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 |
---|---|
17361 | ''Der Schrauber wirklich mit Mala[86] un Ranze? 17361 ''Sein Sie''s wahrhaftig? |
17361 | Ah, ihr sprecht deutsch? |
17361 | Freund Michel, was machst für ein banges Gesicht? |
17361 | Wat seggt de Kirl? |
17361 | Willst, lieber Freund, du das Neueste sehn? 17361 ( não é?) 17361 ............... nicht wahr? 17361 1916[?]. 17361 = N.=_ Brazilian German.__ High German._ no é? 17361 Was soll''ch mit dem Krempel lo tun?'' |
17361 | _ Gutes Geschäft oder eine Pechincha._[85] Wer reit''lo dorch Storm un Wettergeriesel? |
13545 | And is mine one? |
13545 | And what use will my thrifty Aunt make of the blue violets? |
13545 | Aunt Sarah, did you know Frau Schmidt, instead of using flour alone when baking cakes, frequently uses a mixture of flour and cornstarch? 13545 Aunt Sarah, how was sgraffito ware made? |
13545 | Aunt Sarah, may I have the old spinning wheel in the attic? 13545 Aunt Sarah, why was straw ever put under this carpet?" |
13545 | Aunt Sarah,inquired Mary one day,"do you think it pays a housekeeper to bake her own bread?" |
13545 | Aunt Sarah,inquired Mary,"is the rhubarb large enough to use?" |
13545 | Aunt Sarah,questioned Mary one day,"do you mind if I copy some of your recipes?" |
13545 | But what did the husband think of all this? |
13545 | Did n''t I hear that worthless scamp, Fritz Schmidt, a- referrin''to me and a- sayin''to Miss Midleton fer the''servant''to bring over the butter? 13545 Do n''t you mean''That Grand Old Name Called Mary?''" |
13545 | Do tell me, Aunt, what this small iron boat, on the top shelf, was ever used for? 13545 Have you ever made rag rugs?" |
13545 | Have you forgotten, Aunt Sarah, you promised to tell me something interesting about the first red clover introduced in Bucks County? |
13545 | How are you today? |
13545 | If''twere not for God and good people, what would become of the unfortunate? |
13545 | Is_ that all_ you get? |
13545 | Mary, did you ever hear this Persian proverb? 13545 Mary, did you notice the gayly- decorated, old- fashioned coffee pot and tea caddy in the corner cupboard? |
13545 | Mary, have you ever read the poem, The Potter and the Clay?'' 13545 Now,"said Mary,"what shall we do with these stiff, ugly, haircloth- covered chairs and sofa?" |
13545 | Oh, you mean the picture on the mantel standing near those twin gilded china vases, gay with red and blue paint? |
13545 | Professor Schmidt, can you tell me the name of that weed? |
13545 | Speaking of cakes, Aunt Sarah,said Mary,"have you ever used Swansdown cake flour? |
13545 | That old mulberry tree, from the berries of which you made such delicious pies and marmalade last Summer, is it dead? |
13545 | They had no trolley cars in those days? |
13545 | Was there a pottery on your father''s farm, Aunt Sarah? |
13545 | What is it, dear? 13545 Why did you give your family of dolls such an odd name, Aunt Sarah?" |
13545 | Why,exclaimed Mary,"were there so many potteries in that locality?" |
13545 | ***** What draws my eye to yonder spot-- That bench against the wall? |
13545 | And do n''t you think we might paint the floor around the edges of the rug to imitate the woodwork? |
13545 | And is not common? |
13545 | And what is this small frame containing a yellowed piece of paper cut in intricate designs, presumably with scissors?" |
13545 | And who shall say it was not answered? |
13545 | And why was their hair all worn hanging in one braid over each shoulder, with a band over the forehead? |
13545 | And, what if we are commonplace? |
13545 | Are they anything like braided mats?" |
13545 | Aunt Sarah, where did you get this very old poem,''The Deserted City''?" |
13545 | Aunt Sarah,"exclaimed Mary,"do you mean a carpet like the one in the spare bedroom?" |
13545 | Ca n''t we consign them all to the attic? |
13545 | Could we not have it painted to imitate chestnut wood? |
13545 | Did you ever see them grow, Mary? |
13545 | Did you notice the strong, substantial manner in which it is made? |
13545 | Do n''t you think that would be pretty, Aunt Sarah?" |
13545 | Do you suppose the same birds return here from the South every Summer?" |
13545 | Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold, And to the presence in the room he said:"What writest thou?" |
13545 | FISH, CLAMS AND OYSTER( BONED SHAD) How many young cooks know how to bone a shad? |
13545 | Have you ever noticed, Aunt Sarah, what a symphony in green is the yard? |
13545 | Have you ever read the poem,''The Changed Cross?'' |
13545 | Have you ever seen an"Elbadritchel?" |
13545 | Have you never read the poem? |
13545 | He said''twas a good, serviceable color, and more economical to buy it all alike, and remarked:''What''s the difference, anyway? |
13545 | How will I ever repay you for all your kindness to me?" |
13545 | I''m hired girl What does that make out if I do work here? |
13545 | In what nobler work could women engage than in work to promote the comfort and well- being of the ones they love in the home? |
13545 | Is it the same as slip- decorated pottery?" |
13545 | It may be but a little corner, which you have been asked to fill; What matters it, if you are in it, doing the Master''s will? |
13545 | Jake, beaming with happiness, said,"Sibylla vos side by me yet?" |
13545 | Mary is a dear girl, why should she not think of marrying?" |
13545 | Mary replied,"Do n''t you think men are very queer, anyway, Aunt Sarah? |
13545 | Mary, have you ever eaten a small, sweet wafer called''Zimmet Waffle?'' |
13545 | No? |
13545 | No? |
13545 | Sadie, can you crochet?" |
13545 | Say not the days are evil-- who''s to blame? |
13545 | Seeing the letter in his hand she inquired:"What news, John?" |
13545 | She turned to her Aunt, saying,"Do n''t you think the room looks bright, cheery and livable?" |
13545 | Should she have equal political rights? |
13545 | Speaking of salt, my dear, have you read the poem,''The King''s Daughters,''by Margaret Vandegrift? |
13545 | Suffrage, the right of woman to vote; will it not take women from the home? |
13545 | Suppose we start a''girls''campfire,''right here in the country? |
13545 | Then this dull, dark, gray- blue painted woodwork; could any one imagine anything more hideously ugly? |
13545 | They certainly possessed intelligent faces, but why those queer- shaped Indian dresses? |
13545 | To quote an old physician,"If horses thrive on oats, why not boys who resemble young colts?" |
13545 | Was hot er dort i m Schtille g''denkt? |
13545 | Was n''t it her duty to leave the home and see where these products were produced, and if they were sanitary? |
13545 | Weescht du''s? |
13545 | Wer mecht es wisse-- sag? |
13545 | What did my son say?" |
13545 | What difference, if an honest heart beat beneath a laborer''s hickory shirt, or one of fine linen? |
13545 | What makes you think it is condescension for me to address you?" |
13545 | What to a hungry man is more nutritious and appetizing than a perfectly broiled, rare, juicy, steak, served hot? |
13545 | Who has not felt the sweet freshness of early morning before"the sunshine is all on the wing"or the birds awaken and begin to chatter and to sing? |
13545 | Who is it has said,''The discovery of a new dish makes more for the happiness of man than the discovery of a star''? |
13545 | Why so many strings of gaudy beads around their necks? |
13545 | Will man accord woman the same reverence she has received in the past? |
13545 | Wo n''t they look just sweet?" |
13545 | Would you like to see your Uncle''s old deed, which he came into possession of when he inherited the farm from his father?" |
13545 | Yes, and without an''alarm clock,''too, Sibylla, eh?" |
13545 | You remember, we could not decide what use to make of your old, tan cravenette stormcoat? |
13545 | You see that old locust tree against one side the ruined wall of the house?" |
13545 | You see the highest flat rock along the Narrows? |
13545 | [ Illustration: THE OLD MILL]"Aunt Sarah, what is pumpernickel?" |
13545 | exclaimed Mary,"is lard made from pork fat? |
13545 | inquired Mary,"is it like rye bread?" |
13545 | what then shall I say that is both bright and fine? |
41132 | Allow it? |
41132 | And is there no remedy? |
41132 | And my father is actually assisting in this dastardly work? |
41132 | And the payment-- eh? |
41132 | And, again, why did he send you to buy it, when his friend could surely have done so? |
41132 | Are you absolutely certain that Ella has told him nothing? |
41132 | Are you really ill, miss? |
41132 | At night? |
41132 | But how did you manage it? |
41132 | But the road is rather difficult from here to the camp, is n''t it? |
41132 | But there''s surely no danger down here? |
41132 | But why is he living down here-- in a house like this? |
41132 | But why should a woman break into your house? |
41132 | But you really do n''t take it seriously, do you? |
41132 | Can there have been somebody watching us? |
41132 | Could anybody have tampered with it, do you think? |
41132 | Did she carry her attache- case? |
41132 | Did you send him north? |
41132 | Did you travel with that woman Dexter to- night? |
41132 | Do you hear anything? |
41132 | Do you like it? |
41132 | Does the Army Service Corps fetch the milk? |
41132 | Have you got your thick gloves on? |
41132 | Have you received any despatches to- night, sir? |
41132 | Have you seen Ortmann lately? |
41132 | How can we frustrate them? |
41132 | How could he possibly know? |
41132 | How would you accomplish that? |
41132 | How, in the name of Fate, can I prevent it? 41132 I take it, my dear friend, that it will be automatic-- eh?" |
41132 | I wonder if Seymour can have been misled? |
41132 | I wonder if they are going up to York? |
41132 | I wonder if you could lend me a heavy hammer? |
41132 | I wonder if your father is making some fresh experiment? 41132 I wonder what that second noise was, dearest?" |
41132 | I wonder what their game can really be? |
41132 | I wonder who they are? |
41132 | If she knows nothing, then why are we both watched so closely by Kennedy? |
41132 | Is it possible? |
41132 | Is n''t that a train? 41132 It could be dropped by hand-- eh?" |
41132 | Now what can this mean, I wonder? 41132 Oh, so you supply the camp with milk, do you?" |
41132 | Or a woman? |
41132 | Returned, in order to distribute more German money, I suppose? |
41132 | Shall we wait here and follow them? 41132 The new stuff?" |
41132 | The other stuff is there already, I suppose? |
41132 | Then he may be German? |
41132 | Then you suspect that another plot is in progress, Ella? |
41132 | This place smells of cloves-- doesn''t it? |
41132 | Tired? 41132 Well, darling?" |
41132 | Well? |
41132 | Well? |
41132 | What connection can the stick have with the grenade-- if not for the purpose of throwing? |
41132 | What has Ortmann told you? |
41132 | What is it? |
41132 | What is that? |
41132 | What would our friends think if they knew the means by which they came into this country-- eh? |
41132 | What''s the matter? |
41132 | What''s your opinion now-- eh? 41132 What, I wonder, should detain them so long? |
41132 | Who is it? |
41132 | Who knows? |
41132 | Who''s there? |
41132 | Why do you anticipate that? |
41132 | Why not warn the police? |
41132 | Why should she go there? |
41132 | Why? |
41132 | Would the young lady care to come in and wait? |
41132 | You overheard some of their conversation-- eh? |
41132 | You''ll have a breakdown close to the house-- eh? |
41132 | Your daughter comes here sometimes, does she not? 41132 Your girl knows nothing, I hope?" |
41132 | Are you ready to risk it?" |
41132 | But if it failed? |
41132 | But now that the girl has gone, we may as well go upstairs-- eh? |
41132 | But what is your opinion regarding this?" |
41132 | But why, I wonder, should a tube run through the middle in this way?" |
41132 | Can not we warn him?" |
41132 | Could n''t you keep Ella away from him? |
41132 | Could not we part them somehow? |
41132 | Could the intruder have been a woman? |
41132 | Do you remember?" |
41132 | Had her father brought with him that terrible death- dealing machine which he and Nystrom had constructed with such accursed ingenuity? |
41132 | Had the bracelet fallen from her wrist in her hurried flight? |
41132 | Have I ever been false to my word? |
41132 | Have n''t you been convinced?" |
41132 | Have you been to the laboratory lately?" |
41132 | His was not exactly a precious life, Theodore, was it? |
41132 | I wonder if your husband would allow me?" |
41132 | I wonder what secret that old shed contains-- eh?" |
41132 | I wonder where it leads to?" |
41132 | I wonder who''s been in our garden?" |
41132 | I wonder why his friend was so eager to match it?" |
41132 | Is it not a very neat little toy, my dear Ernst?" |
41132 | It looks as if some lady got entangled in the bush, and left part of''er blouse behind-- don''t it? |
41132 | Let us go upstairs-- eh? |
41132 | Or had it fallen from the pocket of a burglar who had secured it with some booty from a house in the vicinity? |
41132 | Or was it some person set to watch her movements? |
41132 | Then I may act-- eh?" |
41132 | They believe you to be soundly asleep, I suppose?" |
41132 | To- day you are convinced-- are you not? |
41132 | Truly, you''ve been inventing some appalling things for our dear friends here-- eh?" |
41132 | Was it a burglar? |
41132 | Was it any wonder that the Press made no mention of the affair? |
41132 | Was it possible that her father and his dastardly companions possessed knowledge of what had actually occurred there? |
41132 | Was it some one desirous of knowing the secrets of that upstairs laboratory? |
41132 | What are they? |
41132 | What despatches?" |
41132 | What do you think of these?" |
41132 | What has come over you that you are so completely given over to suspicions unworthy of a great nation? |
41132 | What is in progress?" |
41132 | What more can I do than I have done? |
41132 | What shall we do?" |
41132 | What was intended? |
41132 | Where''s the nearest station, Mrs Dennis?" |
41132 | Who could she have been? |
41132 | Who knows? |
41132 | Why does he live as Mr Horton over at Wandsworth Common?" |
