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 |
---|---|
47862 | As if a man should say to his friend when in the country,"I am going up to town; can I take anything for you?" |
47862 | But does it follow from all this, that the tone of moral action in the State should be lowered? |
47862 | Had any man said to me,"How soon will it come on?" |
47862 | If any man doubts this, I ask him to ask himself, what demand political honour could have made with which I failed to comply? |
47862 | Was it daringly pretended that there had been no real change of front; and that, if the world had understood me otherwise, it had misunderstood me? |
47862 | Was it made to minister to the interests of political ambition? |
47862 | Was it performed with an indecent levity? |
47862 | Was the gravity of the case denied or understated? |
47862 | What has been her case? |
9900 | Do you know,replied Mr. Gladstone,"that you have just supplied me with a strong argument in Dr. Benson''s favor? |
9900 | The Jew was refused entrance into the House because he would then be a maker of the law; but who made the maker of the law? 9900 What are you doing?" |
9900 | And he had propounded the memorable political maxim,"Have I not a right to do what I like with my own?" |
9900 | And the question, Which was right-- Gladstone or the student? |
9900 | And why? |
9900 | But how comes it to pass that the sight of that flag always raises the spirit of Englishmen? |
9900 | Gladstone?" |
9900 | How could the author of"The State in its Relations with the Church"become the destroyer of the fabric of the Irish Church? |
9900 | If they were, was it probable that the Parliament would cease to be a Christian Parliament?" |
9900 | In reply to the oft- repeated question,"What took you to Egypt?" |
9900 | Is the Irish Church to be or not to be? |
9900 | Is this to be, now that the Reform Bill has done its work? |
9900 | Mr. Gladstone retorted:"I want to know, to what Constitution does it give a mortal stab? |
9900 | Now were the constituencies Christian constituencies? |
9900 | Now what say ye, our merry men, touching the Ballot?" |
9900 | Shall we not heed the lesson taught of old, And by the Present''s lips repeated still? |
9900 | Shall we, then, purchase their applause at the expense of their substantial, nay, their spiritual interests? |
9900 | Throughout the day could be heard expressions of deep regret among the working people, asking,"How is the old gentleman?" |
9900 | Tread the dark desert and the thirsty sand, Nor give one thought to England''s smiling land? |
9900 | What is it? |
9900 | What is the secret of this wonderful capacity of revival? |
9900 | What is wanting? |
9900 | Which policy will the country prefer?" |
9900 | Who foremost now to climb the leaguered wall, The first to triumph, or the first to fall? |
9900 | ii, 475,_ seq_., I was pleasantly surprised by the beautiful eye turning on me with the question,''What is the meaning of_ sacra fero_?'' |
9900 | may be answered by another, Which one became Prime Minister of England? |
12933 | And did Mr. Gladstone go? |
12933 | And did Oliver Goldsmith really play his harp in this very room? |
12933 | And do you never admit visitors, even to the grounds? |
12933 | And so you are an alien? |
12933 | And what did you tell him? |
12933 | Ay, mon, but ai n''t ut a big un? |
12933 | Aye, you are a gentleman-- and about burying folks in churches? |
12933 | But did Shakespeare run away? |
12933 | But visitors do come? |
12933 | Can you tell me how far it is to Brantwood? |
12933 | Can you tell me where Mr. Whitman lives? |
12933 | Did George Eliot live here? |
12933 | Did you visit Carlyle''s''ouse? |
12933 | Do we use them? 12933 Do you believe in cremation, sir?" |
12933 | Have ye a penny, I do n''t know? |
12933 | He might know all about one woman, and if he should regard her as a sample of all womankind, would he not make a great mistake? |
12933 | Heart of my heart, is this well done? |
12933 | How can any adversity come to him who hath a wife? |
12933 | Never mind wot I am, sir--''oo are you? |
12933 | Question, What is justice in Pigdom? 12933 Rheumatism? |
12933 | The Anxworks package-- I will not deceive you, Sweet; why should I? |
12933 | Together, I s''pose? |
12933 | Was what sarcasm? |
12933 | Well,said Hawkins,"what did he say to you?" |
12933 | What are you reading? |
12933 | What did I say-- really I have forgotten? |
12933 | What is your favorite book? |
12933 | Which boat do you want? |
12933 | Who? |
12933 | Would you like to become a telegraph- operator? |
12933 | You are twenty- five now? 12933 You mean Walt Whitman?" |
12933 | You speak of death as a matter of course-- you are not afraid to die? |
12933 | A policeman passed us running and called back,"I say, Hawkins, is that you? |
12933 | Alone? |
12933 | And did I want to buy a bull calf? |
12933 | And is n''t that so? |
12933 | And to whom do we owe it that he did leave-- Justice Shallow or Ann Hathaway, or both? |
12933 | Are these remains of stately forests symbols of a race of men that, too, have passed away? |
12933 | Assertive? |
12933 | Besides, who was there to take up his pen? |
12933 | Brown?" |
12933 | But it is all good-- I accept it all and give thanks-- you have not forgotten my chant to death?" |
12933 | But still, should not England have a fitting monument to Shakespeare? |
12933 | But who inspired Dorothy? |
12933 | But why should I tell about it here? |
12933 | Ca n''t you go with me?" |
12933 | Cawn''t ye hadmire''i m on that side of the wall as well as this?" |
12933 | Could it be possible that these rustics were poets? |
12933 | Dark Mother, always gliding near with soft feet, Have none chanted for thee a chant of fullest welcome? |
12933 | Did Mademoiselle Mars use it? |
12933 | Did you ever hear of him?" |
12933 | Do you know the scene?" |
12933 | Do you not know what books are to a child hungry for truth, that has no books? |
12933 | Does she protest, and find fault? |
12933 | Edison?" |
12933 | Edison?" |
12933 | Genius has its times of straying off into the infinite-- and then what is the good wife to do for companionship? |
12933 | Had Gavroche ever seen them? |
12933 | Have n''t you noticed that men of sixty have no clearer vision than men of forty? |
12933 | He answered back,"What t''ell is the matter with you fellows?" |
12933 | He brings to bear an energy on every subject he touches( and what subject has he not touched?) |
12933 | He evidently was acquainted with five different languages, and the range of his intellect was worldwide; but where did he get this vast erudition? |
