got anything to do, that you sit there with your hands in your lap?"
28524Lois, may I have you, to take care of the rest of my life, as my very own?"
28524Lois, when are you going to be married?"
28524Lois, you never see a handsomer dinner''n this in New York, did you?
28524Lois?"
28524Look at all the wretched ruined lives one sees; what becomes of those plans for good for them?"
28524Look here, young man-- where are we going?"
28524Madge and Charity-- you say they are gone to New Haven?"
28524Mahogany, or walnut, or cherry, or maple, or pine?
28524Mamma, do you hear Mr. Dillwyn?
28524Mark''s?"
28524Marriage?"
28524Marx?"
28524Marx?"
28524May I come and warm myself?
28524May I go home for breakfast?"
28524May I not know?"
28524May I not try to get more money, in order that I may have better things?
28524Mebbe you do n''t think there''s no harm in wine and the like?"
28524Midgin?"
28524Midgin?"
28524Miss Lothrop, would he not look a great deal better if he would cut off those Hungarian twists, and wear his upper lip like a Christian?"
28524Mother, ai n''t that what you would say is a waste of time?"
28524Mother, are you comfortable?"
28524Mother, do you know the way Madge and Lois are goin''on?"
28524Mother, do you like all that stuff?"
28524Mr. Caruthers?
28524Mr. Dillwyn wishes--""And are you going to do everything he wishes?"
28524Mr. Dillwyn, by the way, was he one of your admirers, Lois?"
28524Mr. Dillwyn, the horses have been walking this great while, and we are a long way from home; wo n''t you drive on?"
28524Mr. Dillwyn,_ you_ are not going out?"
28524Mrs. Armadale, your granddaughter confesses the pleasure; and what else do we live for, but to get the most good out of life?"
28524Mrs. Barclay, will you get in?
28524Mrs. Marx, what is life good for, but to be happy?"
28524Must it be?
28524Must she keep out of sight of him?
28524Must we not take people as we find them?"
28524Must we not, a little, as I said, take people as we find them?"
28524My brother?
28524My dear, you do n''t want to be out of the fashion?"
28524Nervous, eh?
28524No more coffee, my dear?
28524No such relations were desired by any such person; what ailed Lois even to take up the subject?
28524Not Romulus and Remus, I s''pose?"
28524Not a faint heart?"
28524Not backwoods farming, I suppose?"
28524Not merely alone now, to- night; she had chosen this, and liked it;( did she like it?)
28524Not one o''your gals?"
28524Not to deny me?
28524Not_ soon_, at any rate?"
28524Now I ask you, as one who can tell-- what have we all come here for?"
28524Now have you done with objections?"
28524Now tell me how you and Mrs. Caruthers come to be at the top of this pass in a snow- storm on the sixteenth of June?"
28524Now we women-- Philip, is the thing mutual already?
28524Now what is it this year?
28524Now, may I go on?
28524Now, what is it?"
28524Now, will you come?"
28524Now?--how was it?
28524O Madge, is n''t it too delicious?"
28524O, by the way!--talking of seeing,--_have_ you seen Dulles& Grant''s new Persian rugs and carpets?"
28524O, could it be?
28524O, if folks have got nothing else to do, and just want to make a flare- up-- but for us in Shampuashuh, what''s the good of them?
28524O, to whom, Lois?
28524O, wo n''t it be magnificent?"
28524Of what are you thinking?"
28524Of what directions are you thinking?
28524Of what use, then?
28524On what did the logic of it rest?
28524Only''wiles''you never descend to;''blame''is not to be thought of; if you forbid praise, what is left to me but the rest of it?"
28524Or are the napkins not essential?"
28524Or do n''t you like it?"
28524Or suppose even the brains were there, and her mission succeeded?
28524Or they; what did it matter?
28524Or to sing?"
28524Or will everybody go to Shampuashuh?
28524Or, indeed, how could they do it?"
28524Ought I not to pay him for his trouble?"
28524Ought Madge to share them?
28524Overturns your theory a leetle, do n''t it?