41132 | With what object, I wonder?" |
41132 | Would the coal- hammer do?" |
41132 | You were not mistaken as to the spot?" |
41132 | You wish to protect her-- eh?" |
41132 | you pose as a Dutch pastor, but do you not remember our German motto:_ Der beste prediger ist der Zeit_?" |
34583 | About whom else should it be? |
34583 | Ah, what poor devils? |
34583 | And again, did they not, the year before, ravage here just so, in connection with the Indians, their like- minded confederates? 34583 And little Catherine?" |
34583 | And little Ursul? |
34583 | And now? |
34583 | And that neither you, nor Conrad, nor any man in this earthly vale of tears, is good enough for the maiden? |
34583 | And then? |
34583 | And where shall I leave you, in the meantime? |
34583 | Are not you Mr. Sternberg from Canada Creek, whom I met two years ago in Albany? 34583 Are they coming, Conrad?" |
34583 | Are you already tired? |
34583 | Are you here yet, Conrad? 34583 Are you holding the dog?" |
34583 | Are you ready, Adam? |
34583 | Are you sorry that you have come with me? |
34583 | Are you then entirely God- forsaken, unhappy woman? |
34583 | Are you then not married? |
34583 | Are you yet thinking about it? |
34583 | But will they go on at once? |
34583 | But, Aunt Ursul, what in all the world is it all about? |
34583 | Can I be of any help to you, madam? |
34583 | Can you not leave the ship? |
34583 | Catherine,he said again,"can you forgive me?" |
34583 | Did you call me, Conrad? |
34583 | Do n''t you hear anything? |
34583 | Do you come at last? |
34583 | Do you mean that? |
34583 | Do you mean the young lady? |
34583 | Do you mean to give me over to other people? |
34583 | Do you think so? 34583 Does he still expect them back? |
34583 | Does not the maiden go along? |
34583 | Does that please you? |
34583 | For God''s sake, Aunt Ursul, what are you driving at? |
34583 | Have you all loaded? 34583 Have you done this for me?" |
34583 | Have you during this time of terror heard of them? |
34583 | Have you no friends among the immigrants who perhaps expect you to accompany them on their farther journey? |
34583 | Have you no parents, no relatives, no friends? |
34583 | Have you now heard, you straw- heads? 34583 Have you now heard?" |
34583 | Have you seen them? |
34583 | He failed us last year, and did we not need him then? 34583 How about the Indians?" |
34583 | How are the children? |
34583 | How can you ask? |
34583 | How can you talk in that way, aunt? |
34583 | How did you learn that I am back? |
34583 | How do you know it, Conrad? |
34583 | How do you mean, Lambert? |
34583 | How does she come now to be here? |
34583 | How is uncle? |
34583 | How many are there? |
34583 | How? |
34583 | If I must believe that my coming has robbed you of your cool courage, how could I forgive myself for having come here with you? 34583 Indeed?" |
34583 | Is it Adam Bellinger? |
34583 | Is it not true? 34583 Is n''t it a shame for one to speak so contemptuously about his own countrymen? |
34583 | Is that kind? |
34583 | Is that you, Lambert? |
34583 | Is there one among you who speaks French? |
34583 | It is always the old story: First you set the world on its head, and then you come running and cry:''What do you advise, aunt?'' 34583 No; why?" |
34583 | Now, without further parley, will you be my man, or not? |
34583 | Now,said Lambert;"why do you not shoot?" |
34583 | On what do the fellows wait? |
34583 | Or do you think you have been deceived in me? |
34583 | Shall I answer for you? |
34583 | Shall I deny it? |
34583 | Surely you have set his head right, aunt? |
34583 | That my young man has gone over to them? |
34583 | The young farmer? |
34583 | Then there really was one there? |
34583 | There she sits, there, do you see? |
34583 | What are the fellows up to now? |
34583 | What business have you to listen? 34583 What can have happened? |
34583 | What comes next? |
34583 | What do you mean by that? |
34583 | What do you mean? |
34583 | What do you want? |
34583 | What do you want? |
34583 | What do you want? |
34583 | What does that mean? |
34583 | What for? 34583 What has happened, my darling?" |
34583 | What is going on? |
34583 | What must happen? 34583 What should I advise?" |
34583 | What then do you want? |
34583 | What will happen now? 34583 What, then, does Adam want?" |
34583 | What? |
34583 | Where are they? 34583 Where is he?" |
34583 | Where was I? |
34583 | Where? |
34583 | Where? |
34583 | Who are the others? |
34583 | Who is the other one? |
34583 | Who knows,continued he,"how different it might have been last year had he been here with us? |
34583 | Who should come? |
34583 | Who? |
34583 | Why impossible? |
34583 | Why is it not suitable for me? |
34583 | Why not? 34583 Why should Conrad give up a hunt to- day which perhaps he had prearranged with his companions? |
34583 | Why should I not call out the dog for my own and my old man''s greater security? |
34583 | Why too late? |
34583 | Why? |
34583 | With or without a scalp? |
34583 | With you? |
34583 | Yes, yes, who could withstand you? 34583 Yet, Conrad,"said Aunt Ursul, interrupting him,"why are you ashamed to tell the truth? |
34583 | You are hungry and thirsty from your long hunt,said Catherine;"shall I prepare your evening meal?" |
34583 | You are looking for Lambert Sternberg? |
34583 | _ You_? |
34583 | Am I God? |
34583 | And Lambert, listen, have you not also brought me a wife?" |
34583 | And now--""And now?" |
34583 | And the Lord said unto Cain: Why art thou wroth? |
34583 | And then what would be the result should everyone, on such an occasion, drag his wife with him? |
34583 | And then? |
34583 | And who shall pay for it? |
34583 | And yet, what sound is that? |
34583 | Are the rifles all loaded?" |
34583 | Are you not ashamed of yourself, old fellow? |
34583 | Are you now willing to fork over, ha?" |
34583 | Are you satisfied with that? |
34583 | Are you surprised that the amount is so large? |
34583 | As he said no more to her as she waited, she added,"You wished to say something?" |
34583 | As they now turned into the woods she asked:"Do you truly love your brother?" |
34583 | Ask you who is He? |
34583 | Aunt Ursul moved her chair to the table, and while she was eating heartily, said:"Do you know, Lambert, that the girl is a treasure?" |
34583 | Brown?" |
34583 | Brown?" |
34583 | But how could I speak of it before? |
34583 | But how did you learn that I had returned?" |
34583 | But if you so pull the chestnuts out of the fire for us will not the sweet fruits be just as good for you? |
34583 | But what can one do when he is every instant in danger, and his crops are destroyed, and his herds are driven off? |
34583 | But who had time now to investigate such things? |
34583 | But why should he to- day stay out so long? |
34583 | By whose help could I leave this ship?" |
34583 | Can you find the way without her, aunt? |
34583 | Catherine arched her eyebrows:"Are you quite sure that I should be kindly received there?" |
34583 | Did I not also love him from the first moment on? |
34583 | Did I not devote myself to him as we left the ship hand in hand? |
34583 | Did he, perhaps, fear that he would not be kindly received on account of the stranger he was bringing home? |
34583 | Did not her pious childhood- faith approve itself to her in a wonderful manner? |
34583 | Did not his parents, in 1710, while Robert Hunter was governor, come to New York with the great immigration, from the Palatinate? |
34583 | Did not the bands under Soubise ravage through the cities and towns of Hanover? |
34583 | Did not the intelligent and faithful beast know her own master? |
34583 | Do you hear? |
34583 | Do you hear?" |
34583 | Do you know anyone in the city, or in its vicinity to whom I can take you?" |
34583 | Do you know that I am Captain Van Broom? |
34583 | Do you know that I shall at once throw you into the water? |
34583 | Do you not see it?" |
34583 | Do you see it?" |
34583 | Do you see, dominie, the impression in the moss and the crushed bushes? |
34583 | Do you still love me as a sister her brother?" |
34583 | Do you think you have enough, Lambert?" |
34583 | Do you wish to see it go up in flames? |
34583 | For what do you take Captain Van Broom? |
34583 | For what else did I bring you along?" |
34583 | Had he not even now expressed a fear that he should not find his parents alive? |
34583 | Had he promised too much? |
34583 | Had the blood with which his leathern jacket was dotted spurted from his veins? |
34583 | Has she told you how much she owes us?" |
34583 | Has uncle also gone along?" |
34583 | Have you transacted your business with Mr. Brown? |
34583 | His blood-- why should this trouble him? |
34583 | How are you off for ammunition? |
34583 | How could I be? |
34583 | How could he now say it? |
34583 | How did the vengeance look when my four brave boys lay dead at their father''s feet, each with a bullet through his breast?" |
34583 | How do you like him?" |
34583 | How shall I stand with her before God''s altar when I know that my brother begrudges me my happiness? |
34583 | I ask again, who hindered? |
34583 | I could shed my blood for him, and how did he renounce us even now-- even now?" |
34583 | I hope you are not displeased with me?" |
34583 | I now ask you, Conrad Sternberg, will you, as is your bounden duty, carry out the orders of our captain?" |
34583 | I would like to know what else it should be called?" |
34583 | If this should not be so what purpose, what meaning had the rest? |
34583 | In certain distant groups the loud talking continued, and a coarse voice cried:"What does the dominie want?" |
34583 | Is it not so, old Hans?" |
34583 | Is it not so?" |
34583 | Is n''t she a stunner? |
34583 | Is not this Mr. Pitcher just as good, or as bad as the poor devils there on the ship? |
34583 | Is she in the house?" |
34583 | Is that satisfactory, Catherine?" |
34583 | Keep your seats; do you hear?" |
34583 | Lambert, what are we beginning?" |
34583 | Lingering he said:"Will you go with me? |
34583 | Miss Catherine? |
34583 | Must he and she be buried beneath its fragments? |
34583 | Must it be trampled? |
34583 | Must it go up in flames? |
34583 | Must they fall as booty into the hands of the enemy? |
34583 | Now, as she was nearing the end of her pilgrimage, should doubt find sly entrance? |
34583 | O, why did I not tell you? |
34583 | Or, amid thunder- claps, did a new world bloom far more beautiful than she had ever dreamed? |
34583 | Pitcher?" |
34583 | Pluto, beast, are you again staring at her? |
34583 | She leaned her head against his breast and whispered:"And you love me notwithstanding, Lambert; not so?" |
34583 | She wished to say:"Why have you done this to me?" |
34583 | Sternberg?" |
34583 | Sternberg?" |
34583 | That the report came from Conrad was certain, but how had he learned the fact? |
34583 | The house is saved; but how long? |
34583 | The house would fill up when the absent ones returned, but would she be happy in the company of those who lived here, who called it their home? |
34583 | Then he would have found Catherine, and he would surely have dealt just as I did; and who knows how everything would then have fitted itself in?" |
34583 | There comes Lambert with Herkimer; and what peculiar little fellow have they forked up?" |
34583 | Was Conrad the third? |
34583 | Was everything that she silently hoped, lived upon, cherished, forever destroyed? |
34583 | Was he looking in the distance for the blood- thirsty enemies? |
34583 | Was he not already too old to load more on himself-- he, to whom the old burden was already so heavy to carry? |
34583 | Was it fatigue after the dreadful running? |
34583 | Was the signal pile there, which with its smoke and fire should warn the rest down the creek, erected for a joke? |
34583 | Was then everything which had passed through his brain a heavy, fearful dream, out of which he could wake when he pleased? |
34583 | Were they not the sons and grandsons of those robbers who, under Melac and Borges, burnt the Palatinate and reduced Heidelberg to a dust heap? |
34583 | What are we to do with the starved ragamuffins, of whom one half could not pay full fare? |
34583 | What brings them here? |
34583 | What brings you here?" |
34583 | What could have moved the silly fellow to such night- wandering except the desire again to be near Catherine? |
34583 | What did Lambert say to it? |
34583 | What did he tell you?" |
34583 | What do the poor creatures gain by it? |
34583 | What do you advise, aunt?" |
34583 | What do you gain by it? |
34583 | What do you know, Adam? |
34583 | What do you think, Mr. Triller? |
34583 | What do you want, man? |
34583 | What do you want?" |
34583 | What does the beast mean? |
34583 | What had happened? |
34583 | What had the wild man said this morning? |
34583 | What have we to do with others? |
34583 | What is beyond its reach? |
34583 | What is her name?" |
34583 | What is so different now? |
34583 | What is to be done?" |
34583 | What is your name? |
34583 | What is your name?" |
34583 | What more could it bring her besides terrible, inconceivable misery? |
34583 | What shall I begin with? |
34583 | What should she do? |
34583 | What sound was that which that instant struck his sharp ear out of the woods? |
34583 | What then, man? |
34583 | What will be the result? |
34583 | What will be their condition should it die out?" |
34583 | What will they now say when they hear that, at the very moment when the danger breaks in upon us, Conrad is not to be found among us?" |
34583 | What would I be without you? |
34583 | What would become of her? |
34583 | What would his friends think of Catherine? |
34583 | What would she say to the proposition that Mr. Brown had made to him? |
34583 | When shall we start?" |
34583 | When you strike for King George do you not just as well fight for your own house and home? |
34583 | Where can they be? |
34583 | Where is he? |
34583 | Where is your brother?" |
34583 | Which two? |
34583 | Whither shall they yet fly, since the same enemy even here begrudges them life and freedom? |
34583 | Who could help me? |