12933 | Honeydew: Ay, Jarvis; but what will fill their mouths in the meantime? |
12933 | How can I get in?" |
12933 | How did she acquire this knowledge? |
12933 | How is any education acquired if not through effort prompted by desire? |
12933 | How? |
12933 | I did likewise, and was greeted with a resounding smack which surprised me a bit, but I managed to ask,"Did you run away?" |
12933 | I heard Old Walt chuckle behind me, talking incoherently to himself, and then he said,"You are wondering why I live in such a place as this?" |
12933 | I touched my hat and said,"Ah, excuse me, Mr. Falstaff, you are the bouncer?" |
12933 | In a voice full of defense the County Down watchman said:"Ah, now, and how did I know but that it was a forgery? |
12933 | Is it not too bad? |
12933 | Is not the child nearer to God than the man? |
12933 | Is not this enough? |
12933 | Is this much or little? |
12933 | Is this to his credit? |
12933 | Just below was the Stone pier and there stood Mrs. Gamp, and I heard her ask:"And which of all them smoking monsters is the Anxworks boat, I wonder? |
12933 | More than a thousand years before Christ, an Arab chief asked,"If a man die shall he live again?" |
12933 | Need I say that the girl who made the remark just quoted had drunk of life''s cup to the very lees? |
12933 | Next the public wanted to know about this thing--"What are you folks doing out there in that buckwheat town?" |
12933 | Of course, these girls are aware that we admire them-- how could they help it? |
12933 | Once they urged him to go with them to an exhibition at Kensington, but he smiled feebly as he lit his pipe and said,"An Art Exhibition? |
12933 | Philip asked the eunuch a needless question when he inquired,"Understandest thou what thou readest?" |
12933 | Proud? |
12933 | Say, did you know him?" |
12933 | So I put the question to him direct:"Did you see Buffalo Bill?" |
12933 | Stubborn? |
12933 | Then the preacher spoke and his voice was sorrowful:"Oh, but I made a botch of it-- was it sarcasm or was it not?" |
12933 | Then what have I done concerning which the public wishes to know? |
12933 | Then what? |
12933 | Then why a monument to Shakespeare? |
12933 | These things being true, and all the sentiments quoted coming from"good"but blindly zealous men, is it a wonder that the Artist is not understood? |
12933 | Tomorrow we go-- where? |
12933 | Victor Hugo has said something on this subject which runs about like this: Why a monument to Shakespeare? |
12933 | WILLIAM M. THACKERAY TO MR. BROOKFIELD September 16, 1849 Have you read Dickens? |
12933 | Was ever a Jones so honored before? |
12933 | Was ever woman more honestly and better praised than Dorothy? |
12933 | Were the waters troubled in order that they might heal the people? |
12933 | What architect has the skill to build a tower so high as the name of Shakespeare? |
12933 | What bronze can equal the bronze of"Hamlet"? |
12933 | What can bronze or marble do for him? |
12933 | What capital, were it even in London, could rumble around it as tumultuously as Macbeth''s perturbed soul? |
12933 | What do you mean by equity? |
12933 | What edifice can equal thought? |
12933 | What framework of cedar or oak will last as long as"Othello"? |
12933 | What is Pig Poetry? |
12933 | What is as indestructible as these:"The Tempest,""The Winter''s Tale,""Julius CÃ ¦ sar,""Coriolanus"? |
12933 | What is meant by''your share''?" |
12933 | What is the Whole Duty of Pigs? |
12933 | What monument sublimer than"Lear,"sterner than"The Merchant of Venice,"more dazzling than"Romeo and Juliet,"more amazing than"Richard III"? |
12933 | What moon could shed about the pile a light more mystic than that of"A Midsummer Night''s Dream"? |
12933 | When trouble, adversity or bewilderment comes to the homesick traveler in an American hotel, to whom can he turn for consolation? |
12933 | Where, one asks in amazement, did this remarkable man find the inspiration for carrying forward his great work? |
12933 | Who can recount the innumerable biographies that begin thus:"In his youth, our subject had for his constant reading, Plutarch''s Lives, etc."? |
12933 | Who can tell? |
12933 | Who could harm the kind vagrant harper? |
12933 | Who made the Pig? |
12933 | Who wrote it? |
12933 | Whom did he ever hurt? |
12933 | Why did he not learn at the feet of Sir Thomas Lucy and write his own epitaph? |
12933 | Why, do n''t you know? |
12933 | Will this convey the thought? |
12933 | Would the author be so kind as to change it? |
12933 | Would they have been so great had they not suffered? |
12933 | Yet love is life and hate is death, so how can spite benefit? |
12933 | now, wot you want?" |
12933 | where the mob surges, cursed with idle curiosity to see the graves of kings and nobodies? |
21091 | Will you come in? 21091 ''But really,''I continue,''do you in your heart mean to say that he should absolutely and for ever give up the state and country? 21091 ''But what of Dante?'' 21091 ''He observed that the question was of the most vital consequence, Who should lead the House of Commons? 21091 ''How,''he replied,''can any uncertainty exist as to the intentions in regard to defence in a government with Lord Palmerston at its head?'' 21091 ''I have not said too much, have I?'' 21091 ''Is human grandeur so stable that they may deny to others that which they would in an humble situation desire themselves? 21091 ''Must the boys touch their hats to me?'' 21091 ''Who will make sacrifices for such a fellow? 21091 ''[ 114] He could not readily apply himself to topics outside of those with which he chanced at the moment to be engrossed:--''Can you not wait? 21091 ( 2) whether_ that_ government ought to allow it, the members of which( except one) have already resigned rather than allow it? 21091 A sermon of Keble''s at St. Mary''s prompts the uneasy question,''Are all Mr. Keble''s opinions those of scripture and the church? 21091 A superb advocate? 21091 AS ORATOR Was this the instinct of the orator? 21091 Affirmatur._ Cernis ut argutas effuderit Anna querelas? 21091 Affirmatur._ Vivimus incertum? 21091 An evangelist, as irresistible as Wesley or as Whitefield? 21091 And now what are you going to do? 21091 And that other man? 21091 And those three ladies? 21091 And what could that power be but ourselves? 21091 And what is it they chiefly admire in England? 21091 Are you going to repeat Penelope''s process, but without the purpose of Penelope? 21091 As to possible danger to our own interests, was it not a canal that would fall within the control of the strongest maritime power in Europe? 