28524Perhaps Lois was tired with talking, seeing she had been doing nothing else for two hours, but what ailed Philip?
28524Perhaps Miss Lothrop has formed her opinion, and practice, upon knowledge of this latter kind?"
28524Perhaps he would ask her; and why, why did Lois wish he would not?
28524Philip, what are you doing here?"
28524Preparation for what?
28524Really, do n''t you think Tom might do worse?"
28524Sears?"
28524Seelye?"
28524Seriously, do n''t you think we might mend our quarters?"
28524Seriously,--I am going to wait to see you home; you will not let me wait in the rain?"
28524Service, I suppose you mean, of one''s fellow creatures?"
28524Shall I tell you my plans?"
28524Shall we go?"
28524Shall we land, and see things by moonlight?
28524Shampuashuh do n''t cultivate exotics, then?"
28524She asks--""Why do n''t you read the letter?"
28524She did not fancy that he cared much about the game, or much about the talk; what was he there for, so often?
28524She has the blood of ever so many of the old Pilgrims in her veins; and that is good descent, Philip?"
28524She queried what time it could be; was the evening half gone?
28524She thought she knew what the grief was; but how to touch it?
28524She would keep herself out of the way; easy at Appledore--"Have I found you, Miss Lothrop?"
28524Shy?"
28524So he asked,"But what is it about the wine?"
28524So he may come?
28524So intently that she almost forgot what she was eating, and she started at Mrs. Marx''s sudden question--"Well, how do you like it?
28524So that is one of the things that strike you here?
28524So this gives him a chance to come here again, do n''t you see?"
28524So work our way--""Always making purchases?"
28524So you remember him?
28524Starks.--What can I do for you?
28524Stay on and keep the house here just as they have done?"
28524Tea will be ready in a minute-- would you like to see your room first?"
28524Tell me, child, do you do that sort of thing at home?"
28524That ai n''t in the book, is it, Lois?"
28524That handsome young Mr. Caruthers-- does he make himself a bore too?
28524That is, letters and words?"
28524That means, loving to dig in the dirt, do n''t it?"
28524That would mean, individual plans, Lois; for you individually, and for me?"
28524The people are somewhere-- the children and grandchildren of those that lived here; what''s become of''em?"
28524The question now is, do you care whether it is done ill or well?"
28524The voices were sometimes delightful; but the words--""Well, the words?"
28524Then as he gave it back, remarked,"This does not tell me yet_ what_ this satisfying food is?"
28524Then he ai n''t one o''your Appledore friends, Lois?"
28524Then what was it to her if he liked Madge?
28524Then why should n''t we take it?"
28524Then you s''pose there ever_ was_ sich a man as Romulus?"
28524Then, seeing a small smile break on the lips of the gardener, she asked Lois what she was thinking of?
28524There are three, are there not?
28524There''s one clever chap in the house-- he showed me the way up here; who''s he?"
28524There?
28524They took her, did n''t they?"
28524Things were not ripe for any decided step on Mr. Dillwyn''s part, and how should they become so?
28524This elegant creature?
28524Those are powers you never call in play?"
28524To Madge, perhaps?
28524To what?
28524Tom, how many times have you been to see her?"
28524Too long, did you think?"
28524Uncle Tim?"
28524Violets here, on these rocks?"
28524WHO IS SHE?
28524WHO IS SHE?
28524Was he that kind?"
28524Was it easier to be good there?
28524Was it indeed an absolute command that justified and necessitated the promise made to her grandmother?
28524Was it merely because Mr. Dillwyn was a man of the world, and she did not want her sister to get entangled with him?
28524Was it not better to sit and talk even with Mr. Dillwyn, than to dig and plant peas?
28524Was it possible that he too could be following in those steps of Tom Caruthers, from which Tom''s mother was at such pains to divert her son?
28524Was it some imprudence?
28524Was it the air?
28524Was she not foolish to have come?
28524Was such the inevitable and universal conclusion?
28524Water?"
28524We are quite out of the race and struggle and uneasiness of the world, do n''t you see?