34583 | Who could honorably begrudge him his unexpected happiness, obtained after fearful misgivings? |
34583 | Who could tell whether this third salvo might not be more dreadful than the first two? |
34583 | Who now has time or inclination to ask the breathless ones how the minister came to be here? |
34583 | Who wishes to speak after me?" |
34583 | Who would not willingly do what you wish?" |
34583 | Why care for a future that could no more bring him true joy? |
34583 | Why cling to a life that had become so burdensome to him? |
34583 | Why did he now stay away when his presence was so much desired? |
34583 | Why did he walk so self- absorbed, so still and dumb at her side, now that he was so near his own hearth and that of his parents? |
34583 | Why did you come just now? |
34583 | Why did you stand near and gaze when you knew that you had such a butter- heart in your breast? |
34583 | Why do we lose time? |
34583 | Why do you laugh, you green woodpecker? |
34583 | Why do you laugh?" |
34583 | Why do you stand about here and gape? |
34583 | Why hope to come out of this battle as victor? |
34583 | Why should you? |
34583 | Why undertake the heavy conflict that was imminent? |
34583 | Why was the house there before them so still? |
34583 | Will a still deeper tone sound in the souls of our children? |
34583 | Will the others also come soon?" |
34583 | Will they seek us again in the same way, or choose some other mode of attack? |
34583 | Will you become a traitor to our common interests-- to your brother, your friends, to wives and children? |
34583 | Will you go with me?" |
34583 | Will you listen to me a few minutes? |
34583 | Will you not rather saddle Hans?" |
34583 | Will you, Lambert Sternberg, undertake the charge?" |
34583 | Would he otherwise have been able to overcome twenty- four Indians who had already pressed forward to the house? |
34583 | Would it not have been the same had he told the truth? |
34583 | Would it not have come out just the same? |
34583 | Yes, why do I say hundred? |
34583 | You comprehend that clearly?" |
34583 | and what then?" |
34583 | and why he had brought one from a distance of fifty miles, when he could easily have found one-- and perhaps a better one-- near by? |
34583 | and why is thy countenance fallen? |
34583 | asked the minister, seizing the hand of the wild man;"and now, Conrad?" |
34583 | called Aunt Ursul, as she quickly rose from her chair;"the minister? |
34583 | do n''t you see that Herkimer wants to speak?" |
34583 | exclaimed Lambert,"why do you look in such a strange way, Catherine? |
34583 | he exclaimed,"who are you? |
34583 | how his maid- servant behaved? |
34583 | that he did not want me as a maid- servant? |
34583 | told me that he loved me? |
34583 | what are you doing?" |
34583 | what have I read? |
34583 | what then has the beast?" |
34583 | whether they had come here to hear a sermon? |
34583 | why did you not tell me at once that it was something about Conrad?" |
33996 | ''How shall we encourage them?'' 33996 About my sister, sir?" |
33996 | All right? |
33996 | All what? |
33996 | Am I named in honour of that swine in America? |
33996 | And Commander Wiedermann? |
33996 | And become-- er-- a governess again? |
33996 | And now may I ask you your adventures? |
33996 | And she has been so all the time? |
33996 | And this other scheme of his-- do you feel yourself that it is feasible enough to justify you in leaving your ship and running such a terrible risk? 33996 And were they actually spies?" |
33996 | And what did he say to you? |
33996 | And what do you mean to do about it? |
33996 | And what the devil are you, Herr Tiel? 33996 And yet you never told me, but let me hide up in this room like a rat in a hole?" |
33996 | And you do n''t think my coming will rouse any suspicion? |
33996 | Another-- in these islands? 33996 Any trout in this stream?" |
33996 | Are they difficult to get? |
33996 | Are you an old friend of Mr Burnett? |
33996 | Are you his motive? |
33996 | Are you often taken like that? |
33996 | Are you staying with the minister? |
33996 | Before the war, I presume? |
33996 | But are you actually going to do it? |
33996 | But ca n''t a man turn King''s evidence( is n''t that the term?) 33996 But can we ever be sure that the fleet will keep to a programme? |
33996 | But do you care what he says? |
33996 | But do you mean you found him with no clothes on right out at sea? |
33996 | But has he knowledge? 33996 But how do you know that Ashington can be absolutely relied on?" |
33996 | But is it your duty? 33996 But then how shall I get back?" |
33996 | But what does he want you for? 33996 But why should you wait?" |
33996 | But why this afternoon rather than this morning? 33996 But will you risk it?" |
33996 | But you think a German secret- service agent should have no such pride? |
33996 | By the way,he exclaimed presently,"do you happen to know a fellow- clergyman there called Maxwell? |
33996 | By whom? |
33996 | Can you get a suit of mufti for me? |
33996 | Can you talk business now? |
33996 | Could you possibly-- conceivably-- think of me as--he hesitated, and then blurted out--"as, dash it all, head over ears in love with you?" |
33996 | Did Mr Burnett whistle? |
33996 | Did a German actually say that? |
33996 | Did he telegraph to you? |
33996 | Did you have much difficulty? |
33996 | Did you see him fall into the water? |
33996 | Do you actually mean that? |
33996 | Do you happen to know a minister there-- a Mr Burnett? |
33996 | Do you honestly think you are essential to the success of a torpedo attack? |
33996 | Do you know Germany well? |
33996 | Do you know her? |
33996 | Do you know many''such men''? |
33996 | Do you know the new course at all accurately? |
33996 | Do you mean to say that Tiel did n''t press you? |
33996 | Do you mean,I demanded,"that you were actually in the habit of holding Miss-- er-- Holland''s hand?" |
33996 | Do you mind giving me a hand with this? |
33996 | Do you propose to wear my clothes? |
33996 | Do you? |
33996 | Do? |
33996 | Duty? |
33996 | For instance, do you know what he is doing to- night? |
33996 | For the girls? |
33996 | For what? 33996 Good heavens, it was n''t you, was it?" |
33996 | Got your passport? |
33996 | Has anything gone wrong? |
33996 | Have another cigar? |
33996 | Have n''t you settled anything? |
33996 | Have you any objections to telling me? |
33996 | Have you had many visitors yet? |
33996 | Have you just landed upon these islands? |
33996 | Have you never fired a torpedo at an inoffensive merchant ship? |
33996 | Have you worked with him often before? |
33996 | He being Burnett and she Holland, eh? |
33996 | He was then very clear and strong on the question? |
33996 | Herr Tiel? |
33996 | How can I avoid it? |
33996 | How do you know? |
33996 | How do you know? |
33996 | How have I deceived you? |
33996 | How many could you? |
33996 | How many submarines can you concentrate, and how long will it take you to concentrate them? |
33996 | How much do you know of our scheme? |
33996 | How will you manage it? |
33996 | I do n''t know whether you heard that she was supposed to be two miles out of her proper course, contrary to orders, did you? |
33996 | I do not see exactly why you wished me to return? |
33996 | I see,I said;"you simply tried to bluff him by behaving like an ordinary simple- minded honest clergyman?" |
33996 | I wonder if it''s conceivable that you''d ever look upon me as anything but a calculating machine? |
33996 | I wonder who will that minister be? |
33996 | If you ever do see any chance of making any sort of use of me-- I mean of letting me be useful-- you will be sure to let me know, wo n''t you? |
33996 | In the Scottish Church the custom is to go to the vacant parish to preach a trial sermon, is n''t it? |
33996 | In what way? |
33996 | In your pay? |
33996 | In your uniform? |
33996 | Is he the officer in command of the base? |
33996 | Is he then-- er-- an abstainer? |
33996 | Is it important? |
33996 | Is n''t that rather roundabout? |
33996 | Is the war over? |
33996 | Is there really any need to deceive me further? |
33996 | It''s all in order, I presume, eh? |
33996 | It''s not mental trouble, I hope? 33996 It''s very good of you,"she said;"you are sure you have time?" |
33996 | Know her? 33996 Looks? |
33996 | May I come in for a little? |
33996 | May I keep it? |
33996 | May I see that telegram? |
33996 | Mind? |
33996 | Mr Alexander Burnett? |
33996 | Mr Drummond? |
33996 | Mr Topham? |
33996 | Not even for Germany? |
33996 | Now he is an acquaintance of yours? |
33996 | Now,she said,"do you mind waiting in the smoking- room for ten minutes or so?" |
33996 | Of what? |
33996 | Or is it a family custom? |
33996 | Really-- you do n''t say so? 33996 Really? |
33996 | Really? |
33996 | Shall we move along there for a little? |
33996 | So it was to get rid of me, and have you alone here with him? |
33996 | So you treated me like an infant, Mr Tiel? |
33996 | So? |
33996 | Still, so long as that is the system, why not try your luck? 33996 Surely you got my letter?" |
33996 | Suspicion? 33996 Taylor? |
33996 | That suits him? |
33996 | The British cruiser which was mined early in the war? |
33996 | The minister? |
33996 | The-- who? |
33996 | Then I shall not know till to- morrow night whether to count on you-- and then I shall very probably lose you? |
33996 | Then I understand I am betrayed? |
33996 | Then did you ever really think of me as a human being-- as a-- as a--he hesitated painfully--"as a friend?" |
33996 | Then if it is not, why are we pretending so religiously that we have no business here but to drink tea, Miss Burnett? |
33996 | Then that is your real name? |
33996 | Then that is your_ rôle_? |
33996 | Then what is right for Germany is wrong for her enemies? |
33996 | Then where----? |
33996 | Then who sent them, I''d like to know? |
33996 | Then whose hands is it in? |
33996 | Then why did Tiel give up trying to persuade me so readily? 33996 Then you are really going to leave us to- night?" |
33996 | Then you have been sent by Mrs Craigie to make inquiries about Miss Holland? |
33996 | Then, Miss Holland, every time you did me the honour to appear kind and visit me you were carrying out one of this gentleman''s plans? 33996 Then-- then you never were Tiel?" |
33996 | There was nae secret, was there? |
33996 | To ensure your escape? |
33996 | To keep it from the rain maybe? |
33996 | Was she? |
33996 | We are not idiots, and why should we pretend to be? |
33996 | Well,I said,"suppose we know when they are going out, they will take the usual precautions, I presume?" |
33996 | Well,asked Eileen,"what did you tell Mr Craigie?" |
33996 | Were you long in Germany? |
33996 | What can I do for you? |
33996 | What did he say to that? |
33996 | What do you mean? |
33996 | What do you mean? |
33996 | What do you mean? |
33996 | What do you mean? |
33996 | What do you think of him? |
33996 | What do you think yourself? |
33996 | What for did you have to mend it in here? |
33996 | What happened then? |
33996 | What has happened? |
33996 | What in Heaven''s name did it mean? |
33996 | What is a woman''s part in such a plan usually? |
33996 | What is extraordinary about it? |
33996 | What is the suggestion? |
33996 | What is your part of the country? |
33996 | What must you think of us? |
33996 | What road are you taking? |
33996 | What will you be doing? |
33996 | What words? |
33996 | What''s that? |
33996 | What''s the matter? |
33996 | What''s the matter? |
33996 | What''s the matter? |
33996 | What''s the matter? |
33996 | What''s this-- an elopement? 33996 Where is he to be seen?" |
33996 | Which light? |
33996 | Which man? |
33996 | Which safe? |
33996 | Who are you going to decoy? |
33996 | Who did you speak to last night? |
33996 | Who forced you to use a woman? 33996 Who was he?" |
33996 | Why did he come? |
33996 | Why do n''t you enter the British War Office, then? |
33996 | Why should I have tried to get out of it? |
33996 | Why should I think you are making a fool of yourself? |
33996 | Why''s Miss Holland like our hall clock? |
33996 | Why? |
33996 | Will you come and sit there with me? |
33996 | Wilson? |
33996 | Would you have felt quite happy if I had told you I had omitted to do the one thing I had professed to come here for? |
33996 | You and Miss Holland living by yourselves in this house-- is it that you need apologise for? |
33996 | You are afraid some one may come and look in at this window? |
33996 | You are quite sure of this? |
33996 | You are sure? 33996 You are_ quite_ sure this is all right? |
33996 | You do n''t mean the great Schumann? |
33996 | You expected a visit from a Mr Burnett yesterday, I believe? |
33996 | You feel sure of that? |
33996 | You feel sure? |
33996 | You got a pretended traitor? 33996 You have heard of half- brothers, have n''t you?" |
33996 | You have no beer? |
33996 | You have thought of everything you can possibly need? |
33996 | You mean some one had tried to murder him? |
33996 | You mean that she has been honest and they dishonest? |
33996 | You mean you wish me_ not_ to rejoin my ship to- morrow night? |
33996 | You mean----? |
33996 | You never at any time came across her captain? 33996 You quite understand what I said?" |
33996 | You remember the affair of the_ Haileybury_? |
33996 | You taught her her trade then, I presume? |
33996 | You told him when I was leaving, and all about it, I suppose? |
33996 | You will really run that risk? |
33996 | You would even become some British Admiral''s mistress? |
33996 | You''ll be a relation of the minister''s too, perhaps? |
33996 | You''ll have some tea before you start, I hope? |
33996 | You''ve spoken to him? |
33996 | You-- you then told her to-- to make me admire her? |
33996 | A tall, square- shouldered fellow, in dark plain clothes, who walks with a short step and a stiff back-- what does that suggest? |
33996 | A traitor?" |
33996 | All at once she leaned towards me and said in a low beseeching voice--"You will come back, wo n''t you?" |
33996 | And I wonder, too, where he was going?" |
33996 | And every word you spoke was said to entangle me in your net, or to keep me quiet while something was being done behind my back? |