21091 But how comes it to pass that the sight of that flag always raises the spirits of Englishmen? 21091 But if it be a blessed work, what are we to say of him who begins the undoing of it?'' 21091 But is not this to say that the real remedy was unattainable without political reform? 21091 But was it certain that Gladstone would join? 21091 But who, he might have asked, are those two gentlemen listening so intently? 21091 CHAPTER VII CLOSE OF APPRENTICESHIP(_ 1839- 1841_) What are great gifts but the correlative of great work? 21091 Can I, with this persuasion engrossing me, be justified in inactivity? 21091 Can_ he_ give it a conscience? 21091 Canning?'' 21091 Could not one of them carry the prize of the premiership into the Lords, and leave to the other the consolation stake of leadership in the Commons? 21091 DID THE CABINET DRIFT? 21091 Did the demands of the parliament or the insolence of their language show it?'' 21091 Did the return of these members with a triumphant mob accompanying them indicate terror? 21091 Did they intend to hold and to act together? 21091 Did they systematically communicate? 21091 Do great things become to great men from the force of habit, what their ordinary cares are to ordinary persons?'' 21091 Do n''t you think the time has come when you might deign to be magnanimous? 21091 Does Mr. Thomson mean to say that the great conservative body in parliament has offered opposition to that measure? 21091 Does Mr. Thomson presume to state that Lord Aberdeen was guilty of neglect to the slaves? 21091 Fortunà ¦ lusus habemur? 21091 From these few facts do we not draw a train of reflections awfully important in their nature and extremely powerful in their impression on the mind?'' 21091 Had he Imagination? 21091 He added,''I think Sidney said more last night than he intended, did he not?'' 21091 He asked: How could he bring himself to fight for the Turks? 21091 He asks,''What is the answer to this? 21091 He quoted his sonnet on the contested election[ what sonnet is this? 21091 He should try me in opposition to Lord Stanley, and did Lord Stanley complain? 21091 His illustrious leader Peel, he said, did indeed look for his revenge; but for what revenge did he look? 21091 How are we to seek an answer to the same question in the history of Mr. Gladstone? 21091 How can I most surely floor him?'' 21091 How could I, under these circumstances, say, I will have nothing to do with you, and be the one remaining Ishmael in the House of Commons? 21091 How could the country go on with a democratic civil service by the side of an aristocratic legislature? 21091 How do you do? 21091 How much were the bills of the chancellor whom this figure shocks? 21091 How then could Aberdeen expect that Mr. Gladstone should abandon the set and avowed purpose with which he had come flaming and resolved to England? 21091 How was Lady Glynne''s jointure( £2500) to be paid? 21091 How was Sir Stephen to be supported? 21091 I answered,''You mean as to one particular expression or sentence?'' 21091 I do not think that you would be very sorrowful? 21091 I have been growing, that is certain; in good or evil? 21091 I inquired( 1) whether Derby mentioned Graham? 21091 I said to him,''Is that possible? 21091 I said,''Are you not building houses of cards? 21091 I simply made my acknowledgments in terms of the common kind, upon which he went on to ask me what in my view was to happen next? 21091 If he gave credit to Mr. Gladstone for being sincere in 1841, 1842, and 1846, why should not Mr. Gladstone give the same credit to him? 21091 In face of pleas so wretched for a prolongation of a war to which he had assented on other grounds, was he bound to silence? 21091 In what way can the first resignation be justified on grounds which do not require a second?'' 21091 Is he to impose his own conscience on the state? 21091 Is it morally just or politically expedient to keep down the industry and genius of the artisan, to blast his rising hopes, to quell his spirit? 21091 Is it necessary to consider now?'' 21091 Is the rule one and the same for individual and for state? 21091 Is this the scene, or were these the men, for the triumphs of the barren rhetorician and the sophist, whose words have no true relation to the facts? 21091 Jamne joci lususque sonant? 21091 Lord Stanley said to Peel,It is twelve, shall I follow him? |
21091 | Lumen ut insolitâ triste tumescat aquâ? |
21091 | MR. GLADSTONE AND HIS GROUP Connected with all this arose a geographical question-- in what quarter of the House were the Peelites to sit? |
21091 | Mais pourquoi faire des lois pires que les moeurs? |
21091 | May not this after all be found to be the case in the House of Commons as well as in many constituencies?... |
21091 | May not this be another legitimate and measured step in the same direction? |
21091 | Might I trust to your kindness to have some cards put in the place for us before prayers?'' |
21091 | Mr. Gladstone, being about to reply in debate, turned to his chief and said:''Shall I be short and concise?'' |
21091 | Now it struck me to inquire of myself, does the duke know the feelings I happen to entertain towards Mr. Canning? |
21091 | On the former day he said,''Is there anyone else to invite?'' |
21091 | One man said to me,''What, vote for Lord Norreys? |
21091 | Or can we accurately describe him as having in any department of life, thought, knowledge, feeling, been precocious? |
21091 | Shall I ever dare to make out a counterpart? |
21091 | Singula prà ¦ teriens det rapiatve dies? |
21091 | Sir, do we not all know that the king at that time had neither friends nor wealth?... |
21091 | So long the church will need parliamentary defence, but in what form? |
21091 | The Peelite leaders therefore had no other choice than to take their seats below the gangway, but on which side? |
21091 | The debater does not ask,''Is this true?'' |
21091 | The man looked hard at me and said these very words,''Damn all foreign countries, what has old England to do with foreign countries?'' |
21091 | The man who listening to his adversary asks of his contention,''Is this true?'' |
21091 | Then by what argument can they repel, by what pretence can they evade the duty?'' |
21091 | Then he said,''Well, I think our friend Peel went rather far last night about Cobden, did he not?'' |
21091 | Then it is asked, Is he honest? |
21091 | This is a most serious event, and at once raises the question, Are we to go into it? |
21091 | This was not enough to outnumber the phalanx of their various opponents combined, but was it possible that the phalanx should combine? |