28524Well, Philip,--will you go on with the lesson I suppose I have interrupted?
28524Well, how many times, Tom?
28524Well, then,--the thing is going on?"
28524Well, you''ve had a visitor?"
28524Were those the desired Isles of Shoals?
28524What advice shall I give him?
28524What ails the things as they are?
28524What am I to give?"
28524What are hands made for?"
28524What are they doing?"
28524What are they?
28524What are they?"
28524What are you doing here?"
28524What are you put out for?
28524What are you thinking about?"
28524What are you thinking of?"
28524What brought you here, Mrs. Wishart?
28524What business was it of his, the particular spring of happiness she had found to drink of?
28524What business?
28524What can I do to thank you?"
28524What can I do with a set of master tailors?"
28524What can she do, Tom?"
28524What can they make that I ca n''t make better?"
28524What compensations?
28524What could I do?
28524What could be worse?"
28524What did he mean?
28524What did he want to see you for, then?"
28524What did it signify just_ how_ her own work should be done, if only it were like work?
28524What did it signify, whom Mr. Dillwyn liked?
28524What did you mean?
28524What did you think of him?"
28524What did you think of my supposed choice?"
28524What do the crowds who fill your second drawing- room know about such experience?"
28524What do ye call it, Lois?"
28524What do you call early?"
28524What do you mean by it?"
28524What do you mean, dear?"
28524What do you mean?"
28524What do you mean?"
28524What do you remember about him?"
28524What do you say to it?"
28524What do you say, Miss Lothrop, to panelling a room at five hundred dollars the panel?"
28524What do you see there that seems so very wonderful?"
28524What do you suppose the white mouse had to do with your old gentleman''s seclusion?"
28524What do you think now of your brother''s choice, Julia?"
28524What do you think of me in my proposed character as having the ownership and the care of you?"
28524What do you think of that young man?"
28524What do you think?"
28524What do you want to buy it for?"
28524What do you want to know more tongues than your own for, to begin with?
28524What do your eyes see, that mine perhaps do not?"
28524What does he mean by it?"
28524What drove you to it?"
28524What else should Tom look for in a wife?"
28524What else were they made for?
28524What else will shut them out?
28524What else''ll go in?"
28524What for?
28524What had she and they in common?
28524What had you done?"
28524What has put all this in your head?"
28524What has set you to thinking about it?"
28524What have you been doing to yourself?"
28524What have you in your hand?
28524What hinders you?
28524What if Mr. Dillwyn were there too?
28524What if she did, Charity?
28524What if she do n''t?
28524What in all the world can you do with so many?"
28524What in all the world do you expect to do up there at Battersby?"
28524What is Shampuashuh to you?"
28524What is here, dear Mrs. Wishart, besides you?
28524What is it about, now?"
28524What is it to you?
28524What is it, Miss Lothrop?"
28524What is she like?"
28524What is she?"
28524What is that to us, if we have no middle class?
28524What is that?"
28524What is the girl thinking of?"
28524What is the harm?
28524What is the matter with it?"
28524What is the question?"
28524What is there for you?
28524What is there?"
28524What is this girl''s family, do you know?"
28524What is this, Williams?"
28524What is your substitute?"
28524What is yours, Lois?--what have you to say to me?"
28524What is''art criticism''?"
28524What kept you there?"
28524What made her, then, so happy?
28524What makes Mr. Dillwyn do all that?
28524What makes you happy?"
28524What matter whether rough or smooth, alone or in company?
28524What on earth should you go to live_ there_ for?"
28524What other consideration governs the decision?
28524What ought he to have in a wife, Mrs. Caruthers?
28524What purpose indeed was there to live for?
28524What room would you give her?"
28524What should I do with a piano?"
28524What should we do with a load of silver?"
28524What should we hinder''em for?
28524What sister is not critical of her brother''s choice of a wife?
28524What sort of a man is he?
28524What sort of a place_ is_ the Isles of Shoals anyhow?"
28524What sort of persons?"
28524What steps?"
28524What then?
28524What use can all these krinkum- krankums be to you?