33996 | And how long does he imagine the British are going to let you stay in this house of yours unsuspected? |
33996 | And now where the devil was it? |
33996 | And then again, why had Eileen consented to such a wild plan? |
33996 | And who the devil has given you such orders?" |
33996 | And yet as a man and a loyal subject how could he possibly decline to assist in an effort to foil the King''s enemies? |
33996 | Are you_ essential_?"'' |
33996 | Besides, why deceive me in any case? |
33996 | But are you sure all this is safe? |
33996 | But from Tiel''s point of view, what was critical about this moment? |
33996 | But how can I? |
33996 | But if so, what could I do? |
33996 | But marriage? |
33996 | But were there not consolations?" |
33996 | But what about my petrol? |
33996 | But what is all this about staying on shore? |
33996 | But what was to be done in the meantime? |
33996 | But where am I to take it?" |
33996 | But where was my road? |
33996 | But why did n''t you tell me all this before?" |
33996 | But-- er-- what am I to say to Mrs Drummond about your visit?" |
33996 | Can you not wait till I pack my things too? |
33996 | Coming straight on top of my discovery of his reckless conduct of Eileen''s affair, what was I to think of him? |
33996 | Could you not have deceived me alone?" |
33996 | Do n''t you think so?" |
33996 | Do n''t you, Mr Belke?" |
33996 | Do you drink whisky- and- soda?" |
33996 | Do you know what I''d do with that Kaiser if I caught him?" |
33996 | Do you mean----""What else could one do with him?" |
33996 | Even at night how many ears would be listening for my"phut- phut- phut,"and how many eyes would be scanning the dark roads? |
33996 | Had I been picked for this errand because I was a coward or a resourceless fool? |
33996 | Had she noticed nothing of that? |
33996 | Has he special information?" |
33996 | Has she not told you the joke of how she left me in the lurch?" |
33996 | Have you forced the safe?" |
33996 | He broke off and asked,"Do you happen to have heard of Schumann?" |
33996 | He glanced at me for a moment in an odd way, and then said merely--"Well, are you going to have another cigar, or would you like to go to bed?" |
33996 | His eyes suddenly began to twinkle again, and he asked abruptly--"Why''s the Kaiser like my boots?" |
33996 | His manner suddenly changed and he asked abruptly,"Are you in a desperate hurry to get in? |
33996 | How am I to get back to my boat?" |
33996 | How can Germany both be right-- as she is, and yet be wrong?" |
33996 | How can I trust him now?" |
33996 | How could he have known so much of Craigie''s character? |
33996 | How should a German agent be a British officer? |
33996 | How were we to get you back again here after you had delivered your message to your submarine?" |
33996 | I exclaimed;"why on earth should you think that?" |
33996 | I fell very silent, and then suddenly, when we were nearly back, I exclaimed--"I wonder whether you are really glad that I returned?" |
33996 | I had cleaned the thing, oiled it, seen that everything was in order; what in heaven''s name could be the matter? |
33996 | I have a chance of escaping now unobserved; shall I have such a chance later in the day?" |
33996 | I have just been thinking it over, and the question struck me-- why are they making this arrangement so far ahead?" |
33996 | I know a John Taylor----""Who comes from Lancashire and keeps a motor- car?" |
33996 | I pricked up my ears, but all I said was--"Why is that?" |
33996 | I wonder if such a talk ever before had such a charming background? |
33996 | Ignition, carburettor, what had been damaged? |
33996 | Indeed, why should he think so? |
33996 | Is it good- bye, or shall I see you in the morning?" |
33996 | It will be hard to do, but I have no doubt as to the result; have you?" |
33996 | Logic had brought me beautifully so far, but now came the rub-- Where was I to hide? |
33996 | Mr Burnett was on his way to the Windy Islands, I believe?" |
33996 | My good woman, d''ye think I''m blind? |
33996 | Now that''s a funny kettle of fish, is n''t it?" |
33996 | Of course I admit they sometimes have enough excuse, but-- what do you think?" |
33996 | Only between you and me, Mr----?" |
33996 | Or was I an honest and peaceable gentleman? |
33996 | Should I take Tiel with me to see Wiedermann? |
33996 | Surely the beautiful liveried figure in the car would require his tea and eggs like his master? |
33996 | Surely you are not going to risk a longer stay?" |
33996 | The chauffeur half- turned round and said in a low voice--"Did you see that light, sir?" |
33996 | The oats is looking very well; do you not think so?" |
33996 | Then I heard the voice of Tiel say--"Well?" |
33996 | Then Miss Holland suddenly asked--"Do you live near the sea?" |
33996 | Then he inquired--"Do you know a Mr Taylor?" |
33996 | Then who did?" |
33996 | Then you hate the English with a double hatred?" |
33996 | There could not possibly be any use in going further; why then did they continue to advance? |
33996 | Till the day broke all I had to do was to sit still, but after that-- what? |
33996 | Was I sure we should have at least four submarines? |
33996 | Was I the suspicious person he fancied at first? |
33996 | We can trust you to do that for England, surely?" |
33996 | We do n''t want to be far away, do we?" |
33996 | Well now, what''s the good in making inquiries about a thing that''s happened and finished and come to an end? |
33996 | What about half a dozen submarines?" |
33996 | What are you going to do next?" |
33996 | What can be done? |
33996 | What did you do with yourself?" |
33996 | What else are you needed for? |
33996 | What is the good in planning ahead, with the house watched night and day?" |
33996 | What is your own part in it? |
33996 | What was to be made of these very disquieting events? |
33996 | What would you like?" |
33996 | What''s your theory?" |
33996 | Where are you going?" |
33996 | Who is he?" |
33996 | Why did n''t he try to use more authority?" |
33996 | Why keep me alive?" |
33996 | Why were you brought into the islands? |
33996 | Why?" |
33996 | Yet an adventuress, a paid agent of the Secret Service, marrying a von Belke-- is it quite conceivable? |
33996 | You do n''t mind my telling her to call me Dick, do you? |
33996 | You would have to wait till Burnett had left Edinburgh, would n''t you?" |
33996 | and get pardoned?" |
33996 | exclaimed Mr Taylor,"what''s up?" |
33996 | he asked me; and would they be brought well in and take the risk? |
33996 | he is really her brother, is he?" |
14646 | About cats? |
14646 | Ah,said the man; and after a silence, broken only by the pantings for breath of the twins, he added:"Mother with you?" |
14646 | Ain''t-- isn''t what? |
14646 | Alive? |
14646 | All Germans? |
14646 | Almost, as it were, still red- not from being with you? |
14646 | Ample,said Mrs Twist; adding icily,"and did I you say confound, Edward?" |
14646 | An English father for you? 14646 And I''m afraid,"said- Anna- Rose,"disappointed as we are, unless you can produce a mother--""But where on earth are we to go to, Anna- R.?" |
14646 | And are n''t I aching? 14646 And as for your aunt in England, what''s she going to say to this twenty- four- hours, quick- lunch sort of engagement? |
14646 | And suppose she does n''t stop talking enough to hear? |
14646 | And what school is going to want two teachers both teaching the same thing, anyway? |
14646 | And who pray is he? |
14646 | And why pray wo n''t he come in? |
14646 | And why should it be? 14646 And will they wait quite quietly till we''ve got it?" |
14646 | And-- and a great many kinds of cakes--"Well, had n''t we better sit down first,said Mr. Wangelbecker genially,"or are all the tables engaged?" |
14646 | Anna- Felicitas, my dear,he said,"wo n''t you go?" |
14646 | Are they-- are the Clouston Sacks visible yet? |
14646 | Are you Mr. Clouston Sack? |
14646 | Are you aware that we are marriageable? |
14646 | Are you pretending-- pretending to_ us_,said the lower berth lady, again beating her hand on the edge of her bunk,"that you are not German?" |
14646 | As Keats very nearly said,said Anna- Rose"And if our friends have run away?" |
14646 | Because it''s so dear? |
14646 | But I ca n''t call to mind--"Do n''t you remember all Uncle Arthur''s letters about us? 14646 But Prussia?" |
14646 | But do you mind having it afterwards? 14646 But if you''ve finished yours, do you mind coming into the office? |
14646 | But what''s a father, when all''s said and done? |
14646 | But what''s the matter? |
14646 | But what,asked Anna- Felicitas,"have aunts to do with love?" |
14646 | But why does mummy call him poor, when he''s gone to heaven? |
14646 | But why should n''t it sing? |
14646 | But,_ Kind_, you know what a lie is? |
14646 | But-- marry which? |
14646 | But_ is_ it natural? |
14646 | Ca n''t you by any chance produce a mother? |
14646 | Can it be brought up? |
14646 | Can you please tell us how to get there? |
14646 | Can you please tell us why we''re stopping? |
14646 | Can you type? |
14646 | Children? |
14646 | Christopher? |
14646 | Confound them-- what have they done to her? 14646 Crying?" |
14646 | Daughters? |
14646 | Dead? 14646 Dead?" |
14646 | Did n''t she like you? |
14646 | Did n''t you know? |
14646 | Did you keep your eye on its variations? |
14646 | Did you not give us to understand,she asked, turning to the driver,"that it was imminent?" |
14646 | Do it? |
14646 | Do n''t what? |
14646 | Do what? |
14646 | Do with them? |
14646 | Do you dispute that God made us? |
14646 | Do you mean our bags? |
14646 | Do you mean they do n''t live here? |
14646 | Do you mean to say you crossed the Atlantic quite alone, you two? |
14646 | Do you mean to say,said the ladies with one voice, feeling themselves now on the very edge of a scandal,"he was forced to fly from Westphalia?" |
14646 | Do you mean,she went on in an awe- struck voice,"that one of them-- one of them is dead?" |
14646 | Do you mind taking those in? |
14646 | Do you suppose we quarrel? |
14646 | Do you think she talks in her sleep? |
14646 | Do you think we look like him? |
14646 | Do you? |
14646 | Does he mind your sitting here? |
14646 | Does it convey nothing to you? |
14646 | Edith, see these girls? 14646 Eh?" |
14646 | English? |
14646 | First visit to the States? |
14646 | Gag her? |
14646 | Germans? |
14646 | Germans? |
14646 | Germans? |
14646 | Give her notice? |
14646 | Go? |
14646 | Going into the town? |
14646 | Going where? |
14646 | Gone to meet you? |
14646 | Gone where? |
14646 | Has another button come off? |
14646 | Has any one come to see us off? |
14646 | Has he fled his country? |
14646 | Has she read it? |
14646 | Have n''t I been trying to give it you ever since I met you? 14646 Have n''t you got any parents?" |
14646 | Have n''t you heard of Co- operative Stores? |
14646 | Have you got something on your mind? |
14646 | Have you tried aspirin? 14646 He died? |
14646 | His funeral? |
14646 | How do you know? |
14646 | How was that? |
14646 | How''s that? |
14646 | How''s that? |
14646 | How''s that? |
14646 | Husband? |
14646 | I beg your pardon? |
14646 | I beg your pardon? |
14646 | I beg your-- what did you say? |
14646 | I hope it''s nothing serious? |
14646 | I say, what the hell can we do with a couple of Germans? 14646 I say-- may I come in? |
14646 | I wish I knew-- I wish I could hope-- but she''s gone for a long while, I''m afraid--"Gone not to come back at all, do you mean? |
14646 | In where? |
14646 | Information? |
14646 | Is he dead? |
14646 | Is he in there? |
14646 | Is it Mr. or Mrs. Clouston Sack who is here? |
14646 | Is n''t he coming back? |
14646 | Is n''t there-- isn''t there always luggage in America too when people come to stay with one? |
14646 | Is that what they''re called in America? |
14646 | Is this to be an unseemly wrangle? |
14646 | Know those? |
14646 | Letters? |
14646 | Letters? |
14646 | Like this? |
14646 | Little Blessed, do n''t you see? |
14646 | Lodgings? |
14646 | Luggage? |
14646 | Marry one of them? |
14646 | Marry them who to? |
14646 | Marry them? |
14646 | Marry what girls? |
14646 | Me? |
14646 | My Bible? |
14646 | Next? 14646 No?" |
14646 | No? |
14646 | Not before? 14646 Not old enough?" |
14646 | Not what? |
14646 | Oh, you have n''t seen-- you do n''t see-- it''s only me that''s seen--"Seen what? 14646 Oh,"she sobbed, looking at him out of her piteous eyes,"has nobody thought of it but me? |
14646 | Oh? |
14646 | Or perhaps you would prefer frothed chocolate? 14646 Our what?" |
14646 | Out of it? |
14646 | Out of what? |
14646 | Presents? 14646 Prussia?" |
14646 | Prussia? |
14646 | Really? |
14646 | Relations of Delloggses? |
14646 | Relations? |
14646 | Say now, where did you meet Teapot Twist? |
14646 | Say--he said,--"how are you to- day, Miss Heap? |
14646 | Saying? |
14646 | Shall I bring you tea or coffee? |
14646 | Shall we? |
14646 | Shall you? |
14646 | Shut? |
14646 | Sisters? |
14646 | So could n''t we walk about a little? |
14646 | So that''s it, is it? |
14646 | Sorry? |
14646 | Sorry? |
14646 | Splendid? |
14646 | Standing just behind us--"Was there a man? |
14646 | That Mr. Dellogg isn''t--resumed Anna- Felicitas with determination,"well, that he is n''t alive?" |
14646 | That they ai n''t? 14646 That''s all very well, Anna- R.,"again protested Anna- Felicitas,"but where are we to go to?" |
14646 | That''s all your grips, ai n''t it? |
14646 | The who? |
14646 | Then if you know why do n''t you do it? |
14646 | Then it must have been months ago-- months ago,said Mr. Sack,"before all this-- do I remember something about it? |
14646 | Then why did she go? |
14646 | Then-- you were born in Prussia? |
14646 | There is n''t? 14646 They ai n''t?" |
14646 | They your sisters? |
14646 | Too young? |
14646 | Twins what of? |
14646 | Twins, are they? 14646 Two?" |
14646 | Uncle gone off by himself to- day? |
14646 | Unrecognizable? |
14646 | Waiting? 14646 Want some ice water?" |
14646 | Was she aware that you were giving it her? |
14646 | We were talking for some time before I went in to order the tea, were n''t we? |
