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 |
---|---|
50742 | ''Who are ye armour- bearers, protected by byrnies, who come here thus bringing the high vessel over the sea, and the ringed ship over the ocean? |
50742 | Now it will be quite naturally asked, What do we learn from Beowulf of the genius and spirit of that race from which we are sprung? |
22080 | Do they come from England? |
22080 | How can a poor girl help the prince? |
22080 | How goes the day with us? |
22080 | What need ye, my masters? |
22080 | What will they say to this in England? |
22080 | When can their glory fade? 22080 Who are these boys?" |
37315 | Do you speak truth? |
37315 | How? |
37315 | I am awake,replied Rodrigo,"but who art thou, and whence is this fragrance and brightness?" |
37315 | Where are you going to take me, oh, Villejo? |
37315 | Who art thou? |
37315 | And one of them, who was much beloved by him, replied,"Do you know, Monseigneur, what that signifies? |
37315 | What was to be done? |
37315 | When she had opened it, he laughed:"How many are there, madam?" |
1864 | And a day less or more At sea or ashore, We die-- does it matter when? |
1864 | Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied over there beyond the seas? |
1864 | FARRAGUT AT MOBILE BAY Ha, old ship, do they thrill, The brave two hundred scars You got in the river wars? |
1864 | GENERAL GRANT AND THE VICKSBURG CAMPAIGN What flag is this you carry Along the sea and shore? |
1864 | GEORGE ROGERS CLARK AND THE CONQUEST OF THE NORTHWEST Have the elder races halted? |
1864 | How would he and such men as he stand the great ordeal when it came? |
1864 | I know St. George''s blood- red cross, Thou mistress of the seas, But what is she whose streaming bars Roll out before the breeze? |
1864 | I write of one, While with dim eyes I think of three; Who weeps not others fair and brave as he? |
1864 | If you ask, what if we do fail? |
1864 | The brigadier answered,"Are you afraid to go, sir?" |
1864 | To him who, deadly hurt, agen Flashed on afore the charge''s thunder, Tippin''with fire the bolt of men Thet rived the rebel line asunder? |
1864 | Was it to destroy a great nation, and fetter human progress in the New World? |
1864 | Was this barbarous force now to prevail in the United States in the nineteenth century? |
1864 | With side to side, and spar to spar, Whose smoking decks are these? |
53723 | How escaped he,said the lady, Dame Lionesse,"from the brethren of Sir Persant?" |
53723 | Sir, know you not me? |
53723 | What dost see, lad? |
53723 | What is the use of this talk? |
53723 | What is this light? |
53723 | What is this? |
53723 | What meanest this? |
53723 | What weapons shall we use to- day? |
53723 | What word was that? |
53723 | Aloud she said to her people,"Is it a true word Cuchulain spoke?" |
53723 | And Finan heard the sleep- bound voice of Cædmon ask,"What shall I sing?" |
53723 | And he began to keen and lament:"What are joy and shouting to me now? |
53723 | And if you were told that in the palace were lamps so bright that they lighted not only the palace, but cast a glow over the whole world? |
53723 | And now, instead of rhyme, what do you think the old English poetry had? |
53723 | And on what golden door shall we rap first that we may be admitted? |
53723 | And some were more beautiful than anything the world had ever known before? |
53723 | And then what do you think happened? |
53723 | And those doors opened into rooms and upon gardens and balconies, all of which were the most beautiful of palace rooms and gardens? |
53723 | And within that palace, you were told, were more than a thousand golden doors? |
53723 | But always Sir Kay would taunt him with these words spoken to others,"How like you my boy of the kitchen?" |
53723 | But tell me now, what is there under the foundations that will not suffer it to stand?" |
53723 | Do you think you would go through the gate to that palace? |
53723 | Do you? |
53723 | Dost thou know who made thee? |
53723 | Geoffrey looked northward out of his golden window in Monmouth, and what do you think he saw? |
53723 | INTRODUCTION Supposing you were asked to enter a Great Palace? |
53723 | Is this not worth more to thee than three hundred salmon?" |
53723 | It is a Palace of Enchantment, is it not? |
53723 | Little lamb, who made thee? |
53723 | Little lamb, who made thee? |
53723 | Little weened I then, That I e''er should speak, in the after- days, Mouthless o''er the mead- bench.... What do you think that meant? |
53723 | Shall we go into the Great Palace to- day? |
53723 | The cook looked him over and said:"Wilt thou work for me? |
53723 | Then cried the maiden Linet on high:"Oh, Sir Beaumains, where is thy courage? |
53723 | Then said Merlin to the King''s magicians,"Tell me, ye false men, what is there under the pond?" |
53723 | Then, you ask, what was this old English poetry like? |
53723 | Was there a man dismayed? |
53723 | What art thou but a ladle- washer?" |
53723 | What boys and girls will enter the gate with me? |
53723 | What is a rhyme? |
53723 | Would it not be better to pray for their safety?" |
53723 | said his uncle, who was tossing his catch of fish to the sand;"creatures of the mist in the clouds yonder?" |
53723 | what will he profit thee?" |
53723 | | 1066- 1097? |
31366 | And is us all goin''to de war? |
31366 | And why do you come here, my child? |
31366 | But, Colonel, jes''''spose war should attack you, wid me fur off? 31366 Ca n''t you speak to me, my child?" |
31366 | Colonel, what is I goin''ter do when dat transport comes in? 31366 Did you see dat hoss by de do''?" |
31366 | G. W., do you remember what you once told me a hero was? |
31366 | Hello, G. W., what have you there? |
31366 | How you know dis''blongs ter me? |
31366 | I s''pose we has ter live in jes a house when we goes home? |
31366 | I spect de uniform was n''t nebber found up on de hill- top, Colonel? |
31366 | Is Colonel Austin in dar? |
31366 | Just so; and where are your folks? |
31366 | Just up this hill, now, G. W.,--can you make it? |
31366 | My boy, there is some one waiting who wishes to see you,said Colonel Austin, presently;"may I bring the person in?" |
31366 | Poor little fellow? |
31366 | Whar? |
31366 | What is it, old fellow? 31366 What''s dar''sides my name?" |
31366 | What''s dat little tent fur, by de side ob it? |
31366 | What''s dat? |
31366 | What''s goin''ter happen? |
31366 | When is we goin''home, Colonel? |
31366 | When will the order come for us to move? |
31366 | Who are you, my small friend? |
31366 | Why, G. W., a house is n''t a bad thing-- do you think so? |
31366 | You wish to be a soldier boy, is that it? |
31366 | ''Where have you been, Jack?'' |
31366 | And, G. W., what do you think Daddy did? |
31366 | Are you understanding, my child?" |
31366 | Dere''s too much ob it too, an''when it gets wobbly, whar are yo?" |
31366 | Did the Colonel think heroes were made on hill- tops a half mile from camp? |
31366 | Do you know what I am saying, G. W.? |
31366 | His severe stare sobered the Colonel, and he asked in a gentle tone,"Do you know what a hero is, my boy?" |
31366 | How can one tell? |
31366 | How could I know dat I wanted ter be one if I did n''t? |
31366 | How does yo''''spec I''se goin''ter report to de Boy an''his Mother?" |
31366 | Is any one going to mind his brown color when his soul is as white-- as white as snow? |
31366 | It will be a tussle, but I think you''d like to make the try?" |
31366 | Now is n''t he brave and fine enough to be respected? |
31366 | Others might step from truth''s narrow way-- but his Colonel? |
31366 | See the light- house shining like a slim white finger? |
31366 | Surely you are not envying the Boy up North? |
31366 | The coat was buttoned crooked, the cap, which G. W. had discovered at the bottom of the box, was hind part before-- but what of that? |
31366 | Then G. W. wearily asked,"Whar did you say yo''tent is, Colonel?" |
31366 | W.?" |
31366 | W.?" |
31366 | W.?" |
31366 | Was he dreaming, or actually looking down upon something that was really taking place? |
31366 | Was the entire American army marching away from camp, leaving him behind who was bound to return there? |
31366 | What had happened since last he had seen the spot? |
31366 | What was it? |
31366 | What was that? |
31366 | What would you have of a boy?" |
31366 | What''s I worth if I doan''t take some chances ter find out news''bout my Colonel Austin? |
31366 | When does we start? |
31366 | Where was the"chance"that was going to make him a hero if he must always stay behind in the place of safety? |
31366 | Why"poor little fellow"? |
31366 | You are as big a hero as ever was brought home-- didn''t you know it?" |
31366 | You know what that means?" |
31366 | but how is I goin''ter take care ob you, wid you trapesing off de Lawd knows whar?" |
31366 | cried Jack,"do n''t you like his looks?" |
31366 | he gasped,"did yo''hear dem words-- dem hero- words? |
31366 | he sobbed,"fore de Lawd, Colonel, where is you? |
31366 | smiled the grave Colonel,"what in the world can you do?" |
6489 | ''And for the tender mother Who dandled him to rest, And for the wife who nurses His baby at her breast? |
6489 | ''Are you then, sir, put out of the bill?'' |
6489 | ''Have you resolved to dishonor me?'' |
6489 | ''How can I bless you,''he said,''while I see my country in mourning?'' |
6489 | ''If we have been able to bring the men into the right path, why should not we be able to deal with these little creatures?'' |
6489 | ''Monsieur Henri,''said the boy,''they say you are to draw for the conscription next Sunday; but may not your tenants rise against it in the meantime? |
6489 | ''Nay,''said the Emperor,''did not holy King David commit both murder and adultery, yet was he not received again?'' |
6489 | ''O Life, without thy chequer''d scene Of right and wrong, of weal and woe, Success and failure, could a ground For magnanimity be found?'' |
6489 | ''Their van will be upon us Before the bridge goes down; And if they once may win the bridge What hope to save the town?'' |
6489 | ''Then what should you have done with the greetings? |
6489 | ''Well,''he said,''is it not a Bishop''s duty to choose the higher course?'' |
6489 | ''What has been lost,''said the Grand Master,''since you cry out for help?'' |
6489 | ''What prize would''st hold, thou''Triller bold'', Who trilled well for my son?'' |
6489 | ''What repentance have you shown for such a sin?'' |
6489 | ''Why be dispirited?'' |
6489 | ''Why, Lady dear, so sad of cheer? |
6489 | ''Wouldest thou know, son why I am so joyful? |
6489 | A BOOK OF GOLDEN DEEDS By Charlotte M. Yonge TABLE OF CONTENTS What is a Golden Deed? |
6489 | All this rush''d with his blood-- Shall he expire, And unavenged? |
6489 | Am I to die without being heard?'' |
6489 | And for the holy maidens Who feed the eternal flame, To save them from false Sextus, That wrought the deed of shame? |
6489 | And what was Vincent''s reply to this? |
6489 | And who was there to bring relief to them, who were themselves the Roman State and government? |
6489 | But who shall say how many souls were saved in those years by these men who did what they could? |
6489 | Captain Berry was delighted, and exclaimed,''If we succeed, what will the world say?'' |
6489 | Hast waked the livelong night?'' |
6489 | Hath the world aught for me to fear When death is on thy brow? |
6489 | He heard all she had to say, and answered,''I pray thee, good Mrs. Alice, tell me one thing-- is not this house as near heaven as my own?'' |
6489 | His parched longing lips gave utterance to the sigh,''Oh that one would give me to drink of the water of the well of Bethlehem that is by the gate?'' |
6489 | How, then, was she to help herself among the proud and determined nobles of her Court? |
6489 | In yon strait path a thousand May well be stopp''d by three: Now who will stand on either hand, And keep the bridge with me?'' |
6489 | Is it the breeze amid the trees Re- echoing her fear? |
6489 | Is there glory in shedding such blood? |
6489 | Oh, wherefore linger?'' |
6489 | Once safe out of Sicily, who would answer for his return? |
6489 | Shall I drink the blood of these men that have put their lives in jeopardy, for with the jeopardy of their lives they brought it?'' |
6489 | Should all starve together, or sacrifice their best and most honored after all suffering in common so long? |
6489 | Should you have kept them in compensation? |
6489 | The Senate was-- all that remained of it-- shut up in the Capitol; the Gauls were spread all round; how was that decree to be obtained? |
6489 | Their homes in the Peloponnesus were comparatively secure-- had they not better fall back and reserve themselves to defend the Isthmus of Corinth? |
6489 | WHAT IS A GOLDEN DEED? |
6489 | Well might Mustafa say,''If the son has cost us so much, what will the father do?'' |
6489 | What clang thrills on her ear? |
6489 | What man is he that lusteth to live, And would fain see good days? |
6489 | What sudden sound is stirring round? |
6489 | What was done to alleviate all these horrors? |
6489 | Where was the vanquished? |
6489 | Who can tell how many innocent lives have been saved by that thirty days''respite? |
6489 | Who could wish to see their brightness dimmed with earthly rewards? |
6489 | Who the inhabitants Who with a slender pittance will relieve Even for a day the wandering Oedipus?'' |
6489 | Women, is this your will?'' |
6489 | they said,''do you wish us to get ourselves massacred?'' |
6489 | what means it? |
39853 | And dost thou know aught of the import of this letter? |
39853 | And how came living man to trust a boy like you to come alone, through the streets of Mecca, with such an errand? |
39853 | And what is he to you? |
39853 | And whither goest thou, my master? |
39853 | Are you afraid? |
39853 | Bedouin, where are your eyes and ears? |
39853 | Boy, dost thou not fear to die? |
39853 | Did I not say I would not trust a horse to thee? |
39853 | Did he not conquer Babylonia without it? |
39853 | Do you think me like your Greek boys, made of wax? 39853 Does he not fight in the name of Allah and the Prophet? |
39853 | Does he not realize that the hosts of Heraclius are bearing down upon us, that he leaves us sitting idly in our tents? |
39853 | Has he not taught us that action is the soul and secret of success? |
39853 | Have I missed the way? 39853 How did you come by it?" |
39853 | How long have you been a man, well taught in killing other men, not to see what any cowardly shepherd boy could read? 39853 If I speak the words and throw the lance and kill an Arab, that moment will he set my father free?" |
39853 | Is Kahled the Invincible afraid? |
39853 | Is it the loss of his girdle? |
39853 | Is not the motto of Kahled''Waiting does not win''? |
39853 | Is the word of the prince unchanged? |
39853 | Is this thy father? |
39853 | Kanana,he exclaimed,"why am I silent? |
39853 | Master, do they see us? |
39853 | Thou knowest not what they all know? |
39853 | Thou son of my old age, why didst thou come into the world to curse me? 39853 What camels and servants shall be provided?" |
39853 | Who art thou? |
39853 | Who is he? |
39853 | Wouldst thou dare to go without an escort? |
39853 | Wouldst thou teach me the value of camels and merchandise to comfort me? 39853 And hast thou fixed the price of ransom which Airikat will demand, or slay thy brother? 39853 Are you dead, or only sleeping? |
39853 | As for the beggars, where were your senses? |
39853 | As it was, he said, a little doubtfully,"What wouldst thou with my girdle?" |
39853 | Could a bright- colored girdle give him strength?" |
39853 | Didst thou think that I would not willingly and freely lead the white camel anywhere, to serve the great caliph?" |
39853 | Dost thou believe I would be treacherous to a servant of Omar and the Prophet?" |
39853 | Dost thou believe that Kanana spoke in fear or cowardice? |
39853 | Dost thou not fear that some rat may bite thee? |
39853 | Hast thou anything to say before the work begins?" |
39853 | He fell from his horse and--""You killed him?" |
39853 | His eyes were fixed on Manuel, and when all was still, he asked:"Will the prince allow his captive to sit alone till sunrise and consider his offer?" |
39853 | His lips parted and he muttered, angrily:"Is this my reward for having given a cup of water to the thirsty?" |
39853 | How could he know that that hand had never drawn a sword? |
39853 | I kept you waiting, did n''t I?" |
39853 | If he should come within range of the lance of Kanana, I suppose that Manuel would be well pleased to wait?" |
39853 | Kanana did not turn his head, but calmly answered:"Do you see yonder a man upon a gray horse, moving slowly among the soldiers? |
39853 | Kanana returned the salutation, and immediately asked,"Did the dust from Kahled''s host blow over you when your foot was on the sand of Bashra?" |
39853 | May it please the prince to double every torture he has prepared for me, and in exchange to set that old man free?" |
39853 | The great caliph quickly broke the seal and read; then, turning to the bearer, asked sharply,"And who art thou?" |
39853 | Three times his father came to him with the question:"Are you ready to be a man?" |
39853 | To Mount Hor? |
39853 | Was he not an Arab, and an Ishmaelite? |
39853 | Was he sleeping? |
39853 | Was it the robbers coming down upon him? |
39853 | Were not their lances made of the same peculiar wood; and their camel saddles, were they not the same, stained with the deep dye of Bashra? |
39853 | What dost thou require to aid thee in performing this duty?" |
39853 | What shall a father do with a son who will neither lift his hand among men nor bear a part with women? |
39853 | What was it? |
39853 | What was that shock that roused him? |
39853 | When wilt thou start?" |
39853 | Whither darest thou to go, thus, all alone, and after dark, upon the sand?" |
39853 | Who should be going toward Mecca at this season, without a burdened camel in his caravan, if he went not to meet his chief for war? |
39853 | Who should come out of the rising sun, with his camel licking the desert sand, if he came not from Bashra? |
39853 | Why did Airikat crowd his caravan, day and night, if he expected no one?" |
39853 | Why should we kill one another, even if we are Arabs and Ishmaelites?" |
39853 | Why was he waiting? |
39853 | Would he never stop? |
39853 | Would you see that happen?" |
39853 | XII KANANA''S MESSENGERS Far and wide the impatient soldiers asked,"Why is the army inactive?" |
39853 | [ Illustration:"DOST THOU BELIEVE THAT KANANA SPOKE IN FEAR?"] |
39853 | _ La Illaha il Allah!_""And what is my mission to be?" |
39853 | cried the old man, angrily( Page 21)_ Frontispiece_ Kanana stood upon the very edge of the white porch 42"Dost thou believe Kanana spoke in fear?" |
39853 | son of the Terror of the Desert, speaking of danger?" |
20520 | But,said my father,"there is no water,"when the Member of Parliament said,"Wo n''t money make the boat swim?" |
20520 | Can you read? |
20520 | Can you swim? |
20520 | Forgive you what? |
20520 | what have you done that you should ask_ me_ to forgive you? |
20520 | ''And for what do you know me, something good or bad?'' |
20520 | ''And how many souls had you saved?'' |
20520 | ''And why the people of Hull more than the people of any other place?'' |
20520 | ''Granted,''replied our friend,''but if you can drink with safety, can others? |
20520 | ''Has it come to this? |
20520 | ''Have you injured me?'' |
20520 | ''I ca n''t say, but I know I saved somebody''s boy, is he yours?'' |
20520 | ''O good, Sir; do n''t you remember jumping overboard and saving my life, at Hull? |
20520 | ''Then look me in the face; are you beyond God''s reach, or do you think that because he has restored your health once, he will not afflict you again? |
20520 | ''What brush?'' |
20520 | ''Yes,''said the rejoicing father,''I''m glad you were there, what am I in your debt?'' |
20520 | A gentleman came to me and said''Did you fetch yon woman out of the water?'' |
20520 | All the next week John was in great perplexity, thinking,''What can I say if I go? |
20520 | Am I a child of God? |
20520 | Am I prepared for entering the mansions of everlasting bliss?" |
20520 | Am I to be a slave to that liquid? |
20520 | And WHO IS HE of whom this land is proud, Whose name we honour and whose worth is known? |
20520 | And are there not tens of thousands of professors who could present similar offerings if they, in the name and spirit of their great Master, tried? |
20520 | And can we wonder that he should thus write? |
20520 | And do you think God will believe you if you again promise to serve him? |
20520 | And is not total abstinence the only safe side for the abstainer himself? |
20520 | And was this Christian woman wrong in calling the public house the devil''s ground? |
20520 | And where is the moderate drinker who can point to the glass and say,''I am safe?'' |
20520 | But I always believed in that little catch,''Have you not succeeded yet? |
20520 | But admitting, for the sake of argument, that you can drink with safety to yourself, can you drink with safety to others? |
20520 | But was he mad? |
20520 | Can I help them?'' |
20520 | Can a man go upon hot coals and his feet not be burnt? |
20520 | Can we wonder that he was within an ace of losing his life in this mad exploit? |
20520 | Could nothing have been done when they saw us sink together, again and again? |
20520 | Did not the Ethiopian Eunuch, having obtained salvation,''_ go on his way rejoicing_?'' |
20520 | Did not the converts in Samaria''make great joy in the city?'' |
20520 | Did not the pentecostal converts''eat their meat with gladness and singleness of heart, praising God?'' |
20520 | Do I now enjoy an interest in Christ? |
20520 | Do n''t you remember when you leaped into the drain forty years ago, and saved my life?'' |
20520 | Does thou think anybody but theeself would jump overboard a night like this? |
20520 | Eaby''s first expression on coming out of his fit was,''What are you doing here?'' |
20520 | Ellerthorpe, you do n''t seem to know who I am?'' |
20520 | Have I injured you?'' |
20520 | Have none of your acquaintances or friends fallen victims to drunkenness? |
20520 | Have you kept the promises you made to the Lord?'' |
20520 | Have you never seen the evil effects of tampering with the glass? |
20520 | He looked this way and that way; I said,''Well, B----, are you all right? |
20520 | How often has that room resounded with the cries of penitent sinners and the songs of rejoicing believers? |
20520 | I replied,''Do you think it possible that there will come a time when you will rather see any one''s face and hear any one''s voice than mine?'' |
20520 | I said to him,''Now, father, can you keep hold while I fetch the Hull horse- boatmen?'' |
20520 | I said''Why do you look so sad? |
20520 | If my corpse were here, where John Ellerthorpe lies, where would my soul be? |
20520 | My captain was provoked by( what_ he_ thought) this man''s niggardly gift, and said,''John, why did you drink it? |
20520 | Need we wonder that our friend had but little faith in a sick- bed repentance? |
20520 | Now, what followed? |
20520 | One day he had put but a few drops of water into a large glass of brandy, but the young gentleman said,''Did''nt I tell you to make it stronger? |
20520 | One of them said,"Is he that Ellerthorpe of Hessle?" |
20520 | Our friend shook his head and said,''Do you think, Sir, I could see a man overboard and not plunge in after him? |
20520 | Placing his hand on this man''s shoulder, he said,''Will you take the pledge?'' |
20520 | So the professor said,"Can you write, my man?" |
20520 | Soon after I was born, one of my uncles asked,"What is the lad''s name to be?" |
20520 | The great question we ought to ask ourselves individually is"Am I prepared to die? |
20520 | Then I would ask,''Why did n''t they make a venture?'' |
20520 | We can not close this chapter of our little book without asking, Were the motives which led our friend to sign the pledge, right or wrong? |
20520 | What, then, must be the feelings of the thirty- nine who have been saved at the eminent risk and peril of Mr. Ellerthorpe''s life? |
20520 | When I returned, Mr. Chapman met me and said,''John, was it you who saved my boy?'' |
20520 | While closing the cabin door for the night, I heard a splash, and running aft, I called out,''Is anyone overboard?'' |
20520 | Why did''nt you try to save him?" |
20520 | _ 8th._--What is now the state of my mind? |
20520 | replied the Master,''how could you get it?'' |
20520 | when Davis said,''Is John Ellerthorpe that young man''s father?'' |
20520 | when his deliverer replied,''Havn''t I as much right here as you have?'' |
5679 | And is Conall,said Fraech,"thus unknown to you yet? |
5679 | And whence was the cry thou hast heard? |
5679 | And why have they come to this land? |
5679 | And, wherefore have ye come? |
5679 | Canst thou say what latest spoil,said Fraech,"they won?" |
5679 | Come hither, O Maev,Ailill softly cried; And Queen Maev came up close to her husband''s side"Dost thou know of that ring?" |
5679 | Dost thou give a decision about the cow? |
5679 | Dost thou recognise that? |
5679 | Dost thou sit on the seat of judgment? |
5679 | Flight I hold disloyal,Answered she in scorn;"I from mother royal, I to king was born; What should stay our wedding? |
5679 | For your lives,he said,"will ye grant a boon, set forth in three words of speech?" |
5679 | How canst thou that strife be surviving? |
5679 | How is that man named? |
5679 | In what place do ye dwell? |
5679 | In what way canst thou do this? |
5679 | Is it a secret( cocur, translateda whisper"by Crowe) ye have?" |
5679 | Is it men out of Ulster,she said,"I have met?" |
5679 | Is the woman constant in your estimation? |
5679 | O daughter,says Ailill,"the ring I gave to thee last year, does it remain with thee? |
5679 | On what side was it? |
5679 | Query, what shall I do? |
5679 | Query, wouldst thou elope with me? |
5679 | See ye now yon woman? |
5679 | She is not my country- name(? 5679 Tell me of that troop,"said Eocho,"in what numbers should we ride?" |
5679 | What hath led you forth? |
5679 | What is the latest thing they have carried off? |
5679 | What is the quality of this flood? |
5679 | What is your number? |
5679 | What manner of gift is it that thou desirest? |
5679 | What should be my force? |
5679 | Whence are ye from the men of Ulster? |
5679 | Whence have come you? |
5679 | Where do ye abide? |
5679 | Wherefore are they come? |
5679 | Wherefore come ye hereto me? |
5679 | Wherefore have I have been invited to come? |
5679 | Which of us,said Fergus,"O Dubhtach, shall encounter this man?" |
5679 | Who are they? |
5679 | Who are ye? |
5679 | Who art thou then? |
5679 | Who art thou? |
5679 | Why is it the woman who answers me? |
5679 | Will ye follow us now, with the prince to speak? |
5679 | Will ye give me your daughter? |
5679 | Will ye give me your daughter? |
5679 | With what number should I go? |
5679 | Yes, what shall we do next in the matter? |
5679 | [ FN#123]Do ye make a fool of me?" |
5679 | [ FN#54]With how many shall I go?" |
5679 | (? |
5679 | (?) |
5679 | ? |
5679 | ? |
5679 | And said Fraech:"Is it good then indeed thy stream? |
5679 | Cacht cid adcobrai form- sa? |
5679 | Cia th''ainm seo? |
5679 | Cid gell bias and? |
5679 | Eocho spoke:"What gift requirest thou from me?" |
5679 | For what purpose is the counsel,"said he,"that thou givest me?" |
5679 | Fraech then takes to the playing of chess with a man of their(?) |
5679 | Gell adcobra cechtar da lina for shall be there? |
5679 | He lets it fly with a charge of the methods of playing of championship, so that it goes through the purple robe and through the tunic(? |
5679 | High? |
5679 | I said to her:''What reward shall I have at thy hands for the finding of it?'' |
5679 | Inn imberam fidchill? |
5679 | Meyer takes literally,"so that they fell on their backs"(?) |
5679 | My daughter,"said Ailill,"a ring last year I gave thee, is''t here with thee yet? |
5679 | Now a vision came to Ailill, as in sleep he lay awhile, or a youth and dame approached him, fairer none in Erin''s Isle:"Who are ye?" |
5679 | Now his men, as they played, the wild beasts late caught were cooking, they thought to feed; And said Ailill to Fraech,"Shall thy harpmen play?" |
5679 | Question what wishest thou from myself? |
5679 | Rose? |
5679 | Said the hero,"Why speaketh this woman? |
5679 | Seven plates of brass from the ceiling(?) |
5679 | Shall we play at chess? |
5679 | She said,"Whence are ye?" |
5679 | So, when he came to Connaught, he brought this matter before[FN#94] Ailill:"What[FN#95] shall I do next in this matter?" |
5679 | Srotha teith millsi tar tir, Streams warm( and) sweet through the land, rogu de mid ocus fin, choice of mead and wine, doini delgnaidi, cen on, men? |
5679 | The remark of Find- abair was:"Is it not beautiful he looks?" |
5679 | Then Cuchulain sprang at the chariot:"Would ye make me a fool with your jest?" |
5679 | Then Fraech to the Hall of Debate returned, and he cried:"Through Some secret chink Hath a whisper passed?" |
5679 | Then he saw Laeg in his harnessed chariot, coming from Ferta Laig, from the north; and"What brings thee here?" |
5679 | Then to Ailill, king of Connaught, Eocho spake:"From out my land{ 50} Wherefore hast thou called me hither?" |
5679 | To this man also they appeared, and"What are your names?" |
5679 | What brought thee? |
5679 | What is the quality of the land we have to come to?" |
5679 | What is thine own name?" |
5679 | What stake bias and? |
5679 | What stake shall be here? |
5679 | What( is) thy own name? |
5679 | Wilt home forsake, Maiden? |
5679 | Wilt thou depart with me, O maiden?" |
5679 | [ FN#56][ FN#55] co m- belgib(?) |
5679 | [ FN#96]"What brings you here?" |
5679 | ["Knowest thou us?"] |
5679 | ["What is the next thing after this that awaits us?" |
5679 | adds,"Through wizardry was all that thing: it was recited(?) |
5679 | answered Fraech,"what is best to be done?" |
5679 | coich les, coich amles to whom the benefit, to whom the harm thocur dar clochach? |
5679 | fer arfeid solaig? |
5679 | fer bron for- ti? |
5679 | fobith oen mna because of one woman Duib in digail: To you the revenge, duib in trom- daim:[FN#142] to you the heavy? oxen[ FN#142] A conjecture. |
5679 | fri aiss esslind? |
5679 | girt( he was), and evil face( was) on him.? |
5679 | hath the man with her never a word?" |
5679 | he cried,"art fearing Hence with me to fly?" |
5679 | how great is the strength of your band?" |
5679 | i. more ertechta inde? |
5679 | indracht? |
5679 | no lossa Is corcair maige cach muin,[FN#137] or growth? |
5679 | said Cuchulain,"why was it not the man?" |
5679 | said she,"Where hast thou learned to know us?" |
5679 | said she:"Mani Mingar, son of Ailill and Medb,"said he:"Welcome then,"she said,"but what hath brought with you here?" |
5679 | said the king:"Canst thou discern Who we are?" |
5679 | sechuib slimprib snithib past them on twisted wattles: scitha lama: weary are hands, ind rosc cloina: the eye? slants aside? |
5679 | sechuib slimprib snithib past them on twisted wattles: scitha lama: weary are hands, ind rosc cloina: the eye? slants aside? |
5679 | she answered:"Of the future I would ask, Canst thou read my fate?" |
5679 | she asked him,"tell me, canst thou trust thy spouse?" |
5679 | sorrow shall, come on the man? |
5679 | tairthim flatho fer ban: splendour of sovereignty over white men: fomnis, fomnis, in fer m- braine cerpae fomnis diad dergæ? |
5679 | the fairy answered,"how didst thou our fashion learn?" |
5679 | thy speech hath brought me Joy,"she said,"most true; Yet, thy side if nearing, What for thee can I?" |
5679 | wilt thou ride beside us?" |
5679 | with an edge on them; femendae? |
14749 | And now what fee will ye give me for my rescue of you from the worst affliction that ever befell you? |
14749 | And now, how shall we set about the capture of the apples? |
14749 | And now,said they among themselves,"what course shall we steer?" |
14749 | And what are we to do now? |
14749 | And what is thy name? |
14749 | And what name dost thou bear? |
14749 | And what reward,he said,"will ye that I make you for the saving of the kingdom of Sorca?" |
14749 | And whither do ye voyage now? |
14749 | And who is this? |
14749 | Are ye willing to take service with me? |
14749 | Art thou able,says Dubdrenn,"to open the hilt of this sword?" |
14749 | But if Eochy the High King consent to let thee go,said Midir,"wilt thou then come with me to my land and thine?" |
14749 | By what token dost thou lay these commands upon me? |
14749 | Did they not reach you with Aoife? |
14749 | Didst thou ever see a woman so tall? |
14749 | Does this branch belong to thee? |
14749 | Dost thou seek a contest from me? |
14749 | Echbael? |
14749 | For what have ye come? |
14749 | For what stake shall we play, then? |
14749 | Glad we are,cried Conall,"that all is ready for feast; and who is carving the boar for us?" |
14749 | Good,said Eochy,"and what stake wilt thou have now?" |
14749 | Have ye any more to contest the pig with me? |
14749 | Have ye ever seen a stronger man than my giant, Glowar? |
14749 | Have ye learned so little in your place of studies,said Brian,"that ye can not distinguish a druidic beast from a natural beast?" |
14749 | How do you mean to get them? |
14749 | In what manner of guise shall we go before the King of Persia? |
14749 | Indeed? |
14749 | Is he less,asked Fergus,"than my dwarf and poet Æda?" |
14749 | Is he, then, a malefactor? |
14749 | Is it of him ye boast, whom I myself slew and cut off his head? |
14749 | Is it that Buicad, who was the rich farmer in Leinster that all Ireland has heard of? |
14749 | Is that Moonremar? |
14749 | Is that so, Ket? |
14749 | It is a fine boar,said Ailill;"and now, O mac Datho, how shall it be divided among us?" |
14749 | Nay, then,cried Conan the Bald,"but what shall I have for my ride on the mare of the Gilla Dacar?" |
14749 | Neither shall I refuse thee,said Finn;"but what brings thee here with a horse and no horseboy?" |
14749 | O my beloved ones, my Three, Who slept under the shelter of my feathers, Shall you and I ever meet again Until the dead rise to life? 14749 Or battle- steeds and men- at- arms better than mine?" |
14749 | Seest thou that? |
14749 | Shall the sons of fellows with nicknames come here to contend with me? |
14749 | Tell me, O Cormac,said his son once,"what were thy habits when thou wert a lad?" |
14749 | Then thou art his foster- child, Ethne the daughter of Dunlang? |
14749 | Was it not a good lord you were with,said Patrick,"Finn, son of Cumhal?" |
14749 | What ails thee, then? |
14749 | What are the most lasting things on earth? |
14749 | What dost thou demand of me? |
14749 | What is become of him? |
14749 | What is his name? |
14749 | What is his name? |
14749 | What is that price? |
14749 | What is thy choicest treasure? |
14749 | What is thy demand, Atharna? |
14749 | What is thy price? |
14749 | What is to be done now? |
14749 | What meanest thou by that? |
14749 | What proof hast thou of that? |
14749 | What ransom, then? |
14749 | What seek ye here? |
14749 | What seek you here? |
14749 | What shall we do, then? |
14749 | What vengeance? |
14749 | What was it kept you through your lifetime? |
14749 | What will thou have of me? |
14749 | What will ye do next? |
14749 | What wilt thou give me for the King''s son? |
14749 | What wilt thou have? |
14749 | What wilt thou have? |
14749 | What, then? |
14749 | When should a man talk to a woman,said his wife,"but when something were amiss? |
14749 | Where is Fiachra, where is Hugh? 14749 Who art thou, woman?" |
14749 | Who else comes to the contest,cried Ket"or shall I at last divide the pig?" |
14749 | Who hath commanded this? |
14749 | Who is this? |
14749 | Who is this? |
14749 | Whom have we here? |
14749 | Why dost thou laugh? |
14749 | Why so? |
14749 | Why was that name given thee? |
14749 | Why,said King Asal,"have ye now come to my country?" |
14749 | Wilt thou be my wife and Queen of Erinn? |
14749 | Wilt thou sell it to me? |
14749 | After a while Brian''s senses came back to him, and he said,"Do ye live, dear brothers, or how is it with you?" |
14749 | And do ye know what are the two horses and the chariot ye must get?" |
14749 | And do ye know what is the spear that I demanded?" |
14749 | And seeing him wasted and pale she was moved with pity and distress and said,"What ails thee, young man? |
14749 | At this the woman cried out,"Murderer parricide, hast thou spilled the King''s blood, and shall Cormac not know it, and do justice on thee?" |
14749 | But Cormac stopped her and saluted her, and said:"For whom, maiden, art thou making this careful choice of the milk and the rushes and the water?" |
14749 | But Mesgedra said,"Is it the fashion of the champions of Ulster to challenge one- armed men to battle?" |
14749 | But one day Fionnuala said to her brethren,"Do ye know, my dear ones, that the end of our time here is come, all but this night only?" |
14749 | But the tall youth stepped in front of his band and cried aloud--"Which of ye is Crimmal, son of Trenmor?" |
14749 | Cairbry said,"What are good customs for a tribe to pursue?" |
14749 | Didst thou never see her since she gave thee, an infant, to the wise women on the day of Cnucha?" |
14749 | Eochy asked,"Why art thou not better of this sickness, how goes it with thee now?" |
14749 | Etain said,"Of what land dost thou speak?" |
14749 | Finegas said,"Hast thou eaten of the salmon?" |
14749 | Finn knew who held him thus and said,"What wilt thou Conan?" |
14749 | Finn said,"On thy conscience, girl, what ailed thee not to drink out of the goblet?" |
14749 | Finn said,"What of my fifteen men that were carried away on the wild mare''s back oversea?" |
14749 | Fionnuala cried to them,"What ails you, beloved brothers?" |
14749 | Have I thy authority,"he went on,"to turn out my steed among thine?" |
14749 | Here be all the valiant men of Ireland assembled; have none of us hit each other a blow on the nose ere now?" |
14749 | Know any of you this champion?" |
14749 | Lir was glad to know that they were at least living, and he said,"Is it possible to put your own forms upon you again?" |
14749 | Long thou hast lain prostrate, in fair weather and in foul, thou who wert wo nt to be so swift and strong?" |
14749 | Shall I henceforth bear my part alone? |
14749 | Shall that man''s son measure himself with me?" |
14749 | So he said to the King,"Shall I have my rightful heritage as captain of the Fianna of Erin if I slay the goblin?" |
14749 | Tell us now, maiden, what portion wilt thou have of meat and drink? |
14749 | Then Finn said,"What is thy land and race, maiden, and what dost thou seek from me?" |
14749 | Then Iubdan went forth to meet Eisirt, and he kissed him, and said,"Why hast thou brought this Fomorian with thee to slay us?" |
14749 | Then Lugh said:"Why do ye rise up before that grim and ill- looking band and not before us?" |
14749 | Then the eric was laid before him, and Brian said,"Is the debt paid, O Lugh, son of Kian?" |
14749 | Then they were all astonished, and the King answered and said:"Surely it is not the father of Lugh Lamfada who has thus been slain?" |
14749 | Then turning to Conan the Bald he said,"Whether among the Fianna is a horseman''s pay or a footman''s the highest?" |
14749 | They were, it seems, finally organized by Cormac mac Art, 227 A.D.(?) |
14749 | Up rose then the son of King Conor, named Cuscrid the Stammerer"Whom have we here?" |
14749 | Was not the love of Niam of the Head of Gold enough to fill a mortal''s heart? |
14749 | What brings the son of that man to contend with me?" |
14749 | What is the cause of thy trouble?" |
14749 | When the sons of Turenn came up to the herd, Brian said,"Brothers, did ye see the warrior wh''just now was journeying across the plain?" |
14749 | Where can I get them?" |
14749 | Where is my fair Conn? |
14749 | Where is the cooking- spit from the Island of Finchory? |
14749 | Ye gods that I adore, why was I not here when this crime was done? |
14749 | and have ye given the three shouts upon the Hill of Mochaen?" |
14749 | said Ket,"and why is his father called Lama Gabad[ wanting a hand]?" |
14749 | will that of a hundred of us suffice thee?" |
38041 | ''How do you know this; and how am I to be sure of it?'' 38041 ''What troops do you speak of?'' |
38041 | ''What will you give me,''I asked,''if I do not bury the corpse on you?'' 38041 ''Whither art thou going?'' |
38041 | And how fares it with my son after that battle? |
38041 | And how is it now with my foster son? |
38041 | And in what manner do you think ye shall get them? |
38041 | And thou, my son, didst thou stand by and see my nursling slain? |
38041 | And what is it that has caused thee to come so far across the sea? 38041 Are they near enough to the shore?" |
38041 | Are they near? |
38041 | Are we not ourselves sufficient guarantee for the payment of an eric- fine greater even than this? |
38041 | But,said the others,"will the Lord accept repentance from us for the dreadful evils we have already done?" |
38041 | Do ye know yonder cavalcade? |
38041 | Do you wish to enter my service? |
38041 | Dost thou not know that thou art under gesa[12] never to hunt a boar? |
38041 | Have you been able,asks Finnen,"to repair everything ye destroyed belonging to the Church?" |
38041 | He then asked,''Do you know why your curragh has stopped?'' 38041 How does it come to pass that you salute us,"said they,"since you are, as we know well, our enemy?" |
38041 | How should I heal thee? |
38041 | If I take you into my service,asked Dermat,"what can you do for us?" |
38041 | In what shape think you we should go to this court? |
38041 | In what shape, think you, should we go to this court? |
38041 | Is it for us that this food has been prepared? |
38041 | Knowest thou not that he has come to claim thee for his wife? |
38041 | Miserable wretch, who art thou? |
38041 | O dear friend Oscar,spoke Dermat again,"what think you is best for me to do, seeing that these heavy gesa- bonds have been put on me?" |