21091 | Upon looking back I am sorry to think how much I partook in the excitement that prevailed; but how could it be otherwise in so extraordinary a case? |
21091 | Was I right?... |
21091 | Was Mr. Gladstone right in his early notion of himself as a slow moving mind? |
21091 | Was the Aberdeen cabinet without Lord Aberdeen one in which I could place confidence? |
21091 | Was the church a purely human creation, changing with time and circumstance, like all the other creations of the heart and brain and will of man? |
21091 | Was there no difference between a protector and a sovereign? |
21091 | We may often ask for ourselves and others: How many of a man''s days does he really live? |
21091 | Were they a party? |
21091 | Were they not celebrating the obsequies of an obnoxious policy? |
21091 | What is the church of England? |
21091 | What matters it? |
21091 | What was a protectorate, and what the rights of the protector? |
21091 | What was the footing on which patron and member were to stand? |
21091 | What was the nature of his relations with other members of the Peel government who had also been in the cabinet of Lord Aberdeen? |
21091 | What would this atrocious ministry have said had the appeal to the voice of the people, which they now quote as their authority, been made in 1829? |
21091 | What, they cried, did the treaty of 1815 mean by describing the Ionian state as free and independent? |
21091 | Whatever your present intentions may be, can it be done?'' |
21091 | When shall I see his like? |
21091 | When shall we learn wisdom? |
21091 | Where could general mental strength be better tested? |
21091 | Where was the official or appointed teacher all this time? |
21091 | Who could deny that these were changes of magnitude settled in peaceful times by a parliament unreformed? |
21091 | Who, I would ask, conducted the correspondence of the government office with reference to that important question? |
21091 | Why did we go out? |
21091 | Why do you return me to parliament? |
21091 | Why not call things by their right names? |
21091 | Why should he, then, refuse a position that Fox had accepted? |
21091 | Why then, cried the_ Times_, does he omit all comment on the church which is the main and direct agent in this atrocious instruction? |
21091 | Why was it more of a usurpation for the pope to make a new Archbishop of Westminster, than to administer London by the old form of vicars apostolic? |
21091 | Will he ever be the bearer of evil thoughts to any mind? |
21091 | Will you forgive me if I write to you on this matter? |
21091 | Will you unite yourself with what must be, from the beginning, an inevitable failure? |
21091 | Would it be true to say that, compared with Pitt, for instance, he ripened slowly? |
21091 | Would not this tend to abridge the member''s independence? |
21091 | Would the success of Russian designs at that day mean anything better than the transfer of the miserable Christian races to the yoke of a new master? |
21091 | [ 269]''Lord John Russell came and said to me,''says Mr. Gladstone,''"What will you do?" |
21091 | [ 345] H. M. seeming to agree in my main position, as did the Prince, asked me: But when will parliament return to that state? |
21091 | _ An aliquid sit immutabile? |
21091 | _ An malum a seipso possit sanari? |
21091 | justifiable? |
21091 | or in any measure short of the most direct and most effective means of meeting, if in_ any degree_ it be possible, these horrible calamities? |
21091 | viget alma Juventus? |
11020 | Held good? |
11020 | The primrose waypossibly? |
11020 | Words? |
11020 | ( Wo n''t you sit down?) |
11020 | (_ And while his Royal Mistress resumes her writing, taking Mop by his"lead"he prepares for departure._) Have ye seen the paper this morning yet? |
11020 | (_ Embracing her_) How are you? |
11020 | (_ He goes, and in a few minutes returns, sets wine and biscuits on the side- table, and retires_?) |
11020 | (_ Pious curiosity awakens._) What happens here, on Sundays? |
11020 | (_ She reaches out a polite hand_) The key? |
11020 | (_ Then, to stand right with herself_) Julia,_ am_ I difficult to get on with? |
11020 | (_ To prove it, she raises her voice defiantly._) Ca n''t you, Mother? |
11020 | )_ Julia, when did you last see it? |
11020 | ... Did you go and see him-- when he was dying? |
11020 | A dream? |
11020 | A feature? |
11020 | A rubber? |
11020 | A thousand thanks; so it is to be mine, is it? |
11020 | All the same-- by mere accident-- mayn''t it be true? |
11020 | Am I not to count on you still? |
11020 | Am I not to see my own husband, pray? |
11020 | Am I to be defied in this way? |
11020 | And I want to know where was that tea- pot all the time? |
11020 | And because of that, they call you my ruin, eh? |
11020 | And how are you''getting on''--without me? |
11020 | And how are you? |
11020 | And how did you leave everybody? |
11020 | And how do you find Laura? |
11020 | And how is everything? |
11020 | And if you could feel safe about me-- what then? |
11020 | And my staying with you for a little is not going to tire you? |
11020 | And now I hope you are satisfied, Laura? |
11020 | And of what-- now? |
11020 | And over there, among the unarmed-- the weak, the defenceless, the infirm-- it has done-- what? |
11020 | And the other? |
11020 | And then suddenly I thought-- what am I worth to you? |
11020 | And then-- he dismissed you without a character, you say? |
11020 | And these are from her Majesty? |
11020 | And use it? |
11020 | And were they? |
11020 | And were you expecting me to--? |
11020 | And what others had any choice?-- what people, I mean? |
11020 | And when you left him? |
11020 | And where are you going to be, Julia? |
11020 | And you did not? |
11020 | And you, Laura? |
11020 | And you, Mother? |
11020 | And you, you--? |
11020 | And you? |
11020 | And-- loyal? |
11020 | Anyone else? |
11020 | Anything serious? |
11020 | Are n''t the probabilities that they will always overstate the case-- as far as possible? |
11020 | Are newspaper paragraphs in such cases-- ever true? |
11020 | Are these our progeny? |
11020 | Are they having a house- party? |
11020 | Are you glad-- that you did n''t have it? |
11020 | Are you living a proper life, William? |
11020 | Are you living with Isabel? |
11020 | Are you wanting a place? |
11020 | Are you writing another of your novels, Lord Beaconsfield? |
11020 | Are you? |
11020 | Are_ you_ my Father? |
11020 | As a business? |
11020 | As a diminishing force? |
11020 | Bannerman; and-- the other? |
11020 | Because he has beaten me, is that any reason for hating him? |
11020 | Better? |
11020 | Brown, how did you come to scratch your leg? |