28524What was any un- Christian man to her, that her heart should beat so at considering possible relations between them?
28524What was his name?
28524What was his name?"
28524What was it about an eagle''s youth?
28524What was it to her?
28524What was the Lord''s beautiful creation to them?
28524What was the singing?"
28524What was this?
28524What will become of your garden?"
28524What will people think of me, if I tell them their playing is abominable?"
28524What will you do with''em then?"
28524What would become of mother, landed on a bare rock like that, with nobody to speak to, and nothing but crabs to eat?"
28524What would fill it worthily?
28524What would happen if you did?
28524What would you think of a man who spent his whole life in painting?"
28524What''ll you do with all that space of emptiness?
28524What''s all the folks about, that they let you do all the nursing?"
28524What''s it all for?
28524What''s that bell for, dinner or supper?
28524What''s the business?"
28524What''s the difference?"
28524What''s the good o''readin''so much?"
28524What''s the good of all that?"
28524What''s the good of floating round in the world as I have been doing all summer and winter here this year?
28524What''s the good of it?"
28524What''s the matter with this sick woman?"
28524What''s the news?"
28524What''s the purpose in all I''ve been doing since I left college?
28524What''s the wrong you mean?"
28524What?"
28524What_ do_ people wear?"
28524What_ do_ you do for pleasure up there then, Miss Lothrop?"
28524What_ do_ you drink?
28524What_ is_ the business?"
28524Whatever would you do with such a wife, Philip Dillwyn?
28524When do you expect to get there?"
28524When does he wish to come?"
28524When he is Love itself, and would have the very best things for each one of us?"
28524When you have said,''Lord, have mercy upon us, miserable sinners''--did you feel guilty?
28524When you''ve got a pretty thing, what should you draw it for?"
28524When?"
28524Where are they?
28524Where are you going to get money for coal and bonnets and tablecloths and napkins and curtains, before we begin to have the board paid in?"
28524Where are you going?"
28524Where are your people?"
28524Where can we be better, meanwhile, than in Switzerland?"
28524Where did you come from?
28524Where did you hear them?"
28524Where do they come from?"
28524Where do you get breakfast?
28524Where else?"
28524Where have you been all summer?
28524Where have_ you_ come from?"
28524Where is bread to come from, to keep them alive to do it?"
28524Where is help to come from?
28524Where is the logic of that?"
28524Where''ll you put''em?"
28524Where''s the old dead village?
28524Where_ are_ the Isles of Shoals?
28524Wherefore do ye spend money for that which is not bread?
28524Which of these ladies is_ the_ one?
28524Who are these people?"
28524Who cares, except the music master?"
28524Who has not taken counsel of a fire?
28524Who is he?
28524Who is it?"
28524Who is satisfied?"
28524Who is she?
28524Who is she?
28524Who is the letter from?"
28524Who sent the flowers, Williams?"
28524Who should do it?"
28524Who was at Appledore?
28524Who was it?"
28524Who was she before she married?"
28524Who were they?
28524Who''s else?
28524Who''s she?"
28524Whose children?"
28524Why did her heart ache?
28524Why did the name of one child come to her lips and not the other?
28524Why did you not bring Miss Lothrop out?"
28524Why in the world should Mr. Dillwyn wish that Lois were not so content?
28524Why may not a beautiful head of hair be dressed flowingly, because the fashion favours the people who have no hair at all?
28524Why may not a plain dress set off a fine figure, because the mode is to leave no unbroken line or sweeping drapery anywhere?
28524Why not do as you like?"
28524Why not, just to see how it tasted?
28524Why not?
28524Why not?"
28524Why should I tell you, supposin''I could?
28524Why should Mr. Dillwyn have got her out?
28524Why should it give her pain?
28524Why should n''t there?
28524Why should not the young people like each other?
28524Why should she concern herself with the matter?
28524Why should she keep out of sight of him?
28524Why should she not say no?
28524Why should they?"
28524Why should you be displeased in Saratoga, or anywhere, merely because other people are pleased there?
28524Why should you do such a thing?"