38041 | Shall we take away some of the pebbles of the strand? |
38041 | Supposing he came now,asks another,"what should we do?" |
38041 | Tell me now,said the king,"what has brought you to my country?" |
38041 | Tell us first,said they,"who art thou that makest this inquiry?" |
38041 | What counsel do you give me, Kylta? |
38041 | What desire is in your mind in regard to that? |
38041 | What dost thou read from that vision, O princess? |
38041 | What else can it be, then? |
38041 | What is that? |
38041 | What is your desire? |
38041 | What reward dost thou seek? |
38041 | What then are the greatest crimes ye have committed? |
38041 | What,said Finnen,"do ye not think it enough-- the penance you have done already for a whole year among the brotherhood?" |
38041 | Wherefore say you this, Grania? |
38041 | Which of us tells truth, Dermat,said Finn, looking up,"Oscar or I?" |
38041 | Whither do you go next, ye sons of Turenn? |
38041 | Who and what in the world are you, good man? |
38041 | Who are these coming towards us? |
38041 | Who are they that you say are coming? |
38041 | Who are ye? |
38041 | Who is he sitting at Dermat''s shoulder? |
38041 | Who is the graceful and active- looking chief sitting next Oscar? |
38041 | Who is the youthful champion to the right of Gaul? |
38041 | Who is this thou art talking to, my son? |
38041 | Who slew him? |
38041 | Who was he? |
38041 | Why are you frightening the poor young calves in that manner? |
38041 | Why art thou abroad so early? |
38041 | Why art thou here? |
38041 | Why should I heal thee by giving thee drink from my hands? |
38041 | Wilt thou go from us to- day? |
38041 | After a time, their father asked them,"Is it possible to restore you to your own shapes?" |
38041 | Ah, where are my brothers, and why have I lived, This last worst affliction to know? |
38041 | Am I not a mother to you? |
38041 | And Concobar called to him his stewards and attendants and asked them:--"How is it in the house of the Red Branch as to food and drink?" |
38041 | And Dermat, doubting even still, asked for the last time,"Is this, my friends, the counsel you all give?" |
38041 | And Finola chanted this lay-- What meaneth this sad, this fearful change, That withers my heart with woe? |
38041 | And Illan looking up said,"Is it thou, Conall? |
38041 | And Oisin said,"Why should you be without a wife if you desire one? |
38041 | And in all this country, is there any mother who loves her son better than I love you?" |
38041 | And now in what manner, think you, is it best for us to approach the garden?" |
38041 | And now,"asked Dermat,"which of the two do ye wish to strive for first, my head or the quicken berries?" |
38041 | And the Irla replied,"Hast thou not come from the Palace of the Island, and dost thou not belong to the host of the King of the World?" |
38041 | And the priest who stood praying at the door said:--"Why say you so? |
38041 | And when Naisi missed her, he turned back and found her just awakening; and he said to her:--"Why didst thou tarry, my princess?" |
38041 | And when it was all gone, Dermat said--"I have here a large drinking- horn of good wine: how am I to give it to thee?" |
38041 | And when she told Naisi that she knew the first shout, he said:--"Why, my queen, didst thou conceal it then?" |
38041 | And when the giant saw him he said,"Why have you followed me; and what business have you here? |
38041 | And when the lady had ceased to speak, the king said--"Connla, my son, has thy mind been moved by the words of the lady?" |
38041 | And when they had talked for some time, she asked him--"What means all this feasting? |
38041 | And why has Finn come with his people on this visit to my father the king?" |
38041 | And why now should they be in banishment on account of any woman in the world?" |
38041 | Angus greeted Dermat and Grania, and said,"What is this thing thou hast done, my son?" |
38041 | Are you not my servant; and why have you come without being bidden by me?" |
38041 | As she came slowly to the presence of Finn, he addressed her courteously in these words--"Who art thou, O lovely youthful princess? |
38041 | As they were about to go, Maildun''s eldest foster brother asked him--"Shall I bring one of those large torques away with me?" |
38041 | At the end of that time, one of them said to Maildun--"We have been a long time here; why do we not return to our own country?" |
38041 | But Ailna replied,"Of what concern are his wounds to us? |
38041 | But Dermat, regarding the matter lightly, and forced by fate to the worse choice, answered--"How can danger arise from such a small affair? |
38041 | But he is just; and though his sire we slew, Have we not paid full eric for the deed? |
38041 | But they laughed, mocking him, and said,"Do you call that a champion- feat indeed? |
38041 | Dermat answered,"I know nothing of these gesa; wherefore were they placed on me?" |
38041 | Do you not know that I am called King of the Four Tribes of Lochlann, and of the Islands of the Sea? |
38041 | Dost thou forget the day thou didst go with the chiefs and nobles of the Fena, to the house of Derca, the son of Donnara, to a banquet? |
38041 | For I see that thou art resolved to compass my death; and why should I fear to die now more than at a future time? |
38041 | For art thou not the pride of Turenn''s line, The noblest champion of green Erin''s plain? |
38041 | For was it not by you that his father and brothers and many of his friends were slain? |
38041 | Has death robbed you of your husband or your child, or what other evil has befallen you? |
38041 | Has thy husband forsaken thee; or what other evil has befallen thee?" |
38041 | He answered,"What advantage will it be to you to ask her?" |
38041 | In a short time the first smith asks again,"What are they doing now?" |
38041 | Is it not better that he should die at once, and all the other Fena with him?" |
38041 | Is it not enough that you see me in this woful plight? |
38041 | Now when one of the waves had retired they spoke to him and asked:--"Who art thou, O wretched man?" |
38041 | Oh, cease, sister Ethnea, cease thy sad wail; Why yield to this terror and gloom? |
38041 | Oisin spoke to him and asked,"Why, O king, hast thou come forth so early?" |
38041 | She came next morning, and they said to her,"Why dost thou not stay here with us? |
38041 | She tried to soothe him, and said,"Why do you worry yourself searching after this matter? |
38041 | The king was greatly astonished and troubled at this, and he said,"How can that be? |
38041 | The young chief, seeing this, said to her--"Dost thou wish to have this cloak? |
38041 | Then Angus, one of the two, asked,"What eric dost thou require, O king?" |
38041 | Then Fergus turned to Naisi and said:--"I dare not violate my knighthood promise: what am I to do in this strait?" |
38041 | Then Luga of the Long Arms spoke to the king and said,"Why have ye stood up before this hateful- looking company, when ye did not stand up for us?" |
38041 | Then go, my father, thou art swift and strong; Speed like the wind-- why linger here to mourn? |
38041 | Then he came to Dermat and said,"Peace is better for thee: art thou willing now to be at peace with Finn and Cormac?" |
38041 | Then he struck at Bres himself, who, unable to withstand his furious onset, cried aloud--"Why should we be enemies, since thou art of my kin? |
38041 | Then suddenly Dryantore bethought him of the drinking- horn, and he said,"Where is the golden drinking- horn I gave you?" |
38041 | Then the crew said aloud:--"Who are ye, O miserable people?" |
38041 | Then the two younger brothers said,"Now our quest begins: what course shall we take?" |
38041 | Then turning wrathfully to the Irla, he asked--"Knowest thou to whom thou hast given the young warrior''s head?" |
38041 | They were all struck with amazement on hearing this, and the king of Erin said--"What does this mean? |
38041 | Thou and we come not from the same territory; but we all love thee, Dermat; and now come forth to us, and who will dare to wound or harm thee?" |
38041 | When he had come to the door, he called aloud to Conan and said--"I have here a goodly meal of choice food: how am I to give it to thee?" |
38041 | When she was gone, Maildun''s companions said to him,"Shall we ask this maiden to become thy wife?" |
38041 | When the messengers had told their errand, Lir was startled; and he asked,"Have the children not reached the palace with Eva?" |
38041 | When the_ crossans_ saw the curragh putting forth on the sea, they inquired:--"Who are yonder people that are launching this curragh on the sea?" |
38041 | When they had ended speaking, the king, Balor[9] of the Mighty Blows and of the Evil Eye, asked the chiefs,"Do ye know who this youth is?" |
38041 | When they turned to go away, the shouting ceased: and they heard one man calling aloud,"Where are they now?" |
38041 | Who are ye; and where have ye seen Him?" |
38041 | Why was I not told that Dermat''s life was linked with the life of the wild boar of Ben- Gulban? |
38041 | Why, O ye gods whom I worship, why was I not present when this deed was done? |
38041 | Wilt thou make friendship with Maildun; and wilt thou take him for thy husband?" |
38041 | what is this I see? |
38041 | why did I abandon thee to be decoyed to thy doom by the guileful craft of Finn? |
38041 | why did I abandon thee, even for once, O my son? |
38041 | why did I not foresee this? |
5678 | ''Tis not for thee,she said,"that I came to this tryst: why comest thou to meet me? |
5678 | ''Tis not with thee that I trysted,said she,"why dost thou come to meet me? |
5678 | And for what purpose art thou come? |
5678 | And what made thee to part from me, if we were as thou sayest? |
5678 | Art thou the man to allot this Boar? |
5678 | Chased thee awayin line 7, for condot ellat, perhaps connected with do- ellaim(?). |
5678 | Eager(? |
5678 | Go ye all to the swift battle that shall come to you from German the green- terrible(? |
5678 | Greatly although thou makest complaint against me to- day,said Ferdia,"tell me to what arms shall we resort?" |
5678 | How shall it be divided, O Conor? |
5678 | How? |
5678 | Is it possible that such claim as this should be made upon me? |
5678 | Is that Munremur? |
5678 | Is this true, O Ket? |
5678 | Let it be as thou wishest,said Mider;"shall we play at the chess?" |
5678 | Sayest thou this, as meaning to refuse me? |
5678 | Seest thou that, O Laegaire? 5678 Speak thou, Emer, and say,"said Cuchulain,"Should I not with this lady delay? |
5678 | The quest then is a good one? |
5678 | To what weapons shall we next resort, O Cuchulain? |
5678 | To whom then appertains it? |
5678 | Truly,said she;"and what was the cause that parted us?" |
5678 | What are we to do now? |
5678 | What claim wilt thou bring why I should do this? |
5678 | What hath brought thee here? |
5678 | What hath happened to thee? |
5678 | What is it that thou desirest me to grant? |
5678 | What is it,they said,"that thou dost? |
5678 | What is the name by which thou art called? |
5678 | What is there now set for us to do? |
5678 | What should now be done, Father Conor? |
5678 | What sight is that of which thou speakest? |
5678 | What sort of a man was he whom ye boast of? |
5678 | What stake shall we have upon the game then? |
5678 | What stake shall we set upon the game? |
5678 | What weapons shall we turn to to- day, O Ferdia? |
5678 | What wilt thou do now? |
5678 | Where hast thou seen me? |
5678 | Where is it that Labraid dwelleth? |
5678 | Wherefore camest thou to me last year? |
5678 | Who art thou, then, thyself? |
5678 | Who art thou? |
5678 | Who is this? |
5678 | Who is this? |
5678 | Who is this? |
5678 | Who then is this? |
5678 | Whom dost thou hate the most,said Conor,"of these whom thou now seest?" |
5678 | Why namest thou thy father''Hand- in- danger? |
5678 | Why, what ails thee? |
5678 | Why,said Eochaid,"surely this sickness of thine is not such as to cause thee to lament; how fares it with thee?" |
5678 | Why,said she,"what is thy name?" |
5678 | Why,said she,"what name hast thou in the land? |
5678 | Wilt thou not be carried to Dun Delga to seek for Emer? |
5678 | a bright purple curling(?) 5678 a smooth number"? |
5678 | finds not room in me), O maiden, lovely is thy form, there is fire of some one behind her eyes(?) |
5678 | no evil wedding feast( banais, text banas) for thee? 5678 ), over the highway beside the lower part of the Burg of the Trees; it( the chariot?) 5678 ), soon shall I reach my early grave, stronger than the sea is my grief, dost thou not know it, O Conor? 5678 @@line x2? 5678 A gold- hilted sword in his hand, two green spears with terrible points(? 5678 A white army, very red for multitudes of horses, they followed after me on every side(? 5678 And Cuchulain complained and lamented, and he spoke the words that follow, and thus did Ferdia reply: Cuchulain Is''t indeed Ferdia''s face? 5678 And Cuchulain saw the lady as she went from him to Manannan, and he cried out to Laeg:What meaneth this that I see?" |
5678 | And Liban spoke to him, and she strove to lead him into the fairy hill; but"What place is that in which Labraid dwelleth?" |
5678 | And Mider said to Etain:"Wilt thou come with me?" |
5678 | And afterwards the king came to the maiden, and he sought speech from her:"Whence art thou sprung, O maiden?" |
5678 | And then Mider said to Etain: Wilt thou come to my home, fair- haired lady? |
5678 | And though it hath been promised(? |
5678 | And thus spoke Liban to the man whom they saw there: Say where He, the Hand- on- Sword, Labra swift, abideth? |
5678 | Apparent rendering:"Place on the land, place close on the land, very red oxen, heavy troop which hears, truly manlike? |
5678 | Art thou subdued, in truth? |
5678 | Be still: let thy praise of him sink: Peer not, like a seer, at the distance; Wilt fail me on battle- field''s brink? |
5678 | But wilt thou come with me to my land,"said Mider,"in case Eochaid should ask it of thee?" |
5678 | Cid fri mnai atbertha- su Mani thesbad nà aire,"Why wouldest thou talk to a woman if something were not amiss?" |
5678 | Come not near, nor right forget In my hand thy fate is set: Those recall, whom late I fought, Hath their fall no wisdom taught? |
5678 | Cuchulain Thine shall be the choosing; Say, what warfare using Hosts shall see thee losing At the Ford this fight? |
5678 | Cuchulain What availeth me triumph or boasting? |
5678 | Dear the mind, firm, upright, dear the youth, lofty, modest, after going with him through the dark wood dear the girding(?) |
5678 | F. Fierce is the man in his excited(?) |
5678 | F. Fierce is the man, a war for twenties, it is not easy to vanquish him, the strength of a hundred in his body, valiant his deed(? |
5678 | Great nobles, mighty(?) |
5678 | His ruddy cheeks, more beautiful than meadows(? |
5678 | How canst thou strive in renown with me?" |
5678 | How dares the son of that man to measure his renown with mine?" |
5678 | How shall the son of that one- legged man measure his renown with mine?" |
5678 | I heard the groan of Echaid Juil, lips speak in friendship, if it is really true, certainly it was not a fight(? |
5678 | In forms like those men loved of old, Naught added, nothing torn away, The ancient tales again are told, Can none their own true magic sway? |
5678 | Is my neck and its beauty so pleasing? |
5678 | It is a heroic(?) |
5678 | It is drowning with cold( or? |
5678 | It is she who was hurt in the land(? |
5678 | Lines 3 and 4 seem to mean:"Look on the king of Macha, on my beauty/ does not that release thee from deep sleep?" |
5678 | Literal translation of the first two stanzas: What has brought thee here, O Hound, to fight with a strong champion? |
5678 | Might not eraise be"turning back,"connected with eraim, and the line run:"It is turning back of the road of love"? |
5678 | Nobles this night, as an ox- troop, stand: Hard is the task that is asked, and who From the bridging of Lamrach shall gain, or rue? |
5678 | O true"(? accent probably omitted)"champion!" |
5678 | PAGE 7@@both line 17? |
5678 | Rhetoric; the literal translation seems to be as follows, but some words are uncertain: It is love that was longer enduring(?) |
5678 | Slowly, slowly I neared her; I feared for my fame: And she said,"Comes he hither, Of Dechtire who came?" |
5678 | Spears, thy life- blood splashing? |
5678 | Stream smooth and sweet flow through the land, there is choice of mead and wine; men handsome(?) |
5678 | Swords dost choose, hard- clashing Cars, in conflict crashing? |
5678 | That will be proved if we are in combat: that will be proved if we are separated: the goader of oxen(?) |
5678 | The Wife Why against a woman speak Till ye test, and find she fails? |
5678 | The meaning of rind(?) |
5678 | Then Fand bade welcome to Laeg, and"How is it,"said she,"that Cuchulain hath not come with thee?" |
5678 | Then Laeg went back to the place where he had left Cuchulain, and Liban with him; and"How appeareth this quest to thee, O Laeg?" |
5678 | Then he said to Etain:"Yet is the completion of my cure at thy hands lacking to me; when may it be that I shall have it?" |
5678 | They seem to mean: When the comely Manannan took me, he was to me a fitting spouse; nor did he at all gain me before that time, an additional stake(?) |
5678 | To you the vengeance, to you the heavy? |
5678 | Victorious Conor came(? |
5678 | What hath happened to thee, O young man? |
5678 | What, O Conor, of thee? |
5678 | Who is he who is the divider of the Boar for ye?" |
5678 | Why hold''st thou back, nor claimest A boon that all would win? |
5678 | Wouldst thou win the prize they bring, Findabar, the child of king? |
5678 | and tell me, Cuchulain,"cried Emer,"Why this shame on my head thou wouldst lay? |
5678 | and that this tone, together with the Arthurian Saga, passed to the Continent? |
5678 | condit chellti if connected with tochell), and thou art disturbed(?) |
5678 | dar c? |
5678 | diclochud) Midi in dracht coich les coich amles? |
5678 | he said,"which wilt thou do? |
5678 | in the place of the young and thou art conquered(? |
5678 | in thy mighty deeds, for that which Labraid''s power has indicated rise up, O man who sittest(?) |
5678 | on my beauty, Will that loose not those slumbers profound? |
5678 | oxen? |
5678 | said Cuchulain,"for our horses are weary, and our charioteers are weak; and now that these are weary, why should not we be weary too?" |
5678 | said Cuchulain,"should I not be permitted to delay with this lady? |
5678 | said Cuchulain,"tell me to what arms we shall resort? |
5678 | said Ferdia,"how hast thou been persuaded to come to this fight and this battle at all? |
5678 | said Ferdia,"wherefore is it: that thou hast continued in thy praise of this man ever since the time that I left my tent? |
5678 | said Liban;"wilt thou go on without a delay, and hold speech with Fand?" |
5678 | said he,"now that he who lieth here hath fallen by me?" |
5678 | says Eochaid,"and whence is it that thou hast come?" |
5678 | shall tell of it: the handcraftsman(?) |
5678 | thocur? |
5678 | to what weapons shall we resort?" |
5678 | what ill dost thou bear? |
5678 | why hither faring,[FN#54] Strife with strong ones daring? |
5678 | wilt thou depart with me, or abide here until Cuchulain comes to thee?" |
6168 | After you have written three or four words, you can put them together, can you not? |
6168 | All of them? |
6168 | And is that what you call justice? |
6168 | And is this the great, beautiful, happy world that I have been told about? |
6168 | And then will you give me more? |
6168 | And what can you do, Aesop? |
6168 | And whose sheep are these? |
6168 | Are you lately from Italy? |
6168 | Are you the Bruce, and are you all alone? |
6168 | Benjamin, how did thee learn to draw such a picture? |
6168 | But what has the bomb to do with what I wish you to write? 6168 But what shall we do with it?" |
6168 | But wo n''t it look rather funny for me to ride to Exeter on a sidesaddle? |
6168 | Did he have reddish- brown hair, and did he ride a gray horse? |
6168 | Did he say anything, father? |
6168 | Did n''t you ever see your father behave so? |
6168 | Do I look like the wisest of the wise? 6168 Do I owe you anything more?" |
6168 | Do you know of any person who was once poor but who has lately and suddenly become well- to- do? |
6168 | Do you mean that the one with his hat on will be the king? |
6168 | Do you remember those birds? |
6168 | Do you think there will be a battle? |
6168 | Does the rain fall there? |
6168 | Does the sun shine in your country? |
6168 | Excuse me, sir,he said;"but may I ask where you live?" |
6168 | Good friend,he said,"if you should find something that we have lost, what would you do with it?" |
6168 | Have you a room here for me? |
6168 | Have you been sick? |
6168 | Henry Longfellow,said the teacher,"why have you not written?" |
6168 | Here, my friend, what shall I pay you? |
6168 | How did these clothes come on me? |
6168 | How do you know that it is only one beast that does all this mischief? |
6168 | How is this, my dear boy? |
6168 | How much did you pay for it? |
6168 | How much will you give? |
6168 | How much will you take for the fish that you are drawing in? |
6168 | How would you like to live with me, Giotto? 6168 Is she like our mother?" |
6168 | Is this the condition to which I must come? |
6168 | It looks just like her, does n''t it? |
6168 | May a poor traveler find rest and shelter here for the night? |
6168 | Mother, what makes the wind blow? |
6168 | Mother,he said,"will you let me see that beautiful book again?" |
6168 | My good men,he said,"how many fish do you expect to draw in this time?" |
6168 | Nothing? 6168 Now tell us, father,"whispered Charlot,"where did you find him?" |
6168 | Now which of you will hang this bell on the Cat''s neck? |
6168 | Now, you charcoal man, where is that child? |
6168 | O Gilbert, where have you been? |
6168 | O my child, how did you learn to do that? |
6168 | Oh, well,said the groom,"wo n''t six nails do? |
6168 | Oh, what has happened? 6168 Poor men? |
6168 | READ, AND YOU WILL KNOW"Mother, what are the clouds made of? 6168 Shall I wrap it up for you?" |
6168 | Shall we take a walk this morning? |
6168 | Then how am I to get it home? |
6168 | Then to whom shall we take it? |
6168 | Then what shall we understand by these children being able to speak a Phrygian word which they have never heard from other lips? |
6168 | Then why did n''t you do it? |
6168 | Then, I intend to travel the way I wish to go-- do you understand? |
6168 | Therefore,said the king,"must we conclude that the Phrygians were the first and oldest of all the nations?" |
6168 | They say that King Henry always has a number of men with him,said the boy;"how shall I know which is he?" |
6168 | Was that the vice president? 6168 Well, boy, what have you got?" |
6168 | Well, my boy,said King Henry,"which do you think is the king?" |
6168 | Well, my boy,said the king,"are you looking for your father?" |
6168 | Well, then,said the caliph,"why did you not return it to us at once?" |
6168 | Well,said the teacher,"you can write words, can you not?" |
6168 | What are they doing by the roadside? |
6168 | What are you making, Robert? |
6168 | What do you mean by that? 6168 What do you mean, you ungrateful little rascal?" |
6168 | What does that mean? |
6168 | What is it? |
6168 | What is that word? |
6168 | What is the matter here? |
6168 | What is the matter? 6168 What is the matter?" |
6168 | What is the matter? |
6168 | What is the name of this island? |
6168 | What is your father''s name? |
6168 | What is your name, my boy? |
6168 | What is your name, young rebel? |
6168 | What news can you give me concerning my friend Arion, the sweetest of all musicians? |
6168 | What shall I do when it comes my turn? |
6168 | What shall I sing? |
6168 | What shall we write about? |
6168 | What sort of lesson? |
6168 | What would you have done? |
6168 | What''s the matter? |
6168 | Where am I? 6168 Where do you carry your gold?" |
6168 | Where have you been? |
6168 | Where is Lincoln? |
6168 | Where shall we find the wisest man? |
6168 | Where? 6168 Which is the true?" |
6168 | Which would you rather haveasked the caliph,"three hundred pieces of gold, or three wise sayings from my lips?" |
6168 | Who are they? |
6168 | Who are those men, and why do their faces look so joyless? |
6168 | Who has done this? |
6168 | Who is going to ride that nag? |
6168 | Who is next? |
6168 | Who is that child? |
6168 | Who is that man? |
6168 | Who is that polite old gentleman who carried my turkey for me? |
6168 | Who lives on the other side of the world? |
6168 | Who will sing us a song? |
6168 | Why are they sick? |
6168 | Why did he offer to carry my turkey? |
6168 | Why did n''t you come to us before? |
6168 | Why did n''t you give something to Sarcas? |
6168 | Why did you tell us where to find it? |
6168 | Why is that man lying there at this time of day? |
6168 | Why is the sky so blue? |
6168 | Why not? |
6168 | Why should we bother? |
6168 | Why, what has happened to you? |
6168 | Yes, why should we? |
6168 | You want your mother, do n''t you? |
6168 | Aristomenes General Greece 685--? |
6168 | At length the chief of the band called to Otanes and said,"Young fellow, have you anything worth taking?" |
6168 | Before Mrs. Jacquot could open it, some one called out,"Is this the house of Jacquot, the charcoal man?" |
6168 | Bruce, Robert King Sweden 1274--1329 Burritt, Elihu Philanthropist Connecticut 1811--1879 Caedmon Poet England 650--720(?) |
6168 | But are there any gentle, harmless animals in your fields?" |
6168 | Could it be possible that he would receive that thrashing? |
6168 | Do not all persons live eighty years-- yes, many times eighty years?" |
6168 | Do you expect to find any man in Corinth who deserves so rich a gift?" |
6168 | Does thee suppose that it is very wrong for Benjamin to do such a thing?" |
6168 | FIFTY FAMOUS PEOPLE Who they were, what they were, where they lived, Aesop Fabulist Greece 550--? |
6168 | He called to him:--"My friend, which of these roads shall I travel to go to Lynchburg?" |
6168 | He looked at the beast, and-- what do you think it was? |
6168 | He looked at the bright, yellow pieces and said,"What shall I do with these coppers, mother?" |
6168 | Here it is:-- Pray, how shall I, a little lad, In speaking make a figure? |
6168 | How could he find out? |
6168 | How had Sirrah managed to get the three scattered divisions together? |
6168 | How had he managed to drive all the frightened little animals into this place of safety? |
6168 | How is that?" |
6168 | I have I paid you my bill?" |
6168 | Is he also an old man?" |
6168 | Is he some new kind of man?" |
6168 | Is this true?" |
6168 | Johnson?" |
6168 | Not dressed in that way?" |
6168 | Now I have a mind to give this book to one of you""Will you give it to me, mother?" |
6168 | Now, how was Arion saved from drowning when he leaped overboard? |
6168 | Now, tell me, O King, which is the true, and which is the false?" |
6168 | Of what other story does this remind you? |
6168 | Randolph?" |
6168 | Shall I show it to you?" |
6168 | Should he buy a pretty toy? |
6168 | Should he buy candy? |
6168 | Soon another came up and said,"My boy, do you happen to have any gold about you?" |
6168 | THE BOMB Did you ever hear of King Charles the Twelfth, of Sweden? |
6168 | THE HUNTED KING What boy or girl has not heard the story of King Robert Brace and the spider? |
6168 | THE WHISPERERS"Boys, what did I tell you?" |
6168 | The shah turned to the second man:"Have you a daughter?" |
6168 | The woman answered,"All travelers are welcome for the sake of one; and you are welcome""Who is that one?" |
6168 | Then he called his wisest men together and asked them,"Is it really true that the first people in the world were Egyptians?" |
6168 | Then he said to the first man,"Have you a son?" |
6168 | Then some one outside called loudly,"Have you seen King Robert the Bruce pass this way?" |
6168 | They told him that there were beautiful things at home-- why go away to see other things less beautiful? |
6168 | Toward what place was the eagle flying when you last saw it?" |
6168 | WHICH WAS THE KING? |
6168 | What does that mean?" |
6168 | What good does it do?" |
6168 | What is going to happen?" |
6168 | What is the price?" |
6168 | What say you?" |
6168 | What shall I do?" |
6168 | What should he do? |
6168 | What will you do with them?" |
6168 | When the caliph heard of this he sent for Al Farra and asked him,"Who is the most honored of men?" |
6168 | Where am I?" |
6168 | Where did you find him?" |
6168 | Where does all the rain water go? |
6168 | Which shall it be?" |
6168 | Who do you think I am? |
6168 | Who has not heard of George Washington? |
6168 | Why do his legs tremble under him as he walks, leaning upon a stick? |
6168 | Why does the rain fall? |
6168 | Why should he not cool himself in the refreshing water? |
6168 | Will you sell it? |
6168 | Wo n''t you come?" |
6168 | Would you like to read his speech? |
6168 | You know where the fountain is?" |
6168 | Your own mother, and no time to attend to her child?" |
6168 | [ Illustration]"She goes ahead all right,"said Christopher,"but how shall we guide her?" |
6168 | asked Gautama,"and why is his face so pinched and his hair so white? |
6168 | said he,"do you eat gold in this country?" |
6168 | what has thee been doing?" |
6168 | where?" |
14391 | What mountain is it yonder? |
14391 | ''"All the most vigorous and finest(?) |
14391 | ''"In what direction?" |
14391 | ''"Is it they who say,"said Cuchulainn,"that there are not more of the Ulstermen alive than they have slain of them?" |
14391 | ''"Is my friend Conchobar in this battlefield?" |
14391 | ''"Tell me,"said Conchobar to him,"why you do not sleep?" |
14391 | ''"What advantage to you to deceive me, wild boy?" |
14391 | ''"What ails you at them now?" |
14391 | ''"What are those cattle yonder so active?" |
14391 | ''"What is your name?" |
14391 | ''"What plain is that over there?" |
14391 | ''"What, is it not you advised it?" |
14391 | ''"Which would the Ulstermen think best,"said Cuchulainn,"to bring them dead or alive?" |
14391 | ''"Which would the Ulstermen think best,"said Cuchulainn,"to have them dead or alive?" |
14391 | ''"Who is it who is there?" |
14391 | ''"Why have you come into the battlefield,"said Conchobar,"that you may swoon there?" |
14391 | ''"Why have you thrown the stone, O boy?" |
14391 | ''"Why were the boys not bound to protect you?" |
14391 | ''A chariot like a huge royal fort, with its yolcs strong golden, with its great panel(?) |
14391 | ''A man in a battle- girdle(? |
14391 | ''A pity for thee to fall on the field of battle, thick[ with slain? |
14391 | ''And I think it better that weariness or cowardice be found with you, because of friendship beyond my own men(?). |
14391 | ''And if I am then?'' |
14391 | ''And now?'' |
14391 | ''And you?'' |
14391 | ''Another company has come there to the hill to Slemon Midi,''said Mac Roth,''which is not fewer than a warlike cantred(?). |
14391 | ''Are the heads yonder from our people?'' |
14391 | ''Are you Cuchulainn?'' |
14391 | ''Are you not able to protect me from him?'' |
14391 | ''Do you hear your new son- in- law greeting you?'' |
14391 | ''Fedelm the prophetess, how seest thou our host?'' |
14391 | ''Fedelm the prophetess, how seest thou our host?'' |
14391 | ''Fedelm the prophetess, how seest thou our host?'' |
14391 | ''Has a bright cloud come over the sun yet?'' |
14391 | ''Have you an idea?'' |
14391 | ''Have you his head, O Fergus?'' |
14391 | ''Have you news?'' |
14391 | ''Have you the inspiration(?) |
14391 | ''He has a yellow head of hair, and a linen emblem round it; a club of fury(?) |
14391 | ''He is half of a combat truly,''said he,''who so comes there; he is a fence(?) |
14391 | ''He is the fierce glow of wrath, he is a shaft(?) |
14391 | ''He is veteran of his land(? |
14391 | ''He was---- of valour and of prowess, in sooth,''said Fergus;''he was of---- pride(?) |
14391 | ''He will be whole who has brought it(? |
14391 | ''Help me,[ Note: Spoken by Fergus?] |
14391 | ''How am I now with the host?'' |
14391 | ''How do the lads of Ulster fight the battle?'' |
14391 | ''How do you see Cuchulainn?'' |
14391 | ''How is it to be done then?'' |
14391 | ''How long have I been in this sleep now, O warrior?'' |
14391 | ''I have promised it''''Take back(?) |
14391 | ''I see a fair man who will make play With a number of wounds(?) |
14391 | ''I see,''said he,''the chariot broad above, fine, of white crystal, with a yoke of gold with----(? |
14391 | ''I think it long,''said Mac Roth,''to be recounting all that I have seen, but I have come meanwhile(?) |
14391 | ''In what manner does it please you to go to meet Medb to- morrow, O Cuchulainn?'' |
14391 | ''Is it he who is hardest to deal with among the Ulstermen?'' |
14391 | ''Is not the king''s host at the will of him, Unless it breaks fair play? |
14391 | ''Is that what he is doing?'' |
14391 | ''Is there anything else then?'' |
14391 | ''Is there no clearer description?'' |
14391 | ''It is ploughland(?) |
14391 | ''Let us put a hero to hunt(?) |
14391 | ''Look, my lad,''said Fer Diad;''is Cuchulainn on the ford?'' |
14391 | ''Nevertheless we have profited by(?) |
14391 | ''Not he,''said Fergus;''he would not have come over the border of the country without thirty chariots two- pointed(?) |
14391 | ''Not so(?) |
14391 | ''O friend Lugaid, do the hosts fear me?'' |
14391 | ''One who fears you not(?) |
14391 | ''Say will you pay for this man on the morrow?'' |
14391 | ''Sleep a little, O Cuchulainn,''said the warrior;''your heavy swoon(?) |
14391 | ''Smite the hills across them and the champions(?) |
14391 | ''So?'' |
14391 | ''The dark churl should not have made fight,''said Fergus,''against the great Hound whom he could not contend with(?).'' |
14391 | ''The hill is named Fithi(?) |
14391 | ''The man of expeditions will come Who will defend(?) |
14391 | ''The men have almost worn me out By reason of the number of single combats; I can not work the slaughter(?) |
14391 | ''Then Cathbad came to them, and said:"Has the boy taken arms?" |
14391 | ''This gift is overpowering(? |
14391 | ''This time,''said Cuchulainn,''will you yield and accept your life?'' |
14391 | ''Though it were that that he should boast, the feat that I have done before him, it was no more shame to me,''(?) |
14391 | ''Was it Celtchar Mac Uithidir?'' |
14391 | ''Was it Eogan Mac Durtacht?'' |
14391 | ''What are you doing here?'' |
14391 | ''What are you looking at?'' |
14391 | ''What are you waiting for here?'' |
14391 | ''What deed is that?'' |
14391 | ''What indeed?'' |
14391 | ''What is it yonder, O Fergus?'' |
14391 | ''What is the matter with you?'' |
14391 | ''What is the matter?'' |
14391 | ''What is to be done to them?'' |
14391 | ''What is your name?'' |
14391 | ''What kind of chariot then?'' |
14391 | ''What kind of man is there?'' |
14391 | ''What kind of man,''said Ailill,''is this Hound of whom we have heard among the Ulstermen? |
14391 | ''What kind of man?'' |
14391 | ''What man have you for the ford to- morrow?'' |
14391 | ''What man is it yonder, O Fergus?'' |
14391 | ''What shall I do, O warriors?'' |
14391 | ''What word is this, O Medb?'' |
14391 | ''What would you say to him?'' |
14391 | ''What, O lad, are you not fit to keep watch and ward for me?'' |
14391 | ''When they had all come to the feast, Culann said to Conchobar:"Do you expect any one to follow you?" |
14391 | ''Whence are you?'' |
14391 | ''Whence do you come?'' |
14391 | ''Whence have you brought the cattle?'' |
14391 | ''Where are their cow- herds?'' |
14391 | ''Where is Cuchulainn?'' |
14391 | ''Where is the Bull?'' |
14391 | ''Where is the madman''s head?'' |
14391 | ''Where is your master?'' |
14391 | ''Where then is Cuchulainn?'' |
14391 | ''Which of the men of Ireland speaks thus to me?'' |
14391 | ''Which of the warriors of the king is that?'' |
14391 | ''Whither will you send,''said Ailill,''to seek that man to meet Cuchulainn?'' |
14391 | ''Who are those, O Fergus?'' |
14391 | ''Who are you at all?'' |
14391 | ''Who are you?'' |
14391 | ''Who carries them off? |
14391 | ''Who has boasted that?'' |
14391 | ''Who has come upon them?'' |
14391 | ''Who has sung that?'' |
14391 | ''Who has sung this?'' |
14391 | ''Who is it yonder, O Fergus?'' |
14391 | ''Who is that, O Fergus?'' |
14391 | ''Who is that, O Fergus?'' |
14391 | ''Who is that, O Fergus?'' |
14391 | ''Who is that, O Fergus?'' |
14391 | ''Who is that, O Fergus?'' |
14391 | ''Who is that, O Fergus?'' |
14391 | ''Who is that, O Fergus?'' |
14391 | ''Who of the Ulstermen holds the shield?'' |
14391 | ''Who shall go for that?'' |
14391 | ''Who strikes the three strong blows, great and distant?'' |
14391 | ''Who takes them, who steals them, who carries them off?'' |
14391 | ''Whom shall I smite?'' |
14391 | ''Whose man are you?'' |
14391 | ''Why do you blame the men?'' |
14391 | ''Why else have you come to me?'' |
14391 | ''Why should we not go against Cuchulainn?'' |
14391 | ''Will it cause injury to the host, If they go a journey from it? |
14391 | ''will you acknowledge your saving?''] |
14391 | (?) |
14391 | ), about him; a brooch of white silver therein; a black shield with a boss of bronze on it; a spear, covered with eyes, with----(? |
14391 | ), dry- framed(? |
14391 | ), dry- framed(? |
14391 | ), feat- high, scythed, sword- fair(? |
14391 | ), feat- high, straight- shouldered(? |
14391 | ), feat- high, sword- fair(? |
14391 | ), horses will be pressed(? |
14391 | ), in his hand; a shirt, braided(? |
14391 | ), of a champion, on two horses, swift, stout(? |
14391 | ), of a champion, on which there would be room for seven arms fit for a lord(?). |
14391 | ), well- yoked(? |
14391 | ), with great panels of copper, with shafts of bronze, with tyres of white metal, with its body thin- framed(?) |
14391 | ), with its nails of sharpness that were on shafts and thongs and cross- pieces and ropes(?) |
14391 | ),----(?). |
14391 | ); the tunic falling(?) |
14391 | ---- as a bee would move to and fro on a day of beauty(?).'' |
14391 | ... One of the two horses is supple(? |
14391 | ...''Does Ailill sleep now?'' |
14391 | A beard curly, forked, on him, so that it reached over the soft lower part of his soft shirt, so that it would shelter(?) |
14391 | A black shield with a hard boss of white metal; a five pointed spear in his hand; a forked(?) |
14391 | A spear with wings(? |
14391 | After that,''Why have you come, O my friend, O Fergus?'' |
14391 | Ailill and Medb perceived it; it was then Medb said:''O Fergus, this is strange, What kind of way do we go? |
14391 | Ailill asked:''Is it Conchobar who has done this?'' |
14391 | And he put it in the hands of the druids; and Fergus sang this song:''Here is a withe, what does the withe declare to us? |
14391 | And this is the agreement,''said Fergus:''that the ford on which takes place(?) |
14391 | As regards the charioteer and Cuchulainn:''What shall you do to- night?'' |
14391 | But for your protection, it would have been your entrails drawn(?) |
14391 | But their herd took their Bull from them, and they drove him across into a narrow gap with their spear- shafts on their shields(?). |
14391 | Conchobar said,"Who has instructed you?" |
14391 | Cuchulainn guards himself so that his skin or his----(?) |
14391 | Cur was plying his weapons against him in a fence(?) |
14391 | Docha Mac Magach went with Mane Andoe: Dubthach Doeltenga of Ulster came with Fiacha Fialdana from Imraith(?). |
14391 | Fergus replied:''O Medb, what troubles you? |
14391 | Few or many? |
14391 | Fiacha Fialdana from Imraith(?) |
14391 | For they were cast from him just as if it was stone or rock or horn that they struck(?). |
14391 | God save you, friend Fergus,"said he,"where is Conchobar?" |
14391 | Hair black and curly on him, and he purple, blue- faced; eyes grey, shining, in his head; a cloak grey, lordly(? |
14391 | Hair black, curly, on him; round eyes, grey(? |
14391 | Hair white- yellow has he, and it curly, neat, bushy(? |
14391 | He asked his charioteer:''Is it I who have caused it?'' |
14391 | He put on his black(?) |
14391 | He put on his dark apron of dark leather, well tanned, of the choice of four ox- hides of a heifer, with his battle- girdle of cows''skins(?) |
14391 | He said"Would he bring his deeds to completion, provided the age of manhood came to them?" |
14391 | He smites them, over left chariot wheel(? |
14391 | He threw two stones from Cuince, so that he slew her in her plain(?). |
14391 | He took the goads(?) |
14391 | He who will not----(?) |
14391 | His hair curled round his head like the red branches of a thorn in the gap of Atalta(?). |
14391 | His heart was heard light- striking(?) |
14391 | I will take you,''said he,''between my toes, till your ribs are broken, and you will be in this condition till a doom of blessing comes(?) |
14391 | I would make their necks whizz(?) |
14391 | It is not long afterwards that they met in the middle of the ford, and Fer Diad said to Cuchulainn:''Whence come you, O Cua?'' |
14391 | It is there he said to the leader:''What is your name?'' |
14391 | It is there that Ailill said:''Go, O Mac Roth,''said Ailill,''and look for us whether the men are all(?) |
14391 | It was thus the chariot was, with its body thin- framed(? |
14391 | Mane said to him in the same way thrice,''whose man was he?'' |
14391 | Not more heavily does he traverse(?) |
14391 | O Fer Diad, do you know why you have been summoned into this tent?'' |
14391 | Ravens will drink milk of----[ Note: Some kenning for blood?] |
14391 | Scathach''s----(? |
14391 | Seven toes on each of his feet, and seven fingers on each of his hands, and the shining of a very great fire round his eye,----(?) |
14391 | So that formerly Cuchulainn''s throng(?) |
14391 | Take thought for the honour of Ulster: what has not been lost shall not be lost, if it be not lost through you to- day(?). |
14391 | The cattle do not come from the fields That the din of the host may not terrify them(?). |
14391 | The charioteer in front of him; the back of the charioteer''s head towards the horses, the reins grasped by his toes(?) |