14646 | We''ll go into it to- day,she said firmly,"Why not? |
14646 | Well now what the devil''s the matter with lodgings? |
14646 | Well, will you stay where you are while I''m away, then? |
14646 | Were you going to? |
14646 | Were you unkind to her? |
14646 | What I want to know is, are they all here? |
14646 | What do you come his funeral for, then? |
14646 | What do you want to get looking at_ that_ for? |
14646 | What first thing? |
14646 | What for? |
14646 | What for? |
14646 | What has happened? |
14646 | What is co- operative? |
14646 | What is it, Edward? |
14646 | What is it? |
14646 | What is n''t? |
14646 | What is? |
14646 | What man? |
14646 | What of? |
14646 | What say? 14646 What say?" |
14646 | What say? |
14646 | What say? |
14646 | What''s the matter? |
14646 | What, are you an Elliott too? |
14646 | What? 14646 What? |
14646 | What? |
14646 | What? |
14646 | What? |
14646 | What? |
14646 | When do you think Mrs. Sack will be back? |
14646 | When you are both so charming that for once the phrase must be sincere? |
14646 | When? |
14646 | Where does your family come from? |
14646 | Where would they be? |
14646 | While you''re somewhere else? 14646 Who are they?" |
14646 | Who are you waving to? |
14646 | Who do you want? |
14646 | Who is it, Edward? |
14646 | Who is n''t? |
14646 | Who was that nice man? |
14646 | Who? 14646 Who?" |
14646 | Whose name? |
14646 | Why does n''t she come? |
14646 | Why luggage? |
14646 | Why not bring your sister here? |
14646 | Why not tell her? |
14646 | Why should two of you be feeling things that are n''t? |
14646 | Why they''re wanting to boycott the teapot? |
14646 | Why? |
14646 | Wife and sister- in- law? |
14646 | Will you announce us please? |
14646 | Will you have tea or coffee? |
14646 | Will you have tea or coffee? |
14646 | Will you kindly bear in mind that we''re totally unaccustomed to the doorstep? |
14646 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
14646 | Worse upstairs? |
14646 | Would n''t you rather--? |
14646 | Would you mind reading this? |
14646 | Would you mind telling me what I am to bring you? |
14646 | Would you? |
14646 | Write what? |
14646 | Yes, but what would a co- operative inn be? |
14646 | Yes, if you do n''t know that he ai n''t? |
14646 | Yes-- except that it''s a Daimler, and are n''t they different? |
14646 | Yes-- who knows if we would n''t be really, if we were given a chance? |
14646 | You from the village? |
14646 | You know about my teapot? |
14646 | You mean you two are the only Twinklers left? |
14646 | You thought? |
14646 | You were inquiring what the hell--? |
14646 | You''re fresh from Europe, are n''t you? 14646 You''re never going to be sick in this bit of bathwater, Miss Twinkler?" |
14646 | You''re not even friends, then? |
14646 | You_ ca n''t_ really think we look as much like him as all that? |
14646 | _ Mein Kind_,said her father, standing her up on a convenient tomb so that her eyes were level with his,"is it then true about the cold potato?" |
14646 | _ Mein Kind_,said her father,"do you not know it is wrong to lie?" |
14646 | _ What_ did you always did? |
14646 | --but quite the contrary,"said Anna- Rose,"had n''t you better take us somewhere else?" |
14646 | A twin? |
14646 | After a week the same advertisements appeared with three lines added: THE OPEN ARMS YES BUT WHY? |
14646 | After tea? |
14646 | Ah, do n''t cry-- don''t cry like that--""Oh, I''ve lost her-- lost her--""Lost her? |
14646 | And Anna- Rose, struck in her turn at such an omission, paused too with food on the way to her mouth, and said,"And we such friends?" |
14646 | And I always intended going back to England as soon as may be, and if you married me what is to prevent your coming too? |
14646 | And also, Why? |
14646 | And how can I with you standing there looking like-- well, like that?" |
14646 | And how could he find somebody else at the eleventh hour and where and how could the twins and he live, unchaperoned as they would be, till he had? |
14646 | And how much do you think we ought to tip the stewardess? |
14646 | And how''s the cabin to get done if you stay in it all the time?" |
14646 | And pulling open the gate and running out to him as one possessed she cried again,"Gag Columbus?" |
14646 | And then what? |
14646 | And this Elliott-- what did he think_ he_ was after, anyway? |
14646 | And were there not Italian villas dotted about also? |
14646 | And who was this Elliott? |
14646 | And why was there only one guest? |
14646 | Anna- Felicitas continued to look blank, but Anna- Rose with a troubled brow said again,"You wo n''t go and forget that, will you, Anna F.?" |
14646 | Are n''t I suffering?" |
14646 | At least, nobody came forward and said,"Are you the Twinklers?" |
14646 | Aunt Alice always said,"Is n''t that very unusual?" |
14646 | Away from us? |
14646 | Because she''s marrying?" |
14646 | Bilton?" |
14646 | Bilton?" |
14646 | But come now-- hasn''t it occurred to you you might marry one of them, and so become quite naturally related to them both?" |
14646 | But do tell me-- why luggage? |
14646 | But do you suppose I was going to have us_ looking_ like people who are n''t seen off?" |
14646 | But he would n''t have caught it if he could, for how could he leave these two poor children? |
14646 | But what about the Miss Twinklers? |
14646 | But would Aunt Alice stroke it? |
14646 | But you know him? |
14646 | CHAPTER XXXVII"Had n''t you better have lunch first?" |
14646 | Charges? |
14646 | Coming to England? |
14646 | Could one sufficiently distrust a nation that did things like that? |
14646 | Dellogg?" |
14646 | Did she go to meet us in New York, or where?" |
14646 | Did you ever?" |
14646 | Do I remember, I wonder?" |
14646 | Do n''t it even cheer you to think you''re going to be a sister- in- law, Anna- Rose?" |
14646 | Do n''t wise wives always? |
14646 | Do what?" |
14646 | Do you realize what a tremendous change that means, you little girl who''s never had brothers? |
14646 | Does n''t it ever stop screeching?" |
14646 | For a subject of the King of Prussia?" |
14646 | For on what now could he base his proposal to Anna- Rose? |
14646 | For suppose, Anna- Felicitas inquired of Anna- Rose, who had been privately asking herself the same thing, America did n''t like them? |
14646 | For the rest of your lives? |
14646 | Friends, are they? |
14646 | Go to school now, like a couple of little suck- a- thumbs? |
14646 | Go to school? |
14646 | Gone all to pieces, back to sheer naughtiness, on the first provocation? |
14646 | Had she ever considered herself? |
14646 | Had she ever flagged in her efforts to set an example of patience in grief, of dignity in misfortune? |
14646 | Had she not borne her great loss without a murmur? |
14646 | Had she not devoted all her years to bringing up her son to be a good man? |
14646 | Has n''t it ever occurred to you, though I''d be real grateful if you''d give me information on this point-- that maybe you do n''t know everything?" |
14646 | Have n''t I been trying to stop your getting out of the taxi till I''d fetched a lantern? |
14646 | Have we ever?" |
14646 | Have you any objection to ninny?" |
14646 | He longed for a liqueur, for anything that would support him...."Is there any brandy in the house?" |
14646 | He might propose-- indeed, everything pointed to his simply having got to-- but would n''t they very quickly dispose? |
14646 | He saw that once too, with surprise,--why smug? |
14646 | He saw-- but what did n''t he see in that moment of submerged horror? |
14646 | He was therefore greatly astonished when Anna- Rose said,"Have you? |
14646 | His idea still seemed to him magnificent, a great solution, but would the Annas be able to see it? |
14646 | How could he have let them set out alone on that four days''journey, with the possibility of once more at its end not being met? |
14646 | How could one get sentimental over and love somebody one so thoroughly liked? |
14646 | How could she, for nieces she had hardly seen, abandon her husband? |
14646 | How could they give anybody so old, so sure of herself, so determined as Mrs. Bilton, notice? |
14646 | How dared they all stare up at her like that as she passed? |
14646 | How long does it take a widow to recover her composure? |
14646 | How many dollars ought she to get? |
14646 | How old are they? |
14646 | How should she? |
14646 | How was that? |
14646 | How was that?" |
14646 | I mean, for a day or two? |
14646 | If people would n''t swallow them last winter are they going to swallow them any better now? |
14646 | If there were any good stuff in Arthur would he not recognize, however angry he might be, that she was doing at least a Christian thing? |
14646 | In the garden? |
14646 | In the office she said,"Do you mind shutting the door?" |
14646 | Is it about schools?" |
14646 | Is one to shut one''s eyes to them?" |
14646 | Is that where you will sit, Güstchen? |
14646 | It seemed to her that the presence of these people on the Pacific coast was a real menace to its safety, moral and physical; but how get rid of them? |
14646 | It was true he had told her to sit like that, but had n''t the woman any imagination? |
14646 | Lose Mrs. Bilton? |
14646 | Lose the very foundation of the party''s respectability? |
14646 | Luke_ left Liverpool? |
14646 | Meanwhile, is there any supper?" |
14646 | Mind? |
14646 | Mine, for instance?" |
14646 | No relation at all? |
14646 | Not old enough? |
14646 | Not quite American?" |
14646 | Now do you really want me to tell you what is being believed?" |
14646 | Of course if it were true that his mother was coming out... but was she? |
14646 | Other people round about had Belgians in their homes, and groaned; but who but he, the most immensely British of anybody, had Germans? |
14646 | Ought she, perhaps, to be going? |
14646 | Parents coming out West soon too? |
14646 | Prevented? |
14646 | Propose to an Anna? |
14646 | Quite fresh? |
14646 | Recover, that is, the first beginnings of it? |
14646 | Ridding?" |
14646 | School? |
14646 | Seventeen? |
14646 | Shall I bring it to you in here?" |
14646 | She became more thoughtful than ever, though she still smiled at them, for how could she help it? |
14646 | She did n''t want to have to be rude to him and hurt his feelings by asking him to go, but why did n''t he? |
14646 | Should he or should n''t he? |
14646 | Should you, Miss Heap?" |
14646 | So why hurry us off somewhere else so soon?" |
14646 | Still, I could have gone by a different route or train, so you see your theory_ is_ rather dished, is n''t it?" |
14646 | Suppose America did n''t like them either? |
14646 | Suppose Uncle Arthur''s friends did n''t like them either? |
14646 | Suppose the same sort of difficulties were waiting for them over there that had dogged their footsteps in England? |
14646 | Supposing civilization were so far advanced that people could no longer see the harm there is in a bedroom, what would have become of him? |
14646 | Surely it was n''t a submarine already? |
14646 | Surely she would be most offended at being tipped by people such years younger than herself? |
14646 | Surely they had all been in the middle of an interesting conversation? |
14646 | The driver, looking first at one of them and then at the other, said,"Well, and who would n''t?" |
14646 | The teapot boycotted? |
14646 | The teapot his mother and sister depended on and The Open Arms depended on, and all his happiness, and the twins? |
14646 | Then Mrs. Bilton; was she going to give trouble? |
14646 | Then he is n''t your uncle?" |
14646 | There is n''t any meanwhile? |
14646 | There must be some of it somewhere, if only they could discover where? |
14646 | These leaflets came out of a green wooden box fastened on to one of the gate- posts, with the words_ Wo n''t you take one_? |
14646 | They did n''t know him? |
14646 | They had gone; Albert was quiet again; and was n''t that the gong for dinner? |
14646 | They naturally thought she was speaking to them, and Anna- Felicitas said politely,"Really?" |
14646 | They would pass on the Twinklers as soon as possible, as indeed why should they not? |
14646 | They, two independent grown- ups with £ 200 in the bank and nobody with any right to stop their doing anything they wanted to? |
14646 | Thinking of making a long stay in the States? |
14646 | To a place they had never been to even in their suitable years? |
14646 | To whom should she go? |
14646 | Turn to? |
14646 | Twist asked himself in language become regrettably natural to him since his sojourn at the front, is a decent interval? |
14646 | Twist before the steamer?" |
14646 | Twist going to be able to find out if he were a proper person to be allowed to pay his addresses to one so precious as a Twinkler twin? |
14646 | Twist impatiently, putting the teapot down with a bang,"do you think we''re running away all the time in America?" |
14646 | Twist looking after you meanwhile? |
14646 | Twist manage to have a forehead and a fortune like that, and yet be a fool? |
14646 | Twist was n''t of the very first quality, except to look at; but what after all were faces? |
14646 | Twist was; who, however, were the Twinklers? |
14646 | Twist with a congested face,"ever been to Berlin?" |
14646 | Twist with a leap of hope in his heart, that she was taking the letter from a non- serious point of view? |
14646 | Twist your uncle, or cousin? |
14646 | Twist''s attention from her by saying with gentleness,"But why add to the general discomfort by being bitter?" |
14646 | Twist''s opinion, had behaved shamefully already, he would n''t have had the heart to press them to go; and then what would he have done with them? |
14646 | Twist''s thoughts were sometimes unjust-- joined them sooner? |
14646 | Twist, or even under a fortnight, or even if you came to that, under a month; and meanwhile what was he to do with the Twinklers? |
14646 | Twist, their friend and stand- by, still with them, and had n''t they got each other? |
14646 | Twist,"could_ you_ talk business with her there?" |
14646 | Twist,"inquired Anna- Felicitas,"when he is n''t? |
14646 | Twist,"this strikes you as a bit sudden, sir?" |
14646 | Twist,"will you two Annas kindly tell me what it is you propose to do next?" |