28524Why would they not be better relegated to Ocean''s domain, from which they were only saved by a few feet of upheaval?
28524Why, Phil, what do the men and women of this world live for?
28524Why, child,_ must_ you do all that?"
28524Why, even if Lois were happy in some new- found human treasure, should it move him, Philip Dillwyn, with discomfort?
28524Why?
28524Why?"
28524Will Miss Lothrop enlighten us?"
28524Will everybody else be?"
28524Will she fetch all the folks down here?
28524Will the people give you breakfast so early?
28524Will you charge it all upon me?--and let me make it good as best I can?"
28524Will you really?
28524Will you send me away?
28524Will you take the place, and do what you can for these girls?"
28524Will you tell me, Miss Lothrop, what are the pleasures in your mind when you speak of their coming unsought?"
28524Will you?
28524Will you?"
28524Will you?"
28524Will you?"
28524Willing to retain her guest?
28524Wishart?"
28524Wishart?"
28524Wishart?"
28524Wishart?"
28524Wishart?"
28524Wishart?"
28524Wishart?"
28524Wo n''t it be fun?"
28524Wo n''t you explain?"
28524Would Madge refuse?
28524Would he think she meant to intimate that he was depriving her of a luxury?
28524Would it be indiscreet, if I were to ask Miss Lothrop what she can possibly mean under the use of the term''_ work_''?"
28524Would she do for a wife for him?
28524Would they never reach home?
28524Would you like to join her?"
28524Would you not like better to be in the country?
28524Write me, wo n''t you?"
28524Yes, I am Mrs. Barclay; but who are you?"
28524Yes, thought that lady to herself, and what will be the end of it?
28524Yet why should she wish to see it?
28524You are as fair as-- whatever shall I compare you to?
28524You are not alone?"
28524You are not going to be Quixote enough to educate a wife for another man?"
28524You are not well?"
28524You can not do the farming?"
28524You do not know French?"
28524You do not mean religious?"
28524You do not mean_ that?_""Yes,"she said.
28524You do not think Mrs. Wishart''s house is the best place, or her company the best assistance for that, do you?"
28524You have been here long enough to judge of us now?"
28524You have just come?"
28524You know what a''yoke''is?"
28524You know, Enoch knew?"
28524You mean it of me as a human being, I trust?
28524You mean, I might marry a rich man some day?"
28524You must make very slow progress?"
28524You recollect our talk one Sunday in the rain?"
28524You sang it loud enough and plain enough; ha''you forgotten?
28524You will do it, wo n''t you?"
28524You will not think it unreasonable, if that fact makes me intolerant of any more waiting, will you?"
28524You would not take a silver spade to break ground with?"
28524You would rather be shot than live easy?"
28524You''ll hev''em walnut, wo n''t you?
28524You''re not serious?"
28524_ Are_ you havin''a good time?"
28524_ Art_ need not be_ false_, need it?"
28524_ Did_ you?"
28524_ I_ am bound-- doubly; what is it to me, what they do?
28524_ Is_ it the beautiful, by the way, or is it something else?"
28524_ Is_ the Bible absolute about it?
28524_ Is_ there anything to do or to see in this place?"
28524_ Then_, it must be that she herself liked_ his_ society-- liked him-- yes, a little too well; else what harm in his preferring Madge?
28524_ have_ I done them good?
28524_ you?_""Yes,"said Lois, looking at her and laughing.
28524_ your_ house, do you mean?
28524a friend of yours, was it not?
28524a new invitation?
28524all this luxury of sense and feeling was not good for her; did not belong to her; and why should she taste at all a delight which must be so fleeting?
28524and are you_ sure_ he did not gain some sort of lien upon this heart which you are so keen to win?
28524and did wet or dry make any difference to her?
28524and dish up dinner enough for twelve people, to feed a hundred?"
28524and had they done it?
28524and how comes she-- so dangerous-- to be visiting you?"
28524and how do you get them?"
28524and if it quenched her thirst, as she said it did, why should he be anything but glad of it?
28524and if she did?"