14391 | The charioteer took first then his helm, ridged, like a board(? |
14391 | The first troop had many- coloured cloaks folded round them; hair like a mantle(? |
14391 | The thunder and the din and the noise(?) |
14391 | Then Cuchulainn attacked him with the edge of his sword, and took his hair off as if it was shaved with a razor; he did not put even a scratch(?) |
14391 | Then Cuchulainn killed Fota in his field; Bomailce on his ford; Salach in his village(? |
14391 | Then Cuchulainn said:''What you have done I deem help at the nick of time(?).'' |
14391 | Then Medb took the arms of Fergus(?) |
14391 | Then he sang a song:''I am all alone before flocks; I get them not, I let them not go; I am alone at cold hours(?) |
14391 | Then the charioteer said to him:''The man goes over thee as the tail over a cat; he washes thee as foam is washed in water, he squeezes(?) |
14391 | Then the maiden looked for it; and Medb said:''O Fedelm the prophetess, how seest thou the host?'' |
14391 | There is a man with fair curly hair, broad cut(? |
14391 | Therewith he drew his foot to him so that his leg(?) |
14391 | Therewith they awoke through their sleep(?). |
14391 | They fell by one another so that no one escaped alive of the abundance(?) |
14391 | They will rush on you on the plains(? |
14391 | They will strive for their women, they will chase their flocks in fight on the morning, heroes will be smitten, dogs will be checked(? |
14391 | This was well- measured(?) |
14391 | What age is this youth who is famous?'' |
14391 | What is its mystery? |
14391 | What is there less fitting for me to be there than for any other good warrior?'' |
14391 | What number threw it? |
14391 | When Cuchulainn saw the kings from the east taking their crowns on their heads and marshalling(?) |
14391 | When Medb came, she asked,''Why are you waiting here?'' |
14391 | When they had reached the mountain, Cuchulainn asked:"What is the white cairn yonder on the top of the mountain?" |
14391 | Which would you think easier to bear, O friend Fergus?'' |
14391 | While the hosts were going over Mag Breg, he struck(?) |
14391 | Why do ye not win my blessing?'' |
14391 | You would think my club[ Note: Or''track''?] |
14391 | [ Note: Or Nera?] |
14391 | ]; and everything that has been destroyed of his household(?) |
14391 | _ The Death of Lethan_ Lethan came on to his ford on the Nith(?) |
14391 | _ The Death of Lochu_ Cuchulainn killed no one from the Saile ind Orthi(?) |
14391 | _ The Death of Nadcrantail_''What man have you to meet Cuchulainn tomorrow?'' |
14391 | and cattle shall be made good, and he shall have full compensation(? |
14391 | and is its equipment here? |
14391 | dry- framed(? |
14391 | indeed,''said he,''right is the honour(?) |
14391 | of a hero, with their pricking goads(? |
14391 | of copper, with its shafts of bronze, with its body thin- framed(? |
14391 | of his horses, and his whip(?) |
14391 | of the chariot under my side and my skin- cover under my head, so that I might sleep now?'' |
14391 | said Ailill;''will you have them neither stay nor go?'' |
14391 | said Cuchulainn;''can you yoke it? |
14391 | the apple- feat, the edge- feat, the supine- feat, the javelin- feat, the ropefeat, the---- feat, the cat- feat, the hero''s salmon[-leap? |
14391 | to the knee, and long(?) |
14391 | which illumines?'' |
14391 | who drives them away? |
14391 | who kills them?'' |
14391 | who makes that boast?'' |
43381 | ''Knowest thou not,''asked Grettir,''that I am a treasure- hill wherein most men have groped with little luck?'' 43381 All those riches which Ar has in his hall,"responded Rolf,"are those to be burned or lost?" |
43381 | And couldst thou find no man,asked he,"who is within the law, to do this for thee?" |
43381 | And how,asked Grettir,"didst thou reach that place? |
43381 | And is there something there in those willows on Einar''s land? 43381 And my mother?" |
43381 | And were there not perchance other heathen weapons which are thine, coming ashore in that great storm? |
43381 | And what is the punishment,asked Rolf,"for slaying?" |
43381 | And where is the boat? |
43381 | Art thou minded to try? |
43381 | Asks Grani that? |
43381 | At what lookest thou, man? |
43381 | Aye? |
43381 | But does Rolf agree to it? |
43381 | But if three men were thus drowned,asked Frodi,"what then?" |
43381 | But is harm meant to Hiarandi? |
43381 | But since we can not leave this place by the front door, why not by the rear? |
43381 | But thou hast no enemies, father? |
43381 | But what sang she with you? |
43381 | But what seekest thou with him? |
43381 | But who gave the sword? |
43381 | But why not Snorri the Priest? |
43381 | Canst thou say no better? |
43381 | Canst thou string it? |
43381 | Come ye not inside? |
43381 | Dost thou forget those at home? 43381 Father,"asked Rolf,"knowest thou who the man is that came upon the ship?" |
43381 | Fearest thou, Ondott? |
43381 | Fishes he,asked Einar,"with a hook on that rope?" |
43381 | For that alone earnest thou hither? |
43381 | Grani, Grani,cried Rolf,"has thy pride at last come to its end? |
43381 | Hast thou nothing better to say? |
43381 | Hast thou seen,asked Rolf,"one who goes driving a ewe?" |
43381 | Hearest thou that? |
43381 | Hearest thou that? |
43381 | How camest thou here? |
43381 | How do that? |
43381 | How else shall I win my heritage again? |
43381 | How goes all at Cragness? |
43381 | How is it come,asked Einar,"that thou hast left Hiarandi?" |
43381 | How many,asked Rolf of Frodi,"threwest thou over?" |
43381 | How shall I get thee safe conduct? |
43381 | How should I forget it? |
43381 | How should he,asked the boy,"bring trouble on thee?" |
43381 | How should that be? |
43381 | How was thy sleep there on the crag? |
43381 | How went thy suit at the Althing? |
43381 | I am sorry for the mariners, yet how is one to help? |
43381 | If thou art made outlaw,asked Rolf,"what wilt thou do?" |
43381 | In what dost thou see it? |
43381 | In what has he offended thee? |
43381 | In what? |
43381 | Is Earl Thorfinn,asked Grani,"coming to visit his realm?" |
43381 | Is it not better,asked Einar,"that this matter be settled here quietly, between neighbors, rather than be brought before the judges at the Althing?" |
43381 | Is it not true that in the moment when the slaying is proved unlawful, the guilt of Einar is established, so that no suit at law is needed? |
43381 | Is it thou that comest to our house,asked Ondott,"making this mischief there?" |
43381 | Is there a farm above? |
43381 | Keep that for yourselves,Rolf said,"but will the ewe stay now at home?" |
43381 | Knowest thou not,asked Grettir,"that if one fares abroad the outlawry is for three years, but if one stays it is twenty? |
43381 | Looks not the mark,asked Ondott,"like the mark of Einar?" |
43381 | May I go with thee to the gate? |
43381 | More than that, shall I take money for my father''s slaying? |
43381 | Nay,answered Hiarandi,"how canst thou ask me to fish when so much must be done on the farm?" |
43381 | Nay,cried the Earl,"what request is this? |
43381 | Now tell me,said Ondott,"when ye twain were together in Orkney, did not Rolf offer peace if thou wouldst but get him this homestead again?" |
43381 | Now wilt thou take a smaller weapon? |
43381 | Now, why not make thy lot lighter,asked Ondott,"by taking service elsewhere?" |
43381 | Now,asked Asdis,"dost thou remember the time thou camest ashore, these many years ago?" |
43381 | Now,asked Grani of his father,"hast thou so mocked that luckless man''s fate?" |
43381 | Now,asked Grani,"which is dearest to thee, that bow, or thy freedom and Frodi''s?" |
43381 | Now,asked Hiarandi,"shall I go to Snorri and crave his help?" |
43381 | Now,asked he,"shall such a beautiful weapon be broken for a crone''s rhymes?" |
43381 | Now,cried Helga,"wilt thou mock the death of Hiarandi, and jeer at Rolf, who saved thy life here on the rocks?" |
43381 | Now,cried Kiartan, staring,"what spirit told thee of me?" |
43381 | Now,said Frodi to Rolf,"shall we stay or go?" |
43381 | Now,said Snorri,"what of that bow which, if shooting here at this boundary may cost thee thy life, is mayhap the greater danger to thee of the two?" |
43381 | Of what father and what place? |
43381 | Said I not,asked he,"that I was not able? |
43381 | Sailed ye across the Firth? |
43381 | Saw ye then,asked Hiarandi,"one who stood by the mast, a tall man with a great beard?" |
43381 | Sea- worn cloaks and weapons,said Ar,"are they dear to ye?" |
43381 | Seekest thou me? |
43381 | Seest thou no way here? |
43381 | Shall I freeze? |
43381 | Shall I have done all my seeking for nothing? |
43381 | Shall I leave him with nothing to begin the world with? 43381 Shall I lend thee money,"asked Snorri,"or hast thou enough?" |
43381 | Shall he die by the hands of my men, or what atonement wilt thou take? |
43381 | Shall we go armed? |
43381 | Since when,asked the man,"has Snorri been used to pledge himself to all who come to him? |
43381 | So he is safe past the rocks? |
43381 | So skilled art thou then? |
43381 | Tell me,he begged,"what sort of man is that outlaw Grettir the Strong, and for what is he outlawed?" |
43381 | Then wilt thou ask help of Snorri the Priest? 43381 There is luck in that,"answered Grani,"for how could we feed them?" |
43381 | Thinkest thou that is right? |
43381 | Thou wilt not go in the storm? |
43381 | What ails thee this day? |
43381 | What ails thee? |
43381 | What are those dues? |
43381 | What doest thou here? |
43381 | What dost thou here? |
43381 | What dost thou with that bill,asked Grani,"if thou canst not stand up like a man, and be ready for what comes?" |
43381 | What hath happened to the ram? |
43381 | What is it,asks Grani,"that makes thee weep?" |
43381 | What is it? |
43381 | What is that memory? |
43381 | What is their wealth to thee? |
43381 | What is there to do? |
43381 | What is this? |
43381 | What is to be done? |
43381 | What is wrong with the woman? |
43381 | What of that? |
43381 | What of the freedom of my fellow? |
43381 | What precious thing hast thou there? |
43381 | What sayest thou of saving my life? |
43381 | What should I have done? |
43381 | What was he doing when thou earnest away? |
43381 | What wilt thou do? |
43381 | What wilt thou give them? |
43381 | What,sneered the man,"wilt thou set thyself against me? |
43381 | When was he here? |
43381 | Where didst thou get,asked the Earl,"that short- sword which thou wearest? |
43381 | Where have ye been? |
43381 | Where is Rolf? |
43381 | Where is thy mistress? |
43381 | Where is thy son? |
43381 | Where,asked Asdis,"is the harm which he was to do us?" |
43381 | Where? |
43381 | Wherefore,asked Grani,"ate she not from our ricks, which were nearer?" |
43381 | Who art thou,asked the man,"not to know that all are welcome at Snorri''s house?" |
43381 | Who else? |
43381 | Who gave them to thee? |
43381 | Who is he, then? |
43381 | Who knows how many have owned this sword? 43381 Who sits by the dais?" |
43381 | Who were they? |
43381 | Who will not dare much for his freedom? |
43381 | Why are ye so burned? |
43381 | Why callest thou me that? |
43381 | Why carriest thou the whittle, then,asked Ondott,"if thou art not ready to use it?" |
43381 | Why comest thou hither,he said,"like a small man to chaffer over little things? |
43381 | Why dost thou not go? |
43381 | Why gazest thou,asked Ondott,"so much at the ship? |
43381 | Why is it ye always burn to return-- whether ye love your foggy isle and plain men more, or our realm less? |
43381 | Why laugh ye? |
43381 | Why need we men? |
43381 | Why not forgive? |
43381 | Why sayest thou that? |
43381 | Why should Kiartan,responded Rolf,"flee before the Earl, who hath sold him permission to trade here? |
43381 | Why stay we here in danger? |
43381 | Why, then,asked Hiarandi,"didst thou persuade me to ask a stay of judgment? |
43381 | Will no one here give us welcome? |
43381 | Wilt thou claim kinship with him? |
43381 | Wilt thou come? |
43381 | Wilt thou do it? |
43381 | Wilt thou flee? |
43381 | Wilt thou look upon my weapons? |
43381 | Wilt thou never be silent? |
43381 | Wilt thou not fight? |
43381 | Wilt thou then,asked Frodi,"take up the quarrel of these wretched carles?" |
43381 | Wilt thou wait another year when thou mightest slip away now? |
43381 | Wilt thou? |
43381 | Wishes the strange woman anything here? |
43381 | Yet it was he the woman meant? |
43381 | A man said:"But what wilt thou do with the arrows if thou canst not string the bow?" |
43381 | And Frodi said:"Were it not better to atone Rolf for the death of his father, rather than have bad blood between neighbors? |
43381 | And Kolbein rode to Grani and said:"Keeps thy father his harvest feast this year as before, asking company thereto?" |
43381 | And Snorri cried on high:"Where are ye, men of Tongue and Swinefell?" |
43381 | And of Asdis he asked:"Who slew Hiarandi my father?" |
43381 | And they will dispossess thy son of his heritage; wilt thou suffer that? |
43381 | Ar asked:"Knowest thou not what he will have of thee?" |
43381 | Art thou ready, Frodi, to help me in my feud?" |
43381 | Asdis answered:"And what use then couldst thou be to thy wife and son; and is not the time short enough until the ban leaves thee? |
43381 | Asdis asked:"Who then is he?" |
43381 | Asked Einar:"How comes the end of life now?" |
43381 | Asked Ondott,"Was he not?" |
43381 | Asks she:"Thinkest thou that the ewe broke out those two times, and leaped out the third?" |
43381 | Because he wept, they fell to laughing, and asked him:"Why weepest thou, Whittle- Frodi?" |
43381 | But Frodi came to Rolf, and said:"What is this thou hast suffered those two to do to thy neighbor? |
43381 | But Frodi sprang from his seat, and cried:"What dost thou now, to insult Grani so? |
43381 | But Rolf said to Frodi:"Hast thou forgotten that Grani made thee thrall?" |
43381 | But at last he asked a servant:"Will it be taken well if I enter?" |
43381 | But he asked her before he went away:"Why camest thou here?" |
43381 | But what can I do for thee?" |
43381 | But what thinkest thou of my bow?" |
43381 | But why art thou so quiet under injustice?" |
43381 | But why has not Einar offered me atonement, if any is to be paid? |
43381 | But wilt thou take this offer, that we handsel this case to Snorri the Priest, and abide by his finding?" |
43381 | CHAPTER XII OF THE TRIAL OF SKILL AT TONGUE Snorri asked of Rolf:"Art thou the son of Hiarandi my kinsman?" |
43381 | Can he be pursued by aught? |
43381 | Did Snorri give the money for the priest''s dues, and the court''s?" |
43381 | Dost thou mock me and my power?" |
43381 | Einar asked,"Shall we light the beacon?" |
43381 | Einar said to Ondott,"Why didst thou such foolery?" |
43381 | Einar, Ondott hath made his choice of death and life; what choice makest thou? |
43381 | Flosi asked of Kari:"Thinkest thou the lad can shoot?" |
43381 | For she said to Hiarandi:"What wilt thou do for thy defence at law? |
43381 | Frodi asked of Rolf:"Did he know us?" |
43381 | Frodi asked:"War with the Scots is expected in the spring?" |
43381 | Frodi drew a long breath, but he asked further:"If two vikings were drowned, what of that?" |
43381 | Frodi said to Rolf:"What dost thou think, and why look''st thou so at the cliffs above us?" |
43381 | Frodi said to him:"Was then Grani fostered by the Earl?" |
43381 | Frodi, what can we do?" |
43381 | Grani asked:"What are my thralls saying?" |
43381 | Grani asked:"What man will go out against Vemund?" |
43381 | Grani cried:"Why dost thou not try the climb?" |
43381 | Grani only said,"Why should I not call thee so?" |
43381 | Grettir cried:"Has no money been paid for thine outlawry?" |
43381 | Hast thou forgotten he is of thy kin?" |
43381 | He took the ring, giving the men silver, and said to them as before:"Will the ewe stay now at home?" |
43381 | Helga asked:"Why dost thou conceal thy thoughts?" |
43381 | Here they have come again with designs on thee, and wilt thou let them go? |
43381 | Hiarandi said:"Saw ye upon the ship, as it lay below us, the faces of any of the men?" |
43381 | How many lovers of good reading know that the most human of all epics lie untouched on the shelves of the public libraries? |
43381 | How shouldst thou stay alone after I have gone up? |
43381 | How then butter thy bread?" |
43381 | How then should I be fortunate?" |
43381 | If I go abroad, how will ye all live? |
43381 | Is aught weighing on thee?" |
43381 | Is her pen strong?" |
43381 | Is there no lawyer to help thee?" |
43381 | Knowest thou me?" |
43381 | Malcolm asked:"Does the woman still make her rhymes with you?" |
43381 | May I choose them from this ship?" |
43381 | Nay, the winter is open: why may they not fall upon us now?" |
43381 | Now Kiartan had stood by and heard all that, and he said:"So thou goest out again with thy friends?" |
43381 | Now canst thou have the heart that men should die longer on our rocks, and we not do our best to save them?" |
43381 | Now let me ask thee, why didst thou stop shooting then; and why didst thou not slay me here as I lay?" |
43381 | Now may I go with Sweyn, or wilt thou put me off yet another time?" |
43381 | Now once more I ask: What hast thou to say to me? |
43381 | Now who has split the wood that lieth here, and piled it against the house? |
43381 | Now wilt thou be ruled by me?" |
43381 | Of course thou badst him come?" |
43381 | On a sudden Frodi started back from the bill, and clutched at the clothes on his breast, and cried:"Heard ye how it hummed even then?" |
43381 | On what thought dost thou sustain thyself?" |
43381 | Once Frodi saw Rolf as he watched them working, and the smith said,"Thou takest pleasure in the sight?" |
43381 | Ondott cried:"What is thy thought? |
43381 | One night Rolf asked him:"Why is it that thou art to answer for that deed which my uncle has done?" |
43381 | Rolf asked,"Rememberest thou what jewels Grani wore, or his father, or Helga, that time when they went away?" |
43381 | Rolf asked:"Was their master worth devotion?" |
43381 | Rolf rose, and came to him, and said:"Wherefore didst thou not slay me?" |
43381 | Rolf said to them:"Why linger ye here? |
43381 | Said Ar:"So those two have their freedom in the end?" |
43381 | Said Einar:"What dost thou here with that great weapon at our feast, where no man comes in war? |
43381 | Said Grani:"Rolf awaited this turn of fortune, and why should he lay up food for us?" |
43381 | Said he:"Lord Bishop, are all manslayings sinful?" |
43381 | Says Rolf:"What hast thou to say to me for the wounding of my house- carles?" |
43381 | Seekest thou to take up the feud for this land?" |
43381 | Seest thou, Grani, why no Icelander loves thy land?" |
43381 | Shall I spare thee now?" |
43381 | Shall I utter it?" |
43381 | Shall they die here under the knife?" |
43381 | Shall we not hold the feast?" |
43381 | Since when are Icelanders enthralled in the Orkneys, and why is this injustice?" |
43381 | So Grani did not press Rolf to stay in the hall, and he asked:"Where will ye live?" |
43381 | That lesson which Rolf set me, now I follow; I can not resist him, save to my death, and what then would become of my father and of thee?" |
43381 | That was Kolbein the son of Flosi, and he asked:"May I speak what is in my mind?" |
43381 | The shipmaster asks:"Those two who walk there are thy thralls?" |
43381 | Then Einar said to Ondott:"Where were thy wits? |
43381 | Then Helga said:"Is this all thou didst learn in the Orkneys, thus to meet the fate which thou hast brought upon thyself?" |
43381 | Then Hiarandi asked:"For what reason can I ask a stay?" |
43381 | Then he asked:"Wilt thou go with me and shoot an arrow before witnesses, to prove that my father was unlawfully slain?" |
43381 | Then he turned to Snorri, and said,"Shall we not go to the feast?" |
43381 | Then night fell, and they spoke of many things; at last Einar asked his son:"What said to thee Kolbein son of Flosi, there ere our roads parted?" |
43381 | Then one of the men asked:"Is the tide coming or going?" |
43381 | Then the shipmaster said:"Didst thou say thou wouldst set them free?" |
43381 | Thou knowest all that is to be done?" |
43381 | Wast thou indeed outlaw of the Earl?" |
43381 | What are your names?" |
43381 | What boy feels his blood stir at the mention of Grettir? |
43381 | What change is on thee, that thou doest so?" |
43381 | What didst thou see?" |
43381 | What is the curse upon us, and can such a thing be true?" |
43381 | What is this mound behind us?" |
43381 | What is thy name?" |
43381 | What sayest thou to that?" |
43381 | What sayest thou, Kari?" |
43381 | What sayest thou, Rolf? |
43381 | What was that foolish tale of thine about a prophecy? |
43381 | When thy honors fall away, and thou must take thy place like other men: how then wilt thou think of the doings of kings and earls?" |
43381 | Whence did Ar take thee?" |
43381 | Where is thy manhood? |
43381 | Which in the end shall bear most woe?" |
43381 | Who among us hath had such training? |
43381 | Who knows where he is? |
43381 | Why didst thou sleep so ill?" |
43381 | Why may I not stay with thee?" |
43381 | Wilt thou follow my redes?" |
43381 | Wilt thou not go with me?" |
43381 | Wouldst thou go in her?" |
43381 | Wouldst thou have me less than a man in fact?" |
43381 | Yet what dost thou with that bow, which is so handsome that man never saw finer, yet which no one in these islands has yet strung?" |
43381 | asked Rolf at once,"and what kind was their following, whether fighting- men or not?" |
5680 | ''Tis not for thee,she said,"that I came to this tryst: why comest thou to meet me? |
5680 | ''Tis not with thee that I trysted,said she,"why dost thou come to meet me? |
5680 | And for what purpose art thou come? |
5680 | And is Conall,said Fraech,"thus unknown to you yet? |
5680 | And what made thee to part from me, if we were as thou sayest? |
5680 | And whence was the cry thou hast heard? |
5680 | And why have they come to this land? |
5680 | And, wherefore have ye come? |
5680 | Art thou the man to allot this Boar? |
5680 | Canst thou say what latest spoil,said Fraech,"they won?" |
5680 | Chased thee awayin line 7, for condot ellat, perhaps connected with do- ellaim(?). |
5680 | Come hither, O Maev,Ailill softly cried; And Queen Maev came up close to her husband''s side"Dost thou know of that ring?" |
5680 | Dost thou give a decision about the cow? |
5680 | Dost thou recognise that? |
5680 | Dost thou sit on the seat of judgment? |
5680 | Eager(? |
5680 | Flight I hold disloyal,Answered she in scorn;"I from mother royal, I to king was born; What should stay our wedding? |
5680 | For your lives,he said,"will ye grant a boon, set forth in three words of speech?" |
5680 | Go ye all to the swift battle that shall come to you from German the green- terrible(? |
5680 | Greatly although thou makest complaint against me to- day,said Ferdia,"tell me to what arms shall we resort?" |
5680 | How canst thou that strife be surviving? |
5680 | How is that man named? |
5680 | How shall it be divided, O Conor? |
5680 | How? |
5680 | In what place do ye dwell? |
5680 | In what way canst thou do this? |
5680 | Is it a secret( cocur, translateda whisper"by Crowe) ye have?" |
5680 | Is it men out of Ulster,she said,"I have met?" |
5680 | Is it possible that such claim as this should be made upon me? |
5680 | Is that Munremur? |
5680 | Is the woman constant in your estimation? |
5680 | Is this true, O Ket? |
5680 | Let it be as thou wishest,said Mider;"shall we play at the chess?" |
5680 | O daughter,says Ailill,"the ring I gave to thee last year, does it remain with thee? |
5680 | On what side was it? |
5680 | Query, what shall I do? |
5680 | Query, wouldst thou elope with me? |
5680 | Sayest thou this, as meaning to refuse me? |
5680 | See ye now yon woman? |
5680 | Seest thou that, O Laegaire? 5680 She is not my country- name(? |
5680 | Speak thou, Emer, and say,said Cuchulain,"Should I not with this lady delay? |
5680 | Tell me of that troop,said Eocho,"in what numbers should we ride?" |
5680 | The quest then is a good one? |
5680 | To what weapons shall we next resort, O Cuchulain? |
5680 | To whom then appertains it? |
5680 | Truly,said she;"and what was the cause that parted us?" |
5680 | What are we to do now? |
5680 | What claim wilt thou bring why I should do this? |
5680 | What hath brought thee here? |
5680 | What hath happened to thee? |
5680 | What hath led you forth? |
5680 | What is it that thou desirest me to grant? |
5680 | What is it,they said,"that thou dost? |
5680 | What is the latest thing they have carried off? |
5680 | What is the name by which thou art called? |
5680 | What is the quality of this flood? |
5680 | What is there now set for us to do? |
5680 | What is your number? |
5680 | What manner of gift is it that thou desirest? |
5680 | What should be my force? |
5680 | What should now be done, Father Conor? |
5680 | What sight is that of which thou speakest? |
5680 | What sort of a man was he whom ye boast of? |
5680 | What stake shall we have upon the game then? |
5680 | What stake shall we set upon the game? |
5680 | What weapons shall we turn to to- day, O Ferdia? |
5680 | What wilt thou do now? |
5680 | Whence are ye from the men of Ulster? |
5680 | Whence have come you? |
5680 | Where do ye abide? |
5680 | Where hast thou seen me? |
5680 | Where is it that Labraid dwelleth? |
5680 | Wherefore are they come? |
5680 | Wherefore camest thou to me last year? |
5680 | Wherefore come ye hereto me? |
5680 | Wherefore have I have been invited to come? |
5680 | Which of us,said Fergus,"O Dubhtach, shall encounter this man?" |
5680 | Who are they? |
5680 | Who are ye? |
5680 | Who art thou then? |
5680 | Who art thou, then, thyself? |
5680 | Who art thou? |
5680 | Who art thou? |
5680 | Who is this? |
5680 | Who is this? |
5680 | Who is this? |
5680 | Who then is this? |
5680 | Whom dost thou hate the most,said Conor,"of these whom thou now seest?" |
5680 | Why is it the woman who answers me? |
5680 | Why namest thou thy father''Hand- in- danger? |
5680 | Why, what ails thee? |
5680 | Why,said Eochaid,"surely this sickness of thine is not such as to cause thee to lament; how fares it with thee?" |
5680 | Why,said she,"what is thy name?" |
5680 | Why,said she,"what name hast thou in the land? |
5680 | Will ye follow us now, with the prince to speak? |
5680 | Will ye give me your daughter? |
5680 | Will ye give me your daughter? |
5680 | Wilt thou not be carried to Dun Delga to seek for Emer? |
5680 | With what number should I go? |
5680 | Yes, what shall we do next in the matter? |
5680 | [ FN#123]Do ye make a fool of me?" |
5680 | [ FN#54]With how many shall I go?" |
5680 | a bright purple curling(?) 5680 a smooth number"? |
5680 | finds not room in me), O maiden, lovely is thy form, there is fire of some one behind her eyes(?) |
5680 | no evil wedding feast( banais, text banas) for thee? 5680 (? 5680 (?) 5680 ), over the highway beside the lower part of the Burg of the Trees; it( the chariot?) 5680 ), soon shall I reach my early grave, stronger than the sea is my grief, dost thou not know it, O Conor? 5680 ? 5680 ? 5680 @@line x2? 5680 A gold- hilted sword in his hand, two green spears with terrible points(? 5680 A white army, very red for multitudes of horses, they followed after me on every side(? 5680 And Cuchulain complained and lamented, and he spoke the words that follow, and thus did Ferdia reply: Cuchulain Is''t indeed Ferdia''s face? 5680 And Cuchulain saw the lady as she went from him to Manannan, and he cried out to Laeg:What meaneth this that I see?" |
5680 | And Liban spoke to him, and she strove to lead him into the fairy hill; but"What place is that in which Labraid dwelleth?" |
5680 | And Mider said to Etain:"Wilt thou come with me?" |
5680 | And afterwards the king came to the maiden, and he sought speech from her:"Whence art thou sprung, O maiden?" |
5680 | And said Fraech:"Is it good then indeed thy stream? |
5680 | And then Mider said to Etain: Wilt thou come to my home, fair- haired lady? |
5680 | And though it hath been promised(? |
5680 | And thus spoke Liban to the man whom they saw there: Say where He, the Hand- on- Sword, Labra swift, abideth? |
5680 | Apparent rendering:"Place on the land, place close on the land, very red oxen, heavy troop which hears, truly manlike? |
5680 | Art thou subdued, in truth? |
5680 | Be still: let thy praise of him sink: Peer not, like a seer, at the distance; Wilt fail me on battle- field''s brink? |
5680 | But wilt thou come with me to my land,"said Mider,"in case Eochaid should ask it of thee?" |
5680 | Cacht cid adcobrai form- sa? |
5680 | Cia th''ainm seo? |
5680 | Cid fri mnai atbertha- su Mani thesbad nà aire,"Why wouldest thou talk to a woman if something were not amiss?" |
5680 | Cid gell bias and? |
5680 | Come not near, nor right forget In my hand thy fate is set: Those recall, whom late I fought, Hath their fall no wisdom taught? |
5680 | Cuchulain Thine shall be the choosing; Say, what warfare using Hosts shall see thee losing At the Ford this fight? |
5680 | Cuchulain What availeth me triumph or boasting? |
5680 | Dear the mind, firm, upright, dear the youth, lofty, modest, after going with him through the dark wood dear the girding(?) |
5680 | Eocho spoke:"What gift requirest thou from me?" |
5680 | F. Fierce is the man in his excited(?) |
5680 | F. Fierce is the man, a war for twenties, it is not easy to vanquish him, the strength of a hundred in his body, valiant his deed(? |
5680 | For what purpose is the counsel,"said he,"that thou givest me?" |
5680 | Fraech then takes to the playing of chess with a man of their(?) |
5680 | Gell adcobra cechtar da lina for shall be there? |
5680 | Great nobles, mighty(?) |
5680 | He lets it fly with a charge of the methods of playing of championship, so that it goes through the purple robe and through the tunic(? |
5680 | High? |
5680 | His ruddy cheeks, more beautiful than meadows(? |
5680 | How canst thou strive in renown with me?" |
5680 | How dares the son of that man to measure his renown with mine?" |
5680 | How shall the son of that one- legged man measure his renown with mine?" |
5680 | I heard the groan of Echaid Juil, lips speak in friendship, if it is really true, certainly it was not a fight(? |
5680 | I said to her:''What reward shall I have at thy hands for the finding of it?'' |
5680 | In forms like those men loved of old, Naught added, nothing torn away, The ancient tales again are told, Can none their own true magic sway? |
5680 | Inn imberam fidchill? |
5680 | Is my neck and its beauty so pleasing? |
5680 | It is a heroic(?) |
5680 | It is drowning with cold( or? |
5680 | It is she who was hurt in the land(? |
5680 | Lines 3 and 4 seem to mean:"Look on the king of Macha, on my beauty/ does not that release thee from deep sleep?" |
5680 | Literal translation of the first two stanzas: What has brought thee here, O Hound, to fight with a strong champion? |
5680 | Meyer takes literally,"so that they fell on their backs"(?) |
5680 | Might not eraise be"turning back,"connected with eraim, and the line run:"It is turning back of the road of love"? |
5680 | My daughter,"said Ailill,"a ring last year I gave thee, is''t here with thee yet? |
5680 | Nobles this night, as an ox- troop, stand: Hard is the task that is asked, and who From the bridging of Lamrach shall gain, or rue? |
5680 | Now a vision came to Ailill, as in sleep he lay awhile, or a youth and dame approached him, fairer none in Erin''s Isle:"Who are ye?" |
5680 | Now his men, as they played, the wild beasts late caught were cooking, they thought to feed; And said Ailill to Fraech,"Shall thy harpmen play?" |
5680 | O true"(? accent probably omitted)"champion!" |
5680 | PAGE 7@@both line 17? |
5680 | Question what wishest thou from myself? |
5680 | Rhetoric; the literal translation seems to be as follows, but some words are uncertain: It is love that was longer enduring(?) |
5680 | Rose? |
5680 | Said the hero,"Why speaketh this woman? |
5680 | Seven plates of brass from the ceiling(?) |
5680 | Shall we play at chess? |
5680 | She said,"Whence are ye?" |
5680 | Slowly, slowly I neared her; I feared for my fame: And she said,"Comes he hither, Of Dechtire who came?" |
5680 | So, when he came to Connaught, he brought this matter before[FN#94] Ailill:"What[FN#95] shall I do next in this matter?" |
5680 | Spears, thy life- blood splashing? |
5680 | Srotha teith millsi tar tir, Streams warm( and) sweet through the land, rogu de mid ocus fin, choice of mead and wine, doini delgnaidi, cen on, men? |
5680 | Stream smooth and sweet flow through the land, there is choice of mead and wine; men handsome(?) |
5680 | Swords dost choose, hard- clashing Cars, in conflict crashing? |
5680 | That will be proved if we are in combat: that will be proved if we are separated: the goader of oxen(?) |
5680 | The Wife Why against a woman speak Till ye test, and find she fails? |
5680 | The meaning of rind(?) |
5680 | The remark of Find- abair was:"Is it not beautiful he looks?" |
5680 | Then Cuchulain sprang at the chariot:"Would ye make me a fool with your jest?" |
5680 | Then Fand bade welcome to Laeg, and"How is it,"said she,"that Cuchulain hath not come with thee?" |
5680 | Then Fraech to the Hall of Debate returned, and he cried:"Through Some secret chink Hath a whisper passed?" |
5680 | Then Laeg went back to the place where he had left Cuchulain, and Liban with him; and"How appeareth this quest to thee, O Laeg?" |
5680 | Then he said to Etain:"Yet is the completion of my cure at thy hands lacking to me; when may it be that I shall have it?" |
5680 | Then he saw Laeg in his harnessed chariot, coming from Ferta Laig, from the north; and"What brings thee here?" |
5680 | Then to Ailill, king of Connaught, Eocho spake:"From out my land{ 50} Wherefore hast thou called me hither?" |
5680 | They seem to mean: When the comely Manannan took me, he was to me a fitting spouse; nor did he at all gain me before that time, an additional stake(?) |
5680 | To this man also they appeared, and"What are your names?" |
5680 | To you the vengeance, to you the heavy? |
5680 | Victorious Conor came(? |
5680 | What brought thee? |
5680 | What hath happened to thee, O young man? |
5680 | What is the quality of the land we have to come to?" |
5680 | What is thine own name?" |
5680 | What stake bias and? |
5680 | What stake shall be here? |
5680 | What( is) thy own name? |
5680 | What, O Conor, of thee? |
5680 | Who is he who is the divider of the Boar for ye?" |
5680 | Why hold''st thou back, nor claimest A boon that all would win? |
5680 | Wilt home forsake, Maiden? |
5680 | Wilt thou depart with me, O maiden?" |
5680 | Wouldst thou win the prize they bring, Findabar, the child of king? |
5680 | [ FN#56][ FN#55] co m- belgib(?) |
5680 | [ FN#96]"What brings you here?" |
5680 | ["Knowest thou us?"] |
5680 | ["What is the next thing after this that awaits us?" |
5680 | adds,"Through wizardry was all that thing: it was recited(?) |
5680 | and tell me, Cuchulain,"cried Emer,"Why this shame on my head thou wouldst lay? |
5680 | and that this tone, together with the Arthurian Saga, passed to the Continent? |
5680 | answered Fraech,"what is best to be done?" |
5680 | coich les, coich amles to whom the benefit, to whom the harm thocur dar clochach? |
5680 | condit chellti if connected with tochell), and thou art disturbed(?) |
5680 | dar c? |
5680 | diclochud) Midi in dracht coich les coich amles? |
5680 | fer arfeid solaig? |
5680 | fer bron for- ti? |
5680 | fobith oen mna because of one woman Duib in digail: To you the revenge, duib in trom- daim:[FN#142] to you the heavy? oxen[ FN#142] A conjecture. |
5680 | fri aiss esslind? |
5680 | girt( he was), and evil face( was) on him.? |
5680 | hath the man with her never a word?" |
5680 | he cried,"art fearing Hence with me to fly?" |
5680 | he said,"which wilt thou do? |
5680 | how great is the strength of your band?" |
5680 | i. more ertechta inde? |
5680 | in the place of the young and thou art conquered(? |
5680 | in thy mighty deeds, for that which Labraid''s power has indicated rise up, O man who sittest(?) |
5680 | indracht? |
5680 | no lossa Is corcair maige cach muin,[FN#137] or growth? |
5680 | on my beauty, Will that loose not those slumbers profound? |
5680 | oxen? |
5680 | said Cuchulain,"for our horses are weary, and our charioteers are weak; and now that these are weary, why should not we be weary too?" |
5680 | said Cuchulain,"should I not be permitted to delay with this lady? |
5680 | said Cuchulain,"tell me to what arms we shall resort? |
5680 | said Cuchulain,"why was it not the man?" |
5680 | said Ferdia,"how hast thou been persuaded to come to this fight and this battle at all? |
5680 | said Ferdia,"wherefore is it: that thou hast continued in thy praise of this man ever since the time that I left my tent? |
5680 | said Liban;"wilt thou go on without a delay, and hold speech with Fand?" |
5680 | said he,"now that he who lieth here hath fallen by me?" |
5680 | said she,"Where hast thou learned to know us?" |
5680 | said she:"Mani Mingar, son of Ailill and Medb,"said he:"Welcome then,"she said,"but what hath brought with you here?" |
5680 | said the king:"Canst thou discern Who we are?" |
5680 | says Eochaid,"and whence is it that thou hast come?" |
5680 | sechuib slimprib snithib past them on twisted wattles: scitha lama: weary are hands, ind rosc cloina: the eye? slants aside? |
5680 | sechuib slimprib snithib past them on twisted wattles: scitha lama: weary are hands, ind rosc cloina: the eye? slants aside? |
5680 | shall tell of it: the handcraftsman(?) |
5680 | she answered:"Of the future I would ask, Canst thou read my fate?" |
5680 | she asked him,"tell me, canst thou trust thy spouse?" |
5680 | sorrow shall, come on the man? |
5680 | tairthim flatho fer ban: splendour of sovereignty over white men: fomnis, fomnis, in fer m- braine cerpae fomnis diad dergà ¦? |
5680 | the fairy answered,"how didst thou our fashion learn?" |
5680 | thocur? |
5680 | thy speech hath brought me Joy,"she said,"most true; Yet, thy side if nearing, What for thee can I?" |
5680 | to what weapons shall we resort?" |
5680 | what ill dost thou bear? |
5680 | why hither faring,[FN#54] Strife with strong ones daring? |
5680 | wilt thou depart with me, or abide here until Cuchulain comes to thee?" |
5680 | wilt thou ride beside us?" |
5680 | with an edge on them; femendae? |
14465 | And do you know what are the seven pigs I asked of you? 14465 And do you know what is the spear I am asking of you?" |
14465 | And has he any poem for me? |
14465 | And how many of the armies of the World are there left? |
14465 | And how would it be for me,he said,"to go to- morrow to the cairn beyond, and to bring my harp with me?" |
14465 | And is it to them you belong, crooked- speaking, bare- headed Conan? |
14465 | And tell me now,he said,"what can the other man do?" |
14465 | And tell me this,said Conan,"what is the music pleased you best of all you ever heard?" |
14465 | And what are the berries Finn is asking of us? |
14465 | And what is the fourth hunt, Caoilte? |
14465 | And what parted us if I was your wife? |
14465 | And what use have you for the rushes when they are gathered? |
14465 | And what will the Fianna of Ireland do from this out,said one of them,"without their lord and their leader?" |
14465 | And where is Bebind, daughter of Elcmar? |
14465 | And who is that thin- legged man beside Osgar? |
14465 | And why is it,he said,"that you put them on me more than on the great men and sons of kings that are in the Middle Court to- night? |
14465 | And will they come near to any one? |
14465 | And will you come there with me, Etain? |
14465 | And you, Credne,Lugh said then to his worker in brass,"what help can you give to our men in the battle?" |
14465 | And you, Luchta,he said then to his carpenter,"what will you do?" |
14465 | Are they not gone to you along with Aoife? |
14465 | Are those the Fianna of Ireland I see? |
14465 | Are you a good player? |
14465 | Are you the children of Lir? |
14465 | Did any one ever make a better cast than that? |
14465 | Did you take the heads off those three kings? |
14465 | Do you know what she asks of every man that comes asking for her? |
14465 | Do you know what was it took him away? |
14465 | Do you know who is the young man? |
14465 | Do you know who those riders are, sons of Lir? |
14465 | For what cause? |
14465 | Good Donn,said Finn,"have you knowledge of any physician that can cure our men?" |
14465 | Good Finn,every one of them said then,"did you ever see any drawing- back in any of us that you give us that warning?" |
14465 | Have you brought me my hand- tribute from the men of Lochlann? |
14465 | Have you horses for a race? |
14465 | Have you hounds with you? |
14465 | Have you news of Cael for me, Fergus? |
14465 | How can we bring that man here,said Finn,"for those he is with are no good friends to us?" |
14465 | I never had a good man with me yet, Conan,said Finn,"but you wanted me to put him away; and how could I put away a man like that?" |
14465 | I thank you for that welcome,said Tadg;"and tell me,"he said,"who are you yourself?" |
14465 | Is it Connla you are? |
14465 | Is it long the bird has been doing this? |
14465 | Is it not enough for you,said Aodh,"to have brought his wife away from Finn without speaking ill of him?" |
14465 | Is it on the dry ridges you will go,said Finn,"or is it in the deep bogs and marshes, where there is danger of drowning?" |
14465 | Is it that your husband is gone from you, or what is the trouble that is on you? |
14465 | Is it your wish to stop with me for a while? |
14465 | Is that the advice you all give me? |
14465 | Is that true? |
14465 | Is there a mind with you,said Lir,"to come to us on the land, since you have your own sense and your memory yet?" |
14465 | Is there any way to put you into your own shapes again? |
14465 | Is there any weakness in our eyes,said Osgar,"that a little story like that would set us crying? |
14465 | Is there anything in my hand worth offering you? |
14465 | Is there pity with you for the sons of Tuireann leaning now on their green shields? 14465 Is there wine in your ships?" |