14646 | Twist,--"could you let me have them soon? |
14646 | Twist-- Teapot Twist we call him where I live--""Teapot Twist?" |
14646 | Twist; and as they did n''t go on he presently added,"Yes?" |
14646 | Twist? |
14646 | Twist? |
14646 | Twist?" |
14646 | Twist?" |
14646 | Twist?" |
14646 | Twist?" |
14646 | Two of you?" |
14646 | WHAT? |
14646 | WHERE? |
14646 | Was all that nothing? |
14646 | Was it possible the cute little girls, so well known by sight on Main Street going from shop to shop, were secretly scandalous? |
14646 | Was it possible, thought the twins, that she was longing to leave but had n''t liked to say so, and the letter had come as a release? |
14646 | Was it that it was so very gay? |
14646 | Was lovableness nothing, and complete innocence, after all in the matter of being born, when weighed against the one fact of the von? |
14646 | Was that tact? |
14646 | Was there going to be emotion? |
14646 | Was this, perhaps, one of the moments in life when the truly judicious went? |
14646 | We had a follower once, did n''t we, Anna- R.?" |
14646 | Well, I do n''t quite-- What say? |
14646 | Were they relations of his? |
14646 | What ai n''t you going to, Albert?" |
14646 | What can you expect, Anna II.?" |
14646 | What could be a more tremendous interest, and one more adapted to the American genius, than safe- guarding public morals? |
14646 | What could have been more like heaven? |
14646 | What could he do? |
14646 | What could she do in face of such a chin? |
14646 | What could there ever again be in the world bad enough to cry about after that? |
14646 | What disgracefulness had penetrated through him, through the son the neighbourhood thought so much of, into her very home? |
14646 | What do Sacks really matter? |
14646 | What ever was more neutral than you and me? |
14646 | What had he been concealing from her? |
14646 | What have n''t I seen? |
14646 | What on earth could The Open Arms be? |
14646 | What say? |
14646 | What say? |
14646 | What say? |
14646 | What say? |
14646 | What say? |
14646 | What say? |
14646 | What should she do? |
14646 | What should she say? |
14646 | What was he to do with the Annas? |
14646 | What were they thinking of? |
14646 | What were we made in God''s image for if it was n''t to stand upright on our own feet?" |
14646 | What would Aunt Alice do in a similar situation? |
14646 | What''s five? |
14646 | What''s the good of catching your deaths?" |
14646 | What, he wondered, had they done with Mrs. Bilton? |
14646 | When do you suppose people have food on board ships? |
14646 | Where it''s pitch dark, and there''s nobody to wait on?" |
14646 | Where? |
14646 | Which was the proper line of warning for her to take? |
14646 | Who and what were they? |
14646 | Who are you talking to?" |
14646 | Who can possibly tell? |
14646 | Who knows what their maw will be like? |
14646 | Who would have thought he had so much of it in him? |
14646 | Who would have thought she had so much of passion in her? |
14646 | Who would have thought she would have gone like that? |
14646 | Who would not be indulgent towards two such sweet little girls and their pet bird, even if it did sing all day and most of the night without stopping? |
14646 | Why could n''t brotherly love continue? |
14646 | Why could n''t he help it? |
14646 | Why did n''t he come out and save them? |
14646 | Why did n''t he go? |
14646 | Why had all those Germans come? |
14646 | Why had he bothered about brandy, and let Mrs. Bilton go? |
14646 | Why had he gone to the lawyer at all? |
14646 | Why had that shirker Dellogg died? |
14646 | Why hide it? |
14646 | Why must people get killing each other? |
14646 | Why not regard us merely as pleasant friends?" |
14646 | Why not simply have announced to the world that he was the Twinkler guardian? |
14646 | Why should he doubt? |
14646 | Why should he have to be married to this old lady? |
14646 | Why should he have to nap because somebody else wanted to? |
14646 | Why should he have to nap with an old lady, anyway? |
14646 | Why should he have to pay bills for putting expensive clothes on it? |
14646 | Why should he let himself drop back from heights like those to the old ridiculous timidities, the miserable habit of avoiding the truth? |
14646 | Why should n''t they go to school? |
14646 | Why the devil had n''t Alice thought of_ that_? |
14646 | Why the verandah? |
14646 | Why think or trouble about a pair of chits like that? |
14646 | Why unnecessarily set tongues wagging? |
14646 | Why, except old Ridding and the experts, had none of the Americans come? |
14646 | Why, you''ve got perambulator faces, the pair of you--""Perambulator--?" |
14646 | Will she mind that?" |
14646 | Would she have to learn to faint? |
14646 | Would you like to say what you''re saying to me in the hearing of your parents?" |
14646 | Yet what was lunch when one was rapidly arriving, as she was sure now that she was, at the condition of being in love? |
14646 | You extraordinary adorable little lovely thing?" |
14646 | You must n''t leave this, do you hear? |
14646 | You see?" |
14646 | _ Protégées_? |
14646 | and Anna- Rose, feeling she too ought to make some comment, said,"Is n''t that very unusual?" |
14646 | said Anna- Rose, pricking up her ears,"Shall we?" |
14646 | shake hands right off with strangers? |
14646 | she repeated, at this feeling altogether female, for what an unusual thing for him to ask for,--"You''re not sick?" |
13141 | A bun? |
13141 | A cook? 13141 A five- pound note?" |
13141 | A hyphen? |
13141 | A small bed? 13141 A tall young lady in a blue costume?" |
13141 | A thousand? 13141 About the junkets? |
13141 | About what? |
13141 | Ah yes, my dear-- why? 13141 All we--?" |
13141 | All? |
13141 | An order? 13141 And managed to persuade her?" |
13141 | And now what I want to know is, what has become of the Hancock girl? |
13141 | And poor old Mrs. Shaw-- how does she like being turned out? |
13141 | And pray why not, if I offer a good price? |
13141 | And pray, Emma, what is to prevent you? |
13141 | And the vicar''s teaching? 13141 And therefore the owner of the cottages?" |
13141 | And when that has been set right you''re sure you''ll like staying on here? |
13141 | And where are the people to live who are in them now? |
13141 | And where, Impudence past believing, will you go, in a country whose tongue you most luckily do not understand? |
13141 | And who? |
13141 | And you know her story, of course? |
13141 | And you, ma''am? 13141 Are they distinct?" |
13141 | Are you mad? |
13141 | Are you only comfortable, or are you happy as well? |
13141 | Are you so great a friend of literature? |
13141 | Are you staying here at present? |
13141 | Are you-- are you comfortable there? |
13141 | Are you-- happy? |
13141 | Are you-- not well? |
13141 | Baker''s Farm? |
13141 | Bathrooms? |
13141 | Because it looks so bad? |
13141 | Birth? 13141 Bring it, ma''am?" |
13141 | Bryce? 13141 But do pumps make you clean enough?" |
13141 | But is n''t my kitchenmaid--? |
13141 | But is n''t there anything you''d like? 13141 But my dear Fräulein, why mind a woman seeing it?" |
13141 | But my dear, twenty- five cooks? |
13141 | But the sentiments, Fritzi-- what do you think of the sentiments? |
13141 | But then-- but then--"Then what, my dear? |
13141 | But what do you want to see it for? |
13141 | But what had made you angry? 13141 But what shall I give you instead? |
13141 | But what? |
13141 | But why Neumann? |
13141 | But why secret? 13141 But why wo n''t you, mother?" |
13141 | But why? |
13141 | Buy a cottage? |
13141 | Can one''s wretched body_ never_ keep quiet? |
13141 | Can we-- can we not borrow? |
13141 | Cheap? |
13141 | Clothes, ma''am? |
13141 | Clothes? |
13141 | Coils? |
13141 | Creeper Cottage is it? 13141 Daughter?" |
13141 | Dear mater, why this extreme interest in my Uncle Cox''s umbrella? |
13141 | Did I not tell you they were dead? 13141 Did he not say his name was Neumann?" |
13141 | Did he? |
13141 | Did he? |
13141 | Did n''t I tell you so, mother? |
13141 | Did n''t she bring it? |
13141 | Did n''t that old scamp-- I mean did n''t the excellent Fritzing bring enough money? |
13141 | Did n''t you tell me nobody was round the corner? |
13141 | Did she-- did she ask for it herself? |
13141 | Did she? |
13141 | Did you ever,said Priscilla, temporizing,"try him with a little-- just a little slap? |
13141 | Did you speak? |
13141 | Did you? 13141 Dinner? |
13141 | Distressed me? 13141 Do I look as if I had?" |
13141 | Do n''t English maids curtsey? |
13141 | Do n''t you remember the people who came at the eleventh hour to labour in the vineyard and got just the same as the others? 13141 Do you know her?" |
13141 | Do you mean Miss Schultz? |
13141 | Do you mean me? |
13141 | Do you mean no one is to come? |
13141 | Do you mean the person staying at the Pearces''? |
13141 | Do you mean to say,said Tussie in a voice hollow with consternation,"that you''ve had no dinner?" |
13141 | Do you mind telling me why you want them? |
13141 | Do you not know the person she was engaged to has gone with her? |
13141 | Do you perchance imagine that a starved and badly treated body can ever harbour that most precious gift of the gods, a clear, sane mind? |
13141 | Do you really? |
13141 | Do you suppose it''s worth while to-- to kick somebody who''s down? 13141 Do you think it can possibly be the barbarous German custom?" |
13141 | Do you think,she went on, after she had got herself straight again,"that the way I''m going to live now will make me want to do it often?" |
13141 | Do you think-- do you think I''m going mad? |
13141 | Do you want them for yourself? |
13141 | Do you wipe the puddles up, or does old Fritzing? |
13141 | Do you? |
13141 | Do, ma''am? 13141 Does he?" |
13141 | Does it matter? |
13141 | Does it matter? |
13141 | Done? |
13141 | Done? |
13141 | Downstairs? 13141 Emma?" |
13141 | Ethel, will you marry me? 13141 Ethel,"implored Tussie, looking at her with a wild entreaty in his eyes,"will you kiss me? |
13141 | Ethel-- Ethel,choked Tussie,"will you marry me?" |
13141 | Ethel? |
13141 | Everybody? |
13141 | Feather beds, sir? |
13141 | Fight? 13141 For me?" |
13141 | Fritzi, are you worried about anything? |
13141 | Fritzi, have you had anything to eat to- day? |
13141 | Fräulein, is there a mirror in your bedroom? |
13141 | Get him over this? |
13141 | Go where, Bessie? |
13141 | Go? 13141 Go?" |
13141 | Go? |
13141 | Going to Baker''s? 13141 Gone where?" |
13141 | Had he lost it? 13141 Had he? |
13141 | Happy again, ma''am? |
13141 | Has he gone out? |
13141 | Has she-- isn''t she in her home? |
13141 | Have I not expressed-- regret? |
13141 | Have the parents lost their senses? |
13141 | Have they forgotten the commandments? |
13141 | Have you finished what you came for? |
13141 | He? |
13141 | Herr Geheimrath, where shall I find the cook? |
13141 | Hiding myself? |
13141 | How can I help gloom? |
13141 | How can I help how you took it? |
13141 | How can I prepare a bath without water- taps? |
13141 | How can it be if it does her so much good? 13141 How can you worry a person who is ill in bed with such things?" |
13141 | How dare you box-- oh, this is too horrible-- and you stand there and tell me so to my face? |
13141 | How did it come here? |
13141 | How did you know we were in Symford? |
13141 | How do you know Fritzing''s here? |
13141 | How do you know we''re here-- here, in Creeper Cottage? |
13141 | How long are you going to stay in this parish? |
13141 | How should I know? |
13141 | Hullo mater, you here? |
13141 | Hungry? |
13141 | I do n''t know if you''ve come to laugh at me? |
13141 | I say, who are you? 13141 I''d dye my hair at once,"she said,"but what about my wretched eyelashes? |
13141 | I''m afraid I''ve grown magniloquent since-- since--"Since you ran away? |
13141 | In London? |
13141 | In what way? |
13141 | Indeed? |
13141 | Indeed? |
13141 | Indeed? |
13141 | Is any one else going to help? |
13141 | Is anything not quite right? |
13141 | Is he so ill? |
13141 | Is it all gone? |
13141 | Is it bad for her? |
13141 | Is it because I''m a girl that I must n''t? |
13141 | Is it for sale? 13141 Is it momentous? |
13141 | Is it not rather unusual,asked Robin,"for two young ladies in one family to die at once? |
13141 | Is it possible something has happened? |
13141 | Is it possible we''ve been insulted? |
13141 | Is it seemly to burst in on a man like this? 13141 Is it surprising?" |
13141 | Is it true that the children are going to Baker''s Farm this afternoon? |
13141 | Is it well so, Fräulein? |
13141 | Is my English so bad? |
13141 | Is my father round the corner? |
13141 | Is n''t he? 13141 Is not the willingness to give you your own price sufficient?" |
13141 | Is she a witch? |
13141 | Is she following you into these cottages, or are you following her? |
13141 | Is she the soul with the holes in its apron? |
13141 | Is that what your niece does? |
13141 | Is this a business conversation or is it not? |
13141 | Is this where you are staying? |
13141 | Is your uncle out? |
13141 | It seems hard on him, do n''t it? 13141 Kate, are you not bitter?" |
13141 | Kate? |
13141 | Kick? 13141 Kill him, ma''am? |
13141 | Kind? |
13141 | Knew me? |
13141 | Look here, what do you suppose people who live in such places want? |
13141 | Lose it? 13141 Loving you? |
13141 | Ma''am, did you not tell them our name is Schultz? |
13141 | Ma''am, if you interrupt how can I read? 13141 Ma''am, why not?" |
13141 | Ma''am, you do not repent? |
13141 | Madam? |
13141 | Matter? 13141 May I come in?" |
13141 | Miserable? |
13141 | Mother, why do you refuse to do a little business? |
13141 | Mrs. Pearce--"She told you? |
13141 | Mutti, is she a witch? 13141 My dear cousin?" |
13141 | My dear young lady,said the vicar kindly,"are you not afraid of catching cold? |
13141 | My dear? |
13141 | My son is much too steady and conscientious, besides being too much accustomed to first- rate society, to stoop to anything so vulgar--"As myself? |
13141 | My uncle''s? |
13141 | Neumann? |
13141 | Never at the Cock and Hens? |
13141 | No, ma''am? |
13141 | No? |
13141 | No? |