28524and still more, why should anybody make a pleasure visit there?
28524and stimulate this lady''s courage?"
28524and what are they, that you should go to see them?"
28524and what are they?"
28524and what are we to understand?"
28524and what brings him to Shampuashuh?"
28524and what brought you here again?"
28524and what communion hath light with darkness?
28524and what concord hath Christ with Belial?
28524and what do they want a tree for?"
28524and what ever will come of it all?
28524and what have you got?
28524and what sort of a place have we come to?"
28524and when did you come?"
28524and where is she?
28524and who was the cleverest?
28524and who was the kindest to you?
28524and your labour for that which satisfieth not?
28524appealed the sister now to a third member of the party,--"do you hear?
28524are n''t you wiser?"
28524are you going to let him have you?"
28524can you tell me?
28524cried Tom in a different tone--"What are you doing there?"
28524cried his mother,"is that you?"
28524curiosities?
28524did n''t he say he was going to make a fire?"
28524did you ever talk with her?"
28524do you call that a lively subject?"
28524first softly and then loud?
28524girls with ever so much money and family?
28524given up to wickedness?"
28524have you said yes to that man?
28524her sister, who had made no promise to her grandmother, and who was only bound, and perhaps would not be bound, by Bible commands?
28524here''s a box to lift down-- won''t you bear a hand?"
28524how should I dislike you?"
28524in some pleasant place?"
28524is n''t he too bad?
28524may I come with you?"
28524not as an individual?
28524not drinking wine?"
28524or after breakfast either, for that matter?"
28524or ai n''t there time?
28524or anything else?
28524or do you want a bookcase fixed up all reg''lar?"
28524or for Scotch oatmeal bannocks?
28524or for sour corn cake?"
28524or go back to Venice?"
28524or had they possibly not done tea yet?
28524or keep me''for good,''as the children say?"
28524or miserable?"
28524or precious things?"
28524or to the children?"
28524or was it a less stringent thing, that might possibly be passed over by one not so bound?
28524or what can_ I_ do about it?
28524or what is yours?"
28524or what part hath he that believeth with an infidel?''"
28524or will you have the complaisance to go with me to see about the Murillo?"
28524pursued Madge,"who was the nicest person you saw?"
28524said Julia, laughing--"how could you think I meant that?
28524said Lois, smiling at the transition in her thoughts.--"For salting, you mean?"
28524said Lois, with her face all illuminated,--"would you like it?"
28524said he, without betraying on his own part any recollection;"how does that come in?
28524said she,"what brought you here?"
28524said the elder lady;"what could be worse than for him to bring such a wife into the house?"
28524said the former;--"Tom Caruthers, who used to be here so often?"
28524she said, turning to Lois;"and what do you do when you are here?"
28524she said;"and is not that eyebright delicate, with its edging of colour?
28524so beyond what he or anybody could give her?
28524so secure in her contentment?
28524the contrast?"
28524the drawing?
28524the old house at Battersby?"
28524the usual little soup fish?"
28524this very uncomfortable situation among the rocks here?
28524thought Lois; is this indeed all?
28524thought her hostess; and yet, fair as she is, what possible chance for her in a good family?
28524to go about his business, and come New Year''s, or next Fourth of July?"
28524was_ that_ to be brought upon his head?
28524were_ they_ uncommon too?
28524what do you think?
28524what do you understand is forbidden by that?
28524what do you want of one now?"
28524what else should it be?"
28524what is it?"
28524what is that?"
28524what sort of hats are they wearing in New York?"
28524what wonder?
28524what''s the harm?"
28524where did you come from?
28524why did n''t you tell them we were just going out?"
28524why do you bring it up?"
28524why should anybody live there?
28524why should n''t one have the pleasure?
28524will you let me go along?"
28524with music, I mean?"
28524with no qualification of golden butter?
28524with so few travellers?"
28524you can not be going out in this storm?"
28524you do not suppose that a man can not belong to the world and yet be what you call a Christian?
28524you like this better than the other room, do n''t you?"
28524your grandmother''s?"