11020 | But a man who gives up anything of the truth, as he sees it, for reasons however good-- can he ever be sure of himself again?... |
11020 | But before you go, will you not wait, and take a glass of wine with me? |
11020 | But can there be-- a just war? |
11020 | But can you risk, Madam, conferring that most illustrious symbol of honour, and chivalry, and power, on a defeated monarch? |
11020 | But do you imagine that this phrase or that phrase( true for the moment) states the case, counts, is worth troubling about? |
11020 | But do you think, Lord Beaconsfield, that the Turks are going to be beaten? |
11020 | But does any such nation-- any such cause exist? |
11020 | But for that, he might-- he just might... yet who can tell? |
11020 | But has it ever been England''s policy, Madam, to mind what the French do n''t like? |
11020 | But has it, indeed, been a primrose way that I have trodden so long and so painfully? |
11020 | But have they any? |
11020 | But having got_ you_--would I ever have let you go for any power under Heaven? |
11020 | But in what hands have I had to leave it? |
11020 | But is it true? |
11020 | But now I wonder how it is going to strike_ you_? |
11020 | But what else, Governor, is your remedy? |
11020 | But what-- what made you lose it? |
11020 | But why do they take this particular form? |
11020 | But why for their instrument of torture did they choose primroses? |
11020 | But will it? |
11020 | But would you, on that score, say of them that they have held good? |
11020 | But, as they never touch earth to any serviceable end, that I could discover-- of what use are they? |
11020 | But-- wasn''t the war necessary? |
11020 | By you? |
11020 | Ca n''t you be more distinct than that? |
11020 | Ca n''t you guess? |
11020 | Ca n''t you stop it? |
11020 | Can I drop you anywhere, Morley? |
11020 | Can it be waged justly? |
11020 | Can it be won justly? |
11020 | Can it, having been won, make to a just peace? |
11020 | Can one be so sure of him now? |
11020 | Can you imagine the horror of it, Doctor, to a sane-- a hitherto sane mind like mine? |
11020 | Chamberlain? |
11020 | Come back, has she? |
11020 | Coming by such means, would it be worth it?... |
11020 | Coming here? |
11020 | Could I have done that with any effect, had I said that in almost everything I had failed? |
11020 | Cronstadt? |
11020 | Curious_ his_ having to back the conventions, eh? |
11020 | D''you know what was the cleverest thing said or done during that war?... |
11020 | D''you remember, Laura, that charming young girl we met at Mrs. Somervale''s, the summer Uncle Fletcher stayed with us? |
11020 | D''you think I have n''t distressed myself too? |
11020 | D''you want her back again? |
11020 | Dear Lord Beaconsfield; did you mean-- had you ever meant----? |
11020 | Did I do so? |
11020 | Did Martha never tell_ you_ what she did with it? |
11020 | Did Martha send me any message? |
11020 | Did anybody recognise you? |
11020 | Did he die? |
11020 | Did he himself----? |
11020 | Did n''t Mr. Biggar? |
11020 | Did n''t he? |
11020 | Did n''t you know I was married? |
11020 | Did n''t you? |
11020 | Did n''t_ she_ open the door to you? |
11020 | Did nobody guess-- outside-- what was going on? |
11020 | Did she fly at you? |
11020 | Did she make a comfortable start, Ma''am? |
11020 | Did they form a feature in your dream? |
11020 | Did you bring me this expecting money for it? |
11020 | Did you ever? |
11020 | Did you expect anything? |
11020 | Did you need-- hatred, to do that for you? |
11020 | Do I imagine? |
11020 | Do I look like a man who has n''t been through anything? |
11020 | Do I, Mr. Morley? |
11020 | Do n''t know? |
11020 | Do n''t people ever ask? |
11020 | Do n''t we already? |
11020 | Do n''t you believe that Ireland will be free some day? |
11020 | Do n''t you know me? |
11020 | Do n''t you see I''m still in mourning for you, William? |
11020 | Do n''t you think it would be much better for you to give it up, and let our Mother come back and live with us? |
11020 | Do n''t you think it''s our solemn duty to inquire? |
11020 | Do n''t you think so yourself? |
11020 | Do n''t you? |
11020 | Do people tell each other when they are dying? |
11020 | Do you know that when you died you left a lot of debts I did n''t know about? |
11020 | Do you mean that everything_ has_ failed now? |
11020 | Do you mean, then, that I may keep this letter? |
11020 | Do you propose to summon Parliament? |
11020 | Do you remember how his tongue stumbled, and tripped him, the last time he spoke in the House? |
11020 | Do you remember the silver tea- pot? |
11020 | Do you see how this carpet is wearing out? |
11020 | Do you think I''ve loved any of my party- followers: that any of them have loved me? |
11020 | Do you think you deserved one? |
11020 | Do you? |
11020 | Do_ you_ use glasses? |
11020 | Does Butt count? |
11020 | Does William belong to_ him_self? |
11020 | Does a wife wear widow''s weeds? |
11020 | Does it matter? |
11020 | Does it matter? |
11020 | Does nobody know? |
11020 | Does she think that is the proper way to behave to_ me?_ Julia! |
11020 | Does that mean-- any change of policy? |
11020 | Does war in its hands remain an instrument that can be justly used? |
11020 | Does''poor Aunt Jane''wear widow''s weeds? |
11020 | Doesn''t-- O''Kelly? |
11020 | Goes? |
11020 | Good- bye... You can find your way? |
11020 | Governor, do n''t you think that you''d better rest now? |
11020 | Had n''t he the same right as I had, to live his own life? |
11020 | Had n''t you better? |
11020 | Hannah, what have you got my best tray for? |
11020 | Has he-- has he, after all, been a failure? |
11020 | Has our Mother seen him? |
11020 | Has she anything alive in her now worth saving? |
11020 | Have n''t I made you sure of that-- yet? |
11020 | Have n''t we, providentially, given the world the proof that it needed of its own lie? |
11020 | Have n''t you any affection for your old home? |
11020 | Have you and he-- had words ever? |
11020 | Have you been put to any expense coming here? |
11020 | Have you brought back any better news-- from there? |
11020 | Have you forgotten I''m your wife? |
11020 | Have you never wondered why men of genius get sent into the world-- only to be defeated? |
11020 | Have you no self- respect? |
11020 | Have you seen her? |
11020 | Have you, my dear? |
11020 | Have_ you_ ever done it? |
11020 | He''s here, I suppose, somewhere? |
11020 | He''s in to- day''s paper again-- columns of him; have ye seen? |
11020 | Her voice summons him almost cheerfully from his reverie._) MRS. G. William dear, can you come shopping with me to- morrow? |