13141 | No? |
13141 | Not English? |
13141 | Not a cook? |
13141 | Not come of age? |
13141 | Not if she is? |
13141 | Not in this weather? |
13141 | Nothing since? |
13141 | Nothing? |
13141 | Notice to quit? 13141 Now, mother, you really ca n''t make Mr. Neumann- Schultz''s niece ill.""Dearest boy, have you suddenly lost your senses?" |
13141 | Now, sir,said Fritzing, assuming an air of brisk bravery and guiltlessness,"what can we do for you?" |
13141 | Of the vicar? 13141 Oh come now,"said the cheerful Robin,"are n''t you looking for her?" |
13141 | Oh,cried Annalise hysterically, pushing him away with both her hands,"what have you done? |
13141 | Oh,she said,"I hope they''re the ones I was expecting from Paris?" |
13141 | Oh,sighed Priscilla, laying her distracted head against the cushions and shutting her eyes,"who are they?" |
13141 | Oh? |
13141 | On that occasion? 13141 Or, after a brief period of starvation and other violent discomfort, we are cast into gaol for debt--""Oh?" |
13141 | Pardon me,said the vicar,"if I seem inquisitive, but is it one of the Symford cottages your uncle wishes to buy? |
13141 | Paris, ma''am? |
13141 | Perhaps the Herr Geheimrath will show me where the tea and milk is? 13141 Perhaps you can change this?" |
13141 | Please miss, what do you wish for luncheon? |
13141 | Please mum, will the parents go too? |
13141 | Pray who, exactly, is the Hancock girl? |
13141 | Psha, Kate? |
13141 | Really not? 13141 Really? |
13141 | Really? |
13141 | Really? |
13141 | Rejoice? |
13141 | Robbed? |
13141 | Robin, are you sure it is his own? |
13141 | Robin, what girl is that? |
13141 | Rum? |
13141 | Selfish? |
13141 | Settled, ma''am? 13141 Shall I inquire if she will receive you?" |
13141 | Shall I see him for you, mother? |
13141 | Shall I send Annalise to you, ma''am? |
13141 | Shall you-- come too? |
13141 | Sir Augustus? |
13141 | Sir Augustus? |
13141 | Sir, what have I to do with Miss Schultz? |
13141 | Sisters, ma''am? |
13141 | Sit down-- no don''t-- stay a moment like this,said Tussie, his breath coming in little jerks,--"unless you are tired? |
13141 | Some? 13141 Something to drink, then?" |
13141 | Splendid? 13141 Surely he would be glad to help any one in difficulties?" |
13141 | Surely,interrupted the vicar mildly,"Ethel is not a German name?" |
13141 | The young lady? |
13141 | Then she did lose the money? |
13141 | Then why did you come? |
13141 | Then why do you do it? |
13141 | Then, if you''re happy, why do you look so miserable? |
13141 | They are to have tea there? |
13141 | Think aloud? |
13141 | To whom shall I give the order? |
13141 | To whom shall you give the order? |
13141 | Too comfortable? 13141 Troubled?" |
13141 | Tussie, are we so poor? |
13141 | Tussie, have I ever shirked doing a kindness? |
13141 | Tussie, it''s so damp,cried his anxious mother after him--"you''re not really going out in this nasty Scotch mist? |
13141 | Tussie? |
13141 | Tussie? |
13141 | Twenty- five cooks? |
13141 | Twenty? 13141 Two what?" |
13141 | Unmannerly one, how dare you linger talking follies when your royal mistress is waiting for her tea? 13141 Upset Symford?" |
13141 | Was he? |
13141 | Was it ever made? |
13141 | Was it you keeping him so quiet? |
13141 | Wasted? 13141 Well then, what? |
13141 | Well, what of that? |
13141 | Well, you do n''t call London round the corner? 13141 Were you going that way too?" |
13141 | Were you not cheerful before? |
13141 | What can we do? |
13141 | What cottages? |
13141 | What did you never hear of, sir? |
13141 | What do you know of these things? 13141 What do you suppose I''ve done? |
13141 | What do you wish to know, madam? |
13141 | What does he say? |
13141 | What have you done? |
13141 | What have you done? |
13141 | What is a bun? |
13141 | What is it? |
13141 | What is not in this place, I should like to know? |
13141 | What is she waiting for? |
13141 | What is that? |
13141 | What is this? |
13141 | What is? |
13141 | What of? |
13141 | What sort? |
13141 | What umbrella is that, Robin? |
13141 | What umbrella is that? |
13141 | What would German maids do, I wonder, in dealing with royalties,said Tussie,"if they curtsey so beautifully to ordinary mistresses? |
13141 | What you are doing now? |
13141 | What''s the matter? |
13141 | What, do n''t you know? |
13141 | What, have those people sent wrong things? |
13141 | What, have you forgotten your New Testaments? |
13141 | What, still there? |
13141 | What, that woman who burst in upon me was Lady Shuttleworth''s cook? |
13141 | What, the vicar? |
13141 | What, you will not carry out her Grand Ducal Highness''s orders? |
13141 | What,she said,"do you say to my marrying this man?" |
13141 | What? 13141 What?" |
13141 | What? |
13141 | What? |
13141 | What? |
13141 | When does Robin go back to Cambridge? |
13141 | Where did it come from? |
13141 | Where in the world do you get it from? |
13141 | Where shall you find the cook? |
13141 | Where you are? |
13141 | Where,asked Annalise,"shall I find the cook?" |
13141 | Who are they? 13141 Who are you?" |
13141 | Who is it? |
13141 | Who would have thought old Fuss would be so enterprising? |
13141 | Why do n''t she take that black thing off? |
13141 | Why do n''t she take that black thing off? |
13141 | Why do n''t you build for yourself? |
13141 | Why do n''t you take better care of your only son? |
13141 | Why do you send him away, mother? |
13141 | Why does he do such things, then? |
13141 | Why does she wear that black thing over her face? |
13141 | Why has no one told you? |
13141 | Why not? |
13141 | Why should I have to be Neumann? |
13141 | Why should I imagine it? |
13141 | Why wo n''t I? 13141 Why?" |
13141 | Wicked? |
13141 | Will you give me your card, sir? |
13141 | Will you go? |
13141 | Will you let me show you the way? |
13141 | Will you please do it, then, and get it over? |
13141 | With us? |
13141 | With whom were you speaking? |
13141 | Woman, what have I to do with you? |
13141 | Write? 13141 Yes, and be Neumann- Schultz?" |
13141 | Yes, but as you were not-- ought I to go back and say they''re only half- sisters? 13141 Yes?" |
13141 | You are Miss Schultz, are you not? |
13141 | You are a member of the Church of England? |
13141 | You are going to a doctor? |
13141 | You are rankly rebellious? |
13141 | You are very young,she said,"so you will not mind my questions--""Do n''t the young mind questions?" |
13141 | You do n''t expect me to answer that? |
13141 | You do n''t like her? |
13141 | You do n''t mind his marrying an adventuress, then? |
13141 | You do n''t mind our boy''s heart being broken, then? |
13141 | You do not repent? |
13141 | You know my son, I believe? |
13141 | You know the cook Lady Shuttleworth sent has gone again? |
13141 | You know,he said,"our engagement has n''t been broken off yet?" |
13141 | You rather like our old people to be tempted to drink, to have it thrust upon them on their very dying beds? |
13141 | You refuse to prepare the bath? |
13141 | You refuse to prepare the tea? |
13141 | You, a German girl, the daughter of poor parents, you are not ashamed to say it? 13141 You, ma''am?" |
13141 | You? |
13141 | You? |
13141 | Your Grand Ducal Highness objects? |
13141 | Your Grand Ducal Highness receives many criticisms and much advice on the subject of drawing from the Herr Geheimrath? |
13141 | Your cottage? 13141 Yours? |
13141 | _ Ach Gott, ja_,he ejaculated, clapping him on the shoulder,"the poets--_ja, ja_--''Blessings be with them and eternal praise,''what? |
13141 | _ Liebes Kind_, are your promises of no value? 13141 _ Mädchen_,"he said with the gentleness of a pastor in a confirmation class,"do you not remember that the love of money is the root of all evil? |
13141 | ''The voiceless children of the Pure--''how is that, ma''am, for beauty?" |
13141 | About your royal sisters? |
13141 | Aloud she said freezingly,"Did you say something?" |
13141 | Am I not deafened by the roar of answers, all seemingly so right yet all so different, that the simplest question brings? |
13141 | And also the sugar, and the bread and butter if any?" |
13141 | And did I tell you I''ve given Bryce the sack?" |
13141 | And do you know why?" |
13141 | And had Providence, in its care for the righteous cause of mothers, brought her here just in time to save him from this girl''s toils? |
13141 | And how can a birthday be put off? |
13141 | And how could she help being born so? |
13141 | And if she has n''t had a bath how can I let her touch me?" |
13141 | And so low down? |
13141 | And the gentleman-- don''t he want nothing neither?" |
13141 | And the good habits of years?" |
13141 | And was he not the son of an obscure Westphalian farmer, a person who in his youth had sat barefoot watching pigs? |
13141 | And was it, close, mere drudging? |
13141 | And what were they going to get? |
13141 | And why should I preach to a reader who meanwhile has skipped? |
13141 | And would n''t you get wet? |
13141 | And would not Fritzing''s buttons presently come off and have to be sewn on again? |
13141 | And would not the answering roar to anything so complicated as a question about conscience- qualms deafen me for ever? |
13141 | And you will, after one week, divulge them to a stranger? |
13141 | And you''ve come too,"she went on, turning to Mrs. Morrison,"to make friends with your new parishioner? |
13141 | Are n''t they very small, though? |
13141 | Are you all such prudes in Germany? |
13141 | Are your sisters-- are they in London?" |
13141 | As for Annalise, who can guess what thoughts were hers while she was being jogged along to Baker''s? |
13141 | At the Cock and Hens? |
13141 | Because I love you so? |
13141 | Besides, what could he decide? |
13141 | But I thought-- I understood that curtseying maid of yours was going to do all that?" |
13141 | But an Annalise-- what was she to make of such a place? |
13141 | But how could the poor Princess, however anxious to be kind, take off her veil and show her well- known face to this probable inhabitant of Kunitz? |
13141 | But is n''t it a little hard to make me responsible?" |
13141 | But the question is do you like it as much as you thought you would?" |
13141 | But they''re not for sale, so what''s the use--""Sir, do they also contain bathrooms?" |
13141 | But this-- where is it? |
13141 | But was it then-- she started at her own thought-- was it then being fed at Baker''s? |
13141 | But was she really, she asked herself during the drive? |
13141 | But what about the effect it had on Priscilla? |
13141 | But what in this law- bound world can sinners do without the help of Luck? |
13141 | But what of that? |
13141 | But where could the girl be going? |
13141 | But why do n''t you write it then? |
13141 | But why on earth do n''t you write it properly, then? |
13141 | But why plural? |
13141 | Ca n''t I get you anything? |
13141 | Can anybody who is supperless, dinnerless, breakfastless, be happy, Priscilla wondered? |
13141 | Can one be too comfortable?" |
13141 | Can one dye eyelashes?" |
13141 | Carry these buckets-- need I go on? |
13141 | Could he have been expected? |
13141 | Could one live peacefully in such an accursed place? |
13141 | Dawson?" |
13141 | Devils? |
13141 | Devils? |
13141 | Devils? |
13141 | Did Dr. Kraus tell you?" |
13141 | Did it only look simple from outside and far away? |
13141 | Did n''t she?" |
13141 | Did n''t you think they were bad?" |
13141 | Did nobody care, then, what became of her? |
13141 | Did she not seek you out from all the others for the honour of keeping her secrets? |
13141 | Did you get your cottages?" |
13141 | Did you not promise to keep your mouth shut, and not betray the Princess''s confidence? |
13141 | Did you walk?" |
13141 | Did you want my uncle? |
13141 | Do I ever sell cottages?" |
13141 | Do n''t you see you are tempting people who know she is defenceless to steal it from her? |
13141 | Do n''t you think it is beautiful, to give poor people a few happy moments sometimes?" |
13141 | Do tell me-- is the Cock and Hens that inn round the corner? |
13141 | Do you anywhere see even a bit, a smallest bit of hope?" |
13141 | Do you have so many earwigs?" |
13141 | Do you know many of the Kunitzers? |
13141 | Do you know the Levisohns well?" |
13141 | Do you know what I''ve come for?" |
13141 | Do you mean to say you have money hidden away and yet allow Lady Shuttleworth to pay everything for you?" |
13141 | Do you not know the enormous, the almost insurmountable difficulty there is in not bullying meekness, in not responding to the cringer with a kick? |
13141 | Do you not remember, on the eve of your wedding, how he swore with tears he would be good to you? |
13141 | Do you not see you have deliberately made a thief out of an honest girl?" |
13141 | Do you think she is so beautiful? |
13141 | Do you want him?" |
13141 | Do you?" |
13141 | Does n''t it seem rather-- a pity not to carry on traditions?" |
13141 | Does one let one''s life go? |
13141 | Dost thou hear what the Fräulein says, Hans- Joachim?" |
13141 | Even you pretending, you little hypocrite?" |
13141 | For letters to reach me? |
13141 | For myself I know that the larger lines of my life were laid down once for all by-- but what has this to do with Priscilla? |
13141 | For you regular, Miss Neumann- Schultz?" |
13141 | Had I--?" |
13141 | Had Lady Shuttleworth suddenly lost her reason? |
13141 | Had he not a cousin who had married a German officer? |
13141 | Had she not had ten years for studying Shakespeare? |
13141 | Had she not interrupted the decent course of Mrs. Jones''s dying, and snatched her back to a hankering after the unfit? |
13141 | Had she not made all its children either sick or cross under the pretence of giving them a treat? |
13141 | Had she not taught the entire village to break the Sabbath? |
13141 | Had she slept comfortably the first night in her little home? |
13141 | Happy? |
13141 | Has it struck you that such things are likely to occur pretty often to Miss Maria- Theresa Ethel Neumann- Schultz?" |
13141 | Has n''t it struck you that we''re very vulgar?" |
13141 | Hast thou not observed the pump? |
13141 | Have I not told you the only two things you are?" |