14465 | Is there wonder on you, Finn? |
14465 | O Diarmuid, what is it you are after saying? |
14465 | O Patrick, where was your God when the two came over the sea that brought away the queen of Lochlann of the Ships? 14465 Osgar, son of Oisin,"he said then,"what must I do with these bonds that are put on me?" |
14465 | Tell me by your oath now,said Finn,"why is it you will let no one see you after nightfall?" |
14465 | Tell me now,said Grania,"who is that man on the right hand of Oisin?" |
14465 | Tell me then,he said,"where is Diarmuid, grandson of Duibhne?" |
14465 | Tell me this first,said Conan,"who was it made the Dord Fiann, the Mutterer of the Fianna, and when was it made?" |
14465 | Tell me, woman,said Tadg,"who is it lives in that dun having a wall of gold about it?" |
14465 | Tell us when will he come back? |
14465 | Tell us where are they now? |
14465 | Tell us, old man,said Caoilte,"did you see a fawn go by, and two hounds after her, and a tall fair- faced man along with them?" |
14465 | That is a good meeting,said Angus;"but what is on you, for you have no good appearance to- day?" |
14465 | That is well,said Finn;"and who is that lover?" |
14465 | Those men are brothers to me,said Donn,"and tell me how can they be cured?" |
14465 | Was it not a great shame for you, Finn,said Meargach then,"to let the queen- woman that had such a great name come to her death by the Fianna?" |
14465 | We did get it,said they;"and where is Lugh till we give it to him?" |
14465 | Well, Cascorach,said Caoilte,"do you know what are the three wolves that are robbing this man?" |
14465 | Well,said Finn,"and what conditions will you ask of Osgar?" |
14465 | What advice do you give me, Caoilte? |
14465 | What advice do you give me, Diorraing? |
14465 | What advice have you for me then? |
14465 | What appearance should we go in with but our own? |
14465 | What appearance should we put on us going in here? |
14465 | What are these men for? |
14465 | What are those berries Finn is asking? |
14465 | What are you skilled in? |
14465 | What are your names? |
14465 | What are your own names? |
14465 | What birds are those? |
14465 | What bride- gift is that? |
14465 | What brings you to this wood? |
14465 | What can we do now? |
14465 | What can we do, having neither a ship or any kind of boat? |
14465 | What conditions are those? |
14465 | What course shall we take first? |
14465 | What did Finn do against God but to be attending on schools and on armies? 14465 What did you come to this country now for?" |
14465 | What do you see now? |
14465 | What else is it? |
14465 | What good will it do us, you to be with us? |
14465 | What has a taste more bitter than poison? |
14465 | What has brought them to this country? |
14465 | What is Ailne to you, man of the rough voice? |
14465 | What is best for a champion? |
14465 | What is best for us to do now? |
14465 | What is gone from you? |
14465 | What is he giving, that shout for? |
14465 | What is her name? |
14465 | What is hotter than fire? |
14465 | What is it ails you, woman of the white hands? |
14465 | What is it ails you? |
14465 | What is it brings you here? |
14465 | What is it brought you here, girl? |
14465 | What is it is wearing you away? |
14465 | What is it you are asking of us? |
14465 | What is it you are come for, and where are you going? |
14465 | What is it you are looking for? |
14465 | What is it you are saying,she said,"and who are you yourself?" |
14465 | What is it you came for? |
14465 | What is quicker than the wind? |
14465 | What is sharper than a sword? |
14465 | What is that apple tree beyond? |
14465 | What is that? |
14465 | What is the best colour? |
14465 | What is the best of jewels? |
14465 | What is the cause of your early rising, Finn? |
14465 | What is the cause of your early rising? |
14465 | What is the dog doing? |
14465 | What is the long new grave we saw on the green outside? |
14465 | What is the name of this country? |
14465 | What is the name you have? |
14465 | What is the reason of that? |
14465 | What is the vengeance each one of you would take on the man that would kill your father? |
14465 | What is this place where we are? |
14465 | What is this? |
14465 | What is whiter than snow? |
14465 | What is your name, and what skill is that? |
14465 | What is your name, boy? |
14465 | What is your name? |
14465 | What is your name? |
14465 | What journey are you going to make now, sons of Tuireann? |
14465 | What length of a race? |
14465 | What loss came next to that? |
14465 | What makes you start from your bed, Finn? |
14465 | What oppression is that? |
14465 | What orders will you give to the Fianna now, king? |
14465 | What place did the grandson of Duibhne go to? |
14465 | What place is it? |
14465 | What request is there that you would not get? |
14465 | What revenge is that? |
14465 | What reward are you asking of me? |
14465 | What should I do about this, Osgar? |
14465 | What sort of a runner are you? |
14465 | What stake shall We play for? |
14465 | What thing is that? |
14465 | What troubles are those? |
14465 | What uses are those? |
14465 | What wages are you asking? |
14465 | What was it brought you to us from over the sea, Queen? |
14465 | What was it made you do that? |
14465 | What was that sound of music we heard? |
14465 | What was the third greatest loss they had? |
14465 | What was troubling you then? |
14465 | What way are you now, my darling? |
14465 | What way are you? |
14465 | What way could I heal you? |
14465 | What way did that young man go from you? |
14465 | What way do you think to get them? |
14465 | What way is Caoilte, son of Ronan? |
14465 | What way is the battle now? |
14465 | What way is the battle now? |
14465 | What way was she going? |
14465 | What way will you divide it? |
14465 | What way will you help me? |
14465 | What were you asking there? |
14465 | What will we do with that many ships? |
14465 | What will you ask of us to be with us like that? |
14465 | What would you do for me, young man? |
14465 | Where are Garb- Cronan, the Rough Buzzing One, and Saltran of the Long Heel? |
14465 | Where are you come from, Cael? |
14465 | Where are you come from? |
14465 | Where do you come from, little one, yourself and your sweet music? |
14465 | Where do you come from, young men? |
14465 | Where is Finn,he said,"of the gentle rule and of the spears?" |
14465 | Where is it you come from? |
14465 | Where is the flower of Almhuin, beautiful gentle Sadbh? |
14465 | Where is the strong son of Lugaidh? 14465 Where is the woman now?" |
14465 | Where were you the time my father was killed? |
14465 | Where would you like to see the best house built that ever was built? |
14465 | Which of them come here? |
14465 | Which of us has the truth, Diarmuid, grandson of Duibhne,Finn said out then,"myself or Osgar?" |
14465 | Who are you at all? |
14465 | Who are you speaking to, boy? |
14465 | Who are you that is asking that? |
14465 | Who are you yourself then? |
14465 | Who are you yourself? |
14465 | Who are you yourself? |
14465 | Who are you yourself? |
14465 | Who are you yourselves? |
14465 | Who are you, young champion? |
14465 | Who are you? |
14465 | Who is best in the battle now? |
14465 | Who is best in the battle now? |
14465 | Who is best in the battle now? |
14465 | Who is first in the battle now, Fergus? |
14465 | Who is it is asking for me? |
14465 | Who is it you are wanting? |
14465 | Who is that I hear? |
14465 | Who is that before me? |
14465 | Who is that beside Goll? |
14465 | Who is that man? |
14465 | Who is that proud, hasty man beside Caoilte? |
14465 | Who is that sweet- worded man,she said then,"with the dark hair, and cheeks like the rowan berry, on the left side of Oisin, son of Finn?" |
14465 | Who is that? |
14465 | Who is that? |
14465 | Who is there living in that dun with the silver walls? |
14465 | Who is there to match with the King of the Dog- Heads for me? |
14465 | Who was it so? |
14465 | Who was the best man that ever came out of Collamair? |
14465 | Who will answer the King of Ireland''s son for me? |
14465 | Who will answer the Tuatha de Danaan for me? |
14465 | Who will be a match for the King of the Cat- Heads? |
14465 | Who will be your sureties that you will fulfil this? |
14465 | Who will go and fight to- day? |
14465 | Who will go out and fight to- day? |
14465 | Who will keep watch to- night? |
14465 | Who will take care of my greyhound bitch and her three pups if I go? |
14465 | Whose house is this? |
14465 | Why are you complaining, Caoilte? |
14465 | Why are you talking like that, Finn? |
14465 | Why did you get that name? |
14465 | Why did you give your love to him beyond all the troops of high princes that are under the sun? |
14465 | Why do you ask that exchange,said Osgar,"when I myself and my spear were often with yourself in time of battle? |
14465 | Why do you come like a friend to us? |
14465 | Why do you say that, Grania,said Diarmuid,"and they being enemies to me?" |
14465 | Why would not the men that can do all that find some good spell that would drive the sons of Uar out of Ireland? |
14465 | Why would you be like that? |
14465 | Will you come if Eochaid gives you leave? |
14465 | Will you show me where the king''s daughter is? |
14465 | Will you take it in hand, Derg? |
14465 | Would you be peaceable if you got those conditions? |
14465 | You are vexed with me, Queen? |
14465 | You will get that indeed,said Caoilte;"and tell me now,"he said,"how long will it take to cure them?" |
14465 | And Bodb Dearg, son of the Dagda, came with twenty- nine hundred men, and he said:"What is the cause of your delay in giving battle?" |
14465 | And Caoilte said:"What ails me now not to go swim, since my health has come back to me?" |
14465 | And Ciabhan got into the curragh, and his people said:"Is it to leave Ireland you have a mind, Ciabhan?" |
14465 | And Etain said:"Though it is bad to tell a secret, yet it ought to be told now, or how can help be given to you?" |
14465 | And Finn said then to Garraidh:"Tell me now, since you were there yourself, what way was it you brought my father Cumhal to his death?" |
14465 | And Goll said then:"Where is my woman- messenger?" |
14465 | And Lugh of the Long Hand said:"Why do you rise up before that surly, slovenly troop, when you did not rise up before us?" |
14465 | And Lugh said:"What are your minds fixed on at this time, Men of Dea?" |
14465 | And O Diarmuid,"he said out then,"which of us is the truth with, myself or Oisin?" |
14465 | And a woman, the daughter of Luchta Lamdearg, of the Red Hand, took notice of it, and she said:"What far thing are you looking at, Ailell? |
14465 | And are you without any share of their skill and their daring now,"he said,"that would bring Finn and his people up this rock?" |
14465 | And could you find any charm, my sons,"he said,"that will drive out these three enemies that are destroying the Fianna of Ireland?" |
14465 | And do another foretelling for us now,"he said,"and tell us will any man of our enemies fall by us before we ourselves are made an end of?" |
14465 | And do you know what two horses and what chariot I am asking of you? |
14465 | And do you know where is that man now?" |
14465 | And do you know who am I myself?" |
14465 | And do you remember that, Finn?" |
14465 | And good Donn,"he said,"is it by day or by night the Men of Dea come against you?" |
14465 | And he said:"What reward would you give to whoever would bring you out of this great danger?" |
14465 | And is there any one left living near me?" |
14465 | And it is what Grania said:"If he is a fitting son- in- law for you, why would he not be a fitting husband for me?" |
14465 | And it is what he said:"O beautiful woman, will you come with me to the wonderful country that is mine? |
14465 | And oh, sweet- voiced queen,''he said,''what ails you to be fretting after me? |
14465 | And one of the men of Iruath said:"How many drinking- horns are with you?" |
14465 | And some of their people said:"What must we do now, since our lords will be going into danger against Finn and the Fianna of Ireland?" |
14465 | And tell me now,"he said,"what is the journey or the work that is before you?" |
14465 | And tell me now,"he said,"who is living in that middle dun that has the colour of gold?" |
14465 | And tell me this, Conan, son of Morna,"he said,"who gets the best wages, a horseman or a man afoot?" |
14465 | And tell us who you are yourself?" |
14465 | And the king said to Goll, son of Morna:"Well, Goll,"he said,"is it your choice to quit Ireland or to put your hand in Finn''s hand?" |
14465 | And their good- will would be better than their curses,"he said;"and what is it you are come to look for here?" |
14465 | And then Bernech said to Caoilte:"Caoilte,"he said,"do you know the other oppression that is on me in this place?" |
14465 | And then Brian asked his brothers:"What way have you a mind to get into the garden? |
14465 | And then Brian said:"What way are you now, my dear brothers?" |
14465 | And there was a serving- maid with Etain at that time, Cruachan Croderg her name was, and she said to Midhir:"Is this your own place we are in?" |
14465 | And was it you, Finn,"he said,"put down Tailc, son of Treon?" |
14465 | And were his hounds along with him?" |
14465 | And what answer do you give us now, Finn?" |
14465 | And what is it you are asking now?" |
14465 | And what shape would you yourself think worst of being in?" |
14465 | And when Finn brought him the salmon after a while he said:"Did you eat any of it at all, boy?" |
14465 | And when the sharpness of their hunger and their thirst was lessened, Finn said:"Which of you can I question?" |
14465 | And where is the cooking- spit?" |
14465 | And which of you will keep watch over the harbour through the night?" |
14465 | And who is there in that grand dun with the silver walls?" |
14465 | And who will give out a challenge of battle from me now?" |
14465 | And will you come away with me now?" |
14465 | And will you do all I will ask you?" |
14465 | Another time Finn said:"What can the three battalions of the Fianna do to- night, having no water?" |
14465 | But after a while she stirred, and she said:"Are you awake, Diarmuid?" |
14465 | But why is it,"he said,"you are without a boy to mind your horse?" |
14465 | Caoilte knew him then, and he said:"And what is your life with your mother''s people, the Tuatha de Danaan in Sidhe Aedha?" |
14465 | Finn stopped, and he said:"Fianna of Ireland,"he said,"did you ever see a beast like that one until now?" |
14465 | For it is not an easy thing Finn is asking of you; and do you know whose head he is asking you to bring him?" |
14465 | He called to the others then to come over, and he said:"Is not this the most beautiful woman that ever was seen?" |
14465 | One time he heard the King of the Luigne of Connacht at his hunting, and Blathmec that was with him said,"What is that hunt, Caoilte?" |
14465 | Patrick of the true crozier, did you ever see, east or west, a greater hunt than that hunt of Finn and the Fianna? |
14465 | She said then to the master of the house:"Who am I to serve drink to?" |
14465 | Tell me is there anything that would cure you, the way I may help you to it?" |
14465 | The High King called then for Fergus of the True Lips, and he said:"Do you know how long is Finn away from us?" |
14465 | The High King spoke then, and it is what he said:"Who is it has done this great slaughter of my people? |
14465 | The King of the World asked then:"Who is there can give me knowledge of the harbours of Ireland?" |
14465 | Then Ailbe of the Freckled Face said to the king:"What should these seventeen queens belonging to Finn''s household do?" |
14465 | Then Bodb Dearg and Midhir and Fionnbhar said to one another:"What are we to do with all these? |
14465 | Then Brian, one of the sons of Tuireann, said to his brothers:"Did you see that armed man that was walking the plain a while ago?" |
14465 | Then Diarmuid rose up to go to her:"Where are you going, Diarmuid?" |
14465 | Then Lugaidh''s Son came to Finn, and Finn asked him,"What is it has put the whole of the Fianna against you?" |
14465 | Then Lugh asked his two witches, Bechulle and Dianan:"What power can you bring to the battle?" |
14465 | Then she said to him:"Where are you going?" |
14465 | Then the three young men from Iruath said:"Well, men of learning,"they said,"would you sooner get the fee for your poem to- night or to- morrow?" |
14465 | There was great wonder on them when they heard that, and one of the chief men among them said:"Tell us was it your own father that was killed?" |
14465 | There was sorrow on his father then, and he said:"What was it drove you out of the country you were king over?" |
14465 | They came back then where Finn was, and he asked them were Diarmuid and Grania in the wood? |
14465 | What happened you after you knew the Fianna to be at an end?" |
14465 | What is the explanation? |
14465 | When he went out trying his white hound, which of us could be put beside Finn? |
14465 | Where was He when Dearg came, the son of the King of Lochlann of the golden shields? |
14465 | Who can tell the ages of the moon? |
14465 | Who can tell the place where the sun rests?" |
14465 | Why did not the King of Heaven protect them from the blows of the big man? |
14465 | he said,"and what is it you are wanting?" |
14465 | he said;"and what are you come for, for you are a stranger to me?" |
14465 | he said;"and where are the three shouts on the hill that you did not give yet?" |
14465 | said Finn;"and is there any help I can give you?" |
14465 | said Grania,"that they can not be got for him?" |
14465 | said the man at the door,"at the ways of this house?" |
14465 | slothful, cheerless Conan, it is great abuse I used to be giving you; why do you not come to see me now? |
14465 | they said,"and have you any word of the grandson of Duibhne?" |
1091 | Detect quacks? |
1091 | Gain influence? |
1091 | Have you hope? |
1091 | Hypocrisy? |
1091 | Is not Belief the true god- announcing Miracle? |
1091 | There is not a leaf rotting on the highway but has Force in it; how else could it rot? |
1091 | To which of these Three Religions do you specially adhere? |
1091 | What do I see? |
1091 | Which is the great secret? |
1091 | Why talk and complain; above all, why quarrel with one another? 1091 Wuotan?" |
1091 | --He went out for the last time into the mosque, two days before his death; asked, If he had injured any man? |
1091 | A false man found a religion? |
1091 | A humble, solitary man, why should he at all meddle with the world? |
1091 | A man embraces truth with his eyes open, and because his eyes are open: does he need to shut them before he can love his Teacher of truth? |
1091 | A mean man he, how shall he reform a world? |
1091 | A_ great_ man? |
1091 | Accordingly all persons, from the Queen Antoinette to the Douanier at the Porte St. Denis, do they not worship him? |
1091 | Again Thor struck, so soon as Skrymir again slept; a better blow than before; but the Giant only murmured, Was that a grain of sand? |
1091 | Ah, does not every true man feel that he is himself made higher by doing reverence to what is really above him? |
1091 | Alas, is not this the history of all highest Truth that comes or ever came into the world? |
1091 | Alas, was not his doom stern enough? |
1091 | Alas, yes;--but as Cato said of the statue: So many statues in that Forum of yours, may it not be better if they ask, Where is Cato''s statue?" |
1091 | All crowns and sovereignties whatsoever, where would_ they_ in a few brief years be? |
1091 | And accordingly was there not what we can call a_ faith_ in him, genuine so far as it went? |
1091 | And did he not interpret the dim purport of it well? |
1091 | And if_ true_, was it not then the very thing to do? |
1091 | And indeed may we not say that intellect altogether expresses itself in this power of discerning what an object is? |
1091 | And now in this sense, one may ask, Is not all worship whatsoever a worship by Symbols, by_ eidola_, or things seen? |
1091 | And now still, what hinders it from being the name of a Heroic Man and_ Mover_, as well as of a god? |
1091 | And then the''honor''? |
1091 | And thereupon the unbelievers sneer and ask, Is this your man according to God''s heart? |
1091 | And we call it"dissimulation,"all this? |
1091 | And what therefore is loyalty proper, the life- breath of all society, but an effluence of Hero- worship, submissive admiration for the truly great? |
1091 | And who are you that prate of Constitutional Formulas, rights of Parliament? |
1091 | And yet what were all Emperors, Popes and Potentates, in comparison? |
1091 | And yet withal this hypochondria, what was it but the very greatness of the man? |
1091 | Answer it;_ thou_ must find an answer.--Ambition? |
1091 | Are not all dialects"artificial"? |
1091 | Are not you yourselves there? |
1091 | Are they base, miserable things? |
1091 | Are we to suppose that it was a miserable piece of spiritual legerdemain, this which so many creatures of the Almighty have lived by and died by? |
1091 | As for the Old Woman, she was_ Time_, Old Age, Duration: with her what can wrestle? |
1091 | Ask now, What Paganism could have been? |
1091 | Ay, what? |
1091 | Bad methods: but are they so much worse than our methods,--of understanding him to be always the eldest- born of a certain genealogy? |
1091 | Ballot- boxes, suffrages, French Revolutions:--if we are as Valets, and do not know the Hero when we see him, what good are all these? |
1091 | Begging is not in our course at the present time: but for the rest of it, who will say that a Johnson is not perhaps the better for being poor? |
1091 | But alas, what help now? |
1091 | But call it worship, call it what you will, is it not a right glorious thing, and set of things, this that Shakspeare has brought us? |
1091 | But how shall we blame_ him_ for struggling to realize it? |
1091 | But if you ask, Which is the worst? |
1091 | But indeed that strange outbudding of our whole English Existence, which we call the Elizabethan Era, did not it too come as of its own accord? |
1091 | But now, intrinsically, is not all this the inevitable fortune, not of a false man in such times, but simply of a superior man? |
1091 | But would it be a kindness always, is it a duty always or often, to disturb them in that? |
1091 | Can not a man do without King''s Coaches and Cloaks? |
1091 | Can not we conceive that Odin was a reality? |
1091 | Can not we understand how these men_ worshipped_ Canopus; became what we call Sabeans, worshipping the stars? |
1091 | Can the man say,_ Fiat lux_, Let there be light; and out of chaos make a world? |
1091 | Can we not understand him? |
1091 | Compared with any speaker or singer one knows, even with Aeschylus or Homer, why should he not, for veracity and universality, last like them? |
1091 | Creative, we said: poetic creation, what is this too but_ seeing_ the thing sufficiently? |
1091 | Did Hero- worship fail in Knox''s case? |
1091 | Did he not, in spite of all, accomplish much for us? |
1091 | Did the Westminster Confession of Faith add some new property to the soul of man? |
1091 | Do not Books still accomplish_ miracles_, as_ Runes_ were fabled to do? |
1091 | Do not we feel it so? |
1091 | Do we not see well enough how the Fable might arise, without unveracity on the part of any one? |
1091 | Does like join itself to like; does the spirit of method stir in that confusion, so that its embroilment becomes order? |
1091 | Each one of us here, let the world go how it will, and be victorious or not victorious, has he not a Life of his own to lead? |
1091 | Effect? |
1091 | England, Scotland, Ireland, all lying now subdued at the feet of the Puritan Parliament, the practical question arose, What was to be done with it? |
1091 | Ever the constitutional Formula: How came you there? |
1091 | Every such man is the born enemy of Disorder; hates to be in it: but what then? |
1091 | Fame, ambition, place in History? |
1091 | Faults? |
1091 | For our honor among foreign nations, as an ornament to our English Household, what item is there that we would not surrender rather than him? |
1091 | For this world, and for all worlds, what curse is so fatal? |
1091 | Forger and juggler? |
1091 | From of old, a thousand thoughts, in his pilgrimings and wanderings, had been in this man: What am I? |
1091 | From of old, was there not in his life a weight of meaning, a terror and a splendor as of Heaven itself? |
1091 | Given your Hero, is he to become Conqueror, King, Philosopher, Poet? |
1091 | God has made many revelations: but this man too, has not God made him, the latest and newest of all? |
1091 | Has he not solved for them the sphinx- enigma of this Universe; given assurance to them of their own destiny there? |
1091 | Has he not the power of articulate Thinking; and many other powers, as yet miraculous? |
1091 | Has it not_ been_, in this world, as a practiced fact? |
1091 | Has not each man a soul? |
1091 | He asked of the Parliament, What it was they would decide upon? |
1091 | He courts no notice: what could notice here do for him? |
1091 | He has the power of holding his peace over many things which do not vitally concern him,--"They? |
1091 | He is the fatal man; unutterably fatal, put in the high places of men.--"Why complain of this?" |
1091 | He was a great_ ebauche_, a rude- draught never completed; as indeed what great man is other? |
1091 | He was a weak child, they told him: could he lift that Cat he saw there? |
1091 | Hero- worship,--Odin, Burns? |
1091 | Hero- worship? |
1091 | His love of Music, indeed, is not this, as it were, the summary of all these affections in him? |
1091 | His scorn, his grief are as transcendent as his love;--as indeed, what are they but the_ inverse_ or_ converse_ of his love? |
1091 | Homer yet_ is_ veritably present face to face with every open soul of us; and Greece, where is_ it_? |
1091 | Hot weather? |
1091 | How came he not to study his words a little, before flinging them out to the public? |
1091 | How can a man act heroically? |
1091 | How could a man travel forward from rustic deer- poaching to such tragedy- writing, and not fall in with sorrows by the way? |
1091 | How could he? |
1091 | How could the rude Earth make these, if her Essence, rugged as she looks and is, were not inwardly Beauty? |
1091 | How much does one of us foresee of his own life? |
1091 | How shall he stand otherwise? |
1091 | How to regulate that struggle? |
1091 | How was it, what was it? |
1091 | How was this? |
1091 | How will you govern these Nations, which Providence in a wondrous way has given up to your disposal? |
1091 | Hypocrite, mummer, the life of him a mere theatricality; empty barren quack, hungry for the shouts of mobs? |
1091 | I do not assert Mahomet''s continual sincerity: who is continually sincere? |
1091 | I? |
1091 | If Hero mean_ sincere man_, why may not every one of us be a Hero? |
1091 | If he owed any man? |
1091 | In all this what"hypocrisy,""ambition,""ca nt,"or other falsity? |
1091 | In fact, if a man have any purpose reaching beyond the hour and day, meant to be found extant_ next_ day, what good can it ever be to promulgate lies? |
1091 | In the commonest meeting of men, a person making, what we call,"set speeches,"is not he an offence? |
1091 | In the one sense and in the other, are we not right glad to possess it? |
1091 | In the same direction have not we their descendants since carried it far? |
1091 | Influence? |
1091 | Is it even of business, a matter to be done? |
1091 | Is it such a blessedness to have clerks forever pestering you with bundles of papers in red tape? |
1091 | Is not a man''s walking, in truth, always that:"a succession of falls"? |
1091 | Is not all work of man in this world a_ making of Order_? |
1091 | Is not every leaf of it a biography, every fibre there an act or word? |
1091 | Is not that a sign?" |
1091 | Is not this the sincerest and yet rudest voice of the spirit of man? |
1091 | It is like Pococke asking Grotius, Where is your_ proof_ of Mahomet''s Pigeon? |
1091 | It was Superstition, Fanaticism, disgraceful ignorance of Constitutional Philosophy to insist on the other thing!--Liberty to_ tax_ oneself? |
1091 | Joyful to men as the dawning of day from night;--_is_ it not, indeed, the awakening for them from no- being into being, from death into life? |
1091 | Liberty of judgment? |
1091 | May we not call Shakspeare the still more melodious Priest of a_ true_ Catholicism, the"Universal Church"of the Future and of all times? |
1091 | Mighty fleets and armies, harbors and arsenals, vast cities, high- domed, many- engined,--they are precious, great: but what do they become? |
1091 | Mirabeau''s ambition to be Prime Minister, how shall we blame it, if he were"the only man in France that could have done any good there"? |
1091 | Miracles? |
1091 | Money? |
1091 | Morality itself, what we call the moral quality of a man, what is this but another_ side_ of the one vital Force whereby he is and works? |
1091 | Mother of God? |
1091 | Mother? |
1091 | Napoleon looking up into the stars, answers,"Very ingenious, Messieurs: but_ who made_ all that?" |
1091 | Napoleon''s working, accordingly, what was it with all the noise it made? |
1091 | Nay I may ask, Is not every true Reformer, by the nature of him, a_ Priest_ first of all? |
1091 | Nay here in these ages, such as they are, have we not two mere Poets, if not deified, yet we may say beatified? |
1091 | Nay not only our preaching, but even our worship, is not it too accomplished by means of Printed Books? |
1091 | Nay, a man preaching from his earnest_ soul_ into the earnest_ souls_ of men: is not this virtually the essence of all Churches whatsoever? |
1091 | Nay, at bottom, what else is alive_ but_ Protestantism? |
1091 | Nay, is it not what all zealous men, whether called Priests, Prophets, or whatsoever else called, do essentially wish, and must wish? |
1091 | Nevertheless, you will say, there must be a difference between true Poetry and true Speech not poetical: what is the difference? |
1091 | Not so Cromwell:"For all our fighting,"says he,"we are to have a little bit of paper?" |
1091 | Not to pay out money from your pocket except on reason shown? |
1091 | Notoriety: what would that do for him? |
1091 | Of Odin what history? |
1091 | Of a man or of a nation we inquire, therefore, first of all, What religion they had? |
1091 | Of all acts, is not, for a man,_ repentance_ the most divine? |
1091 | Oliver''s life at St. Ives and Ely, as a sober industrious Farmer, is it not altogether as that of a true and devout man? |
1091 | Or are we made of other clay now? |
1091 | Or coming into lower, less unspeakable provinces, is not all Loyalty akin to religious Faith also? |
1091 | Or indeed what of the world and its victories? |
1091 | Or what of Scotland? |
1091 | Our own Wednesday, as I said, is it not still Odin''s Day? |
1091 | Peace? |
1091 | Popeship, spiritual Fatherhood of God''s Church, is that a vain semblance, of cloth and parchment? |
1091 | Possible? |
1091 | Precious they; but also is not he precious? |
1091 | Pure? |
1091 | Really his utterances, are they not a kind of"revelation;"--what we must call such for want of some other name? |
1091 | Reform Bill, free suffrage of Englishmen? |
1091 | Shall we not say, of this great mournful Johnson too, that he guided his difficult confused existence wisely; led it_ well_, like a right valiant man? |
1091 | Shall we say, then, Dante''s effect on the world was small in comparison? |
1091 | She was a widow; old, and had lost her looks: you love me better than you did her?" |
1091 | Sword and Bible were borne before him, without any chimera: were not these the_ real_ emblems of Puritanism; its true decoration and insignia? |
1091 | Tax- gatherer? |
1091 | That_ he_ stood there as the strongest soul of England, the undisputed Hero of all England,--what of this? |
1091 | The Age of Miracles past? |
1091 | The Atheistic logic runs off from him like water; the great Fact stares him in the face:"Who made all that?" |
1091 | The Giant merely awoke; rubbed his cheek, and said, Did a leaf fall? |
1091 | The Poet indeed, with his mildness, what is he but the product and ultimate adjustment of Reform, or Prophecy, with its fierceness? |
1091 | The Prophet too has his eye on what we are to love: how else shall he know what it is we are to do? |
1091 | The Time call forth? |
1091 | The Writer of a Book, is not he a Preacher preaching not to this parish or that, on this day or that, but to all men in all times and places? |
1091 | The builder cast_ away_ his plummet; said to himself,"What is gravitation? |
1091 | The crabbed old Schoolmaster used to ask, when they brought him a new pupil,"But are ye sure he''s_ not a dunce_?" |
1091 | The eye too, it looks out as in a kind of_ surprise_, a kind of inquiry, Why the world was of such a sort? |
1091 | The human Reynard, very frequent everywhere in the world, what more does he know but this and the like of this? |
1091 | The light which now rose upon them,--how could a human soul, by any means at all, get better light? |
1091 | The poor old Mother!--What had this man gained; what had he gained? |
1091 | The rough words he articulated, are they not the rudimental roots of those English words we still use? |
1091 | The uses of this Dante? |
1091 | The world''s heart is palsied, sick: how can any limb of it be whole? |
1091 | The world- wide soul wrapt up in its thoughts, in its sorrows;--what could paradings, and ribbons in the hat, do for it? |
1091 | The"imagination that shudders at the Hell of Dante,"is not that the same faculty, weaker in degree, as Dante''s own? |
1091 | They are lamentable, undeniable; but after all, what has Luther or his cause to do with them? |
1091 | They called him Prophet, you say? |
1091 | They say scornfully, Is this your King? |
1091 | Think, would_ we_ believe, and take with us as our life- guidance, an allegory, a poetic sport? |
1091 | This I call a noble true purpose; is it not, in its own dialect, the noblest that could enter into the heart of Statesman or man? |
1091 | This Rome, this scene of false priests, clothed not in the beauty of holiness, but in far other vesture, is_ false_: but what is it to Luther? |
1091 | This Universe, ah me-- what could the wild man know of it; what can we yet know? |
1091 | This body, these faculties, this life of ours, is it not all as a vesture for that Unnamed? |
1091 | This indeed is properly the sum of his offences, the essential sin; for which what pardon can there be? |
1091 | This is the Work he and his disciples made so much of, asking all the world, Is not that a miracle? |
1091 | This night the watchman on the streets of Cairo when he cries,"Who goes?" |
1091 | This was imperfect enough: but to welcome, for example, a Burns as we did, was that what we can call perfect? |
1091 | Those are critics of small vision, I think, who cry:"See, is it not the sticks that made the fire?" |
1091 | Though all men walk by them, what good is it? |
1091 | Thought, true labor of any kind, highest virtue itself, is it not the daughter of Pain? |
1091 | Till it do come, what have we? |
1091 | Till we know that, what is all our knowledge; how shall we even so much as"detect"? |
1091 | To be Sheik of Mecca or Arabia, and have a bit of gilt wood put into your hand,--will that be one''s salvation? |
1091 | To us also, through every star, through every blade of grass, is not a God made visible, if we will open our minds and eyes? |
1091 | True, you may well ask, What could the world, the governors of the world, do with such a man? |
1091 | Utility? |
1091 | Was it Heathenism,--plurality of gods, mere sensuous representation of this Mystery of Life, and for chief recognized element therein Physical Force? |
1091 | Was it his blame? |
1091 | Was it not the humble sincere nature of the man? |
1091 | Was it not_ true_, God''s truth? |
1091 | Was not such a Parliament worth being a member of? |
1091 | Was not the purpose so formed like to be precisely the best, wisest, the one to be followed without hesitation any more? |
1091 | Was not the whole Norse Religion, accordingly, in some sense, what we called"the enormous shadow of this man''s likeness"? |
1091 | We all love great men; love, venerate and bow down submissive before great men: nay can we honestly bow down to anything else? |
1091 | Well, answers Luther, what harm will a cassock do the man? |
1091 | Were they not indubitable awful facts; the whole heart of man taking them for practically true, all Nature everywhere confirming them? |
1091 | What Act of Parliament, debate at St. Stephen''s, on the hustings or elsewhere, was it that brought this Shakspeare into being? |
1091 | What am I to believe? |
1091 | What am I to do? |
1091 | What are all earthly preferments, Chancellorships, Kingships? |
1091 | What built St. Paul''s Cathedral? |
1091 | What could gilt carriages do for this man? |
1091 | What indeed are faculties? |
1091 | What is Florence, Can della Scala, and the World and Life altogether? |
1091 | What is Life; what is Death? |
1091 | What is it? |
1091 | What is the chief end of man here below? |
1091 | What made it? |
1091 | What man''s heart does, in reality, break forth into any fire of brotherly love for these men? |
1091 | What we wants to get at is the_ thought_ the man had, if he had any: why should he twist it into jingle, if he_ could_ speak it out plainly? |
1091 | What will become of your harvest through all Eternity? |
1091 | What will he do with it? |
1091 | What wonder it runs all wrong? |
1091 | What_ is_ this unfathomable Thing I live in, which men name Universe? |
1091 | What_ will_ he do with it? |
1091 | Whatever wrongs he did, were they not all frightfully avenged on him? |
1091 | Whence comes it? |
1091 | Where, then, lies the evil of it? |
1091 | Whereby, is not spiritual union, all hierarchy and subordination among men, henceforth an impossibility? |
1091 | Whether they shall take him to be a god, to be a prophet, or what they shall take him to be? |
1091 | Which Englishman we ever made, in this land of ours, which million of Englishmen, would we not give up rather than the Stratford Peasant? |
1091 | Whither goes it? |
1091 | Who is called there"the man according to God''s own heart"? |
1091 | Who is there that, in logical words, can express the effect music has on us? |
1091 | Who knows but, in that same"best possible organization"as yet far off, Poverty may still enter as an important element? |
1091 | Why could not Dante''s Catholicism continue; but Luther''s Protestantism must needs follow? |
1091 | Why is Idolatry so hateful to Prophets? |
1091 | Why not? |
1091 | Why should the Prophet so mercilessly condemn him? |
1091 | Why should we misknow one another, fight not against the enemy but against ourselves, from mere difference of uniform? |
1091 | Why should we? |
1091 | With spurious Popes, and Believers having no private judgment,--quacks pretending to command over dupes,--what can you do? |
1091 | Yet, at bottom, after all the talk there is and has been about it, what is tolerance? |
1091 | You will burn me and them, for answer to the God''s- message they strove to bring you? |
1091 | Your Cromwell, what good could it do him to be"noticed"by noisy crowds of people? |
1091 | Your harvest? |
1091 | _ Was_ it not such? |
1091 | am not I sincere? |
1091 | cries he: What miracle would you have? |
1091 | said the Preacher, appealing to all the audience: what then is_ his_ duty? |
1091 | what are they?" |
33242 | Afraid to get here ahead of time, eh? |
33242 | Ai n''t one fire in twenty- four hours enough for you? |
33242 | Ai n''t there anythin''we can do to stop you from tryin''to run Jip down? |
33242 | Ai n''t there anything I can do to help the poor feller out of the scrape? |
33242 | Ai n''t we here on time? |
33242 | Ai n''t you fellers slingin''a terrible lot of style? |
33242 | Ai n''t you''fraid he''ll be mad if he finds you in there? |
33242 | All hands of us swelling, and our kid rushing around at the head with patched trousers? 33242 Am I in it?" |
33242 | And are you allowing to adopt this''ere kid who is setting himself up as a firebug? |
33242 | And write? |
33242 | And you were figuring on that same thing when you stayed here until eight o''clock last night, eh? |
33242 | Are the men always practising? |
33242 | Are they new clothes, sir? |
33242 | Are we goin''to stay here all night? |
33242 | Are you a fireman already? |
33242 | Are you certain that can be done? |
33242 | Are you claimin''to be posted in the fire business, an''do n''t know things like that are given to men who save folks from bein''burned up? |
33242 | Are you goin''to act jest like as if you was a reg''lar fireman? |
33242 | Are you hurt? |
33242 | Are you reckonin''on stayin''there till you catch him? |
33242 | Are you sure he''s over in Philadelphy? |
33242 | At anything special, sir? |
33242 | But how can you help it if you build the fire right close to the door, when there''s no other way for''em to get out? |
33242 | But how''ll he get back? |
33242 | But if Sam''s here with money in his pocket, how shall we stop him from workin''up the case? |
33242 | But of course I''ll sleep at Mrs. Hanson''s same''s I''ve been doin''? |
33242 | But what about us? 33242 But what am I to do''bout this money he borrowed from Joe Carter?" |
33242 | But what does he know about the detective business? |
33242 | But why are you here, Mr. Davis? 33242 But you do n''t allow folks can go''round settin''fire to houses an''tryin''to burn other people up without havin''to pay for it?" |
33242 | Ca n''t I stay till Ninety- four pulls out? |
33242 | Can Sam Barney have him arrested? |
33242 | Care? 33242 Did Josh really put you into physical training as quick as this?" |
33242 | Did n''t I get Jip Collins arrested? |
33242 | Did n''t they give you any lessons in the school? |
33242 | Did n''t you ever go to school, Amateur? |
33242 | Did n''t you find Sam? |
33242 | Did you hear any of Ninety- four''s men say so? |
33242 | Did you make all that to- day? |
33242 | Do n''t you know any better''n to break up what a feller''s fixin''? |