11020 | Here are we in the next world just as we expected, and where are all the--? |
11020 | Here? |
11020 | High and mighty as ever, is n''t she? |
11020 | Holborn? |
11020 | How are you able to afford it? |
11020 | How are you, Ma''am? |
11020 | How begot, how nourished? |
11020 | How can it be kept from either of you? |
11020 | How could I have gone out and worked against him after that? |
11020 | How could I live with any of you? |
11020 | How could she? |
11020 | How could things have come to fail as much as they did? |
11020 | How could you expect it, in a house all by herself? |
11020 | How d''ye do, Hannah? |
11020 | How did I know whether I was going to find you here? |
11020 | How did you come? |
11020 | How did you get mine here? |
11020 | How do n''t you know? |
11020 | How do you do it? |
11020 | How do you do, Susan? |
11020 | How is our brother, Edwin? |
11020 | How much were we to the bad? |
11020 | How should we? |
11020 | How was she? |
11020 | How? |
11020 | I am singularly obliged to you.... How did you come by it, may I ask? |
11020 | I did n''t choose.... Julia, how am I to see him? |
11020 | I have a best suit, I suppose? |
11020 | I hope I am fortunate, and that this is one of your good ones? |
11020 | I hope that you slept upon the train? |
11020 | I made up the bed in the red room; was that right, Ma''am? |
11020 | I may do what I like with it? |
11020 | I mean, ought n''t we to be seeing a great many more things than we do? |
11020 | I mean-- when the will to war takes hold of a people-- does it remain the same people? |
11020 | I only say, when does history begin to get written? |
11020 | I said''where?'' |
11020 | I see.... Had your dismissal anything to do with this? |
11020 | I suppose it_ is_ Heaven, in a way, though? |
11020 | I suppose that''s true of some? |
11020 | I suppose you were? |
11020 | I think only one at a time is enough-- better for me: do n''t you? |
11020 | I wonder how she''d like me to go and sit in that pet chair of hers? |
11020 | I, dear lady? |
11020 | I... need I go on? |
11020 | I? |
11020 | If Gladstone had given me a large enough hand over his first Bill, d''you suppose I should n''t have been a Home Ruler? |
11020 | If Ireland needs more failures, to make a case for her conviction, shall I grudge mine? |
11020 | If he had come to me with that a year ago-- what should I have done? |
11020 | If you had not thought it possible-- should you have come? |
11020 | If you had-- should we have won, straight away? |
11020 | In Tudor times Prime Ministers were permanent, were n''t they? |
11020 | In a box? |
11020 | In politics can one afford to be quite-- sincere? |
11020 | Indeed? |
11020 | Is Martha coming too? |
11020 | Is a man''s reputation for statesmanship safe, even after a hundred years? |
11020 | Is all going on there-- as usual? |
11020 | Is he in there, waiting to see me? |
11020 | Is it as bad as that? |
11020 | Is it to put your feet on? |
11020 | Is it too late to tell me now? |
11020 | Is it? |
11020 | Is my talk tiring you? |
11020 | Is n''t it amazing how a man with charm can do things that nobody else dare? |
11020 | Is n''t it better to accept things? |
11020 | Is n''t that a triumph? |
11020 | Is n''t that true? |
11020 | Is n''t"wilful"a sufficient answer, my dear? |
11020 | Is she so much more difficult than she used to be? |
11020 | Is that odious man who used to be our next- door neighbour-- the one who played on the''cello-- here still? |
11020 | Is the man still there? |
11020 | Is there no way of finding him? |
11020 | Is this China tea? |
11020 | Is this the end? |
11020 | Is this true, Susan? |
11020 | It has n''t tired you too much, I hope? |
11020 | It was mine, was n''t it? |
11020 | It was_ not_ mine; it was yours... Don''t you remember_ I_ broke it? |
11020 | It''s the Covenant, you mean, Governor? |
11020 | J.B. Ay? |
11020 | J.B. Then when were you wanting to see your visitor, Ma''am? |
11020 | J.B. Will he be staying for long? |
11020 | JESSE COLLINGS(_ startled)._ Do n''t you still believe in it? |
11020 | JULIA(_ coldly)._ Have you, Laura? |
11020 | Julia, are we not to discuss this matter, pray? |
11020 | Julia, have you ever seen Papa, since you came here? |
11020 | Julia, when you first came here, did you find old friends and acquaintances? |
11020 | Julia, where is the silver tea- pot? |
11020 | Julia, where_ are_ we? |
11020 | LORD B. I serve you, Madam? |
11020 | Look at him now!--does that look like failure? |
11020 | MARTHA(_ awe- struck)._ Has she? |
11020 | MR. J.B. What kind of a chair are you wanting, Ma''am? |
11020 | MR. J.B. With a lean back? |
11020 | MRS. G. And has he taken it? |
11020 | MRS. G. And how is the world using you? |
11020 | MRS. G. And then they frighten you? |
11020 | MRS. G. And you? |
11020 | MRS. G. Are n''t epochs failures, sometimes? |
11020 | MRS. G. Are you? |
11020 | MRS. G. But is n''t there to be one this year? |
11020 | MRS. G. Does that mean that you do n''t want it? |
11020 | MRS. G. Has anything special happened? |
11020 | MRS. G. Have I? |
11020 | MRS. G. Have you, my dear? |
11020 | MRS. G. Is anyone leaving the Cabinet? |
11020 | MRS. G. Mr. Morley, who is going to be-- who will take Mr. Gladstone''s place? |
11020 | MRS. G. Now why should it, Mr. Morley? |
11020 | MRS. G. Shall you serve under him? |
11020 | MRS. G. That you are going down to Windsor to- morrow? |
11020 | MRS. G. The new age? |
11020 | MRS. G. Then you mean Mr. Gladstone is going to form a new Cabinet? |
11020 | MRS. G. Then you will shop with me-- not to- morrow-- Thursday? |
11020 | MRS. G. Then-- will you read him to me to- night, William? |
11020 | MRS. G. Was n''t it yours, too? |
11020 | MRS. G. We do jump in the dark so, do n''t we? |
11020 | MRS. G. Well, Mr. Morley? |
11020 | MRS. G. What, another? |
11020 | MRS. G. When did I say that? |
11020 | MRS. G. When has he ever lost-- except just for the time? |
11020 | MRS. G. Will she offer him a peerage, do you think? |
11020 | MRS. G. Wo n''t you sit down, Mr. Morley? |
11020 | MRS. G. You think that-- possible? |
11020 | MRS. R. Do you remember, Jane, one day when we''d all started for a walk, Laura had forgotten to bring her gloves, and I sent her back for them? |
11020 | MRS. R. Well, what about your Father? |
11020 | MRS. R. What for? |
11020 | MRS. R. Who''s William? |
11020 | MRS. R. Yes; why did you come? |
11020 | Martha, do you remember that odious man who used to live next door, who played the''cello on Sundays? |
11020 | Martha, my dear, how are you? |
11020 | Martha, what do you think of Julia? |