13141 | Have n''t I kept him well in hand up to this?" |
13141 | Have you been worrying?" |
13141 | Have you got Mrs. Shaw''s, then?" |
13141 | Have you no decency? |
13141 | Have you perhaps omitted to investigate the coal- hole?" |
13141 | Have you the change?" |
13141 | He had not heard her call her uncle baldly Fritzi before; and what fuss and luxury could a German teacher''s life have known? |
13141 | He is an excellent physician, is he not?" |
13141 | He loved the Princess so much that he cared nothing for his own risks, but what about hers? |
13141 | He withdrew to a little distance, and fell into a reverie: where had he seen just that mechanically gracious bow and smile? |
13141 | Heavens and earth, what had he done? |
13141 | Here? |
13141 | How can I? |
13141 | How could he go away even for one hour, even in search of a cook, when such dreadful things happened? |
13141 | How could she explain to him what she knew to be true, that the one person responsible for Tussie''s illness was Priscilla? |
13141 | How could she? |
13141 | How dared Annalise? |
13141 | How dared she? |
13141 | How dared she? |
13141 | How did you manage that in such a little while?" |
13141 | How was he to stop her going even so far as young Morrison? |
13141 | How was he to stop the girl''s going back to Kunitz? |
13141 | How was she going to bear her about her, endure the sight and sound of that veiled impertinence? |
13141 | I am here--""Oh, Noyman, is it? |
13141 | I hope he is n''t going to upset Symford?" |
13141 | I hope they make you comfortable?" |
13141 | I say, it ca n''t be-- no, it ca n''t possibly be the uncle?" |
13141 | I shall miss my train you know if you keep me, and then I''d be exposed again to those-- what was the word? |
13141 | I''ll be hanged if I will, do you hear?" |
13141 | I''ve been making you anxious, have n''t I? |
13141 | If you''ve finished wo n''t you go?" |
13141 | In a cottage? |
13141 | In this house?" |
13141 | Is it not true that the less a person has inside him of culture and imagination the more he wants outside him of the upholstery of life? |
13141 | Is it possible she was thinking of giving the comfortable mother that admonition which the policeman had so narrowly escaped? |
13141 | Is it seemly to keep the Princess waiting?" |
13141 | Is it well so?" |
13141 | Is n''t he German?" |
13141 | Is n''t that true wisdom?" |
13141 | Is n''t there any other place here you''d rather have?" |
13141 | Is the Herr Geheimrath agreed?" |
13141 | Is there a special voice for buns?" |
13141 | It is a rash?" |
13141 | It seems natural enough she should wait, do n''t it?" |
13141 | It was now Robin''s turn to say"What?" |
13141 | It''s a Mr. Neumann I''ve come to see; does n''t he live here?" |
13141 | Kraus?" |
13141 | Like the dogs of the Scriptures we will return--""Why not borrow of the vicar?" |
13141 | Lingering, perhaps, among the very tombs just outside her window? |
13141 | Loving you?" |
13141 | Might I inquire the number of rooms the cottages contain?" |
13141 | Miss Schultz? |
13141 | Morrison?" |
13141 | Morrison?" |
13141 | Must I be gloomy?" |
13141 | Must I then teach thee the elements of thy business? |
13141 | Must n''t she die happy?" |
13141 | Mutti, Mutti, is she a witch, Mutti?" |
13141 | My dear, how could I think anything so unkind? |
13141 | Neumann- Schultz?" |
13141 | No respect for another''s privacy? |
13141 | Now Priscilla''s and Mrs. Jones''s last words together had been these:"Is there anything else I can do for you?" |
13141 | Now if you were not so vain-- what does a rash matter when only women are present? |
13141 | Now is n''t that what a sensible girl like you would call absurd?" |
13141 | Now what is she and where is she?" |
13141 | One''s hope of salvation go? |
13141 | One''s little precious minute of perfect happiness go? |
13141 | Or at Robin, that he seemed so modest? |
13141 | Or at Tussie, that he seemed so well put together? |
13141 | Or must I show you how?" |
13141 | Or sisters in law? |
13141 | Or step- sisters? |
13141 | Or was she already accepting the girl as her son''s wife? |
13141 | Perhaps even murder her? |
13141 | Priscilla caught her breath: what white anguish was going to flash into his face when he grasped the situation? |
13141 | Quite well? |
13141 | Really?" |
13141 | Shall I order it, or will you? |
13141 | Shall we not too one day in our turn feel her claws? |
13141 | She felt she had done wrong; yet how, except by just existing? |
13141 | She had, I say, been wretched enough; but what was this wretchedness to that which followed? |
13141 | She pushed that on one side without looking at it; what did bills matter? |
13141 | She was not; but then who is? |
13141 | Since when have you become thus greedy for it?" |
13141 | Smothered?" |
13141 | So completely got to the bottom?" |
13141 | Suppose my uncle were to hear you? |
13141 | Surely it could n''t hurt?" |
13141 | Surely it was very innocent to do that? |
13141 | Surely she was a sort of poisonous weed, fatal to every one about her? |
13141 | Surely there was no limit, positively none, to what the girl might do or say? |
13141 | That is a question for you to answer, is it not?" |
13141 | That''s quite easy, is n''t it?" |
13141 | The old lady was dead no doubt, had died quietly in her sleep as had been expected, but what folly was all this about a murder? |
13141 | The voluntaries she played that day were Dead Marches, and the vicar preached a conscience- shattering sermon upon the text"Lord, who is it?" |
13141 | Then an idea struck her, and looking up at him with sudden gaiety she said,"Ca n''t we have a hyphen?" |
13141 | Then he added suddenly,"Will you have a small bed-- a little iron one-- put in my bedroom?" |
13141 | Then he said,"Buy a cottage?" |
13141 | These are not reproaches being piled up on the vicar''s wife; who shall dare reproach another? |
13141 | They were not even linen,--how could they be for Fritzing''s three hundred marks? |
13141 | They''d have to go down on their knees to a princess, would n''t they?" |
13141 | This young gentleman is, I take it, your son?" |
13141 | Those delicate meals, served in spotlessness, surely they had been rather of the nature of poems? |
13141 | To Priscilla she said, with an obvious dawning of distrust,"But Fräulein, what reason can you have for hiding yourself?" |
13141 | To lead us to certain shipwreck, ma''am? |
13141 | Twenty marks?" |
13141 | Was Tussie going to turn over a new leaf after all, now that he was coming of age, and interest himself in more profitable things than verse- making? |
13141 | Was ever a man interrupted like this in the act of asking a girl to marry him?" |
13141 | Was ever so much love and so much folly united in one wise old man? |
13141 | Was ever, for that matter, so expensive a tea? |
13141 | Was he not encouraging the strangest, wickedest, wildest ideas in the Princess? |
13141 | Was it because she had been looking so long at Fritzing that this man seemed so nicely groomed? |
13141 | Was she keeping warm and dry this shocking weather? |
13141 | Was she not a_ hochgeboren_, a member of an ancient house, of luminous pedigree as far back as one could possibly see? |
13141 | Was she not happy at last, and happy in the right way? |
13141 | Was she of positively no value at all? |
13141 | Was that, then, how the public stigmatized blameless persons in search of peace? |
13141 | Was the Grand Duke round the corner? |
13141 | Was the day of Tussie''s coming of age, that dreadful day when he was nearest death, a day a mother could ever forget? |
13141 | Was the kitchenmaid taking proper care of her? |
13141 | Was the poor dear delirious? |
13141 | Was the simple life a sordid life as well? |
13141 | Was there not rather cause for an infinity of shame? |
13141 | We wo n''t let one mad young man turn all our beautiful life sour, will we?" |
13141 | Were they unhealthy young ladies?" |
13141 | What about all the other occasions? |
13141 | What business, said Priscilla''s look more plainly than any words, what business had people to walk into other people''s cottages in such a manner? |
13141 | What can I do for you? |
13141 | What can be more inexperienced than a carefully guarded young princess? |
13141 | What could I write? |
13141 | What could he do but follow? |
13141 | What do you think? |
13141 | What do you wish for luncheon?" |
13141 | What else has been taken? |
13141 | What excuse can I make at the last moment? |
13141 | What had happened? |
13141 | What had he come for? |
13141 | What had he done? |
13141 | What had she done but accept help eagerly offered? |
13141 | What had she done but whine during her passive period? |
13141 | What had she done? |
13141 | What have you not been to me?" |
13141 | What in the world was she doing in Symford? |
13141 | What is all this talk of traps and horses? |
13141 | What is it? |
13141 | What is its address? |
13141 | What is the matter with the Countess Disthal? |
13141 | What is the use of a cook in a house where there is nothing to cook? |
13141 | What may not one expect of anything so cheap? |
13141 | What on earth for? |
13141 | What right have you to christen me?" |
13141 | What was he to do? |
13141 | What was he to say to his Princess? |
13141 | What was it that your Grand Ducal Highness thought aloud?" |
13141 | What was she doing to- day? |
13141 | What was she to do? |
13141 | What was she to do? |
13141 | What was the use, briefly reflected this philosopher, of worrying about what they were or were not thinking at Kunitz? |
13141 | What was to become of her, and of poor Fritzing, dragged down by her to an equal misery? |
13141 | What, fifty English sovereigns? |
13141 | What, first he is to insult me and then hurt or kill my Fritzi? |
13141 | What, of the father of the young man who insulted your Grand Ducal Highness and whom I propose to kill in duel my first leisure moment? |
13141 | What?" |
13141 | When all Europe was going to be about their ears? |
13141 | When he was in the eyes of the world a criminal-- an aider, abettor, lurer- away of youth and impulsiveness? |
13141 | Where am I?" |
13141 | Where are you staying? |
13141 | Where is the great man?" |
13141 | Where the deuce to?" |
13141 | Where''s he from?" |
13141 | Which cottage is it?" |
13141 | While I was away-- what had happened?" |
13141 | Who are the Levisohns? |
13141 | Who could be anything else with his stomach full of starch? |
13141 | Who could have dreamed it would get so quickly into the papers? |
13141 | Who could have dreamed the news of it would call forth such blazing words? |
13141 | Who does not know that fresh impulse, so strong and gracious, towards good that surges up in us after a period of sitting still in mud? |
13141 | Who had been infamous? |
13141 | Who said you were? |
13141 | Who shall measure the influence of one kind and blameless life? |
13141 | Who wants to be a flame, doomed to be blown out by the same gust of wind that has first fanned it to its very brightest? |
13141 | Who was this shabby young lady? |
13141 | Who?" |
13141 | Why are you going to Baker''s, Emma?" |
13141 | Why do you let him go out at night this time of year? |
13141 | Why do you let him over- exert himself? |
13141 | Why had she gone starving to bed? |
13141 | Why had she not thought of this, known that she would be in the power of any servant they chose to bring? |
13141 | Why not have fewer things, and give the rest to the poor?" |
13141 | Why should I be put into my clothes and taken out of them again as though I had n''t been weaned yet?" |
13141 | Why should I try to improve on parables?" |
13141 | Why should I? |
13141 | Why should it be Neumann? |
13141 | Why should it kill him?" |
13141 | Why should she be eternally lost? |
13141 | Why should she? |
13141 | Why such a fuss and such big words about five pounds? |
13141 | Why, Mrs. Morrison asked herself, did n''t the girl smile? |
13141 | Why, Robin, and you too?" |
13141 | Why, Tussie asked himself over and over again, had she looked so strange the night before? |
13141 | Why, how many do you want?" |
13141 | Why, then, should she feign if it is not in order to see the doctor? |
13141 | Why, what has he done?" |
13141 | Why, what would you do with it?" |
13141 | Why,"fumed Tussie,"ca n''t we live decently? |
13141 | Why? |
13141 | Why?" |
13141 | Will it not be well so?" |
13141 | Will not Nature herself teach thee what to do with buckets?" |
13141 | Will you think me unpardonably curious if I ask what made you pitch on Symford as a place to live in?" |
13141 | Would Fritzing be angry? |
13141 | Would he not be happier if he lay down and went to sleep?" |
13141 | Would he, only remembering she was grand ducal, regard it as an insult and want to fight Tussie? |
13141 | Would n''t that do?" |
13141 | Would she recognize it? |
13141 | Would they also sew buttons on her uncle''s clothes? |
13141 | Would they not turn away shuddering from what she now saw was a hideous selfishness and ingratitude? |
13141 | Would you like her to come up and see you?" |
13141 | Yet how could they go away? |
13141 | You are the most--""Really I think we''ve done, have n''t we?" |
13141 | You could not, said Priscilla, expect soil at the top of ladders, could you? |
13141 | You do not hide your head for shame? |
13141 | You do think she''s an adventuress, then?" |
13141 | You have seen her? |
13141 | You know she is lady- in- waiting to the Princess Priscilla, the one who is so popular and has such red hair? |
13141 | You must know their magnificent shop at the corner of the Heiligengeiststrasse? |
13141 | You must know you are in England?" |
13141 | You will leave her service? |
13141 | You will return to Kunitz? |
13141 | You''re German, ai n''t you?" |
13141 | You''re going to say why not eat? |
13141 | You''ve not been hungry since?" |
13141 | You? |
13141 | _ Elender Junge_, what have you done?" |
13141 | _ What_ were they talking about? |
13141 | cried Priscilla, startled,"what, whether he wants to or not?" |
13141 | cried Tussie, interrupting his kissing of her hands to look up at Priscilla and smile with a sort of pitying wonder,"Let you go? |
13141 | she cried,"What?" |