33242 | Do n''t you know you''re liable to be arrested for doing anything of that sort? |
33242 | Do n''t you know? |
33242 | Do n''t you s''pose I know that after all this time? |
33242 | Do n''t you s''pose they''ve got sense enough to wake up before the thing gets too far along? |
33242 | Do the men really work as hard there as they do at a fire? |
33242 | Do they keep you humpin''on the odd jobs, Amateur? |
33242 | Do they, Amateur? 33242 Do you allow he''ll run straight after this?" |
33242 | Do you go around working for thanks? |
33242 | Do you know how he happened to nab him? |
33242 | Do you know where he is? |
33242 | Do you mean Jip? 33242 Do you mean that I''m goin''to school now?" |
33242 | Do you mean that we''re to hire a reg''lar room? |
33242 | Do you mean to say we''re goin''to range a decent house? 33242 Do you mean to say you''re willin''he should burn the shed an''come pretty nigh killin''you?" |
33242 | Do you mean you''re hankering to run to a fire with them good clothes on? |
33242 | Do you mean''cause of what was done last night, Dan? |
33242 | Do you really mean that? |
33242 | Do you really think I stand a better chance of gettin''into the Department because of tryin''to pull the kid through? |
33242 | Do you reckon they believe you''re a detective? |
33242 | Do you s''pose I count on shinin''boots for a livin''all my life? |
33242 | Do you s''pose he could find any one chump enough to lend him money? |
33242 | Do you s''pose he stayed on the street after that? |
33242 | Do you s''pose he''s countin''on doin''this all alone? |
33242 | Do you s''pose he''s countin''on findin''Jip Collins in that fool way? |
33242 | Do you s''pose we ought''er thank Mr. Davis now for findin''the room for us? |
33242 | Do you think you could keep things in proper shape here? 33242 Feeling pretty good this morning, ai n''t you, kid?" |
33242 | Feeling rather sore? |
33242 | Fine? 33242 Found you plenty of work, eh?" |
33242 | Gettin''scared, eh? |
33242 | Going to strike for Seth while the iron''s hot, eh? |
33242 | Got to do it now? 33242 Had a bath this morning?" |
33242 | Had your breakfast? |
33242 | Have n''t got any folks, eh? |
33242 | Have you been here all that time? |
33242 | Have you been with Ninety- four''s crew at this''ere fire, or not? |
33242 | Have you done anythin''yet? |
33242 | Have you given it up? |
33242 | Have you got enough to buy your breakfast with? |
33242 | Have you got the feller yet what stole your money? |
33242 | Have you seen him since he did this terrible fine piece of detective work? |
33242 | Have you seen_ him_? |
33242 | Have you_ got_ to get Jip arrested? |
33242 | He ai n''t on at headquarters Sunday, is he? |
33242 | He did n''t mean a word of it; did you, Jip? 33242 Hello, where are you fellers goin''?" |
33242 | How are you countin''on gettin''your ticket to come back? |
33242 | How are you feelin''this mornin'', kid? |
33242 | How are you feeling, kid? |
33242 | How did he get a chance to do anything like that? |
33242 | How did he happen to be here instead of at headquarters? |
33242 | How did you find it out? |
33242 | How did you get along at headquarters? |
33242 | How did you hear of it so soon? |
33242 | How did''Lish Davis swell''round? |
33242 | How do you count on keepin''awake? |
33242 | How do you know that? |
33242 | How do you mean? |
33242 | How does that fit in with the lesson you read to him? |
33242 | How long are you goin''to keep up sich a racket as that? |
33242 | How long since you turned out? |
33242 | How much did that lay- out cost you last night? |
33242 | How much money have you got laid up? |
33242 | How much will it cost? |
33242 | How will you get another outfit? |
33242 | How''d you get in? |
33242 | How''s Jip gettin''along? |
33242 | How? |
33242 | I can take care of myself as well as you, an''if I do n''t knock''round when there''s a fire, how am I ever goin''to learn the business? |
33242 | I do n''t see very much of you, an''perhaps----"You''re reckoning that we may get a call, and you''ll have the chance to go out with us? |
33242 | I do n''t suppose I could sneak in? |
33242 | I made pretty near forty cents, an''it''s kind''er tough if a feller ca n''t spend fifteen of it, eh? |
33242 | I s''pose we sha n''t see very much of you now you''re gettin''so high up in the Department, eh? |
33242 | I s''pose you think you''re pretty nigh the only feller in this town? |
33242 | I s''pose you''d have gone in there if you was wearing the finest coat ever made, eh? |
33242 | I suppose Sam still holds to it that he''ll pull Jip in? |
33242 | I suppose you had n''t thought you might be needing something to eat? |
33242 | I thought''Lish Davis said he''d have his eye out so''s you could n''t get into the fire lines? |
33242 | I''d like to know why? |
33242 | I''d like to know why? |
33242 | I''d like to know, sir, if I''m to be allowed to pay for these clothes when I get so I can earn money enough? |
33242 | If such was the case, would you admit it? |
33242 | If you ai n''t scared, what are you makin''a row''bout now? 33242 Is Sam Barney still on my trail?" |
33242 | Is he the only feller who owes you anythin''? |
33242 | Is it a bad fire? |
33242 | Is it all over? |
33242 | Is it me they mean? |
33242 | Is that what you call a habit? |
33242 | It''s Dan Roberts, of course, an''I was----"Are you acquainted with the prisoner? |
33242 | It''s coming kind of tough on Ninety- four, eh, Jerry? |
33242 | It''s too late to tackle the job to- night; but what''s to stop all three of us from goin''to the Erie Basin after Sam Barney leaves town? 33242 Kind- er late this mornin'', eh?" |
33242 | Little fidgety about to- morrow''s work? |
33242 | Look here, Sam, s''posen it turns out that you do n''t find Jip, how''ll you get home? |
33242 | Look here, Seth, what kind of a stiff are you tryin''to give me? |
33242 | Mr. Davis took a lawyer there? |
33242 | No; is he goin''to the court? |
33242 | Not sure whether you''re feeling good or not? |
33242 | Now see here, Seth Bartlett, what''s the sense of talkin''that way? 33242 Now, see here, mister, Jip never''d done that----""Where were you?" |
33242 | Now, then, Amateur, what are you staring at? 33242 Now, what''s the matter with my doin''a little thing like that? |
33242 | Of course I''ll black boots here same as I''ve allers done? |
33242 | Of course, we may be in the wrong as to that, but if we ai n''t, how''ll you live? 33242 Oh, has he gone over there?" |
33242 | Oh, you did, eh? 33242 Oh, you do n''t, eh? |
33242 | Sam says Jip is in Philadelphy; now, s''posen all hands chipped in enough to buy a ticket for him to go there? 33242 See here, Amateur, how much money have you on hand?" |
33242 | See here, Seth, are you countin''on keepin''that racket up? |
33242 | See here, ai n''t I a detective? |
33242 | Seen Sam Barney to- day? |
33242 | Shall I have any chance to see you? |
33242 | So Jip Collins had sand enough to try an''burn us out, did n''t he? |
33242 | So the letter is for you, even though you never received one before? |
33242 | So we did, sir; but we met Jip Collins, an''----"The kid who started the fire in the lumber- yard? |
33242 | Something been going on that we have n''t heard? |
33242 | Stuck on the business, eh? |
33242 | Sure you''re all right? |
33242 | That kid has got sand, eh? |
33242 | That''s what----The attorney interrupted him by asking as before:"What is your name?" |
33242 | Them as do n''t know their business gets left; but we have n''t got in with that crowd, eh, William? |
33242 | Then how does it happen he let anybody go through him? |
33242 | Then if we talk smooth he stands a better chance, eh? |
33242 | Then there''s nothin''for the poor fellow but to go up the river? |
33242 | Then what are you goin''up this way for? |
33242 | Then why did n''t you''tend to it when you first came in? |
33242 | Then you believe he''d work''round and be a decently square kind of a boy if he got out of this scrape? |
33242 | Then you did n''t have any row? |
33242 | Then you do n''t feel like backin''out yet? |
33242 | Then you will keep the officers from arrestin''him? |
33242 | There''s a brick building butts up against the back end of that lot, so your only chance of getting out would be to come through the lumber- yard? |
33242 | They tell me you''re counting on being a fireman one of these days? |
33242 | They''re beginnin''to find out that I''m no slouch of a detective after all, hey? |
33242 | We''ve got the money, sir,Seth replied;"but seein''''s we belong to Ninety- four jest now, why ca n''t we stay till she pulls out?" |
33242 | Well, how did you sleep last night? |
33242 | Well, how do you like it so far''s you''ve gone? |
33242 | Well, s''pose he has? 33242 Well, s''posen I am?" |
33242 | Well, s''posen they should? 33242 Well, sha n''t I be in time-- and not such a terrible long while either? |
33242 | Well, what are you doing here so early? 33242 Well, what do you think of it?" |
33242 | Well, what have you done with your firebug? |
33242 | Well,Seth said after a brief reflection,"if you ca n''t help him, what''s the use of standin''here?" |
33242 | Well,he cried, stepping directly in front of the boys,"what do you think_ now_''bout my bein''a detective?" |
33242 | Were they to wait there for me? |
33242 | Wha-- wha-- what? |
33242 | What about the fire? |
33242 | What are you countin''on doin''right now? |
33242 | What are you counting on wearing? |
33242 | What are you doing here? |
33242 | What are you goin''to do to- morrow? |
33242 | What did he say''bout givin''Joe Carter sich a yarn? |
33242 | What did he say? |
33242 | What do you call home now the carpenter- shop has gone up in smoke? |
33242 | What do you do to the company? |
33242 | What do you mean by arson? |
33242 | What do you mean by takin''up the case? |
33242 | What do_ you_ want of Jip? |
33242 | What does that''mount to? 33242 What is it to you, so long as we''re satisfied?" |
33242 | What is it you''ve been gettin''up, Bill? |
33242 | What kind of a blow- out do you mean? |
33242 | What kind of a detective do you allow I am if I do n''t know that? 33242 What makes him sell it so cheap?" |
33242 | What things? |
33242 | What would be the use? 33242 What would you do if you should meet him right here this very minute?" |
33242 | What you been doin''? |
33242 | What''s he waitin''for? |
33242 | What''s makin''you so foolish all of a sudden? 33242 What''s that?" |
33242 | What''s the matter? |
33242 | What''s the news''bout Seth? |
33242 | What''s the reason you have n''t got as much of a one with me as you had with Seth? 33242 What''s the use of givin''anything away when folks are howlin''''bout your bein''so brave? |
33242 | What''s the use of that? |
33242 | What''s to be done with the kid who started the fire? |
33242 | What? 33242 What? |
33242 | What? |
33242 | When are you willin''I should come? |
33242 | Where are the medals to be presented? |
33242 | Where are we goin''? |
33242 | Where are we goin''? |
33242 | Where are you counting on sleeping to- night? |
33242 | Where do you count on starting the fire? |
33242 | Where is the exhibition to be held? |
33242 | Where was Dan an''Bill when they sent you to tell me? |
33242 | Where were you when he set fire to the shed in Baxter''s lumber- yard? |
33242 | Where you goin''? |
33242 | Where''s Teddy? |
33242 | Where''s the baby? |
33242 | Where''s your father? |
33242 | Who asked you to? 33242 Who did you think was in the alley?" |
33242 | Who? 33242 Who? |
33242 | Who? |
33242 | Why could n''t I black boots at odd times? |
33242 | Why did n''t he come back on the next train if everybody was ready to lend him money? |
33242 | Why did n''t you stay there? |
33242 | Why do n''t somebody send in an alarm? |
33242 | Why do n''t you come with me? |
33242 | Why do n''t you hunt him up? |
33242 | Why do n''t you kind er loaf here till they have hitched up, an''perhaps we''ll get another chance to stay in the engine- house? |
33242 | Why do n''t you leave this place for two or three days, and find some other quarters? |
33242 | Why do n''t you tackle her? |
33242 | Why not have it settled now? |
33242 | Why not, if it comes cheap enough? 33242 Why not? |
33242 | Why not? |
33242 | Why not? |
33242 | Why not? |
33242 | Why not? |
33242 | Why should n''t I be? 33242 Why, how did you know where he was?" |
33242 | Why, how''d he raise the money? |
33242 | Why, in the shed, of course, we----"Had you heard the prisoner threaten to set fire to the shed? |
33242 | Why? |
33242 | Will Ninety- four''s men be there? |
33242 | Will he get out of the scrape? |
33242 | Will that settle matters for me? |
33242 | Will you come up to the Basin? |
33242 | Will you wear your uniform? |
33242 | Wo n''t, eh? 33242 Would you be willin''to send a feller to jail so''s you might get ahead in the business?" |
33242 | Would you turn tinker, or tailor, or candlestick- maker, Jerry Walters, in order to avoid risking your life two or three times a day? |
33242 | Yell for the perlice, will yer? 33242 Yes, I did, an''of course you can have me sent up the river for it; but what good will that do you? |
33242 | Yes, sir; but I do n''t s''pose it can make much difference if I''m here a little before time,''cause then I''ll get more done, do n''t you see? |
33242 | Yes, that I know, else I would n''t be standing on my feet this minute; but suppose you had missed your hold? 33242 Yes; but yet you did n''t think he''d do so much, eh?" |
33242 | You ai n''t scared of him, are you? |
33242 | You ai n''t thinking of getting him taken on here, are you,''Lish? |
33242 | You can read, ca n''t you? |
33242 | You do, eh? 33242 You''re goin''to lend me money after what I did?" |
33242 | You''ve still got the fool idea in your mind that you''re going to be a fireman? |
33242 | Your firebug has his chance this forenoon, eh? |
33242 | After what seemed like a long time in waiting, Jip''s attorney asked the witness:"What is your name?" |
33242 | Ai n''t gettin''discouraged so soon, are you?" |
33242 | Ai n''t he got the nerve to be snoopin''''round here? |
33242 | Amateur in trouble again?" |
33242 | Anything gone wrong?" |
33242 | Are you hearing what I''m saying?" |
33242 | At that moment some one stepped to the side of the wagon and asked the driver:"Shall we send an ambulance?" |
33242 | Been swelling all the morning till your head is so big that you need to borrow a new cap?" |
33242 | Been to breakfast?" |
33242 | But say, I do look pretty fine, eh?" |
33242 | Ca n''t Ninety- four''s men stop it?" |
33242 | Could n''t you find the mistake before then?" |
33242 | Dan did not reply, but changed the subject of conversation by asking Bill:"What er you goin''to do''bout Sam Barney?" |
33242 | Davis?" |
33242 | Davis?" |
33242 | Davis?" |
33242 | Did n''t come up here reckonin''he or I''d got it, did you?" |
33242 | Did n''t you hear the man call my name? |
33242 | Do n''t you reckon all the firemen were boys once?" |
33242 | Do n''t you reckon you''d stand the heat from a blaze better and longer than them who need to have it mighty nigh cold?" |
33242 | Do n''t you s''pose the driver would kind- er help somehow?" |
33242 | Do you know of any place where we can stop for a night or two till I''ve had time to look''round more?" |
33242 | Do you know, lad, it''s a mighty dangerous thing to jump for a horse in that fashion?" |
33242 | Do you mean that''s really you?" |
33242 | Do you reckon I can show myself down- town now?" |
33242 | Do you s''pose we''d lay still after he''s been an''done what he did? |
33242 | Do you think I''d give you any fairy story about the place? |
33242 | Do you want to consult with him?" |
33242 | Goin''to run a bank, or keep a hotel, or do somethin''like that?" |
33242 | Got a big job?" |
33242 | Got anything on your mind?" |
33242 | Has Mr. Davis turned out yet?" |
33242 | Has the imitation detective caught him yet?" |
33242 | Have n''t been getting into trouble with Josh, I hope?" |
33242 | Have n''t been to breakfast yet, have you?" |
33242 | Have n''t you got the right? |
33242 | He has, eh? |
33242 | He shall come into the Department, eh?" |
33242 | He was----""Where''s them swell Brooklyn chums of yours?" |
33242 | He''s always doin''that, an''what does he''mount to?" |
33242 | How about getting first water now, Amateur?" |
33242 | How did you get inside the lines?" |
33242 | How long can I stay here? |
33242 | How much have you seen of the building so far?" |
33242 | How was Jip lookin''?" |
33242 | How would it look for a fireman to be around blackin''boots? |
33242 | I allow you''re counting on that suit of clothes?" |
33242 | I do n''t reckon you''ve got any big pile of money left by this time, eh?" |
33242 | I reckon you lost everything you owned, eh?" |
33242 | I s''pose that''s what you call bein''a chum of mine?" |
33242 | I thought you shipped that bloomin''detective over to Philadelphia?" |
33242 | I wonder why he could n''t be yanked up for lyin''to Joe Carter when he borrowed that money? |
33242 | I''m goin''to turn in, for what''s the use of payin''for a bed if you only get into it for the sake of sleepin''? |
33242 | If I keep on sellin''papers an''do n''t try to do anything else, I''ll never get some other kind of a job, will I? |
33242 | Instead of immediately acting upon his own suggestion Seth hesitated, and after a moment the driver asked:"What are you hanging in the wind now for? |
33242 | Is Ben Dunton in the house?" |
33242 | Is Bill over to the room?" |
33242 | Is Dan all right?" |
33242 | Is n''t the work here enough to satisfy you, but that you must needs look around for more?" |
33242 | It seems to me you''ve knocked off work kind- er late to- night?" |
33242 | Let me see, you live in the rear of Baxter''s carpenter shop, do n''t you?" |
33242 | Look here, I''ve got to be up at seven o''clock to- morrow mornin'', an''why could n''t I shine your boots to- night?" |
33242 | Neither Dan nor Bill spoke for several seconds, and then the former exclaimed with emphasis:"Say, but you''re gettin''there with both feet, eh?" |
33242 | Now you all know I''m tryin''to work into the Department, an''what kind of show would I stand if there was a record like that against me? |
33242 | Of course you''re countin''on seein''him off?" |
33242 | S''posen you get another feller to do the shinin''an''I come''round evenin''s to tell you what''s been goin''on? |
33242 | S''posen you got the shop this very minute, an''wanted to write a letter, or figger up how much anythin''cost? |
33242 | Sam?" |
33242 | Say, Seth, wo n''t you let me square it somehow?" |
33242 | Say, ca n''t you come down by the post- office now?" |
33242 | Say, goin''into the house now, or do you count on swellin''''round a spell first?" |
33242 | Say, have you seen Sam Barney?" |
33242 | Say, you know Dan made up his mind to own a store on Third Avenoo?" |
33242 | See here, my lad, supposing you could practise here two or three hours a day, would it tire you out so that the regular duties might be slighted?" |
33242 | Seth Bartlett?" |
33242 | Seth made no attempt to read the account, and Dan cried impatiently as he held the sheet in front of him:"Why, do n''t you see what it says? |
33242 | Seth made no attempt to take the missive until Mr. Fernald asked quite sharply:"Why do n''t you take it? |
33242 | Still here, eh?" |
33242 | Suppose I slap your face, how''ll it be then?" |
33242 | Supposing you could drink that while it was boiling? |
33242 | That''s a big step- up for a bootblack to make, an''I wonder how''Lish Davis will like it?" |
33242 | The driver leaned over him once more, and asked almost tenderly:"Will I send you up to the house, Amateur?" |
33242 | Then Seth said interrogatively:"Of course Teddy knew what he was talkin''''bout?" |
33242 | Then Seth turned to the attorney, who was yet talking with Jip, and asked:"How''s he goin''to pay you for lookin''after him?" |
33242 | Then he cried eagerly:"Say, you do n''t want to take another feller in, I s''pose? |
33242 | Well, why do n''t you start?" |
33242 | What about that firebug of yours? |
33242 | What about the team?" |
33242 | What did the lawyer say?" |
33242 | What does he know''bout bein''a detective? |
33242 | What else could he want of me?" |
33242 | What else has come up?" |
33242 | What kind of a fist would you make of it?" |
33242 | What little game_ have_ you got? |
33242 | What made you late in getting down- town? |
33242 | What task have they set for you this morning?" |
33242 | What''s all this talk I hear of your showing the members of the Department how to effect a rescue?" |
33242 | What''s he standin''out there all by his lonesome for?" |
33242 | What''s up?" |
33242 | When did you have a bath last?" |
33242 | When you goin''to leave here?" |
33242 | Where did you get''em?" |
33242 | Who''ll write to Joe Carter''bout it?" |
33242 | Why did n''t you leave headquarters as he told you?" |
33242 | Why not take a spin as far as the post- office?" |
33242 | Would n''t most any feller who''s got as near into the Department as you have?" |
33242 | You do n''t allow that when this''ere company takes it into their heads to fit out a kid they''re going to do it on second- hand rigging, do you?" |
33242 | You do n''t allow we''re running an ambulance for such kids as you, eh?" |
33242 | You goin''to do any more shinin''?" |
33242 | got your eyes open again, eh?" |
33242 | the driver asked gravely, and Seth replied with another question:"Would n''t you, sir?" |
15202 | Am I? |
15202 | And did n''t you know the meaning of this, father? 15202 And did you happen to see anything of the gods,"asked Frigga,"as you came?" |
15202 | And how does that happen: have I not faithfully kept my promise; have you not everything that your heart desired? |
15202 | And nothing hurt him? |
15202 | And now may I ask what you can do yourself? |
15202 | And pray, in what may this youth be specially skilled? |
15202 | And what do you want of me? |
15202 | And what good would it be to you, Jason, if you were heir of that fair land? |
15202 | And why are you standing here all alone, my brave friend? |
15202 | And why is Baldur to be so honored,said he"that even steel and stone shall not hurt him?" |
15202 | And will you kill the Minotaur? 15202 And you will be careful, wo n''t you?" |
15202 | And, by the bye,said Mercury, with a look of fun and mischief in his eyes,"where is this village you talk about? |
15202 | Apples in winter, sister? 15202 Are not two stout sticks as good as two horses for helping one along on the road? |
15202 | Are you afraid? |
15202 | Are you indisposed? |
15202 | Are you quite sure, Midas, that you would never be sorry if your wish were granted? |
15202 | Art thou sure that thou didst see the Jomsvikings? |
15202 | As high as the sun? |
15202 | Athene, was my dream true? 15202 Aunty,"said the Rajah''s son,"why do n''t you light a lamp?" |
15202 | Ay, ay, my girl; and so thou wouldst be queen and lady over me? 15202 Be welcome, Siegfried,"she cried,"yet wherefore hast thou come again to Isenland?" |
15202 | But how am I to get the monkey here? 15202 But is there not something you dread here? |
15202 | But what cow,cried Cadmus,"and where shall I follow?" |
15202 | But what will you do? |
15202 | But who ever heard of strawberries ripening in the snow? |
15202 | But who gave it you? |
15202 | But, Noko,he continued,"what do you intend doing with all that cedar cord on your back?" |
15202 | But, my dear sister, who ever heard of violets blooming in the snow? |
15202 | By- the- bye,said the jellyfish,"have you ever seen the palace of the Dragon King of the Sea where I live?" |
15202 | Can it be possible that any will be so rash as to risk so much for a wife? |
15202 | Can it be that the apples have charmed her from her home? |
15202 | Can you save the boat and bring us to land? |
15202 | Comrade, what dost thou? |
15202 | Could the stranger have made a mistake,he wondered,"or had it been a dream?" |
15202 | Did I not forbid it to be green until my child should be sent back to me? |
15202 | Did you ever hear anything so wonderful? |
15202 | Do I? |
15202 | Do n''t you think it would be pleasanter if you and I sometimes gave each other a lift? |
15202 | Do you call it fair to stand with your bow and arrow ready to shoot at me when I have only a stick to defend myself with? 15202 Do you happen to have picked up my glove?" |
15202 | Do you know what the child''s name is? |
15202 | Do you mean to tell me that you ca n''t get the medicine here? |
15202 | Do you really, dear child? |
15202 | Do you see that beautiful white sandy beach? |
15202 | Do you see these big gates? 15202 Do you think he has stolen the meat?" |
15202 | Does the Earth dare to disobey me? |
15202 | Dost wish to be avenged upon Roland? 15202 Eh, what?" |
15202 | Esa,he replied,"what will I do with a dirty dogskin?" |
15202 | Fair Sir Ganelon,said King Marsil boldly, knowing his hatred,"tell me, how shall I slay Roland?" |
15202 | Friend,she said to the countryman,"tell me where is he who gave thee this ring?" |
15202 | Hallo, where are you? |
15202 | Hast thou any horned beasts, the Sheriff then said, Good fellow, to sell to me? 15202 Have I been dreaming?" |
15202 | Have I not? |
15202 | Have you left your liver behind you? |
15202 | Have you not? |
15202 | Have you other children? |
15202 | How am I to escape her eyes? |
15202 | How are we to get over this? |
15202 | How can I crush the oil out of all this mustard seed in one day? |
15202 | How can I fight with these two demons? |
15202 | How can I play a trick on a monkey? 15202 How can I tell you, Pandora?" |
15202 | How can any of my people capture a monkey? |
15202 | How far can you shoot, father? |
15202 | How now, little lady,he said,"pray what is the matter with you this morning?" |
15202 | I am not obliged to tell you, old graybeard; what business is it of yours? |
15202 | I beseech thee, noble knight,said the King,"tell me why thou hast journeyed to this our royal city?" |
15202 | I should love to go,said the monkey,"but how am I to cross the water? |
15202 | I want to know,replied Odin,"for whom Hela is making ready that gilded couch in Helheim?" |
15202 | I wonder if it will be the same at dinner,he thought,"and if so, how am I going to live if all my food is to be turned into gold?" |
15202 | I wonder what he will do next? 15202 I wonder,"said he,"how I must do it? |
15202 | If only you could capture one of those monkeys? |
15202 | Is it a he or a she? |
15202 | Is it much further,she asked,"and will you carry me back when I have seen your palace?" |
15202 | Is it now the time to fight with staves? 15202 Is it so beautiful as all that?" |
15202 | Is that your boy? |
15202 | Is there something alive in the box? 15202 Is this eaten or not?" |
15202 | Law, law? |
15202 | Men of God, may I warm myself at your fire? 15202 Men of God, may I warm myself at your fire? |
15202 | Mother, what do you want? |
15202 | Mr. Monkey, tell me, have you such a thing as a liver with you? |
15202 | Must I leave my home and my people? |
15202 | Must you really go? 15202 My child,"she said,"did you taste any food while you were in King Pluto''s palace?" |
15202 | My father? |
15202 | My friend, my Roland, who shall now lead my army? 15202 My lord,"said Tell, turning pale,"you do not mean that? |
15202 | No, no,he said,"why should I want to look at you?" |
15202 | No,said Tom,"my mother did not teach me that wit: who would be fool then?" |
15202 | No,was the reply, with his usual deceit;"how do you think_ he_ could get to this place? |
15202 | Noko,said he,"what is the matter?" |
15202 | Nothing,Hiawatha replied;"but can you tell me whether any one lives in this lake, and what brings you here yourself?" |
15202 | Now mother, why will you not let me sleep? |
15202 | Now tell me honestly,said he to Thor,"what do you think of your success?" |
15202 | Now, young man, when can I see these horned beasts of yours? |
15202 | O Frithiof why hast thou come hither to steal an old man''s bride? |
15202 | O father, where are you going? |
15202 | O master dear, what has happened? |
15202 | O my sweet purple violets, shall I ever see you again? |
15202 | Oh, may I? 15202 Oh, where is my dear child?" |
15202 | Poor little orphan,he said sadly,"what will become of thee without a mother''s care?" |
15202 | Pray who are you, kind fairy? |
15202 | Pray, my young friend, what is your name? |
15202 | Proserpina, Proserpina did you call her? |
15202 | Seest thou the fairest of the band,cried the King,"she who is clad in a white garment? |
15202 | Shall the pawn save the king? |
15202 | Sir Siegfried,he said,"wilt thou help me to win the matchless maiden Brunhild for my queen?" |
15202 | Sir,said the monster,"who gave you permission to come this way? |
15202 | Sire,he said,"hast thou forgotten thy promise, that when Brunhild entered the royal city thy lady sister should be my bride?" |
15202 | Son of Satan,said the keeper,"why do you let your horse stray in the cornfields?" |
15202 | Star of day,she replied,"whom could I have here that you would not see sooner than I? |
15202 | Strangers, who are ye? |
15202 | Tell me what it is you want for the Queen? |
15202 | Tell me, Sire,he said,"what grief oppresseth thee?" |
15202 | Tell me, do you really wish to get rid of your fatal gift? |
15202 | Tell me, have you seen him pass? |
15202 | Tell,he said at last,"that was a fine shot, but for what was the other arrow?" |
15202 | Tell? |
15202 | That is the most important thing of all,said the stupid jellyfish,"so as soon as I recollected it, I asked you if you had yours with you?" |
15202 | The archbishop, where is he? 15202 The way is long,"said Rustem;"how shall I go?" |
15202 | Then why did you not bring more? |
15202 | Then you are not satisfied? |
15202 | There is Ogier the Dane,said Ganelon quickly,"who better?" |
15202 | This is not the season for violets; dost thou not see the snow everywhere? |
15202 | This is the river Lethe,said King Pluto;"do you not think it a very pleasant stream?" |
15202 | This is the strangest thing I have ever known,said Pandora, rather frightened,"What will Epimetheus say? |
15202 | To the house of Dède- Vsévède? 15202 Very miserable, are you?" |
15202 | Well, friend Midas,he said,"pray how are you enjoying your new power?" |
15202 | Well, how high? 15202 Well,"said Loki to himself,"if this is the sport of Asgard, what must that of Jötunheim be? |
15202 | Well,said the wolf,"whom do you think is the fastest of the boys? |
15202 | What adventure has brought you here? |
15202 | What ails thee, Polyphemus? |
15202 | What can I do? |
15202 | What can it be? |
15202 | What can that be? |
15202 | What causes these cries? |
15202 | What delightful milk, Mother Baucis,said Mercury,"may I have some more? |
15202 | What did you see? |
15202 | What did you see? |
15202 | What do you want, mother? |
15202 | What does the man mean,thought the old farmer,"calling this largely populated city a cemetery?" |
15202 | What does this mean? |
15202 | What dost thou demand of my master? |
15202 | What god can tempt one so young and handsome to throw himself away? 15202 What has brought thee here? |
15202 | What has she got to love? 15202 What have you in that box, Epimetheus?" |
15202 | What have you there, my man? |
15202 | What is Theseus to you? |
15202 | What is that the Valkyries are saying? |
15202 | What is the matter with you? |
15202 | What is the matter, dear Baldur? |
15202 | What is the matter, father? |
15202 | What kind of a staff had he? |
15202 | What man hurt you that you roared so loud? |
15202 | What man is this,she asked,"who dares disturb my sleep?" |
15202 | What orders have you for to- day? |
15202 | What rage possesseth thee? 15202 What says the man?" |
15202 | What shall I do now? |
15202 | What shall I do, then? |
15202 | What towers are these? |
15202 | What was it, mother? |
15202 | What was the old woman like? |
15202 | What were they doing? |
15202 | What will you call your castle? |
15202 | What would satisfy you? |
15202 | When our lord and King gave us swords and armor,he cried,"did we not promise to follow him in battle whenever he had need? |
15202 | Whence sail ye over the watery ways? 15202 Where are my wife and my children?" |
15202 | Where are you? |
15202 | Where art thou, Roland? |
15202 | Where did you find them? |
15202 | Where did you gather them? |
15202 | Where did you get all that betel- leaf? |
15202 | Where do you come from? 15202 Where do you come from?" |
15202 | Where has master gotten that Maypole? |
15202 | Where have you seen any Apples like them? |
15202 | Where is Heraud, who never yet forsook man in need? |
15202 | Where is Proserpina, you naughty sea- children? |
15202 | Where is he? 15202 Where shall I go?" |
15202 | Where, then, is Heraud? |
15202 | Where,said he to himself,"is the reservoir from which this creature drinks?" |
15202 | Wherever did you find them? |
15202 | Which of them do you love best? |
15202 | Who are the strangers who come thus unheralded to my land? |
15202 | Who are ye, wonder- working strangers? |
15202 | Who are you, bold youth? |
15202 | Who are you, lady? 15202 Who are you?" |
15202 | Who are you? |
15202 | Who are you? |
15202 | Who art thou, fair fly, who hast walked into the spider''s web? |
15202 | Who art thou, thou brave youth? |
15202 | Who dares to disobey my orders? |
15202 | Who has done this foul murder? |
15202 | Who is that? |
15202 | Who makes the law, you or I? |
15202 | Who would have thought it? 15202 Who''s there?" |
15202 | Whose can these ships be? |
15202 | Whose house is this? |
15202 | Why are you so frightened, my little girl? |
15202 | Why com''st thou here? 15202 Why did you take hold of my hook? |
15202 | Why do n''t you go to work, my lad? |
15202 | Why do n''t_ you_ throw something at Baldur? 15202 Why do you look so grave, my lord?" |
15202 | Why do you look so sad? |
15202 | Why do you roar like that? |
15202 | Why dost thou cry aloud in the night and awake us from our sleep? 15202 Why hast thou done this?" |
15202 | Why is my liver so important to you? |
15202 | Why is there always snow on the mountains, father? |
15202 | Why should I bow to a cap? |
15202 | Why should I leave my bow behind? 15202 Why,"said he,"do you strike me so?" |
15202 | Why? |
15202 | Will he never come back to Asgard again? |
15202 | Will the dog bite me? |
15202 | Will you come with me into the fields,she asked,"and I will gather flowers and make you each a wreath?" |
15202 | Will you kindly show me the way to the highroad? 15202 Wo n''t he be very heavy?" |
15202 | You are new to the business? |
15202 | You are very fond of your children, Tell? |
15202 | You have not been here before? |
15202 | You kill me by saying so,cried Mother Ceres, almost ready to faint;"where was the sound, and which way did it seem to go?" |
15202 | You''re not going yet, are you? |
15202 | Yours is a kind welcome, very different from the one we got in the village; pray why do you live in such a bad place? |
15202 | After a while his heart began to fail him, and he sighed and said within himself,"What if my father have other sons around him, whom he loves? |
15202 | After a while, as he was thus musing, there appeared before him one in white garments, who said unto him,"Sleepest thou or wakest thou, Rodrigo?" |
15202 | Alas, my little child, what will become of thee when I am gone?" |
15202 | All at once he cried out, with a loud and terrified voice,"What is that behind you?" |
15202 | Am I one to whom you can say,''Come down from your throne, and present yourself before me?'' |
15202 | And Medeia said slowly,"Why should you die? |
15202 | And besides, who would dare to attack Roland? |
15202 | And he asked him,"Will you leave your mountains, Orpheus, my playfellow in old times, and sail with the heroes to bring home the Golden Fleece? |
15202 | And how do you know my name?" |
15202 | And how shall I slay her, if her scales be iron and brass?" |
15202 | And if I give command of the rear to Roland, who, then, shall lead the van?" |
15202 | And if it be the will of Heaven that you should fall by the hand of the White Genius, who can change the ordering of destiny? |
15202 | And now must I go out again, to the ends of all the earth, far away into the misty darkness? |
15202 | And she asked,"Do you see the land beyond?" |
15202 | And she whispered to Medeia, her sister,"Why should all these brave men die? |
15202 | And the herald asked in wonder,"Fair youth, do you know whither you are going?" |
15202 | And then, what do you think happened? |
15202 | And they asked,"How shall we set your spirit free?" |
15202 | And to what end? |
15202 | And what do you think he saw? |
15202 | And what was the Golden Fleece? |
15202 | And who will show me the way? |
15202 | And will you charm for us all men and all monsters with your magic harp and song?" |
15202 | And will you stay with us,"asked Epimetheus,"for ever and ever?" |
15202 | Are they not a beautiful color? |
15202 | Are they not fine and fat? |
15202 | Are ye merchants? |
15202 | Are you careless of your life? |
15202 | Are you not dreadfully hungry, is there nothing I can get you to eat?" |
15202 | Are you stronger than your uncle Pelias the Terrible?" |
15202 | As high as the snow- mountains?" |
15202 | As soon as the pole was set up a herald stepped out, blew his trumpet and cried,"Se ye this cap here set up? |
15202 | As these butchers had nothing to do, they began to talk among themselves and say,"Who is this man? |
15202 | As you have never seen the palace of the Dragon King, wo n''t you avail yourself of this splendid opportunity by coming with me? |
15202 | At first Marouckla was afraid, but after a while her courage returned and drawing near she said:"Men of God, may I warm myself at your fire? |
15202 | At last he said,"Now, Will, do n''t you think that is enough?" |
15202 | At last, however, he found voice to ask,"What is your name?" |
15202 | At length his grandmother asked him,"Hiawatha, what is the matter with you?" |
15202 | At the head? |
15202 | At this she grew very angry and said,"How couldst_ thou_ see in darkness? |
15202 | Aulad said to him,"Who are you? |
15202 | But Aietes thought,"Who is this, who is proof against all magic? |
15202 | But Odin asked very gravely,"Is the shadow gone out of our son''s heart, or is it still there?" |
15202 | But Theseus wept,"Shall I leave you, O my mother?" |
15202 | But after a moment Pelias spoke gently,"Why so rash, my son? |
15202 | But am I not superior to them in courage, in power and wealth? |
15202 | But are you not Hiawatha himself?" |
15202 | But each man''s neighbor whispered in return,"His shoulders are broad; will you rise and put him out?" |
15202 | But he said hastily,"Do you not know who this Theseus is? |
15202 | But how shall I cross the seas without a ship? |
15202 | But how was it to be done? |
15202 | But in whom does he trust for help?" |
15202 | But now what can I do? |
15202 | But perhaps, as you are a tiger, when I have made you well, you will eat me?" |
15202 | But soon he looked at Pelias, and when he saw that he still wept, he said,"Why do you look so sad, my uncle?" |
15202 | But still she sighed and said,"Why will you die, young as you are? |
15202 | But tell me where thou didst leave thy good ship? |
15202 | But tell me, do the serpents ever appear? |
15202 | But when spring had come, a herald stood in the market- place and cried,"O people and King of Athens, where is your yearly tribute?" |
15202 | But where are we most likely to find a monkey?" |
15202 | But where is my brother? |
15202 | But who can tell us where among them is hid the Golden Fleece?" |
15202 | But why cometh he within our borders? |
15202 | Cadmus thought,"or did I really hear a voice?" |
15202 | Can not you get me a wife?" |
15202 | Can you give me a plan, Jason, by which I can rid myself of that man?" |
15202 | Can you guess who I am? |
15202 | Can you tell by the jumps they take?" |
15202 | Can you tell me what has become of my little daughter Proserpina?" |
15202 | Cheiron sighed and said,"Will you go to Iolcos by the sea? |
15202 | Could this be his long lost sister Europa coming to make him happy after all these weary years of searching and wandering? |
15202 | Could you, good mother, put me on the right road?" |
15202 | Dare you brave Medusa the Gorgon?" |
15202 | Did Guy, I wonder, or some other, in days of loneliness and despair, carve these words? |
15202 | Do not you care what you do? |
15202 | Do you dare to disobey me?" |
15202 | Do you mock at poor old souls like me?" |
15202 | Do you not know how I make all stand in fear of me? |
15202 | Do you not think that these diamonds which I have had dug out of the mine for you are far prettier than violets?" |
15202 | Do you see this lovely crown on my head? |
15202 | Do you want to buy some?" |
15202 | Dost thou not see how many thousand heads hang upon yonder tree-- heads of those who have offended against my laws? |
15202 | Dost thou take him for an enemy? |
15202 | Europa was very frightened, and she started up from among the tulips and lilies and cried out,"Cadmus, brother Cadmus, where are you? |
15202 | For how much longer must this poor old man continue to row?" |
15202 | For what man might tell which from that fight should come forth victorious? |
15202 | From whence didst thou get it?" |
15202 | Good Phoebus, will you come with me to demand my daughter from this wicked Pluto?" |
15202 | Had Eurydice really followed his steps, or had she turned back, and was all his toil in vain? |
15202 | Had they such warriors as you, and Rustem your son? |
15202 | Has an adventure come to me already?" |
15202 | Has everything sworn then?" |
15202 | Has he been vanquished by the warrior- queen? |
15202 | Has not the old world perished, and all that was in it?" |
15202 | Hath she picked up a shipwrecked stranger, or is this one of the gods who has come to make her his wife?'' |
15202 | He checked his horse and, gazing angrily round the crowd,"What is this rioting?" |
15202 | He cried out,"Tyau, why do you strike me, you old dog?" |
15202 | He robs people, he-- do you think we will meet him?" |