11020 | Martha, when did you last see it? |
11020 | Martha, where is the silver tea- pot? |
11020 | Martha, why was I put into that odious shaped coffin? |
11020 | Martha, will you excuse me? |
11020 | Martha, would you like to go upstairs with your things? |
11020 | May I be permitted to enquire if your Majesty''s health has benefited? |
11020 | May I propose for myself-- a toast, Madam? |
11020 | May I show it to-- this lady? |
11020 | May I speak in his praise, just for once, to- night? |
11020 | May I? |
11020 | Milk? |
11020 | More tea, Laura? |
11020 | More than-- six months ago? |
11020 | Mother, where_ are_ you living?... |
11020 | Mr. Harper? |
11020 | My dear Chamberlain, how very good of you to let me come? |
11020 | My dear friend, are n''t you forgetting yourself? |
11020 | My dear, would you move the light a little nearer? |
11020 | My medicine? |
11020 | Name? |
11020 | Niagara, the Flood? |
11020 | Nice? |
11020 | No use? |
11020 | No, it never has been, has it? |
11020 | No, it''s Miss Laura this time: you did n''t know she had married, I suppose? |
11020 | No? |
11020 | No?... |
11020 | No_ High_ Church ways, I hope? |
11020 | Not an accident, then, eh? |
11020 | Not too much out of your way, I hope? |
11020 | Now I wonder if that''s true? |
11020 | Now was n''t that just a bit unnecessary? |
11020 | Now-- now it''s the great stroke, and Home Rule goes down under it.... Is that history, or is it"Alice in Wonderland"?... |
11020 | Now? |
11020 | Oh, Julia, I''ve just thought: whatever will poor William do? |
11020 | Oh, Laura, why did you do this? |
11020 | Oh, Thomas, what brought you there? |
11020 | Oh, she''s-- What do you want me to think? |
11020 | Oh, why ca n''t you let the thing be? |
11020 | Oh, you do n''t mean Mr. Gladstone? |
11020 | Oh? |
11020 | Oh? |
11020 | Openly, I mean? |
11020 | Or did others think of it for me? |
11020 | Papa, when did you die? |
11020 | Patriots, statesmen? |
11020 | Piccadilly, or Oxford Street? |
11020 | Pitt, or was it Pepys? |
11020 | Primroses? |
11020 | Propose it? |
11020 | QUEEN, But you_ do_ think it necessary, do n''t you? |
11020 | Quite true: and what is the most that it amounts to? |
11020 | Randolph, Parnell, Gladstone-- we got the better of them, did n''t we? |
11020 | Rather trying, was n''t that? |
11020 | Remedy? |
11020 | She was devoted to you, was n''t she? |
11020 | Since he was to arrive off the train, you mean, Ma''am? |
11020 | So Morley has told you, my dear? |
11020 | So it''s the real country we are seeing now? |
11020 | So late? |
11020 | So logical, is n''t it? |
11020 | So that''s how things happen? |
11020 | So that''s the end, eh?... |
11020 | So you are not disappointed? |
11020 | So you have been wishing it, have you? |
11020 | So you think that-- in words at any rate-- I''ve been honest? |
11020 | So you''re expecting a visitor, ye say? |
11020 | So you''ve been with Edwin, and his family? |
11020 | So-- you remember him? |
11020 | Some day, who knows? |
11020 | Something happens: there comes a change; war in a people''s mind drives justice out.... Can soldiers fight without"seeing red"--can a nation? |
11020 | Stop? |
11020 | Stop?--stop what, Madam? |
11020 | Suppose--? |
11020 | Tea- cake? |
11020 | Tell me, Lord Beaconsfield, how has he ever helped you? |
11020 | Tell me, where is fancy bred, Or in the heart or in the head? |
11020 | Tell me--(I am curious)--do you pray for him as plain"Joe Chamberlain,"or do you put in the"Mister"? |
11020 | Than when you left us? |
11020 | Thank you-- for hearing me so patiently... You always did that, even though it made no difference... I wonder-- shall I ever see you again? |
11020 | That did n''t occur to you, I suppose? |
11020 | That seemed a helpful, charitable sort of reason, did n''t it? |
11020 | That served us for-- two years, did it not? |
11020 | That so? |
11020 | The beef- tea? |
11020 | The best? |
11020 | The doctors-- are hopeful? |
11020 | The vote_ for_ the Senate, and the vote_ of_ the Senate: where''s the difference? |
11020 | Then he resumes._) My ruin? |
11020 | Then he''ll say he''s afraid of tiring me; then he''ll go.... Have you noticed how he shakes hands? |
11020 | Then she made her own too, I suppose? |
11020 | Then what have you come here for? |
11020 | Then where is it? |
11020 | Then where''s the pleasure of it? |
11020 | Then why ca n''t we have our Mother, like other things? |
11020 | Then you had really meant coming this way, in any case? |
11020 | Then you knew someone was coming? |
11020 | Then you mean to tell me that if I had indulged more then, I could indulge more now? |
11020 | Then-- you have repented, Papa? |
11020 | They used to hang out washing in the garden, did n''t they? |
11020 | This may be the clue? |
11020 | Tired? |
11020 | To put the"business"on a sound footing? |
11020 | Too much for what, my dear Tumulty? |
11020 | Torn it up? |
11020 | V. But let me understand, my dear Chamberlain, what exactly in Pitt''s policy you now question? |
11020 | V. But, my dear Chamberlain-- if one may be personal-- you are maintaining your strength, are you not? |
11020 | V. Do you mean, then, that you intended to break_ me_? |
11020 | V. Does n''t that rather indicate failure? |
11020 | V. Has it? |
11020 | V. I helped? |
11020 | V. I-- a type of success? |
11020 | V. In politics one tries not to look like anything; but how at the end of the session can one be otherwise? |
11020 | V. May I, at least, claim that even for self- defence I have not slung it at my opponents? |
11020 | V. Opposite? |
11020 | V. Surely you were not then intending to force me against my own judgment? |
11020 | V. The other? |
11020 | V. Was that one? |
11020 | V. What more can one do than direct it for the generation in which one lives? |
11020 | V. You were thinking, then, of somebody? |
11020 | Wait till when? |
11020 | Wait? |
11020 | Was I wrong, Tumulty, was I wrong? |
11020 | Was I wrong, Tumulty-- was I wrong? |
11020 | Was I wrong-- was I wrong to pretend that I had won anything worth winning? |
11020 | Was he feeling it-- much? |
11020 | Was it ever intended to be nice? |
11020 | Was it so sudden? |
11020 | Was there, then, any applause, Madam? |
11020 | Was your Majesty wanting anything, or were you ringing only for the fun? |
11020 | We wanted to be as we are, did n''t we? |
11020 | Well, Armitstead, draughts, or backgammon? |
11020 | Well, Brown? |
11020 | Well, Collings? |
11020 | Well, Governor, and supposing you had yielded to this"Temptation,"as you call it, what''s the proposition? |
11020 | Well, Governor, now you''ve seen him in place, what do you think of him? |
11020 | Well, Governor, well? |
11020 | Well, I''m_ here_, my dear; what more do you want to know? |
11020 | Well, dear lady? |
11020 | Well, my dear Chamberlain, how are you? |
11020 | Well, my dear lord, how are you to- day? |
11020 | Well, now, could n''t we call him? |
11020 | Well, who has a better right? |
11020 | Well, you did die, did n''t you? |
11020 | Well,... have you seen Moses and the Prophets? |
11020 | Well? |
11020 | Well? |
11020 | Well? |
11020 | Well? |
11020 | Well? |
11020 | Were you really mad when you died, Papa? |
11020 | What I want to know is, whether, as Prime Minister, you have any objection? |
11020 | What about Pitt? |
11020 | What adequate answer can these poor lips make to so magnificent an offer? |
11020 | What are you doing? |
11020 | What are you looking for? |
11020 | What are you-- thinking? |
11020 | What brought you? |
11020 | What d''you think he was doing then? |
11020 | What did she want with them? |
11020 | What did ye say? |
11020 | What do n''t I understand? |
11020 | What do you mean? |
11020 | What does it matter now? |
11020 | What does more or less matter? |
11020 | What does really interest him? |
11020 | What else, except to be tired, is there left for me to do? |
11020 | What has"just now"to do with it? |
11020 | What is that for, my dear? |
11020 | What is the time? |
11020 | What is there between us? |
11020 | What is this place we''ve come to? |
11020 | What mistake? |
11020 | What sort of things? |
11020 | What time is it? |
11020 | What was going to be done about the furniture? |
11020 | What will he talk about? |
11020 | What would my ruin matter anyway? |
11020 | What''s the good of that? |
11020 | What, Miss Martha, Ma''am? |
11020 | What, before he has seen_ me_? |
11020 | What, is that you, Thomas? |
11020 | What, my dear Morley, must you be going? |
11020 | What? |
11020 | What? |
11020 | What? |
11020 | When I ask, what did she do with it in the first place? |
11020 | When exactly does history begin to get written? |
11020 | When is a door not a door? |
11020 | When we shared our dear Mother''s things between us, did n''t Martha have it? |
11020 | Where are those_ others_ now? |
11020 | Where are you going, Father? |
11020 | Where are you living now? |
11020 | Where did you get it? |
11020 | Where do they come from? |
11020 | Where do you want to go? |
11020 | Where else? |
11020 | Where is our Mother? |
11020 | Where is she? |
11020 | Where is_ she_? |
11020 | Where was I? |
11020 | Where will you have it, my lord? |
11020 | Where would our compact have been, then? |
11020 | Where''s Mamma gone? |
11020 | Where''s William? |
11020 | Where_ are_ you living? |
11020 | Which governess? |
11020 | Which room are you sleeping in? |
11020 | Which she? |
11020 | Which, Laura? |
11020 | Whisky, madam? |
11020 | Who are all of you? |
11020 | Who are_ you_? |
11020 | Who can say what is really best for anyone? |
11020 | Who did have it? |
11020 | Who is it? |
11020 | Who wants him? |
11020 | Who was it wrote that?--Byron or Dr. Watts? |
11020 | Who will live with her, then? |
11020 | Who''s Hannah? |
11020 | Who''s''they''? |
11020 | Who, Governor? |
11020 | Who, Ma''am, did you say, Ma''am? |
11020 | Whoever thought of finding you? |
11020 | Whom, I take it, you recognise? |
11020 | Why Cronstadt? |
11020 | Why ca n''t you leave him alone? |
11020 | Why could n''t you? |
11020 | Why did she keep on calling me''Jane''? |
11020 | Why did you bring it here, Martha? |
11020 | Why did you pretend, Hannah? |
11020 | Why did you? |
11020 | Why did you? |
11020 | Why do you think it was a railway accident? |
11020 | Why do you try to make me a coward? |
11020 | Why do you want me? |
11020 | Why does he? |
11020 | Why is n''t she here always? |
11020 | Why must you go? |
11020 | Why need you think? |
11020 | Why not? |
11020 | Why should Arabella have my furniture? |
11020 | Why should she do that, pray? |
11020 | Why stop? |
11020 | Why talk about it? |
11020 | Why then, in this country at any rate, is its application to living persons only considered legitimate when associated with caricature? |
11020 | Why waste it? |
11020 | Why( as soon as you were free) did I marry you? |
11020 | Why, Mother dear, when did you come in? |
11020 | Why, nothing? |
11020 | Why,_ where_ has she gone to? |
11020 | Why-- why primroses?" |
11020 | Why? |
11020 | Why? |
11020 | Why? |
11020 | Why? |
11020 | Will it? |
11020 | Will you go and tell him: the Queen''s compliments, and she would like to see him, now? |
11020 | Will you please to remember that your holiday began at twelve o''clock to- day? |
11020 | William, is that you? |
11020 | William, who are you living with? |
11020 | Wish? |
11020 | Wo n''t you take your things off? |
11020 | Wonderful creatures-- who first invented them? |
11020 | Would it matter now? |
11020 | Would it not have been better to say"I have failed"? |
11020 | Would n''t they be glad to get that now? |
11020 | Would you like tea, Martha, or will you wait for supper? |
11020 | Would you like to take one with you? |
11020 | Would you mind-- the bell? |
11020 | Would you very much mind accepting a gift not originally intended for you? |
11020 | Yes, Ma''am; nicely, are n''t they? |
11020 | Yes? |
11020 | Yes? |
11020 | Yes? |
11020 | Yes? |
11020 | You are a valet? |
11020 | You arrived early? |
11020 | You could have let me have it before? |
11020 | You do that?--still? |
11020 | You have n''t inquired after_ her_, I suppose? |
11020 | You have n''t seen Lord Beaconsfield yet, I suppose? |
11020 | You know who I mean? |
11020 | You know, I suppose, that I left it to the two of you-- you and Edwin? |
11020 | You mean that talk about fuse caps being on board might have been true? |
11020 | You mean, you had been staying with Laura? |
11020 | You pray for the Queen, too, I suppose; or do n''t you? |
11020 | You promise to go right away? |
11020 | You regret-- nothing? |
11020 | You remember him, Brown, being here before? |
11020 | You remember? |
11020 | You said"the people,"Governor? |
11020 | You think so? |
11020 | You think that influenced him? |
11020 | You want to see him alone, sir? |
11020 | You will want your best frock- suit, I suppose? |
11020 | You wonder that I should mention it? |
11020 | You''ll forgive this little interruption, Governor: I got domestic orders to see that you took it.... You will? |
11020 | Your Majesty would have me speak on politics, and affairs of State? |
11020 | _ Do n''t you_? |
11020 | _ You_ heard when I called, did n''t you? |
11020 | why ca n''t you leave it? |
11020 | why did I come here? |