15202 | He said:"Oh, tongue, what is this that you have done through your greediness? |
15202 | He stopped for a moment, but then said to himself,"What have I to lose? |
15202 | Hippomenes, not daunted by this result, fixing his eyes on the virgin, said,"Why boast of beating those laggards? |
15202 | His wife, seeing him, exclaimed in great surprise,"What has happened to you?" |
15202 | How can I cut that thick tree- trunk in two with a wax hatchet?" |
15202 | How can I do this?" |
15202 | How can I ever do that?" |
15202 | How can I possibly tie it up again?" |
15202 | How can I trust thee?" |
15202 | How much do you want for it? |
15202 | How say you? |
15202 | How then will you do it?" |
15202 | I am very poor, no one cares for me, I have not even a fire in my cottage; will you let me warm myself at yours?" |
15202 | I looked at that spot only a moment ago; why did I not see the flowers?" |
15202 | I pray you, good shepherds, tell me where they may be found?" |
15202 | I see you have been gathering flowers? |
15202 | I wonder what Father Odin and Mother Frigga would say if they were here?" |
15202 | III HOW THEY BUILT THE SHIP ARGO So the heralds went out and cried to all the heroes,"Who dare come to the adventures of the Golden Fleece?" |
15202 | If he die, where shall I find such another?" |
15202 | If you had fallen under his claws, how should I have carried to Mazanderan this cuirass and helmet, this lasso, my bow and my sword?" |
15202 | In the midst of his trouble he met an old woman who said,"Where are you going, Plavacek? |
15202 | Is Baldur going to Helheim?" |
15202 | Is n''t it a lovely day?" |
15202 | Is there any knight among you who will fight this giant? |
15202 | Is there no more corn, that men can not make bread and give us? |
15202 | It is a bargain, is n''t it?" |
15202 | Luckless wretch, what brings you to this mountain?" |
15202 | May I, mother?" |
15202 | Meanwhile the Blind Man called out to his friend:"Where am I? |
15202 | Medeia''s heart pitied the heroes, and Jason most of all, and she answered,"Our father is stern and terrible, and who can win the Golden Fleece?" |
15202 | Oh my Emperor, my friend, alas, why wert thou not here? |
15202 | Oliver, my brother, how shall we speed him now our mournful news?" |
15202 | Oliver, where art thou?" |
15202 | One observed,"Why do n''t you attend the sick, and not sit there making such a noise?" |
15202 | Pandora sobbed:"No, no, I am afraid; there are so many troubles with stings flying about that we do not want any more?" |
15202 | Rustem said to Aulad,"What mean these fires that are blazing up to right and left of us?" |
15202 | Shall I slay the Gorgon?" |
15202 | Skrymner half opened the eye nearest to Thor, and said in a very sleepy voice,"Why will the leaves drop off the trees?" |
15202 | So she called out,"Father Cobra, father Cobra, my husband has come to fetch me; will you let me go?" |
15202 | So the mighty army passed onward through the vale of Roncesvalles without doubt or dread, for did not Roland the brave guard the rear? |
15202 | Sternly Aietes looked at the heroes, and sternly he spoke and loud,"Who are you, and what want you here that you come to our shore? |
15202 | Still Theseus came steadily on, and he asked,"And what is your name, bold spider, and where are your spider''s fangs?" |
15202 | Surely no one stealeth thy flocks? |
15202 | Swiftly then the Prince drew his sword, well tempered as he knew, for had not he himself wrought it in the forge of Mimer the blacksmith? |
15202 | THE SUN; OR, THE THREE GOLDEN HAIRS OF THE OLD MAN VSÉVÈDE ADAPTED BY ALEXANDER CHODSKO Can this be a true story? |
15202 | Tell me, for pity''s sake, have you seen my poor child Proserpina pass by the mouth of your cave?" |
15202 | Tell me, how did it happen?" |
15202 | Tell me, then, why you come?" |
15202 | The King looked at him attentively, then turning to the fisherman, said,"That is a good- looking lad; is he your son?" |
15202 | The King saw the crown, set with precious stones, and said,"To what end bring ye hither this crown?" |
15202 | The Prince showed him the mustard seed, and said to him,"How can I crush the oil out of all this mustard seed in one day? |
15202 | The Rajah''s son asked some men he saw,"Whose country is this?" |
15202 | The Sheriff''s house was close to the town hall, so as dinner was not quite ready all the butchers went to say"How do you do?" |
15202 | The bird inquired,"What are you doing here?" |
15202 | The devils in great surprise jumped up, saying,"Who is this?" |
15202 | The great Setchène raised his head and answered:"What brings thee here, my daughter? |
15202 | The great Setchène raised his head and asked:"Why comest thou here? |
15202 | The people crowded round and asked them,"Who are you, that you sit weeping here?" |
15202 | The young wolves were in the act of running off, when Hiawatha cried out,"My grandchildren, where are you going? |
15202 | Then Circe cried to Medeia,"Ah, wretched girl, have you forgotten your sins that you come hither, where the flowers bloom all the year round? |
15202 | Then Earl Eric, Hakon''s son, who loved brave men, said,"Vagn, wilt thou accept life?" |
15202 | Then Orpheus sighed,"Have I not had enough of toil and of weary wandering far and wide, since I lived in Cheiron''s cave, above Iolcos by the sea? |
15202 | Then Theseus laughed and said,"Am I not safe enough now?" |
15202 | Then Theseus shouted to him,"Holla, thou valiant Pine- bender, hast thou two fir- trees left for me?" |
15202 | Then he asked them,"By what road shall I go homeward again?" |
15202 | Then he clasped her in his arms, and cried,"Where are these sea- gods, cruel and unjust, who doom fair maids to death? |
15202 | Then he cried to Athene,"Shall I never see my mother more, and the blue ripple of the sea and the sunny hills of Hellas?" |
15202 | Then he looked down through the cloud and said,"Are you all weeping?" |
15202 | Then he said to him again,"Good bangle- seller, I would see these strange people of whom you speak; can not you take me there?" |
15202 | Then he said to the parrots,"Who is the Princess Labam? |
15202 | Then he said,"And will you now come home with me?" |
15202 | Then he sighed and asked,"Is it true what the heroes tell me-- that I am heir of that fair land?" |
15202 | Then he thought of his tiger: and the tiger and his wife came to him and said,"Why are you so sad?" |
15202 | Then if it is not so, when will he cease his wars?" |
15202 | Then recovering himself he got down from his horse and said:"I want a trusty messenger to take a message to the palace, could you send him with it?" |
15202 | Then said Cincinnatus, being not a little astonished,"Is all well?" |
15202 | Then said Odysseus:"How can I be at peace with thee, Circe? |
15202 | Then she loved him all the more and said,"But when you have killed him, how will you find your way out of the labyrinth?" |
15202 | Then the king died, and there was great dismay in the city, for where would they find a good ruler to sit on the throne? |
15202 | These he put on the tigers to make them beautiful, and he took them to the King, and said to him,"May these tigers fight your demons for me?" |
15202 | Theseus walked on steadily, and made no answer, but he thought,"Is this some robber? |
15202 | They saw Theseus and called to him,"Holla, tall stranger at the door, what is your will to- day?" |
15202 | They went outside the sacred wall and looked down over the bright blue sea, and Aithra said,"Do you see the land at our feet?" |
15202 | This Cobra was a very wise animal, and seeing the maiden, he put his head out of his hole, and said to her:"Little girl, why do you cry?" |
15202 | This time the brother was in a better temper, so he lent what was asked of him, but said mockingly,"What can such beggars as you have to measure?" |
15202 | This time they gathered with less fear and less secrecy, for was not the dreaded governor dead? |
15202 | Three days he kept Ferbad as his guest, and then sent back by him this answer:"Shall the water of the sea be equal to wine? |
15202 | To her maidens then she called:"Why do ye run away at the sight of a man? |
15202 | To what have my English come that I may not find one knight among them bold enough to do battle for his King and country? |
15202 | To whom therefore shall I trust the rear- guard that we may march in surety?" |
15202 | V WEEPING"Well, Hermod, what did she say?" |
15202 | Was it a saint who kneeled, or was it the Lord Himself? |
15202 | Was it near here, or at the far end of the island?" |
15202 | Was it not splendid?" |
15202 | Was the King''s wonderful palace falling to pieces? |
15202 | Were ever any so divinely beautiful? |
15202 | Were not these sandals to lead me in the right road?" |
15202 | Were peasants ever more unruly and discontented? |
15202 | Were you made of iron, could you venture to deal alone with these sons of Satan?" |
15202 | What ails you that you tarry here, doing no thing?" |
15202 | What are all these splendors if she has no one to care for? |
15202 | What are you doing here? |
15202 | What can be done to make it fruitful?" |
15202 | What can be the matter?" |
15202 | What can this one do?" |
15202 | What can we do?" |
15202 | What cruel men have bound you? |
15202 | What did he care for danger? |
15202 | What do you think of my horned beasts?" |
15202 | What dost thou seek?" |
15202 | What dost thou seek?" |
15202 | What dost thou seek?" |
15202 | What dost thou seek?" |
15202 | What has happened? |
15202 | What have you in your saddle- bags, then?" |
15202 | What if he will not receive me? |
15202 | What if there be another noble deed to be done before I see the sunny hills of Hellas?" |
15202 | What is all this crying about?" |
15202 | What is it for?" |
15202 | What is the matter with them? |
15202 | What is the present to be?" |
15202 | What must be done to restore the flow of water?" |
15202 | What need have these peasants for great houses?" |
15202 | What nonsense is this? |
15202 | What people?" |
15202 | What think ye?" |
15202 | What would you do, Theseus, if you were king of such a land?" |
15202 | When King Kaoüs came up with his warriors, he said to Rustem,"What is it? |
15202 | When Rustem awoke and saw the dead lion, which indeed was of a monstrous size, he said to Raksh,"Wise beast, who bade you fight with a lion? |
15202 | When he got to the pine- tree he raised his voice and said:"How do you do, Mr. Monkey? |
15202 | When she saw Jason, she spoke, whining,"Who will carry me across the flood?" |
15202 | When they saw him they trembled and said,"Are you come to rob our garden and carry off our golden fruit?" |
15202 | When? |
15202 | Whence art thou?" |
15202 | Where am I? |
15202 | Where am I?" |
15202 | Where are you going?" |
15202 | Where are you going?" |
15202 | Where are you going?" |
15202 | Where are you going?" |
15202 | Where can I find the monster?" |
15202 | Where could he have come from? |
15202 | Where does she live?" |
15202 | Where have you come from and what is your name?" |
15202 | Where is thy sword called Hauteclere with its crystal pommel and golden guard?" |
15202 | Where is your aged father, and the brother whom you killed? |
15202 | Where? |
15202 | Who are you, and whence? |
15202 | Who are you? |
15202 | Who knows if we shall see Pelion again? |
15202 | Who so bold? |
15202 | Who was it?" |
15202 | Who would be the victor, who the vanquished? |
15202 | Who would guard the treasure now, and who would warn his master that a strong man had found his way to Nibelheim? |
15202 | Why did I not think of him sooner? |
15202 | Why did you pluck off my keeper''s ears and let your horse feed in the cornfields?" |
15202 | Why do you come to my room?" |
15202 | Why does not my father give up the fleece, that my husband''s spirit may have rest?" |
15202 | Why halt? |
15202 | Why left he us not in peace?" |
15202 | Why should I fear? |
15202 | Why should he welcome me now?" |
15202 | Why, then, do you ride on the way to Helheim?" |
15202 | Will it please you to listen to me? |
15202 | Will you ask Dède- Vsévède the cause of it?" |
15202 | Will you pass the night under our roof? |
15202 | Will you shake hands and be friends with me?" |
15202 | Without these Apples of Idun, Asgard itself would have lost its charm; for what would heaven be without youth and beauty forever shining through it? |
15202 | Would he see the light that was brighter than any sunbeam again? |
15202 | Would his adventures bring him at last to the Holy Grail? |
15202 | Would they not have found the Sacred Cup one day if they had stayed with their King and helped to clear the country of its enemies? |
15202 | Would you like to come?" |
15202 | Yet what could they do? |
15202 | You naughty Pandora, why did you open this wicked box?" |
15202 | You remember that Mercury''s staff was leaning against the cottage wall? |
15202 | and he answered and said,"I do not sleep: but who art thou that bringest with thee such brightness and so sweet an odor?" |
15202 | and not buy any horned cattle? |
15202 | asked Pandora,"and where did it come from?" |
15202 | called King Marsil to his treasurer,"are my gifts for the Emperor ready?" |
15202 | cried he to himself,"some men have got in here, have they? |
15202 | exclaimed Loki, eagerly;"what is that you say? |
15202 | have you found it more easy to promise than to fulfil?" |
15202 | have you found me again?" |
15202 | he cried out;"why do you come here?" |
15202 | he said;"what will become of us in the cottage? |
15202 | how can that be? |
15202 | how can you think so?" |
15202 | is that all?" |
15202 | is that it?" |
15202 | is this thy mercy to strangers and widows? |
15202 | or are ye sea- robbers who rove over the sea, risking your own lives and bringing evil to other men?" |
15202 | or why are ye thus come at the bidding of your master, King Porsenna, to rob others of the freedom that ye care not to have for yourselves?" |
15202 | said Perseus;"will she not freeze me too?" |
15202 | said Philemon;"and your friend, what is he called?" |
15202 | said Tom,"have you drunk of my strong beer already?" |
15202 | said he, placidly, after he had got by,"how do you like my exploit?" |
15202 | said the poor Queen, weeping,"Europa is lost, and if I should lose my three sons as well, what would become of me? |
15202 | she asked;"tell me, have you taken her to your home under the sea?" |
15202 | they all cried, together;"can he tell us about Earl Hakon?" |
15202 | what had he done? |
15202 | what has become of our poor neighbors?" |
15202 | why did you dirty my hook by taking it in your mouth? |
15202 | why do you laugh at me? |
15202 | would you not like to ride a little way with me in my beautiful chariot?" |
15202 | Ægeus cried,"What have you done?" |
43065 | Oddsboddikins,says he( for that is his pet oath),"mayhap I should know the voice of that silk?" |
43065 | ''''Pon honor?'' |
43065 | ''A few years? |
43065 | ''After ten years''imprisonment, to be disowned by my daughter, and taunted with sarcastic insinuations against my face? |
43065 | ''Ah, why do n''t you?'' |
43065 | ''Ah,''cried she,''and see my father torture you to death?'' |
43065 | ''Alas, then,''exclaimed I,''what portends this nocturnal visit? |
43065 | ''Am I an impostor now?'' |
43065 | ''Am I bleeding?'' |
43065 | ''And curse you,''says Anniseed- water,''what was your father but a gallows- bird of a bum- bailiff?'' |
43065 | ''And did n''t your ladyship hear me sneeze at the door?'' |
43065 | ''And did you both ever come together to me, and ask for it?'' |
43065 | ''And do you love him, Mary?'' |
43065 | ''And do you think I would leave you?'' |
43065 | ''And have ye children, have ye hearts?'' |
43065 | ''And he?'' |
43065 | ''And how can you talk so,''cried I,''before you know me to be a murderess? |
43065 | ''And how do you get on at the profession?'' |
43065 | ''And if I am not,''said he,''what the mischief must_ you_ be?'' |
43065 | ''And in the Black Sea?'' |
43065 | ''And in the White Sea, and the Pacific Ocean?'' |
43065 | ''And is it true,''cried Jerry to Lady Gwyn,''that she is the real mistress of this house?'' |
43065 | ''And is there no decent house on the estate, that one of your tenants could lend you?'' |
43065 | ''And is this our tender meeting?'' |
43065 | ''And is this you?'' |
43065 | ''And is this your defence?'' |
43065 | ''And now, Madam,''said the man,''will you have the goodness to tell me who you are?'' |
43065 | ''And now,''cried my mother, running down from the bower,''who is for a dance?'' |
43065 | ''And now,''cried she, when the first transports had subsided,''how do you like being a heroine?'' |
43065 | ''And now,''said I, walking closer to it,''will you do me the favour to take a pinch of snuff?'' |
43065 | ''And pray to whom am I indebted for it?'' |
43065 | ''And pray what kind of seas are they?'' |
43065 | ''And pray what were their names?'' |
43065 | ''And pray, Sir,''cried Wilkinson, advancing fiercely,''who are you?'' |
43065 | ''And pray, how dared you go near it? |
43065 | ''And pray, my good fellow, who are you?'' |
43065 | ''And pray, my good friend,''asked I archly, as I bound up my golden ringlets--''WHAT IS LOVE?'' |
43065 | ''And pray, to whom would you marry this charmer?'' |
43065 | ''And pray,''cried I,''where, and how do ghosts live?'' |
43065 | ''And pray,''said I,''how would you make love?'' |
43065 | ''And pray,''said I,''who is Lady Bontein?'' |
43065 | ''And so,''cried Jerry to me,''you wo n''t dine in this house till you are mistress of it?'' |
43065 | ''And so,''cried he to Lady Gwyn,''you wo n''t make her mistress of it?'' |
43065 | ''And was that all?'' |
43065 | ''And what are_ you_ looking at?'' |
43065 | ''And what did I do to you?'' |
43065 | ''And what have I done?'' |
43065 | ''And what is that?'' |
43065 | ''And what is the meaning of Pacific?'' |
43065 | ''And what is the name of his castle?'' |
43065 | ''And what proof have we,''cried I,''that such personages as Alfred the Great, Henry the Fifth, Elfrida, or Mary Queen of Scots, ever existed? |
43065 | ''And what sort of nasty language is that?'' |
43065 | ''And where are you going, Maria?'' |
43065 | ''And where shall we moisten it, Maria?'' |
43065 | ''And who was that stranger in the next pew?'' |
43065 | ''And who won?'' |
43065 | ''And why do they keep you down?'' |
43065 | ''And why then wo n''t your ladyship give it up to her?'' |
43065 | ''And will your worship,''said Maria,''ask the girl to describe the sixpence that is in it?'' |
43065 | ''And will your worship,''said Sullivan,''permit this compromise, and stand umpire between us?'' |
43065 | ''And yet what proof have we that such personages as Schedoni, Vivaldi, Camilla, or Cecilia ever existed?'' |
43065 | ''And you would not allow him, Mary?'' |
43065 | ''And you?'' |
43065 | ''And your name?'' |
43065 | ''Another sarcasm?'' |
43065 | ''Any thing more, my fine fellow?'' |
43065 | ''Are you meditating an escape?'' |
43065 | ''Are you quite, quite sure?'' |
43065 | ''Are you so far gone, as not to know your own nephew?'' |
43065 | ''Are you weeping?'' |
43065 | ''Are you, indeed, the ancient and loyal vassal?'' |
43065 | ''Arrah, and is that Susy?'' |
43065 | ''Assumed, Sir?'' |
43065 | ''At least, are the apartments haunted?'' |
43065 | ''At least, may I learn whether I can, in any manner, repay it?'' |
43065 | ''At least, tell me,''said I, with a searching look,''how comes that blood on the floor; for it appears but just spilt?'' |
43065 | ''At least,''said he,''will you do me the favour of being at home for me to- morrow morning?'' |
43065 | ''At which corner?'' |
43065 | ''Ay, my lord----''''What?'' |
43065 | ''Bad luck to you, what do you mean by that?'' |
43065 | ''Begging your ladyship''s pardon,''said he;''what I mean, is, how far are we from where your ladyship lives?'' |
43065 | ''Betterton,''cried I,''what is love?'' |
43065 | ''But Pamela, the virtuous Pamela?'' |
43065 | ''But can that restore the teeth he has knocked out?'' |
43065 | ''But did I not bid you clean out the room?'' |
43065 | ''But do the flowers of the spreading agnus castus mingle with the pomegranate of Shemlek? |
43065 | ''But have you never considered the consequences of continuing this abandoned course of life?'' |
43065 | ''But my good friend, how am I to set about proving my title?'' |
43065 | ''But now,''pon your conscience, does your ladyship intend to live in this old castle?'' |
43065 | ''But pray how did you contrive to subsist in London at first?'' |
43065 | ''But pray,''said I, addressing Amanda,''is not your brother Oscar happy with his Adela?'' |
43065 | ''But the barouche?'' |
43065 | ''But what can you mean by_ child_ Gwyn?'' |
43065 | ''But wherefore,''cried he, starting from his seat;''wherefore talk of the past? |
43065 | ''But why so?'' |
43065 | ''But,''said I,''though satirizing the vicious may be beneficial to the community, is it always advantageous to the satirist?'' |
43065 | ''Ca n''t you speak low?'' |
43065 | ''Can it be possible?'' |
43065 | ''Can you devise no remedy?'' |
43065 | ''Cherry,''said he,''dear Cherry, what have I done to you, that you should use me thus? |
43065 | ''Cherubina what?'' |
43065 | ''Compel me? |
43065 | ''Compel me?'' |
43065 | ''Confound your written sentences,''cried he,''ca n''t you come to the point?'' |
43065 | ''Dear Lady Gwyn,''cried I, panting with joy;''sure you are not---- Ah, are you serious?'' |
43065 | ''Did William never save your life?'' |
43065 | ''Did he promise to come?'' |
43065 | ''Did you hear that?'' |
43065 | ''Do I tease you?'' |
43065 | ''Do n''t I tell you that not one syllable about the blade- bone ever came outside your lips?'' |
43065 | ''Do the doors creek on their hinges?'' |
43065 | ''Do you hope to hide your cunning under mists and laughing landscapes? |
43065 | ''Do you know Lord Orville and his Evelina?'' |
43065 | ''Do you love me?'' |
43065 | ''Do you remember me, Mary?'' |
43065 | ''Do you remember the mad woman with the long hair?'' |
43065 | ''Do you want to leave your poor mother?'' |
43065 | ''Do, tell me,''said she,''how are you unwell?'' |
43065 | ''Do?'' |
43065 | ''Doing, Ma''am? |
43065 | ''Eh? |
43065 | ''Fie brother,''said the young lady,''how can you talk so to a murderess?'' |
43065 | ''First inform me,''said Montmorenci,''by what right you feel entitled to put that question?'' |
43065 | ''For how can our mechanics make any thing good, while a packed parliament deprives them of money and a mart?'' |
43065 | ''Friends?'' |
43065 | ''Godfrey, Godfrey,''says she,''is this the conduct that I requested of you? |
43065 | ''Gracious heaven, where are we?'' |
43065 | ''Have I not?'' |
43065 | ''Have I then hope? |
43065 | ''Have you any defence?'' |
43065 | ''Have you money?'' |
43065 | ''Have you really never heard of their notorious miffs? |
43065 | ''Higginson,''said I,''shall I trouble you to pay him?'' |
43065 | ''How are you? |
43065 | ''How dare you call me Ignoramus?'' |
43065 | ''How did you tear your robe, my love?'' |
43065 | ''How far are we from your ladyship''s house?'' |
43065 | ''How goes it, heroine? |
43065 | ''How is this? |
43065 | ''How so?'' |
43065 | ''I do not want them comfortable,''said I;''but are they furnished with tapestry and old pictures? |
43065 | ''I wonder can he be ghosting her all this time?'' |
43065 | ''I wonder where our mad poet can be?'' |
43065 | ''I? |
43065 | ''If you mean her protector from injury and insult,''said Stuart,''I hope, Sir, you are not on this occasion, as on others, an actor?'' |
43065 | ''In the life of man you are known but once; yet once known, can you ever be forgotten? |
43065 | ''In the name of all that is dreadful, who can you be?'' |
43065 | ''In the name of wonder,''cried he,''how came you here?'' |
43065 | ''Is Miss Wilkinson within?'' |
43065 | ''Is it generosity,''said I,''to we d me with one I hate?'' |
43065 | ''Is it justice,''said she,''to we d me with one who hates me?'' |
43065 | ''Is it not enough,''thought she,''to be harassed by beings of this world, but those of the next too must think proper to interfere? |
43065 | ''Is not all this exquisite, Mary?'' |
43065 | ''Is that my daughter?'' |
43065 | ''Is that the murderess? |
43065 | ''Is this fact?'' |
43065 | ''Knock down whom?'' |
43065 | ''Lackadaisy, Ma''am,''said Margueritone,''are you wet?'' |
43065 | ''May I presume on my sudden predilection,''said I,''and inquire your name?'' |
43065 | ''My lads, are your carbines charged, and your daggers sharpened?'' |
43065 | ''My lord,''said I,''are you quite, quite certain that you have lost them?'' |
43065 | ''Nay,''said I,''what can be finer than Montalto, Stefano, Morano, Rinaldo, Ubaldo, Utaldo?'' |
43065 | ''Need I portray her eloquence, the purity of her style, and the smoothness of her periods? |
43065 | ''Need I shock your gentle feelings,''continued she,''by relating my subsequent story? |
43065 | ''No, Sir, to run in debt is part of my plan, and by what right dare you interfere to save me from ruin? |
43065 | ''Not know? |
43065 | ''Nothing, Mary?'' |
43065 | ''Now we are in partnership, a''nt we?'' |
43065 | ''Pray how far is it to the next village?'' |
43065 | ''Pray why?'' |
43065 | ''Pray, Ma''am,''said I, civilly,''may I presume to ask how romances and novels contaminate the mind?'' |
43065 | ''Pray, Mr. Blunderer,''whispered I to Jerry,''did I not desire you to clean out the room?'' |
43065 | ''Pray, Sir, what?'' |
43065 | ''Pray, Sir,''said she, to our fellow traveller,''what is your opinion of novels? |
43065 | ''Pray,''said I to her,''are your northern apartments uninhabited?'' |
43065 | ''Pray,''said I, at length,''what makes you so dull and absent to- day?'' |
43065 | ''Pray,''said he, laughing,''what was your fancy for telling me that you were ruined?'' |
43065 | ''Say? |
43065 | ''Shall I call him?'' |
43065 | ''So will your ladyship have the goodness to pay me?'' |
43065 | ''Sweetest and noblest of men,''exclaimed I, aloud,''say, dost thou mourn my mysterious absence? |
43065 | ''Tell me then,''continued I,''miserable man, tell me where my dear, my distracted father lingers out the remnant of his wretched days? |
43065 | ''Tell me,''I cry,''is he murdered?'' |
43065 | ''Tell me,''said I, with a look that pierced into his soul,''which character do_ you_ mean to support on this occasion? |
43065 | ''Tell your lord,''said I,''that I shall be ready to receive him: but pray, my good woman,''said I,''what is the name of your lord?'' |
43065 | ''The people told us that this was Monkton Castle,''said he;''but where is the Monkton Castle that your ladyship is to live in?'' |
43065 | ''Then you are a stranger here?'' |
43065 | ''Then you saw the three notches?'' |
43065 | ''Tis true, he has blue eyes, like myself, but has he my pouting lip and dimple? |
43065 | ''Tis true, he has lost two teeth, and you do not love him; but was not Walstein a cripple? |
43065 | ''Was n''t? |
43065 | ''Well then, Dame Ursulina, what is his name?'' |
43065 | ''Well then, he had a quarrel with you?'' |
43065 | ''Well, Mary,''said I,''what was he doing to you?'' |
43065 | ''Well, Rosa, the gentle beggar- girl,--what of her?'' |
43065 | ''Well, William,''said I, sportively,''how goes on your little quarrel with Mary? |
43065 | ''Well, and what did she say?'' |
43065 | ''Well, how do you do?'' |
43065 | ''Well, was not that glorious? |
43065 | ''Well, what do you think? |
43065 | ''Well,''cried Betterton,''is the council of war over?'' |
43065 | ''Well,''cried she,''saving a drunkard and a scold, what else can you call me?'' |
43065 | ''Well,''said Stuart, as I got to the carriage,''has her ladyship acknowledged your claims?'' |
43065 | ''Well?'' |
43065 | ''Well?'' |
43065 | ''What adventures, my friend?'' |
43065 | ''What am I to do with it?'' |
43065 | ''What are you doing in my room?'' |
43065 | ''What are you muttering there, Miss?'' |
43065 | ''What can you want of me, now that you have robbed me?'' |
43065 | ''What do you mean, fellow? |
43065 | ''What do you mean, sirrah?'' |
43065 | ''What do you mean?'' |
43065 | ''What does the horrid woman mean?'' |
43065 | ''What dram shall we drink?'' |
43065 | ''What dreadful blow awaits me? |
43065 | ''What has happened to you?'' |
43065 | ''What have you done to me?'' |
43065 | ''What is all this?'' |
43065 | ''What is the matter?'' |
43065 | ''What is the matter?'' |
43065 | ''What is the meaning of this mummery?'' |
43065 | ''What is the use of bullying?'' |
43065 | ''What is your reason for refusing to marry him?'' |
43065 | ''What makes you stand peeping over that wretch''s shoulder?'' |
43065 | ''What mark? |
43065 | ''What murder is this you were talking of, young woman?'' |
43065 | ''What of his character?'' |
43065 | ''What shall I say?'' |
43065 | ''What thing is that?'' |
43065 | ''What upon earth shall I do?'' |
43065 | ''What was it?'' |
43065 | ''What will my lady say to this?'' |
43065 | ''What, leaving me?'' |
43065 | ''What? |
43065 | ''What? |
43065 | ''Where do you live?'' |
43065 | ''Where is my blue- eyed chief? |
43065 | ''Where is my parrot?'' |
43065 | ''Where is old Eftsoones? |
43065 | ''Whether,''said I,''if I marry Lord Montmorenci, I shall be happy with him or not?'' |
43065 | ''Who are you? |
43065 | ''Who could have presumed to liberate this woman?'' |
43065 | ''Who taught you to tell falsehoods?'' |
43065 | ''Who tore her gown?'' |
43065 | ''Who? |
43065 | ''Who? |
43065 | ''Who?'' |
43065 | ''Why not?'' |
43065 | ''Why now, do you not think we have obtained the most decisive advantages? |
43065 | ''Why now,''said she,''how can I prevent you?'' |
43065 | ''Why should I tell a falsehood about it, Ma''am?'' |
43065 | ''Why then, is that Barney Delany?'' |
43065 | ''Why then, is that Jerry Sullivan?'' |
43065 | ''Why who but-- shall I speak it? |
43065 | ''Why you little creature,''cried Wilkinson,''do you hope to frighten me? |
43065 | ''Why, curse you,''says Gin,''what was your mother but an old apple- woman?'' |
43065 | ''Why, dame,''cried I,''how did you manage to pick up such a charming sentiment, and such elegant language?'' |
43065 | ''Why, how can the morning have rosy fingers?'' |
43065 | ''Will no one go for my daughter? |
43065 | ''Will you then execute some commissions for me? |
43065 | ''Will you trust my solemn promise to send you a hundred pounds?'' |
43065 | ''Would you scandalize the mother that bore you?'' |
43065 | ''Yet do not novelists contradict themselves?'' |
43065 | ''You a hero?'' |
43065 | ''You did?'' |
43065 | ''You have?'' |
43065 | ''You know me then?'' |
43065 | ''You said, I think, that you had just escaped from confinement?'' |
43065 | ''You will not?'' |
43065 | ''You will tell me, perhaps, that selling the dress is improper? |
43065 | ''Your business, Ma''am?'' |
43065 | ''Your business, Sir?'' |
43065 | ''Your deer- park? |
43065 | ''Your''s?'' |
43065 | ''_ Your_ house?'' |
43065 | ( and he started,) what do mine eyes behold beneath these embers? |
43065 | (_ Huzza!_) Is there a man amongst you who would refuse to lay down his life for liberty? |
43065 | (_ Laughter and bravo!_) Eh, my boys, do n''t you remember the good old fun at the fair there? |
43065 | A bonnet? |
43065 | ARE THESE THINGS REAL? |
43065 | After all, what is rank? |
43065 | Again climb my shoulders, and gallop me round the lawn? |
43065 | Allow me to ask, Sir, by what right you feel entitled to call yourself the protector of this lady?'' |
43065 | Am I mad? |
43065 | Am I, Cherry?'' |
43065 | And did not Caroline of Lichfield fall in love with him after their marriage, though she had hated him before it?'' |
43065 | And do the golden clusters of Eastern spartium gleam amidst the fragrant foliage of the cedrat, the most elegant shrub of the Levant? |
43065 | And say, can nought but converse love inspire? |
43065 | And sure, would not I help her to a bonnet? |
43065 | And then I would frown and turn from him; and then he would follow, so sad and so pale: do n''t you think he would? |
43065 | And what was the building, think you? |
43065 | And what were the banditti who had knocked me down, think you? |
43065 | And what were the two corpses, think you? |
43065 | And whence arises their purity? |
43065 | And while the lower part of your face is hidden in black drapery, can your eyes glare from under the edge of a cowl? |
43065 | And with whom? |
43065 | And yet something of the kind there must be, else how could the baron and bravo have entered my chamber? |
43065 | Ant they all love and nonsense, and the most unpossible lies possible?'' |
43065 | Are not her ancestors illustrious? |
43065 | Are not her manners fascinating? |
43065 | Are the rose- coloured nerit, and verdant alia marina imbost upon the rocks? |
43065 | Are we to renew all our little quarrels, then kiss and be friends? |
43065 | Are you much addicted to fainting?'' |
43065 | Are you, Cherry? |
43065 | At last the wife exclaims,''A Heroine? |
43065 | Besides, have I not already given you twelve guineas?'' |
43065 | Besides, have I not far greater merit in getting a husband by sentiment, adventure, and melancholy, than by dressing, gadding, dancing, and singing? |
43065 | Betterton bowed and began: TO FANNY Say, Fanny, why has bounteous heaven, In every end benign and wise, Perfection to your features given? |
43065 | But Montmorenci-- what shall I say of him? |
43065 | But abroad I shall encounter banditti, monks, daggers, racks-- O ye celebrated terrors, when shall I taste of you?'' |
43065 | But how can I live without the means? |
43065 | But how can I refuse going? |
43065 | But if I am to act on the skulking system, how can I reside here at all?'' |
43065 | But invisible, how could he attract her eyes? |
43065 | But pray who was this immortal doll of your''s?'' |
43065 | But say, can nothing absolve you from this hateful vow?'' |
43065 | But tell me candidly, Miss Wilkinson, what tempted you to leave home? |
43065 | But to whom?'' |
43065 | But was virtue sufficient? |
43065 | But what boots that now? |
43065 | But what preserves her virtuous? |
43065 | But what signified a few for what I wanted? |
43065 | But what think you, Biddy, of my keeping you in suspense, till my next letter? |
43065 | But whither am I wandering? |
43065 | But would it be proper to pick them? |
43065 | But, oh, my friend, how shall I find language to describe the calamitous termination of an evening so propitious in its commencement? |
43065 | Can you darken the midnight of a scowl? |
43065 | Dare I pronounce the divine words, she loves me?'' |
43065 | Dare I say it? |
43065 | Desolate, destitute, and dependent on strangers, what is to become of me? |
43065 | Did I not always sooth the wounded mind? |
43065 | Did I, or did I not, order you to clean out the room?'' |
43065 | Do n''t they, Cherry? |
43065 | Do n''t you think he will? |
43065 | Do they, Mary?'' |
43065 | Do you blush well?'' |
43065 | Do you recollect a letter that I got you to write for me when I was here last?'' |
43065 | Do you weep well?'' |
43065 | Does the Asiatic andrachne rear its red trunk? |
43065 | Eh, do n''t I understand the doctrine of bolts and bars?'' |
43065 | Enchantment to your witching eyes? |
43065 | For instance, do we not already abhor Evelina''s and Harriet Byron''s powdered, pomatumed, and frizzled hair? |
43065 | Have I not explained all about the letter; and how can you now treat him so cruelly?'' |
43065 | Have I not made a glorious expedition of it? |
43065 | Have not all persons their favorite pursuits in life, and do not all brave fatigue, vexation, and calumny, for the purpose of accomplishing them? |
43065 | Have you parents?'' |
43065 | Have you the gaunt ferocity of famine in your countenance? |
43065 | Have you the quivering lip and the Schedoniac contour? |
43065 | He did so; but what were his emotions, when he beheld-- whom? |
43065 | He has the flaxen hair, but can he execute the rosy smile? |
43065 | He thought it was mine, do you say?'' |
43065 | How are you situated at present? |
43065 | How are you? |
43065 | How are you?'' |
43065 | How can he possibly exculpate himself from his treacherous intrigue with the landlady? |
43065 | How could I remain unmoved? |
43065 | How dare you, hussey, commit such a robbery?'' |
43065 | How dared you even look at it? |
43065 | How shall I support this approaching interview? |
43065 | How should she reach him? |
43065 | I am to be forced into marriage, am I? |
43065 | I believe I was quite delirious; for notwithstanding all that I could do to prevent myself, I ran on rapidly, am I a heroine? |
43065 | I followed you with cautious steps,''continued he,''till I traced you into your-- you had a garden, had you not?'' |
43065 | I heard a little lamb cry, ba; Says I, so you have lost mamma? |
43065 | I looked up, and beheld-- what?--Can you imagine what? |
43065 | I mad? |
43065 | I rise, and colouring violently, mutter, without looking at him:''I wonder where her ladyship can be?'' |
43065 | I say by Jingo?'' |
43065 | I will add( for why should I conceal it from you?) |
43065 | I wonder whether Thompson''s Musidora could be considered a sufficient precedent, or at least a palliative parallel? |
43065 | IS THIS A VISION? |
43065 | In a word, are you a picturesque villain, full of plot, and horror, and magnificent wickedness? |
43065 | In the first place, will your ladyship give me back my cloaths and the money that I left behind me, when I was here last?'' |
43065 | Incorporeal, how could he touch her? |
43065 | Is he following me?'' |
43065 | Is it as I suspect?'' |
43065 | Is it made up?'' |
43065 | Is it not Cherubina, and would Cherubina hurt her Montmorenci?'' |
43065 | Is it tufted with myrtle, or shaded with a grove of lemon, orange, and bergamot?'' |
43065 | Is she not, young woman?'' |
43065 | Is the sun quenched or eclipsed? |
43065 | Is this the way to treat the daughter of your friend, Mr. Stuart? |
43065 | Lady Gwyn, where is your hereditary honour? |
43065 | MANUSCRIPT---- Six tedious years-------- and all for what? |
43065 | Mad? |
43065 | May I hope, that to me, who feel a personal interest in all your actions, you will be more communicative?'' |
43065 | May be you wo n''t believe me neither, when I tell you that I landed?'' |
43065 | Me, your other heart, Your favourite Ellen? |
43065 | Motherless, am I to be bereft of my more than mother, at the sensitive age of fifteen? |
43065 | Mr. Stuart, Mr. Stuart, is it not a shame for you, Mr. Stuart? |
43065 | Must I no longer wander with you through painted meadows, and by purling rivulets? |
43065 | My dear friend, do you not sympathize with my sorrows? |
43065 | My face like a pumpkin?'' |
43065 | My mother too-- or say, am I indeed an orphan?'' |
43065 | Need I dwell on those elegant adventures, those sorrows, and those horrors, which she has experienced; I might almost say, sought? |
43065 | Need I his arts unfold? |
43065 | Need I recount to you all her accomplishments? |
43065 | No gentle gesture? |
43065 | Now I leave it to your own taste, which sounds better,--Asiatic andrachne, or daffodowndillies? |
43065 | Now my ambition is to be a Heroine, and how can I hope to succeed in my vocation, unless I, too, suffer privations and inconveniences? |
43065 | Now then, my brave fellows, will you consent on these conditions to rally round my standard, to live in my service, and to die in my defence? |
43065 | O Biddy, does not your blood run cold at this horrible scrawl? |
43065 | O Lady Gwyn, what have I done to you, to deserve death at your hands? |
43065 | O murder, murder,''tis all over with us? |
43065 | Oh, my unfortunate girl, are you too conspiring against me? |
43065 | Oh, what shall I do? |
43065 | Oh, ye favourite pullets, oh ye inimitable apple- pies, shall I never, never, taste you more? |
43065 | Or when I made a single glance my law, What wonder if that law were made in vain? |
43065 | Patrick, Patrick, are you so faithless as to be taking part with my mortal enemy?'' |
43065 | Pray with what moral will you now conclude the book?'' |
43065 | Say, little, foolish, fluttering thing? |
43065 | Shall I put something about you? |
43065 | Shall we even recognize each other''s features, through their change from childhood to maturity? |
43065 | Shall we repair thither?'' |
43065 | Sleep-- sleep-- sleep? |
43065 | Sleep? |
43065 | Sleep? |
43065 | Sleep? |
43065 | So that''s that, and mine''s my own, and how do you like my manners, Ignoramus?'' |
43065 | Speak, lady; what question art thou anxious that I should expound?'' |
43065 | Still silent? |
43065 | Sullivan?'' |
43065 | Sure, ca n''t you pin the curtains round, so that we sha n''t see you? |
43065 | Sure, did not she save me from a gaol? |
43065 | Sure, how did the ladies manage on board the packet that I came over in? |
43065 | Sure-- my heavens!--Sure he can not want to break off with me? |
43065 | Surely you would not have a hero with overhanging brows and lank hair? |
43065 | THE HEROINE LETTER I My venerable Governess, guardian of my youth, must I then behold you no more? |
43065 | Tell me, are they mamma''s, dear mamma''s?'' |
43065 | Tell me, girl, will you embrace me, or will you not?'' |
43065 | The accomplish''d guile That glosses poisonous words with gilded smile? |
43065 | The more I picked, the more I longed to pick--''Tis human nature; and was not Eve herself tempted in a garden? |
43065 | The tear suborned, the tongue complete to please; Eyes ecstasied, idolatry of knees? |
43065 | Then I woke, repeating, am I a heroine? |
43065 | Then''tis,''Good morrow, Cherry,''or''is the paper come, Cherry?'' |
43065 | This, to seek clandestine interviews, where I had prohibited even an open acquaintance? |
43065 | WHY AM I BROUGHT HITHER? |
43065 | WHY CONFINED THUS RIGOROUSLY? |
43065 | Was I not called the generous and the kind? |
43065 | Was it not a glorious affair?'' |
43065 | Was it not enough, unhappy woman, that thy husband attempted my life, but must thou, too, thirst for my blood?'' |
43065 | Was it not natural now? |
43065 | Was it that mortal man might view Thy charms at distance, and adore? |
43065 | Was there ever a wish of your heart that I left ungratified? |
43065 | Was there no revenge? |
43065 | Well, Biddy, what say you now? |
43065 | What angel sent from heaven?'' |
43065 | What can be the matter? |
43065 | What can you answer to these arguments?'' |
43065 | What could I do? |
43065 | What could Theodore do? |
43065 | What have I ever done to you, you base, you cruel people?'' |
43065 | What heart but throbs, what voice but shouts, at the name of liberty? |
43065 | What heroine in distress but loaths her food? |
43065 | What is the world to us? |
43065 | What is your name?'' |
43065 | What of his character?'' |
43065 | What phantom, what horrid disorder is distracting my treasure?'' |
43065 | What say you to that, old Hector?'' |
43065 | What say you? |
43065 | What says your ladyship? |
43065 | What should I do? |
43065 | What should I do? |
43065 | What should I do? |
43065 | What think you of a decayed nut in an unripe shell? |
43065 | What tho''for me her lips have never moved? |
43065 | What tho''thy cheek have furrows? |
43065 | What though he turned you by the shoulder out of his house? |
43065 | What though papa caught the Butler kissing you in the pantry? |
43065 | What was I to do? |
43065 | What was I to do? |
43065 | What was I to do? |
43065 | What wonder that I forgot my prudence amidst these indignities? |
43065 | What would he more? |
43065 | What, not even a tear? |
43065 | What?'' |
43065 | When I name Monkton Castle, need I tell you the rest? |
43065 | When I was within a few paces of him, I heard quick steps; and a hoarse voice vociferating,''Who goes yonder with the light?'' |
43065 | Whence come you? |
43065 | Where is that worthy character?'' |
43065 | Where is your father?'' |
43065 | Whither could I hide? |
43065 | Whither turn? |
43065 | Who presumes to go for to say that a lord left me an annuity or the like? |
43065 | Who the devil is this villain?'' |
43065 | Who would have the face to set up such a silly claim?'' |
43065 | Who, I ask? |
43065 | Why all this dissection of the heart, while there are crowns to be broke? |
43065 | Why do their biographers always conclude the book just at their wedding? |
43065 | Why how long have you known him?'' |
43065 | Why speak so angrily, yet act so kindly?'' |
43065 | Why this terror? |
43065 | Why thus imprisoned? |
43065 | Why you graceless little thing, are you robbing me?'' |
43065 | Wilkinson?'' |
43065 | Will Cherubina condemn the conduct that Heloise applauded?'' |
43065 | Will she again make me her playmate? |
43065 | Will you drive me to distraction? |
43065 | Will you permit them, during the baron''s absence, to spend an hour with you this evening? |
43065 | Wo n''t you save my house? |
43065 | Would Sir Charles Bingley have deserted me so, I ask? |
43065 | Would you have them build swallows''nests for themselves under the windows, and live on suction like the snipes?'' |
43065 | Yes or no?'' |
43065 | Yet ah, what wonder, if, when shrinking awe Withheld me from her sight, I broke my chain? |
43065 | Yet as in withered Autumn, charms we see, Say, faded maiden, may we not in thee? |
43065 | You a beauty?'' |
43065 | You a title? |
43065 | You happen to have my hand now; and I am afraid-- very much afraid, that----''''That what?'' |
43065 | _ It was the late Lord Gwyn!_''''Who are you?'' |
43065 | act so diametrically, so outrageously contrary to the principle of aspersed heroines, who are sure on such occasions to pin up a bundle, and set off? |
43065 | ah, why couldst thou not sit down in the lap of content here, and dance, and sing, and say thy prayers, and go to heaven with this nut- brown maid? |
43065 | all these dreadful faces? |
43065 | am I a heroine? |
43065 | am I? |
43065 | am I? |
43065 | am I? |
43065 | am I? |
43065 | and what did he say? |
43065 | and what is your object?'' |
43065 | asked Stuart,''or are you merely sporting with my feelings?'' |
43065 | chains are clanking-- The furies are whipping me with their serpents-- What smiling cherub arrests yon bloody hand? |
43065 | cried I, clasping his neck,''will you break my heart? |
43065 | cried I, ineffably affected,''or what shall I do?'' |
43065 | cried I,''What are you saying? |
43065 | cried I,''What, will no one help me?'' |
43065 | cried I,''can nothing move thee to confess thy crimes? |
43065 | cried I,''do you not live in this castle, and are you not its noble heir?'' |
43065 | cried I,''knowest thou not the fatal, the inscrutable, the mysterious destiny, which must ever prevent our union?'' |
43065 | cried I,''why have I been seized? |
43065 | cried I;''can it be possible?'' |
43065 | cried he,''have you seen any body pass this way with a parcel of flowers; for some confounded thief has just robbed me of all I had?'' |
43065 | cried he,''leaving your old father a prisoner in this vile house? |
43065 | cried he,''so you are the thief, are you? |
43065 | cried she;''and wherefore? |
43065 | cried the maid;''how could they dare for to say that so rich a lady murdered the girl?'' |
43065 | dear ma''am, wo n''t you?'' |
43065 | exclaimed I,''and is this thy vile design?'' |
43065 | exclaimed I,''what do you mean? |
43065 | exclaimed I,''when will my troubles cease? |
43065 | exclaimed I,''why must I leave you? |
43065 | exclaimed Jerry,''Why then, death alive, for what?'' |
43065 | exclaimed she,''do you spurn my proffered embrace?'' |
43065 | exclaimed the youth, who had also got a brain- fever;''after my preserving you in brandy?'' |
43065 | exclaimed this accomplished crocodile, bursting into tears, and snatching me to his bosom,''what have they done to you? |
43065 | exclaims he,''why should the guest imitate the harshness of the hostess?'' |
43065 | it you that murdered the milliner?'' |
43065 | mercy, have you broken my beautiful china vase?'' |
43065 | mercy, what''s this?'' |
43065 | no remedy? |
43065 | no word, no look to cheer? |
43065 | or am I struck stone blind? |
43065 | or has the globe ceased rolling? |
43065 | or''more cream, Cherry,''or''what shall we have to dinner, Cherry?'' |
43065 | remain in a house where suspicion attached to my character? |
43065 | said I,''and pray, for what possible purpose?'' |
43065 | said I,''ca n''t you speak within your breath?'' |
43065 | said I,''not admire Hesperian, Hyacinthine, clustering curls? |
43065 | said I;''a heroine swing? |
43065 | said I;''and are not they happy?'' |
43065 | said I;''how did you get that?'' |
43065 | said the white- bosomed daughter of Erin, as the wave kissed her foot; and wherefore went he from his weeping maid, to the fight of heroes? |
43065 | shall I, father? |
43065 | she conjures,''ere yet to phrenzy driven, Tell me who weeps? |
43065 | that of my friend, or of an accomplice in the plot against me?'' |
43065 | this assault on my chamber? |
43065 | thought I,''a woman of her magnitude and vulgarity, faint, and have nerves? |
43065 | what are riches? |
43065 | what hideous whim is this?'' |
43065 | what is all this?'' |
43065 | what mean you?'' |
43065 | what murder?'' |
43065 | what shall I do? |
43065 | what shall I do?'' |
43065 | what''s all that?'' |
43065 | what? |
43065 | what? |
43065 | where is your dignity?'' |
43065 | where is your prudence? |
43065 | where shall I hide?'' |
43065 | whither turn? |
43065 | who could resist the maddening sight of so much beauty?'' |
43065 | who''s here?'' |
43065 | whom do I behold?'' |
43065 | will you leave me? |
43065 | with whom? |
43065 | wo n''t you? |
35196 | A bottle of your best brandy-- the French cognac? |
35196 | Addicted to dipsomania? |
35196 | Always? |
35196 | Am I myself? 35196 Among the invited Le Capitaine Ryecroft, I presume?" |
35196 | Amongst them did ye include forgin''? |
35196 | An otter, then? |
35196 | And I hope worthy of Olympe Renault? |
35196 | And all ready for starting? |
35196 | And has there been no search yet? |
35196 | And how am I to bring it home to them? 35196 And my saying that the man who had just got out of it, and gone inside, resembled a priest I''d seen but a day or two before?" |
35196 | And suppose we do that to- day? |
35196 | And supposing her to be alive,he asks,"where do you think she is now? |
35196 | And surer with a heavier one, as yourself, for instance? |
35196 | And the waterman, too? |
35196 | And what after? |
35196 | And what did you hear? |
35196 | And where am I to bring it? |
35196 | And where has she slept? |
35196 | And who do you suspect besides? |
35196 | And why did n''t you, Gibbons? 35196 And without committing,"--he fears to speak the ugly English word, but expresses the idea in French--"_cette dernier coup_?" |
35196 | And ye found them in the cubbert too? |
35196 | And you do think he has gone for good? |
35196 | And you really think she has n''t slept in her room? |
35196 | And you''d like to be a rich one? |
35196 | And you''re quite sure she has not slept in her room? |
35196 | And, supposing him identified, what follows? |
35196 | Are they there still? |
35196 | Are you quite sure, sir? 35196 Are you sure of it? |
35196 | As who? |
35196 | At what? |
35196 | Attending to culinary matters, I presume? 35196 Be there anythin''amiss?" |
35196 | Be what? |
35196 | Business-- wi''me? |
35196 | But ai n''t he stayin''in the neighbourhood longer than he first spoke of doin''? |
35196 | But could you as you are now-- with clothes on, boots, and everything? |
35196 | But have you ever known of a boat being moored in there? |
35196 | But he''s very good- looking? |
35196 | But how can that concern any one save myself? |
35196 | But how gone? 35196 But how is it to be avoided?" |
35196 | But is there still? |
35196 | But not when he leaves at a late hour-- as, for instance, when he dines at the Court; which I know he has done several times? |
35196 | But surely it is not so? 35196 But then she was drowned also? |
35196 | But there be new people there now, ye sayed? |
35196 | But what do you advise my doing,_ Pere_? 35196 But what do you make of all that?" |
35196 | But what made ye go there, Jack? |
35196 | But what sort of man is he? 35196 But what''s to be the upshot? |
35196 | But why are you looking so often below? 35196 But why ca n''t it be done?" |
35196 | But why do you think he means fight? 35196 But why should she assist in such a dangerous deception-- at risk of her daughter''s life?" |
35196 | But why should we? |
35196 | But why, Jack? 35196 But why, madame?" |
35196 | But why? |
35196 | But yaw do n''t think he''s an adventuwer? |
35196 | But you are not recommending it, now-- in this little convent matter? |
35196 | But you saw her in her coffin? 35196 But, shawly, that is n''t how the gentleman yondaw made acquaintance with the fair Gwendoline?" |
35196 | But,continues the Major, greatly moved,"you''ll forgive me, old fellow, for being so inquisitive? |
35196 | Can it be he? |
35196 | Can you wonder at that? |
35196 | Come, Captain Ryecroft; you know what I allude to? |
35196 | Do n''t yield the_ Sassenach_ an inch? |
35196 | Do you mean to say you''re not aware of what''s happened? |
35196 | Do you suppose, Miss Lees, I have n''t penetrated your secret long ago? 35196 Do you think they''ll be out long?" |
35196 | Does what mean? |
35196 | Dressing, may be? 35196 Drowned? |
35196 | Fear of what? |
35196 | Frightened o''what? 35196 From the cold he caught that night, I suppose?" |
35196 | Had n''t we better keep on, an''make sure? |
35196 | Hansom, sir? |
35196 | Has any letter reached Llangorren Court? |
35196 | Have you a through ticket? |
35196 | Have you any idea whose? |
35196 | He visits often at the Court of late? |
35196 | He with the vewy peculya head gear? 35196 He''s a gentleman, is he?" |
35196 | He''s dying, then? |
35196 | He''s gone then? |
35196 | He''s out too, then? |
35196 | Her name? |
35196 | How can I help thinkin''it? 35196 How can he, Jack?" |
35196 | How can it give you a belief in the girl being still alive? 35196 How far did the man say? |
35196 | How long is it since she went off? |
35196 | How long since they went off-- may I know, Miss Linton? |
35196 | How should I know, my son? 35196 How soon do you think? |
35196 | How then? |
35196 | How was he introduced? |
35196 | How would you like to live in that over yonder? |
35196 | How would you like, somebody else being with you in it--_if made worth your while_? |
35196 | How''d I like it, your Reverence? 35196 How''m I to help it, Miss Gwen? |
35196 | How,_ Pere_? |
35196 | How-- where? |
35196 | I can understand all that; still I do n''t quite see its application, or how the English Foreign Minister can be interested in those you allude to? |
35196 | I mean for Miss Wynn-- since the night of that ball? |
35196 | I wonder where the place is? 35196 In a worldly sense, you mean? |
35196 | In that case, why did n''t you bring him in? |
35196 | In what direction did you hear them? |
35196 | In what respect? 35196 In what way could I?" |
35196 | In what way? 35196 In what way? |
35196 | In what way? |
35196 | Is it likely they will, Miss Linton? |
35196 | Is it strange, Ellen? |
35196 | Is it yourself? 35196 Is n''t it a beautiful creature?" |
35196 | Is that any reason we should n''t now? |
35196 | Is that so? |
35196 | Is there any landing- place there for a boat? |
35196 | Is what true? |
35196 | It be a bird, Captain? 35196 It is a love secret, then? |
35196 | It is your place to look after the letters, I believe? |
35196 | It may as well be written now-- may it not? |
35196 | It''s very kind of you, Mahon; but that must depend on--"On what? |
35196 | Let him-- as many as he likes; you do n''t suppose I''ll believe them? |
35196 | Let me have a squint at it? |
35196 | Let me hear it, Mahon? |
35196 | Llangowen Court? |
35196 | May I have a hint o''what it is? |
35196 | May I know who that one is, Father Rogier? |
35196 | Meanin''o''what, sir? |
35196 | Mr George Shenstone? |
35196 | Murdock is married, then? |
35196 | My wife? |
35196 | Nay, I am sure,continues Miss Linton, with provoking coolness,"they would have been glad to go riding with you; delighted--""But why ca n''t they?" |
35196 | No, Mahon; instead, proved himself as brave a fellow as ever stood before sword point, or dared pistol bullet? |
35196 | Not here? |
35196 | Oh, mother, what did you dream about them? |
35196 | Old acquaintance; friend, I presume? 35196 Only whether-- whether she-- Miss Gwen, I mean-- said anything about riding to- day?" |
35196 | Ormeston Hall? 35196 Perhaps you''d prefer it being boots? |
35196 | Quite turn it upside down-- as your old truckle, eh? |
35196 | Richard--_le braconnier_--you''re thinking of? |
35196 | Rogue''s Ferry? 35196 Shall I read it to you?" |
35196 | Shall I turn the boat back? |
35196 | Sharp fellow? |
35196 | So you think he have a notion o''her, Jack? |
35196 | Somethin''to do wi''the coracle, have it? |
35196 | Specify, Jack? |
35196 | Starve on them, you mean? |
35196 | Sure, then, the Captain han''t been to visit them? |
35196 | Surely he will not be so stupid-- so insane? 35196 That all he said?" |
35196 | That you, Mary? |
35196 | That''s to be on Thursday, ye sayed? |
35196 | The canwyll corph? |
35196 | The heequall? |
35196 | The man''s wife must know all about it? |
35196 | The moon? |
35196 | Then there''s no trouble between you? |
35196 | Then what''s been a scarin''ye, mother? |
35196 | There ha''something happened? |
35196 | They did so? |
35196 | They mean mischief,mutters Wingate;"what''d we best do, Captain? |
35196 | To your great annoyance, no doubt; if it did not make you dreadfully jealous? |
35196 | Too late for what? 35196 True, but does that bear upon our affair?" |
35196 | True, how? 35196 True; and, availing myself of that, I might have been gone long since, as you supposed, but for--""For what?" |
35196 | True; but, then, there may come a fare the morrow, an''what if there do? 35196 Two hours ago they got off, you say?" |
35196 | WHERE''S GWEN? |
35196 | Well, and what after? |
35196 | Well; an''what if''t be? |
35196 | Well; did it strike you as a cry that would come from one falling over the cliff-- by accident or otherwise? |
35196 | Well; what of him? |
35196 | Well; what of it? |
35196 | Well? |
35196 | What are they? 35196 What are they? |
35196 | What article? |
35196 | What be there so odd in that? |
35196 | What can Jack be coming after? 35196 What can all that mean? |
35196 | What can it mean? |
35196 | What could be more ridiculous? |
35196 | What do you mean, Wingate? 35196 What do you think it was?" |
35196 | What fellow? |
35196 | What had he to say about me? |
35196 | What have you done with those addressed to Miss Wynn? |
35196 | What have you heard, mother? |
35196 | What have you? |
35196 | What hour? |
35196 | What is it, Wingate? |
35196 | What is it? |
35196 | What is it? |
35196 | What is it? |
35196 | What is it? |
35196 | What is it? |
35196 | What is it? |
35196 | What is there specially repulsive about him? |
35196 | What makes you suppose she is there? |
35196 | What makes you think I''m lookin''that way? |
35196 | What may it be, your Reverence? |
35196 | What may that be, Father Rogier? |
35196 | What mean you, Gregoire? |
35196 | What more? |
35196 | What more? |
35196 | What news? |
35196 | What other respects? |
35196 | What other thing? |
35196 | What reasons? |
35196 | What say you, gentlemen? |
35196 | What sort of a man? |
35196 | What sort of anodyne? |
35196 | What then? |
35196 | What then? |
35196 | What thing, pway? |
35196 | What thing? |
35196 | What train? |
35196 | What was it? 35196 What''s strangest?" |
35196 | What''s that for? |
35196 | What''s the meaning of all this, Joe? |
35196 | What, Gregoire? |
35196 | What, may I ask? |
35196 | What? |
35196 | What? |
35196 | What? |
35196 | What? |
35196 | What? |
35196 | What? |
35196 | Whatever be the matter wi''ye, Jack? |
35196 | Whatever ha kep''ye, Jack? 35196 When is it to be?" |
35196 | When is this horror to have an end? 35196 When might you want it, your Reverence?" |
35196 | When? |
35196 | Where are they? |
35196 | Where are you going, Gwen? |
35196 | Where be the poor man abidin''now? |
35196 | Where can Gregoire have gone? |
35196 | Where did you find them? |
35196 | Where do they weesh the boat to be took? 35196 Where ha''ye heerd all this, Jack?" |
35196 | Where may that be? |
35196 | Where? 35196 Where?" |
35196 | Where? |
35196 | Where? |
35196 | Where? |
35196 | Which of us do you propose staying here? 35196 Which?" |
35196 | Who can be asking for me? |
35196 | Who could help liking it? |
35196 | Who is Mr Shenstone? |
35196 | Who is that young lady? |
35196 | Who is this other? |
35196 | Who the deuce is he? |
35196 | Who then? |
35196 | Who''s his endawser? 35196 Who? |
35196 | Who? |
35196 | Who? |
35196 | Who? |
35196 | Whose is it, Jack? |
35196 | Why all this emotion about such a_ miserable_? 35196 Why d''y aw say that, Jawge?" |
35196 | Why do you say so, Captain Ryecroft? |
35196 | Why do you think that? 35196 Why must you? |
35196 | Why odd? |
35196 | Why should I? 35196 Why should it?" |
35196 | Why so? |
35196 | Why too well? |
35196 | Why wo n''t it do in the mornin''? |
35196 | Why, Ryecroft, you''re surely joking? |
35196 | Wi''who? |
35196 | Will you take it neat, or mixed wi''a drop o''water? |
35196 | Wish to do what? |
35196 | With safety? |
35196 | Would it greatly surprise you, if to- night your husband did n''t come home to you? |
35196 | Wynn, eh? 35196 Ye ha''been into the chapel buryin''groun''then?" |
35196 | Ye had a big time last night at Llangorren? |
35196 | Ye say ye know him better than ye did? 35196 Ye suspect somebody, then?" |
35196 | Ye''re to see him the morrow, then? |
35196 | Yes; well? |
35196 | Yes? |
35196 | You advise my going over to Llangorren? |
35196 | You can write, Jack-- can''t you? |
35196 | You do n''t think it was Dick and his coracle, then? |
35196 | You have n''t yet told me his name? |
35196 | You mean Mr Murdock? |
35196 | You mean the tongue of_ le braconnier_? |
35196 | You mean--? |
35196 | You said nothing of this at the inquest? |
35196 | You say you''ve brought them along? |
35196 | You see something? |
35196 | You think only_ days_? |
35196 | You think there were others? |
35196 | You''ll come up to the house, and let me introduce you to my aunt? |
35196 | You''re not going to Paris now-- not this night? |
35196 | You''re quite sure of that,_ ma fille_? |
35196 | You''re quite sure there was a boat, Wingate? |
35196 | You''re sure you''ll be able? |
35196 | You''ve been to the Ferry, then? |
35196 | You''ve done something to keep him quiet? |
35196 | Your waterman, sir, Wingate, says he''d like to see you, if convenient? |
35196 | _ Comment_? 35196 _ Le bagage bien arrange_?" |
35196 | _ No_? |
35196 | --were her husband present it would be"Pere;"but she is alone--"Who''s gone away? |
35196 | A gentle tapping at the door tells him the trigger is touched; and, responding to the signal, he calls out--"That you, Jack Wingate? |
35196 | A man guilty of aught illegal-- much more one who has committed a capital crime-- would not be acting thus? |
35196 | A nate thing, and a close shave, was n''t it? |
35196 | Above all, who are the men in it? |
35196 | Above all, why her distraught look, with the sigh accompanying it, as the baronet''s son went galloping out of the gate? |
35196 | After a sip, he resumes speech with the remark:"If I mistake not, you are a poor man, Monsieur Dempsey?" |
35196 | After a time it occurs to him he has been spoken to and asks--"What did you observe, Wingate?" |
35196 | After a time, he again observes:--"You''ve said you do n''t know the ladies we''ve helped out of their little trouble?" |
35196 | After all, what do it matter-- only a bit o''weed?" |
35196 | All I said was, that somebody thinks so; and that is n''t I. Shall I tell you who it is?" |
35196 | All that can be said is, she disappeared on the night of the ball, without telling any one-- no trace left behind-- except--""Except what?" |
35196 | Am I not right? |
35196 | Am I, indeed, to pass the remainder of my days within this dismal cell? |
35196 | An''if I an''t astray, he be the one your Reverence thinks would not be any the worse o''a wettin''?" |
35196 | An''t she a bewty? |
35196 | An''t she?" |
35196 | An''what d''ye want wi''me?" |
35196 | And a pretty sight it is, is n''t it? |
35196 | And d''y''spose I did n''t obsarve them glances exchanged twixt you and the salmon fisher-- sly, but for all that, hot as streaks o''fire? |
35196 | And having gone so, the questions are, why and whither? |
35196 | And how is she to give it, with least pain to him? |
35196 | And if other, what its business? |
35196 | And if suicide, why? |
35196 | And is it not for him they are there; risking liberty-- it may be life? |
35196 | And the cry heard so soon after? |
35196 | And the men in it those whose names he has mentioned? |
35196 | And the quarrel; how did it end? |
35196 | And this very day, what meant Mr Shenstone by that sudden and abrupt departure? |
35196 | And was in the water some time?" |
35196 | And what but the body of Gwendoline Wynn? |
35196 | And what can be keeping_ her_? |
35196 | And who?" |
35196 | And why am I to rejoice?" |
35196 | And why should n''t she, Pere Rogier? |
35196 | And you think she will be able to obtain the information, without in any way compromising herself?" |
35196 | Anyhow, he''ll want her to go down to them grand doin''s at Llangowen Court?" |
35196 | Are they not, Mr Musgrave?" |
35196 | As he is not questioned about these, why should he? |
35196 | As he joins her going out, she asks,_ sotto voce_:--"_ C''est arrange_?" |
35196 | As he stands with eyes glaring upon them, he is again accosted by his inquisitive acquaintance, who asks:"What''s the matter, Jawge? |
35196 | Be''t anybody ha''stoled the things out o''the boat? |
35196 | Bean''t there somethin''amiss?" |
35196 | Beast, bird, or fish?" |
35196 | Being so observant, I wonder if this everybody has also observed how I receive them?" |
35196 | Besides, is he not back there-- come of his own accord-- to confront his accusers, if any there still be? |
35196 | Brought up under the_ regime_ of Louis and trained in the school of Eugenie, why need she fear either social slight or exclusion? |
35196 | But Mahon, drawing them for himself, says searchingly--"Then you have a suspicion there''s been what''s commonly called foul play?" |
35196 | But can it be the priest who is in it? |
35196 | But has she been borne off by force, or went she willingly? |
35196 | But have you any thoughts as to how we should proceed?" |
35196 | But how came I to it? |
35196 | But how could she think that? |
35196 | But how does it corrupt them?" |
35196 | But how have I come into it? |
35196 | But how is it to be hindered?" |
35196 | But how, your Reverence? |
35196 | But possibly better not? |
35196 | But speaking seriously, Ryecroft, as you say you''re on business, may I know its nature?" |
35196 | But the Cognac? |
35196 | But the latter-- is it still alive and flourishing? |
35196 | But the throe passing, she again pursues her soliloquy, now in more conjectural strain:--"Strange that no friend has come after me? |
35196 | But the time? |
35196 | But what am I thinkin''o''? |
35196 | But what do you conclude from its not having been?" |
35196 | But what has that to do with your daughter''s going to the Ferry?" |
35196 | But what is beauty to her with all these adjuncts? |
35196 | But what its width or depth, compared with that other something between? |
35196 | But what led ye to think he ha''been also in the housebreaking line?" |
35196 | But what matters it? |
35196 | But what''s the use of talking of a thing not likely to happen?" |
35196 | But what''s your argument?" |
35196 | But where are they? |
35196 | But where is the other, the false one? |
35196 | But whither?" |
35196 | But who do you suspect?" |
35196 | But who the deuce is the gentleman? |
35196 | But why be you so partic''lar about my goin''out-- this night more''n any other?" |
35196 | But why do ye ask? |
35196 | But why on each and every occasion has he found a gentleman there-- the same every time-- George Shenstone by name? |
35196 | But you surely do n''t suppose I could think of him as a sweetheart? |
35196 | But''s what brought you to Boulogne?" |
35196 | But, maybe, I make too free, asking your business in Boulogne?" |
35196 | By the way, I hear you''re about to have grand doings at the Court-- a ball, and what not?" |
35196 | By the way, have I got my purse with me?" |
35196 | By the way, what have you got in that black jack?" |
35196 | Ca n''t a been anybody else? |
35196 | Ca n''t be a brother? |
35196 | Can I take the liberty of asking him into your house, Mahon?" |
35196 | Can I?" |
35196 | Can it be possible, that what they are looking upon is she who once was Gwendoline Wynn? |
35196 | Can she be English? |
35196 | Can the chasm which angry words have created be bridged over? |
35196 | Can you?" |
35196 | Controlling it, the other asks, with diminished interest, still earnestly:--"What leads you to think that way, Wingate? |
35196 | Did n''t I, your Reverence? |
35196 | Did n''t it strike you so, Nelly?" |
35196 | Did ye hear that, Captain?" |
35196 | Do n''t you think so?" |
35196 | Do you chance to know him?" |
35196 | Do you know where you can borrow such, or hire it?" |
35196 | Do you really mean that, Captain Ryecroft?" |
35196 | Does anyone know who was his boatman?" |
35196 | Does he live at Llangorren? |
35196 | Does n''t it?" |
35196 | Dreaming? |
35196 | Dropped, of course; but under what circumstances? |
35196 | Dropping egg and cup, in stark astonishment, she demands:"What do you mean, Gibbons?" |
35196 | Dublin is his native place; but what would or could he now do there? |
35196 | Even if it were, you seem to forget that her mother, father-- all of them-- must have been cognisant of these facts-- if facts?" |
35196 | Fell from a foot plank, you told me? |
35196 | Flirting while engaged-- what might she do when married? |
35196 | For himself? |
35196 | For its solution he appeals to Ryecroft, asking:--"How about the moon?" |
35196 | For what are either now to him? |
35196 | George Shenstone? |
35196 | Giving the lurcher a kick to quiet the animal, he pulls back the bolt, and draws open the door, as he does so asking,"That you, Father Rogier?" |
35196 | Ha''the thing been cut off, or pulled up?" |
35196 | Ha''ye larned anythin''''bout him o''late?" |
35196 | Has any occurred to you, Gregoire?" |
35196 | Has it indeed carried away Gwen Wynn? |
35196 | Have I hit the nail upon the head?" |
35196 | Have I not played it to perfection?" |
35196 | Have been up to that famous catching place by the Ferry, and are on the way home downward-- to Rock Weir, no doubt? |
35196 | Have you a reason?" |
35196 | Have you any idea of the reason, Nelly?" |
35196 | Have you any idea?" |
35196 | Have you put down the date? |
35196 | Have you?" |
35196 | He does not wait for her to speak, but asks excitedly:--"What''s the matter, mother?" |
35196 | He does so, asking:"But, Miss Gwen; what will your aunt say to it? |
35196 | He is himself interrogated the instant after-- thus:--"You see that shadowed spot under the bank-- by the wall?" |
35196 | He seeks an explanation:--"How is it, Jack, that you, living but a short league above, do n''t know all about these people?" |
35196 | He''s shown the white feather?" |
35196 | He, however, has no doubt of it, muttering to himself--"Wonder whose boat can be on the river this time o''night-- mornin'', I ought to say? |
35196 | Her face in the glass-- what the expression upon it? |
35196 | Her reflection followed by the inquiry, called out--"_ C''est vous, mon mari_?" |
35196 | His name of course, but what the destination? |
35196 | His name?" |
35196 | His reverence is a Frenchman, is he?" |
35196 | Holding out the card Ryecroft says interrogatively--"Is this meant for me, Mr Shenstone?" |
35196 | How are the other twenty being spent? |
35196 | How are they to be occupied? |
35196 | How came he intwoduced at Llangowen?" |
35196 | How can she expect him to have resisted, or that his heart is still whole? |
35196 | How comes it to have been there in the summer- house? |
35196 | How could I expect, or hope, he would? |
35196 | How could he help? |
35196 | How could he otherwise? |
35196 | How could he while his young mistress lived? |
35196 | How could it be otherwise? |
35196 | How could she have lived throughout all that? |
35196 | How could there, since the younger addresses the older as"uncle"; himself in return being styled"nevvy?" |
35196 | How could there? |
35196 | How could there?" |
35196 | How could they otherwise? |
35196 | How could they? |
35196 | How else is her disappearance to be accounted for? |
35196 | How far?" |
35196 | How has she been taking it?" |
35196 | How is it you have n''t gone?" |
35196 | How is the odd time being spent by him? |
35196 | I ask you again-- have you thought of anything, Gregoire?" |
35196 | I han''t heerd her name; what be it?" |
35196 | I intend starting off within the hour, and expecting a letter of some importance, may I ask you to glance over them again?" |
35196 | I may be wronging them all-- friends-- relatives-- even him? |
35196 | I merely wished to know who Mr White Cap is?" |
35196 | I suppose leverets are plentiful just now, and easily caught, since they can no longer retreat to the standing corn?" |
35196 | I suppose she thought I''d gone to my room, and did n''t wish to disturb me? |
35196 | I suppose the train will be starting in a few minutes?" |
35196 | I suppose you''ve heard?" |
35196 | I take it they''re sufficient for reaching either bank of this river, supposing the skiff to get capsized and you in it?" |
35196 | I think, you told me she often accompanies him down to the boat stair, at his departure?" |
35196 | I was only wondering why Miss Gwen-- that is, I am a little astonished-- but-- perhaps you''ll think it impertinent of me to ask another question?" |
35196 | If I mistake not, you can swim like a fish?" |
35196 | If I''ve been rightly informed, Miss Wynn, it belongs to a relative of yours?" |
35196 | If he has gone to the Ferry first, and sets to drinking in the Harp? |
35196 | If questioned about these commodities, what answer is he to make? |
35196 | If you do n''t expect pleasure there, for what should you be in such haste to reach it? |
35196 | In other words, was it suicide, accident, or murder? |
35196 | In what does Mrs Murdock differ from the rest of your Herefordshire fair?" |
35196 | In what way? |
35196 | Indirectly, then? |
35196 | Instead, it but adds to her bewilderment, and she once more exclaims, almost repeating herself:"Am I myself? |
35196 | Instead, with simulated calmness, he says:"Suppose I step out and see whether she be near at hand?" |
35196 | Into France, too; for surely am I there? |
35196 | Is it a dream? |
35196 | Is it a sin? |
35196 | Is it growing? |
35196 | Is it hare?" |
35196 | Is it labelled?" |
35196 | Is it possible-- so early?" |
35196 | Is it possible?" |
35196 | Is it so, my son? |
35196 | Is it to"blight his life''s bloom,"leaving him"an age all winters?" |
35196 | Is it true?" |
35196 | Is n''t that so?" |
35196 | Is that true, Gwendoline? |
35196 | Is the priest jesting? |
35196 | Is there any harm in it?" |
35196 | Is there thought of it in her heart-- for him? |
35196 | It can not be the boat she has seen rowing off above? |
35196 | It is all gone?" |
35196 | It is of him the priest speaks as king:--"Has he signed the will?" |
35196 | It is the lady who speaks first:--"I understand you''ve been but a short while resident in our neighbourhood, Captain Ryecroft?" |
35196 | It''s but natural I should love our beautiful Wye-- I, born on its banks, brought up on them, and, I suppose, likely to--""What?" |
35196 | It''s the voice of a girl? |
35196 | Jack?" |
35196 | Knaw him?" |
35196 | Less from observing his abstraction, than the slow, negligent movements of his knife and fork, the mother asks--"What''s the matter with ye, Jack? |
35196 | Let me see-- was it? |
35196 | Let me see; when will that be?" |
35196 | Madame la Chatelaine oblivious, I apprehend; in the midst of her afternoon nap?" |
35196 | May I ask what it is?" |
35196 | May I ask who is this_ she_ you''re soliloquising about? |
35196 | May I know them?" |
35196 | Maybe,"he continues in tone of confidential suggestion,"there be somebody as you think ought to get a duckin''beside myself?" |
35196 | Might_ he_ be a cousin?" |
35196 | Miss Wynn?" |
35196 | Mr Murdock''s a character, then?" |
35196 | Murdock has himself come easily by it, and why should he not be made as easily to part with it? |
35196 | Need I tell you who sent it, Richard Dempsey?" |
35196 | Nigh on the stroke o''eleven? |
35196 | No enemy, I hope?" |
35196 | Not Monsieur Shenstone, after all?" |
35196 | Not alone, I take it?" |
35196 | Not much in the manner, I should say; but altogether the contrary,"she laughs, adding--"And how do you like our Wye?" |
35196 | Not on the sick list, I hope?" |
35196 | Not receiving immediate answer, Ellen again asks--"Is there any danger you fear?" |
35196 | Not the Captain?" |
35196 | Nothing to surprise him that? |
35196 | Now, Captain, what do ye think o''the whole thing?" |
35196 | Now, Jack, whose boat could that be if it wa''nt your''n?" |
35196 | Now, Monsieur, do you comprehend me?" |
35196 | Odd succession of events, is it not?" |
35196 | Of course you''ll stay, gentlemen? |
35196 | Oh, no; I noticed nothin''o''all that, not I? |
35196 | Only with my life? |
35196 | Only, who these redemptionists are that take such interest in my spiritual welfare, and how I have come to be here, surely I may know?" |
35196 | Or am I mad? |
35196 | Or am I to wait for''em here?" |
35196 | Or have my senses indeed forsaken me?" |
35196 | Or in that face, dark and disfigured, who could recognise the once radiant countenance of Llangorren''s young heiress? |
35196 | Or is there yet a chance of reconciliation? |
35196 | Or would ye rather be took on up to the town? |
35196 | Or, is it insanity?" |
35196 | Or, stepping off, does he spurn the boat with angry heel, as in angry speech he has done her whose name it bears? |
35196 | Out at this hour?" |
35196 | Perhaps in Paris? |
35196 | Perhaps you''ll extend it, and favour me with the lady''s name? |
35196 | Perhaps, better it were so? |
35196 | Rang no bell? |
35196 | Ryecroft smiles, further interrogating:--"What have you heard of her?" |
35196 | S''pose we gie''em a capsize?" |
35196 | S''pose we slide after, and see where she hangs out?" |
35196 | Sadness, or joy? |
35196 | Saying which, she slips several shillings into his hand, adding, as she notes the effect,--"Do you think it sufficiently heavy? |
35196 | Shall I call him in?" |
35196 | Shall I run down to the boat- dock and see?" |
35196 | Shall we, Mr Musgrave?" |
35196 | She knows he has conceived some scheme to disembarrass her of a husband, she no longer care? |
35196 | She knows how Shenstone suffers-- how could she help knowing? |
35196 | She mayent like you young ladies to go rowin''by yourselves? |
35196 | She''s at home, is n''t she?" |
35196 | Should ye like take a drop o''somethin''''fores you lie down?" |
35196 | Sidling up to the girl, he asks in a tone which tells of lovers_ en rapport_, mutually, unmistakably--"When, Mary?" |
35196 | So shall I; the blackest in all the convent''s wardrobe if they wish it-- aye, crape if they insist on it? |
35196 | So, my boy, you perceive the necessity of our acting with caution in this business, whatever trouble or time it may take-- do n''t you?" |
35196 | Some business?" |
35196 | Some of your old English_ bonnes amies_, I suppose?" |
35196 | Somethin''crooked''s come between''em at the ball-- bit o''jealousy, maybe? |
35196 | Something happened between you, eh?" |
35196 | Something wrong?" |
35196 | Soon again he resumes his conjectured soliloquy:--"''Tan''t possible she ha''been to the Ferry, an''goed back again? |
35196 | Suppose I write a note requesting his presence, with explanations?" |
35196 | Suppose hers should some day go to the bottom she being in it?" |
35196 | Suppose we do?" |
35196 | Surely I''d have heard it? |
35196 | Surely it can not be? |
35196 | Surely it can not come from any of the sisters? |
35196 | Surely our oaks, elms, and poplars can not be compared with the tall palms and graceful tree ferns of the tropics?" |
35196 | Surely she has been found?" |
35196 | Surely the Captain is not going to call on Mr Lewin Murdock-- in amicable intercourse? |
35196 | Surely you arn''t goin''out again the night?" |
35196 | Surely, not a pleasure excursion, at such an unreasonable hour-- night just drawing down? |
35196 | Taking her seat, she asks:"Where''s Gwen?" |
35196 | Tell me something of its nature?" |
35196 | Tell me why I am here?" |
35196 | That appears too early for the after event? |
35196 | The balin''pan, or that bit o''cushion in the stern?" |
35196 | The boat coming back? |
35196 | The first is--"You''re not afraid of water, are you, Dick?" |
35196 | The longer before fishing the thing up, the better it will be for our purposes: you comprehend?" |
35196 | The which, my amiable Joseph, you''ll not do-- I''m sure you will not?" |
35196 | Then adding, as he observes a young man leap down from the box where he has had seat beside the driver,"Part of your belongings, is n''t he?" |
35196 | Then succeeds inquiry as to how the death has been brought about; whether it be a case of suicide or assassination? |
35196 | Then why be ye looking so black?" |
35196 | There han''t been nobody to the house-- has there?" |
35196 | They hold their_ tete- a- tete_ there at times; do they?" |
35196 | They may have ate it up?" |
35196 | They may not know where I am? |
35196 | To the first,` How?'' |
35196 | True there will be four against two; but what of it? |
35196 | True, your Wye is subject to sudden floods; might it have ought to do with them?" |
35196 | Upon what do you base them?" |
35196 | WHAT DOES HE WANT? |
35196 | Waked for two days, as I understood you; then laid in her grave? |
35196 | Was n''t it a little strange?" |
35196 | Was n''t it,_ cherie_?" |
35196 | Was the girl good looking?" |
35196 | Well, what''d I best do? |
35196 | What answer did you gie to the man?" |
35196 | What are your own thoughts about it, Jack?" |
35196 | What are your reasons for doubting it?" |
35196 | What boat could have been there but his own? |
35196 | What can I remember? |
35196 | What can he be doing down there? |
35196 | What care I?" |
35196 | What could it mean?" |
35196 | What did the sarvint say?" |
35196 | What difference whether he find the grave of his griefs in Paris or Boulogne-- if find it he can? |
35196 | What do I care?" |
35196 | What do you know of_ him_?" |
35196 | What for could have been the angry words? |
35196 | What ha''become o''they?" |
35196 | What have you done with them?" |
35196 | What have you got to reward me for it?" |
35196 | What if there be some one on the road, or the river''s bank, and be seen in the act of capsizing his own boat? |
35196 | What is it? |
35196 | What is it?" |
35196 | What is such a man doing in Herefordshire? |
35196 | What is this barometer you seem to place such confidence in? |
35196 | What is to compare with that to come? |
35196 | What makes ye think he a''been a forger?" |
35196 | What man in love, profoundly, passionately as he, could believe his last chance eliminated; or have his ultimate hope extinguished? |
35196 | What matter? |
35196 | What mean you?" |
35196 | What say you, Nell?" |
35196 | What say you, Wingate?" |
35196 | What should be my first pretence? |
35196 | What should we do to''em, Captain?" |
35196 | What sort of fellow is he?" |
35196 | What sort of place is it? |
35196 | What sort of sound?" |
35196 | What step do you wish me to take, first?" |
35196 | What then? |
35196 | What then? |
35196 | What was it, pray?" |
35196 | What will_ they_ do?--and think? |
35196 | What would ye think o''my predecessor here bein''a burglar as well as smasher?" |
35196 | What''s cheerin''him? |
35196 | What''s that? |
35196 | What''s the hour now? |
35196 | What''s your idea, Mahon?" |
35196 | What, after all, if his suspicions prove groundless, and it turn out that Captain Ryecroft is entirely innocent? |
35196 | What, in Protestant England? |
35196 | What_ has_ occurred there?" |
35196 | What_ jeu d''esprit_ has he been perpetrating?" |
35196 | When I left the Ferry he was in the Welsh Harp, as I was told, tossing sovereigns upon its bar counter,` Heads and tails, who wins?'' |
35196 | When seated at the table, the Major asks--"What on earth has delayed you, Vivian? |
35196 | When will it be over?" |
35196 | When, and where?" |
35196 | When? |
35196 | Whence all this plenty, within walls where of late and for so long, has been such scarcity? |
35196 | Where do you suppose, mother?" |
35196 | Where is he who has both to be relied upon? |
35196 | Where is the beautiful woman, by both beloved, fondly, passionately? |
35196 | Where is the man who would not feel flattered, gratified, to be the shrine of such sacrifice, and from such a worshipper? |
35196 | Where is the man who would not rather know his sweetheart dead than see her in the arms of a rival? |
35196 | Where, and how, is one to be had? |
35196 | Where?" |
35196 | Where?" |
35196 | Where?" |
35196 | Whether in the country, or in a town among houses? |
35196 | Which did she go by-- the path or the lane? |
35196 | Which is she to take? |
35196 | Which quarter is she in? |
35196 | Which way did you come, Father Rogier-- the path or the lane?" |
35196 | Whither then? |
35196 | Who Pere?" |
35196 | Who could fail to observe that pretty hand play, when you two were twining the ivy around the altar- rail? |
35196 | Who could''a carried it across the river-- that night especial, wi''a flood lippin''full up to the banks? |
35196 | Who dreams of that? |
35196 | Who else could it be? |
35196 | Who has brought me? |
35196 | Who is to do this? |
35196 | Who knows but that in a fit of drunken bravado he may stake the whole estate on a single turn of cards or cast of dice? |
35196 | Who says I do?" |
35196 | Who so circumstanced ever does? |
35196 | Who would n''t with such laws-- unrighteous-- oppressive to the poor? |
35196 | Who, then, is the owner of the brooch, bracelets, and other bijouterie? |
35196 | Who,_ Pere_? |
35196 | Who-- what is he?" |
35196 | Who?" |
35196 | Why all this? |
35196 | Why did I ever leave you?" |
35196 | Why did he not start earlier? |
35196 | Why do you wish that?" |
35196 | Why examining those things, he already knows all about, as she herself? |
35196 | Why has it stopped there? |
35196 | Why is he not here? |
35196 | Why is it staying? |
35196 | Why not, Miss Wynn?" |
35196 | Why not?" |
35196 | Why should I not dissemble? |
35196 | Why should I?" |
35196 | Why should I?" |
35196 | Why should it? |
35196 | Why should she have gone outside? |
35196 | Why should that attract the attention of the young Herefordshire squire, causing him to start, as it first catches his eye? |
35196 | Why, may I ask? |
35196 | Why? |
35196 | Will ye let me wake her up? |
35196 | Will your Reverence enlighten me?" |
35196 | Within a mile of their own home, and still within the boundary of the Llangorren land, how could they think of danger such as is threatening? |
35196 | Wonder why she did n''t wake me up? |
35196 | Would n''t be a tourist party-- starting off so early? |
35196 | Would you desire that?" |
35196 | Wyquoft-- Wyquoft, you say?" |
35196 | Ye remember my tellin''you, mother?" |
35196 | Ye see what comes o''sich as they humbuggin''about in a boat?" |
35196 | Ye understand me, mother?" |
35196 | Ye''ll let me row you up the river-- leastways for a couple o''miles further? |
35196 | Ye''ll remember the night we come up from the ball, my tellin''ye I had an engagement the next day to take the young Powells down the river?" |
35196 | Yet, would you believe it, Nelly, notwithstanding all, I sometimes have a strange fear upon me?" |
35196 | You comprehend?" |
35196 | You comprehend?" |
35196 | You do n''t expect the Father, our only visitor, to- night? |
35196 | You have it in the house, I hope?" |
35196 | You have learnt something since?" |
35196 | You know his name?" |
35196 | You know the place-- you know the ring too?" |
35196 | You mean Captain Ryecroft?" |
35196 | You really admire it?" |
35196 | You remember my sayin''so, Captain; and that I took it to be some o''the sarvint girls shoutin''up there?" |
35196 | You see that big poplar standing on the bank there?" |
35196 | You see that building below?" |
35196 | You see that?" |
35196 | You will, wo n''t you?" |
35196 | You''ll stand by me, Mahon?" |
35196 | You''ll stay to dinner with us, Father Rogier?" |
35196 | You''ll stay? |
35196 | You''re her maid-- you undressed her?" |
35196 | _ Comprenez- vous, cherie_?" |
35196 | an''t he, Jack?" |
35196 | are you sure of that, Father Rogier?" |
35196 | cry both gentlemen in a breath, seeming alike vexed by the intelligence, Shenstone mechanically interrogating:"On the river?" |
35196 | ejaculated the Major, struck by the words, and their despondent tone,"what''s this, old fellow? |
35196 | groans the young girl in despair, flinging herself along the pallet, and for the third time interrogating,"am I myself, and dreaming? |
35196 | he repeats with a look of blank astonishment--"What the deuce does it mean?" |
35196 | he says, going on in conjectural chain;"and that French priest-- he probably the instigator of it? |
35196 | possibly had a hand in the deed itself? |
35196 | she asks, soon as he has mounted up to her,"_ Quelque chose a tort_?" |
35196 | she exclaims involuntarily, adding, in a timid whisper,"Was it, Gregoire?" |
35196 | she exclaims, as if pricked by a pin,"Mademoiselle to be married?" |
35196 | she exclaims, in feigned astonishment,"ye beant a comin''from the Ferry that way?" |
35196 | she exclaims,"what are we to do? |
35196 | the Morgans?" |
35196 | this time you_ have_ an errand? |
35196 | vite- vite_?" |
35196 | what d''ye mean?" |
35196 | what do it mean?" |
35196 | what is to become of me? |
35196 | what shall we do?" |
35196 | what way?" |
35196 | what''s going on at Llangorren?" |
35196 | where am I to find this means?" |
35196 | where?" |
35196 | who can tell? |
35196 | why did I not know it before?" |
35196 | would n''t you like to be sellin''her a pair of kids-- Jouvin''s best-- helpin''her draw them on, eh?" |
35196 | yonder''s a very different sort of pedestrian approaching it? |
35196 | you know it?" |
35196 | you''ll break your journey here, and stay a few days with me? |
35784 | A bottle of your best brandy-- the French cognac? |
35784 | Always? |
35784 | Am I myself? 35784 Among the invited, Le Capitaine Ryecroft, I presume?" |
35784 | Amongst them did ye include forgin''? |
35784 | An otter, then? |
35784 | And I hope worthy of Olympe Renault? |
35784 | And all ready for starting? |
35784 | And comes down the river by boat, does n''t he? |
35784 | And has there been no search yet? |
35784 | And how am I to bring it home to them? 35784 And my saying that the man who had just got out of it, and gone inside, resembled a priest I''d seen but a day or two before?" |
35784 | And suppose we do that to- day? |
35784 | And supposing her to be alive,he asks,"where do you think she is now? |
35784 | And surer with a heavier one, as yourself, for instance? |
35784 | And the waterman too? |
35784 | And what after? |
35784 | And what did you hear? |
35784 | And where am I to bring it? |
35784 | And where has she slept? |
35784 | And who do you suspect besides? |
35784 | And why did n''t you, Gibbons? 35784 And without committing"--he fears to speak the ugly English word, but expresses the idea in French--"_cette dernier coup_?" |
35784 | And ye found them in the cubbert too? |
35784 | And you do think he has gone for good? |
35784 | And you really think she has n''t slept in her room? |
35784 | And you''d like to be a rich one? |
35784 | And you''re quite sure she has not slept in her room? |
35784 | And, supposing him identified, what follows? |
35784 | Are they there still? |
35784 | Are you quite sure, sir? 35784 Are you sure of it? |
35784 | As who? |
35784 | At what? |
35784 | Attending to culinary matters, I presume? 35784 Be there anythin''amiss?" |
35784 | Be what? |
35784 | Business-- wi''me? |
35784 | But ai n''t he stayin''in the neighbourhood longer than he first spoke of doin''? |
35784 | But could you as you are now, with clothes on, boots, and everything? |
35784 | But have you ever known of a boat being moored in there? |
35784 | But how can that concern any one save myself? |
35784 | But how gone? 35784 But how is it to be avoided?" |
35784 | But is there still? |
35784 | But not when he leaves at a late hour-- as, for instance, when he dines at the Court; which I know he has done several times? |
35784 | But then she was drowned also? 35784 But there be new people there now, ye sayed?" |
35784 | But what do you advise my doing,_ Père_? 35784 But what do you make of all that?" |
35784 | But what made ye go there, Jack? |
35784 | But what sort of man is he? 35784 But what''s to be the upshot? |
35784 | But why are you looking so often below? 35784 But why ca n''t it be done?" |
35784 | But why do you think he means fight? 35784 But why should she assist in such a dangerous deception-- at risk of her daughter''s life?" |
35784 | But why should we? |
35784 | But why, Jack? 35784 But why, madame?" |
35784 | But why? |
35784 | But yaw do n''t think he''s an adventuwer? |
35784 | But you are not recommending it now-- in this little convent matter? |
35784 | But you saw her in her coffin? 35784 But, shawly, that is n''t how the gentleman yondaw made acquaintance with the fair Gwendoline?" |
35784 | But,continues the Major, greatly moved,"you''ll forgive me, old fellow, for being so inquisitive? |
35784 | Can it be he? |
35784 | Can you wonder at that? |
35784 | Certainly? |
35784 | Do you mean to say you''re not aware of what''s happened? |
35784 | Do you suppose, Miss Lees, I have n''t penetrated your secret long ago? 35784 Do you think they''ll be out long?" |
35784 | Does what mean? |
35784 | Dressing, may be? 35784 Drowned? |
35784 | Fear of what? |
35784 | Frightened o''what? 35784 From the cold he caught that night, I suppose?" |
35784 | Had n''t we better keep on, an''make sure? |
35784 | Hansom, sir? |
35784 | Has any letter reached Llangorren Court? |
35784 | Have you a through ticket? |
35784 | Have you any idea whose? |
35784 | He visits often at the Court of late? |
35784 | He''s a gentleman, is he? |
35784 | He''s dying, then? |
35784 | He''s gone then? |
35784 | He''s out too, then? |
35784 | Head and shoulders? 35784 Her name?" |
35784 | How can I help thinkin''it? 35784 How can he, Jack?" |
35784 | How can it give you a belief in the girl being still alive? 35784 How far did the man say? |
35784 | How is it, Jack, that you, living but a short league above, do n''t know all about these people? |
35784 | How long is it since she went off? |
35784 | How long since they went off-- may I know, Miss Linton? |
35784 | How should I know, my son? 35784 How soon do you think? |
35784 | How then? |
35784 | How was he introduced? |
35784 | How would you like to live in that over yonder? |
35784 | How would you like, somebody else being with you in it--_if made worth your while_? |
35784 | How''d I like it, your Reverence? 35784 How''m I to help it, Miss Gwen? |
35784 | How,_ Pére_? |
35784 | How-- where? |
35784 | I mean for Miss Wynn, since the night of that ball? |
35784 | I see-- what of it? |
35784 | I wonder where the place is? 35784 In a worldly sense you mean? |
35784 | In that case, why did n''t you bring him in? |
35784 | In what direction did you hear them? |
35784 | In what respect? 35784 In what way could I?" |
35784 | In what way? 35784 In what way? |
35784 | In what way? |
35784 | Is it likely they will, Miss Linton? |
35784 | Is it strange, Ellen? |
35784 | Is it yourself? 35784 Is n''t it a beautiful creature?" |
35784 | Is that any reason we should n''t now? |
35784 | Is that so? |
35784 | Is there any landing- place there for a boat? |
35784 | Is what true? |
35784 | It is a love secret, then? 35784 It is your place to look after the letters, I believe?" |
35784 | It may as well be written now-- may it not? |
35784 | It''s very kind of you, Mahon; but that must depend on----"On what? |
35784 | Let him-- as many as he likes; you do n''t suppose I''ll believe them? |
35784 | Let me have a squint at it? |
35784 | Llangorren Court? |
35784 | May I have a hint o''what it is? |
35784 | May I know who that one is, Father Rogier? |
35784 | Meanin''o''what, sir? |
35784 | Mr. George Shenstone? |
35784 | Murdock is married, then? |
35784 | My wife? |
35784 | Nay, I am sure,continues Miss Linton, with provoking coolness,"they would have been glad to go riding with you; delighted--""But why ca n''t they?" |
35784 | Not here? |
35784 | Oh, mother, what did you dream about them? |
35784 | Old acquaintance; friend, I presume? 35784 Only whether-- whether she-- Miss Gwen, I mean-- said anything about riding to- day?" |
35784 | Ormeston Hall? 35784 Perhaps you''d prefer it being boots? |
35784 | Quite turn it upside down-- as your old truckle, eh? |
35784 | Richard--_le braconnier_--you''re thinking of? |
35784 | Rogue''s Ferry? 35784 Shall I read it to you?" |
35784 | Shall I turn the boat back? |
35784 | So you think he have a notion o''her, Jack? |
35784 | Somethin''to do wi''the coracle, have it? |
35784 | Still, it_ is_ strange, her not calling me, nor requiring my attendance? |
35784 | Sure, then, the Captain han''t been to visit them? |
35784 | Surely he will not be so stupid-- so insane? 35784 That all he said?" |
35784 | That you, Mary? |
35784 | That''s to be on Thursday, ye sayed? |
35784 | The canwyll corph? |
35784 | The heequall? |
35784 | The moon? |
35784 | Then there''s no trouble between you? |
35784 | Then what''s been a scarin''ye, mother? |
35784 | There ha''something happened? |
35784 | They did so? |
35784 | They mean mischief,mutters Wingate;"what''d we best do, Captain? |
35784 | To your great annoyance, no doubt, if it did not make you dreadfully jealous? |
35784 | Too late for what? 35784 True, how? |
35784 | True; and, availing myself of that, I might have been gone long since, as you supposed, but for----"For what? |
35784 | True; but does that bear upon our affair? |
35784 | True; but, then, there may come a fare the morrow, an''what if there do? 35784 Two hours ago they got off, you say?" |
35784 | WHERE''S GWEN? |
35784 | WHERE''S GWEN? |
35784 | Well, and what after? |
35784 | Well, did it strike you as a cry that would come from one falling over the cliff-- by accident, or otherwise? |
35784 | Well, what of it? |
35784 | Well; an''what if''t be? |
35784 | Well; what of him? |
35784 | Well? |
35784 | What are they? 35784 What are they? |
35784 | What article? |
35784 | What be there so odd in that? |
35784 | What can Jack be coming after? 35784 What can all that mean? |
35784 | What can it mean? |
35784 | What could be more ridiculous? |
35784 | What do you mean, Wingate? 35784 What do you think it was?" |
35784 | What fellow? |
35784 | What had he to say about me? |
35784 | What have you done with those addressed to Miss Wynn? |
35784 | What have you heard, mother? |
35784 | What have you? |
35784 | What hour? |
35784 | What is it, Wingate? |
35784 | What is it? |
35784 | What is it? |
35784 | What is it? |
35784 | What is it? |
35784 | What is it? |
35784 | What is it? |
35784 | What is there''specially repulsive about him? |
35784 | What makes you suppose she is there? |
35784 | What makes you think I''m lookin''that way? |
35784 | What may it be, your Reverence? |
35784 | What may that be, Father Rogier? |
35784 | What mean you, Gregoire? |
35784 | What more? |
35784 | What more? |
35784 | What news? |
35784 | What other respects? |
35784 | What other thing? |
35784 | What reasons? |
35784 | What say you, gentlemen? |
35784 | What sort of a man? |
35784 | What sort of anodyne? |
35784 | What then? |
35784 | What thing, pway? |
35784 | What thing? |
35784 | What train? |
35784 | What was it? 35784 What''s strangest?" |
35784 | What''s that for? |
35784 | What''s the meaning of all this, Joe? |
35784 | What, Gregoire? |
35784 | What, may I ask? |
35784 | What, then? |
35784 | What? |
35784 | What? |
35784 | What? |
35784 | What? |
35784 | What? |
35784 | What? |
35784 | Whatever be the matter wi''ye, Jack? |
35784 | Whatever ha''kep''ye, Jack? 35784 When is this horror to have an end? |
35784 | When might you want it, your Reverence? |
35784 | Where are they? |
35784 | Where are you going, Gwen? |
35784 | Where be the poor man abidin''now? |
35784 | Where can Gregoire have gone? |
35784 | Where did you find them? |
35784 | Where do they weesh the boat to be took? 35784 Where ha''ye heerd all this, Jack?" |
35784 | Where may that be? |
35784 | Where? 35784 Where?" |
35784 | Where? |
35784 | Where? |
35784 | Where? |
35784 | Which of us do you propose staying here? 35784 Which?" |
35784 | Who can be asking for me? |
35784 | Who could help liking it? |
35784 | Who is that young lady? |
35784 | Who is this other? |
35784 | Who the deuce is he? |
35784 | Who then? |
35784 | Who''s gone away? 35784 Who''s his endawser? |
35784 | Who? 35784 Who?" |
35784 | Who? |
35784 | Who? |
35784 | Whose is it, Jack? |
35784 | Why all this emotion about such a_ misérable_? 35784 Why d''yaw say that, Jawge?" |
35784 | Why do you say so, Captain Ryecroft? |
35784 | Why do you think that? 35784 Why must you? |
35784 | Why odd? |
35784 | Why should I? 35784 Why should it?" |
35784 | Why so? |
35784 | Why too well? |
35784 | Why wo n''t it do in the mornin''? |
35784 | Why, George; where else could they go rowing? 35784 Why, Ryecroft, you''re surely joking?" |
35784 | Wi''who? |
35784 | Will you take it neat, or mixed wi''a drop o''water? |
35784 | Wish to do what? |
35784 | With safety? |
35784 | Would it greatly surprise you if to- night your husband did n''t come home to you? |
35784 | Wynn, eh? 35784 Ye ha''been into the chapel buryin''groun'', then?" |
35784 | Ye had a big time last night at Llangorren? |
35784 | Ye say ye know him better than ye did? 35784 Ye suspect somebody, then?" |
35784 | Ye''re to see him the morrow, then? |
35784 | Yes; well? |
35784 | You advise my going over to Llangorren? |
35784 | You can write, Jack, ca n''t you? |
35784 | You do n''t think it was Dick and his coracle, then? |
35784 | You have n''t yet told me his name? |
35784 | You mean the tongue of_ le braconnier_? |
35784 | You mean----? |
35784 | You said nothing of this at the inquest? |
35784 | You say you''ve brought them along? |
35784 | You see something? |
35784 | You think only_ days_? |
35784 | You think there were others? |
35784 | You''re not going to Paris now-- not this night? |
35784 | You''re quite sure of that,_ ma fille_? |
35784 | You''re quite sure there was a boat, Wingate? |
35784 | You''re sure you''ll be able? |
35784 | You''ve been to the Ferry, then? |
35784 | You''ve done something to keep him quiet? |
35784 | Your waterman, sir, Wingate, says he''d like to see you, if convenient? |
35784 | _ Chat maudit!_ But what has that to do with your daughter''s going to the Ferry? |
35784 | _ Comment?_ Explain! |
35784 | _ Le bagage bien arrangé?_"_ Parfaitement_; or, as we say in English, neat as a trivet. 35784 _ Moi aussi!_ Who,_ Père_? |
35784 | _ Oui, m''ssieu; oui._"When is it to be? |
35784 | _ Oui._"When? |
35784 | _ Quelque chose à tort?_"More than that. 35784 _ Vraiment!_ I ask you again-- have you thought of anything, Gregoire?" |
35784 | A gentle tapping at the door tells him the triangle is touched; and, responding to the signal, he calls out,--"That you, Jack Wingate? |
35784 | A nate thing, and a close shave, was n''t it? |
35784 | Above all, who are the men in it? |
35784 | Above all, why her distraught look, with the sigh accompanying it, as the baronet''s son went galloping out of the gate? |
35784 | After a sip, he resumes speech with the remark,--"If I mistake not, you are a poor man, Monsieur Dempsey?" |
35784 | After a time it occurs to him he has been spoken to, and asks,--"What did you observe, Wingate?" |
35784 | After a time, he again observes,--"You''ve said you do n''t know the ladies we''ve helped out of their little trouble?" |
35784 | After all, what do it matter-- only a bit o''weed?" |
35784 | All I said was, that somebody thinks so; and that is n''t I. Shall I tell you who it is?" |
35784 | All that can be said is, she disappeared on the night of the ball, without telling any one; no trace left behind-- except----""Except what?" |
35784 | Am I not right? |
35784 | Am I, indeed, to pass the remainder of my days within this dismal cell? |
35784 | An''if I an''t astray, he be the one your Reverence thinks would not be any the worse o''a wettin''?" |
35784 | An''t she a bewty? |
35784 | An''t she?" |
35784 | An''what d''ye want wi''me?" |
35784 | And a pretty sight it is, is n''t it? |
35784 | And d''y''spose I did n''t obsarve them glances exchanged twixt you and the salmon fisher-- sly, but, for all that, hot as streaks o''fire? |
35784 | And d''ye think I did n''t see Mr. Whitecap going down, afore ye thought o''a row yerself? |
35784 | And did not thy limpid waters bathe the feet of Fair Rosamond, in childhood''s days, when she herself was pure? |
35784 | And having gone so, the questions are, why, and whither? |
35784 | And how is she to give it, with least pain to him? |
35784 | And if other, what its business? |
35784 | And if suicide, why? |
35784 | And is it not for him they are there; risking liberty-- it may be life? |
35784 | And the cry heard so soon after? |
35784 | And the quarrel-- how did it end? |
35784 | And this very day, what meant Mr. Shenstone by that sudden and abrupt departure? |
35784 | And was in the water some time?" |
35784 | And what but the body of Gwendoline Wynn? |
35784 | And what can be keeping_ her_? |
35784 | And who?" |
35784 | And why am I to rejoice?" |
35784 | And why should n''t she, Père Rogier? |
35784 | And you think she will be able to obtain the information, without in any way compromising herself?" |
35784 | Anyhow, he''ll want her to go down to them grand doin''s at Llangorren Court?" |
35784 | Are you sure of that, Father Rogier?" |
35784 | As he is not questioned about these, why should he? |
35784 | As he stands with eyes glaring upon them, he is again accosted by his inquisitive acquaintance, who asks:"What''s the matter, Jawge? |
35784 | Be''t anybody ha''stoled the things out o''the boat? |
35784 | Bean''t there somethin''amiss?" |
35784 | Beast, bird, or fish?" |
35784 | Being so observant, I wonder if this everybody has also observed how I receive them?" |
35784 | Besides, is he not back there-- come of his own accord-- to confront his accusers, if any there still be? |
35784 | Brought up under the_ regimé_ of Louis and trained in the school of Eugenie, why need she fear either social slight or exclusion? |
35784 | But Mahon, drawing them for himself, says searchingly--"Then you have a suspicion there''s been what''s commonly called foul play?" |
35784 | But can it be the priest who is in it? |
35784 | But has she been borne off by force, or went she willingly? |
35784 | But have you any thoughts as to how we should proceed?" |
35784 | But how came I to it? |
35784 | But how could she think that? |
35784 | But how does it corrupt them?" |
35784 | But how have I come into it? |
35784 | But how is it to be hindered?" |
35784 | But how, your Reverence? |
35784 | But if only one, and that her, what of himself? |
35784 | But speaking seriously, Ryecroft, as you say you''re on business, may I know its nature?" |
35784 | But the Cognac? |
35784 | But the latter-- is it still alive and flourishing? |
35784 | But the time? |
35784 | But what am I thinkin''o''? |
35784 | But what do you conclude from its not having been?" |
35784 | But what is beauty to her with all these adjuncts? |
35784 | But what its width or depth, compared with that other something between? |
35784 | But what led ye to think he ha''been also in the housebreakin''line?" |
35784 | But what matters it? |
35784 | But what''s brought you to Boulogne?" |
35784 | But what''s the use of talking of a thing not likely to happen?" |
35784 | But what''s your argument?" |
35784 | But where are they? |
35784 | But where is the other, the false one? |
35784 | But whither?" |
35784 | But who in the deuce is the gentleman? |
35784 | But whom do you suspect?" |
35784 | But why be you so partic''lar about my goin''out-- this night more''n any other?" |
35784 | But why do ye ask? |
35784 | But why on each and every occasion has he found a gentleman there-- the same every time-- George Shenstone by name? |
35784 | But you surely do n''t suppose I could think of him as a sweetheart? |
35784 | But, maybe, I make too free, asking your business in Boulogne?" |
35784 | By the way, I hear you''re about to have grand doings at the Court-- a ball, and what not?" |
35784 | By the way, have I got my purse with me?" |
35784 | By the way, what have you got in that black jack?" |
35784 | Can I?" |
35784 | Can she be English? |
35784 | Can the chasm which angry words have created be bridged over? |
35784 | Can you?" |
35784 | Controlling it, the other asks, with diminished interest, still earnestly,--"What leads you to think that way, Wingate? |
35784 | D''d ye hear that, Captain?" |
35784 | Did n''t I, your Reverence? |
35784 | Did n''t it strike you so, Nelly?" |
35784 | Do n''t you think so?" |
35784 | Do you chance to know him?" |
35784 | Do you know where you can borrow such, or hire it?" |
35784 | Do you really mean that, Captain Ryecroft?" |
35784 | Does any one know who was his boatman?" |
35784 | Does he live at Llangorren? |
35784 | Does n''t it?" |
35784 | Dreaming? |
35784 | Dropped, of course; but under what circumstances? |
35784 | Dropping egg and cup, in stark astonishment, she demands:"What do you mean, Gibbons?" |
35784 | Dublin is his native place; but what would or could he now do there? |
35784 | Even if it were, you seem to forget that her mother, father-- all of them-- must have been cognizant of these facts-- if facts?" |
35784 | Fell from a foot plank, you told me? |
35784 | Flirting while engaged-- what might she do when married? |
35784 | For himself? |
35784 | For its solution he appeals to Ryecroft, asking,--"How about the moon?" |
35784 | For what are either now to him? |
35784 | George Shenstone? |
35784 | Giving the lurcher a kick to quiet the animal, he pulls back the bolt, and draws open the door, as he does so asking,"That you, Father Rogier?" |
35784 | Ha''the thing been cut off, or pulled up?" |
35784 | Ha''ye larned anythin''''bout him o''late?" |
35784 | Has any occurred to you, Gregoire?" |
35784 | Has it indeed carried away Gwen Wynn? |
35784 | Have I hit the nail upon the head?" |
35784 | Have I not played it to perfection?" |
35784 | Have you a reason?" |
35784 | Have you any idea of the reason, Nelly?" |
35784 | Have you any idea?" |
35784 | Have you?" |
35784 | He does not wait for her to speak; but asks excitedly:--"What''s the matter, mother?" |
35784 | He does so, asking:"But, Miss Gwen, what will your aunt say to it? |
35784 | He is himself interrogated the instant after, thus,--"You see that shadowed spot under the bank-- by the wall?" |
35784 | He''s shown the white feather?" |
35784 | He, however, has no doubt of it, muttering to himself,--"Wonder whose boat can be on the river this time o''night-- mornin'', I ought to say? |
35784 | Her face in the glass-- what the expression upon it? |
35784 | Her reflection followed by the inquiry, called out--"_ C''est vous, mon mari?_""Of course it is. |
35784 | His name, of course; but what the destination? |
35784 | His name?" |
35784 | His reverence is a Frenchman, is he?" |
35784 | How are the other twenty being spent? |
35784 | How are they to be occupied? |
35784 | How came he intwoduced at Llangowen?" |
35784 | How can she expect him to have resisted, or that his heart is still whole? |
35784 | How comes it to have been there in the summer- house? |
35784 | How could I expect or hope he would? |
35784 | How could he help? |
35784 | How could he otherwise? |
35784 | How could he while his young mistress lived? |
35784 | How could he, while so keenly suffering it for her? |
35784 | How could it be otherwise? |
35784 | How could she have lived throughout all that? |
35784 | How could there, since the younger addresses the older as"uncle"; himself in return being styled"nevvy"? |
35784 | How could there? |
35784 | How could there?" |
35784 | How could they otherwise? |
35784 | How could they? |
35784 | How else is her disappearance to be accounted for? |
35784 | How far?" |
35784 | How has she been taking it?" |
35784 | How is it you have n''t gone?" |
35784 | How is the odd time being spent by him? |
35784 | I han''t heerd her name; what be it?" |
35784 | I intend starting off within the hour, and, expecting a letter of some importance, may I ask you to glance over them again?" |
35784 | I merely wished to knaw who Mr. White Cap is?" |
35784 | I suppose leverets are plentiful just now, and easily caught, since they can no longer retreat to the standing corn?" |
35784 | I suppose she thought I''d gone to my room, and did n''t wish to disturb me? |
35784 | I suppose the train will be starting in a few minutes?" |
35784 | I suppose you''ve heard?" |
35784 | I take it they''re sufficient for reaching either bank of this river, supposing the skiff to get capsized, and you in it?" |
35784 | I think you told me she often accompanies him down to the boat stair at his departure?" |
35784 | I was only wondering why Miss Gwen-- that is, I am a little astonished-- but-- perhaps you''ll think it impertinent of me to ask another question?" |
35784 | If I mistake not, you can swim like a fish?" |
35784 | If I''ve been rightly informed, Miss Wynn, it belongs to a relative of yours?" |
35784 | If questioned about these commodities, what answer is he to make? |
35784 | If you do n''t expect pleasure there, for what should you be in such haste to reach it? |
35784 | In what does Mrs. Murdock differ from the rest of your Herefordshire fair?" |
35784 | In what way? |
35784 | Indirectly, then? |
35784 | Instead, it but adds to her bewilderment, and she once more exclaims, almost repeating herself,--"Am I myself? |
35784 | Instead, why not in angry spite fling it off-- as it has me? |
35784 | Instead, with simulated calmness, he says:"Suppose I step out and see whether she be near at hand?" |
35784 | Into France, too; for surely am I there? |
35784 | Is it a dream? |
35784 | Is it a sin? |
35784 | Is it growing? |
35784 | Is it hare?" |
35784 | Is it labelled?" |
35784 | Is it possible-- so early?" |
35784 | Is it possible?" |
35784 | Is it so, my son? |
35784 | Is it true?" |
35784 | Is n''t that so?" |
35784 | Is that true, Gwendoline? |
35784 | Is the priest jesting? |
35784 | Is there any harm in it?" |
35784 | Is there anything else you think of?" |
35784 | Is there thought of it in her heart-- for him? |
35784 | It is Miss Wynn who has commenced it, saying,--"You''ll come up to the house, and let me introduce you to my aunt?" |
35784 | It is all gone?" |
35784 | It is of him the priest speaks as king,--"Has he signed the will?" |
35784 | It is the lady who speaks first:--"I understand you''ve been but a short while resident in our neighbourhood, Captain Ryecroft?" |
35784 | It is to"blight his life''s bloom,"leaving him"an age all winters?" |
35784 | It''s but natural I should love our beautiful Wye-- I, born on its banks, brought up on them, and, I suppose, likely to----""What?" |
35784 | Jack?" |
35784 | Knaw him?" |
35784 | Less from observing his abstraction, than the slow, negligent movements of his knife and fork, the mother asks--"What''s the matter with ye, Jack? |
35784 | Let me see-- was it? |
35784 | Let me see; when will that be?" |
35784 | Madame la Chatelaine oblivious, I apprehend; in the midst of her afternoon nap?" |
35784 | May I ask what it is?" |
35784 | May I ask who is this_ she_ you''re soliloquising about? |
35784 | May I know them?" |
35784 | Maybe,"he continues, in a tone of confidential suggestion,"there be somebody as you think ought to get a duckin''beside myself?" |
35784 | Might_ he_ be a cousin?" |
35784 | Miss Wynn?" |
35784 | Mr. Murdock''s a character, then?" |
35784 | Murdock has himself come easily by it, and why should he not be made as easily to part with it? |
35784 | Murdock?" |
35784 | Musgrave?" |
35784 | Musgrave?" |
35784 | Need I tell you who sent it, Richard Dempsey?" |
35784 | No enemy, I hope?" |
35784 | Not Monsieur Shenstone, after all?" |
35784 | Not alone, I take it?" |
35784 | Not much in the manner, I should say; but altogether the contrary,"she laughs, adding--"And how do you like our Wye?" |
35784 | Not on the sick list, I hope?" |
35784 | Not receiving immediate answer, Ellen again asked--"Is there any danger you fear?" |
35784 | Not the Captain?" |
35784 | Now, Captain, what do ye think o''the whole thing?" |
35784 | Now, Jack, whose boat could that be if it wa''nt your''n?" |
35784 | Now, Monsieur, do you comprehend me?" |
35784 | Odd succession of events, is it not?" |
35784 | Of course you''ll stay, gentlemen? |
35784 | Only with my life? |
35784 | Only, who these redemptionists are that take such interest in my spiritual welfare, and how I have come to be here, surely I may know?" |
35784 | Or am I mad? |
35784 | Or am I to wait for''em here?" |
35784 | Or have my senses indeed forsaken me?" |
35784 | Or in that face, dark and disfigured, who could recognise the once radiant countenance of Llangorren''s young heiress? |
35784 | Or is it insanity?" |
35784 | Or is there yet a chance of reconciliation? |
35784 | Or would ye rather be took on up to the town? |
35784 | Or, stepping off, does he spurn the boat with angry heel, as in angry speech he has done her whose name it bears? |
35784 | Out at this hour?" |
35784 | Perhaps in Paris? |
35784 | Perhaps you''ll extend it, and favour me with the lady''s name? |
35784 | Rang no bell? |
35784 | Ryecroft smiles, further interrogating:--"What have you heard of her?" |
35784 | S''pose we gie''em a capsize?" |
35784 | S''pose we slide after, and see where she hangs out?" |
35784 | Sadness, or joy? |
35784 | Saying which, she slips several shillings into his hand, adding, as she notes the effect--"Do you think it sufficiently heavy? |
35784 | Shall I call him in?" |
35784 | Shall I run down to the boat- dock and see?" |
35784 | She mayent like you young ladies to go rowin''by yourselves? |
35784 | She''s at home, is n''t she?" |
35784 | Shenstone?" |
35784 | Shenstone?" |
35784 | Shenstone?" |
35784 | Should ye like take a drop o''somethin''''fores you lie down?" |
35784 | Sidling up to the girl, he asks, in a tone which tells of lovers_ en rapport_, mutually, unmistakably--"When, Mary?" |
35784 | So, my boy, you perceive the necessity of our acting with caution in this business, whatever trouble or time it may take-- don''t you?" |
35784 | Some business?" |
35784 | Some of your old English_ bonnes amies_, I suppose?" |
35784 | Something happened between you, eh?" |
35784 | Something wrong?" |
35784 | Soon again he resumes his conjectured soliloquy:--"''Tan''t possible she ha''been to the Ferry, an''goed back again? |
35784 | Suppose I write a note requesting his presence, with explanations?" |
35784 | Suppose hers should some day go to the bottom, she being in it?" |
35784 | Suppose we do?" |
35784 | Surely I''d have heard it? |
35784 | Surely it can not come from any of the sisters? |
35784 | Surely our oaks, elms, and poplars can not be compared with the tall palms and graceful tree ferns of the tropics?" |
35784 | Surely she has been found?" |
35784 | Surely the Captain is not going to call on Mr. Lewin Murdock-- in amicable intercourse? |
35784 | Surely you arn''t goin''out again the night?" |
35784 | Surely, not a pleasure excursion, at such an unreasonable hour-- night just drawing down? |
35784 | Taking her seat, she asks:"Where''s Gwen?" |
35784 | Tell me why I am here?" |
35784 | That appears too early for the after event? |
35784 | The balin''pan, or that bit o''cushion in the stern?" |
35784 | The boat coming back? |
35784 | The first is,--"You''re not afraid of water, are you, Dick?" |
35784 | The longer before fishing the thing up, the better it will be for our purposes: you comprehend?" |
35784 | The same name, you''re sure?" |
35784 | Then adding, as he observes a young man leap down from the box where he has had seat beside the driver,"Part of your belongings, is n''t he?" |
35784 | Then succeeds inquiry as to how the death has been brought about; whether it be a case of suicide or assassination? |
35784 | Then why be ye looking so black?" |
35784 | There han''t been nobody to the house-- has there?" |
35784 | They hold their_ téte- à- téte_ there at times, do they?" |
35784 | They may not know where I am? |
35784 | Three of them-- that at least in curious correspondence? |
35784 | To the first,''How?'' |
35784 | True there will be four against two; but what of it? |
35784 | True, your Wye is subject to sudden floods; might it have aught to do with them?" |
35784 | Turning savagely on Ryecroft, he stammers out--"Hic-- ic-- who the blazes be you, Mr. White Cap? |
35784 | Upon what do you base them?" |
35784 | WHAT DOES HE WANT? |
35784 | WHAT DOES HE WANT? |
35784 | Waked for two days, as I understood you; then laid in her grave? |
35784 | Was n''t it a little strange?" |
35784 | Was n''t it,_ chèrie_?" |
35784 | Was the girl good looking?" |
35784 | Well, what''d I best do? |
35784 | What answer did you gie to the man?" |
35784 | What are your own thoughts about it, Jack?" |
35784 | What are your reasons for doubting it?" |
35784 | What boat could have been there but his own? |
35784 | What can I remember? |
35784 | What can he be doing down there? |
35784 | What care I?" |
35784 | What could it mean? |
35784 | What could it mean?" |
35784 | What did the sarvint say?" |
35784 | What difference whether he find the grave of his griefs in Paris or Boulogne-- if find it he can? |
35784 | What do I care?" |
35784 | What do you know of_ him_?" |
35784 | What for could have been angry words? |
35784 | What ha''become o''they?" |
35784 | What have you done with them?" |
35784 | What have you got to reward me for it?" |
35784 | What if there be some one on the road, or the river''s bank, and be seen in the act of capsizing his own boat? |
35784 | What is it? |
35784 | What is it?" |
35784 | What is such a man doing in Herefordshire? |
35784 | What is this barometer you seem to place such confidence in? |
35784 | What is to compare with that to come? |
35784 | What makes ye think he ha''been a forger?" |
35784 | What man in love, profoundly, passionately as he, could believe his last chance eliminated, or have his ultimate hope extinguished? |
35784 | What matter? |
35784 | What mean you?" |
35784 | What say you, Nell?" |
35784 | What say you, Wingate?" |
35784 | What should be my first pretence? |
35784 | What should we do to''em, Captain?" |
35784 | What sort of fellow is he?" |
35784 | What sort of place is it? |
35784 | What sort of sound?" |
35784 | What step do you wish me to take first?" |
35784 | What then? |
35784 | What then? |
35784 | What was it, pray?" |
35784 | What will_ they_ do?--and think? |
35784 | What would ye think o''my predecessor here bein''a burglar as well as smasher?" |
35784 | What''s cheerin''him? |
35784 | What''s that? |
35784 | What''s the hour now? |
35784 | What''s your idea, Mahon?" |
35784 | What, after all, if his suspicions prove groundless, and it turn out that Captain Ryecroft is entirely innocent? |
35784 | What, in Protestant England? |
35784 | What_ has_ occurred there?" |
35784 | What_ jeu d''esprit_ has he been perpetrating?" |
35784 | When I left the ferry, he was in the Welsh Harp, as I was told, tossing sovereigns upon its bar counter,''Heads and tails, who wins?'' |
35784 | When seated at the table, the Major asks,--"What on earth has delayed you, Vivian? |
35784 | When will it be over?" |
35784 | When, and where?" |
35784 | When? |
35784 | Whence all this plenty, within walls where of late and for so long has been such scarcity? |
35784 | Where do you suppose, mother?" |
35784 | Where is he who has both to be relied upon? |
35784 | Where is the beautiful woman, by both beloved, fondly, passionately? |
35784 | Where is the man who would not feel flattered, gratified, to be the shrine of such sacrifice, and from such a worshipper? |
35784 | Where is the man who would not rather know his sweetheart dead than see her in the arms of a rival? |
35784 | Where, and how, is one to be had? |
35784 | Where?" |
35784 | Where?" |
35784 | Where?" |
35784 | Whether in the country, or in a town among houses? |
35784 | Which did she go by-- the path or the lane? |
35784 | Which is she to take? |
35784 | Which quarter is she in? |
35784 | Which way did you come, Father Rogier-- the path or the lane?" |
35784 | Whither then? |
35784 | Who could fail to observe that pretty hand play, when you two were twining the ivy around the altar- rail? |
35784 | Who could''a carried it across the river-- that night especial, wi''a flood lippin''full up to the banks? |
35784 | Who dreams of that? |
35784 | Who else could it be? |
35784 | Who has brought me? |
35784 | Who is to do this? |
35784 | Who knows but that in a fit of drunken bravado he may stake the whole estate on a single turn of cards or cast of dice? |
35784 | Who says I do?" |
35784 | Who so circumstanced ever does? |
35784 | Who would n''t with such laws-- unrighteous, oppressive to the poor? |
35784 | Who, Père?" |
35784 | Who, then, is the owner of the brooch, bracelets, and other bijouterie? |
35784 | Who-- what is he?" |
35784 | Who?" |
35784 | Why all this? |
35784 | Why did I ever leave you?" |
35784 | Why did he not start earlier? |
35784 | Why do you wish that?" |
35784 | Why has it stopped there? |
35784 | Why is he not here? |
35784 | Why is it staying? |
35784 | Why not, Miss Wynn?" |
35784 | Why not?" |
35784 | Why should I not dissemble? |
35784 | Why should I?" |
35784 | Why should I?" |
35784 | Why should it? |
35784 | Why should she have gone outside? |
35784 | Why should that attract the attention of the young Herefordshire squire, causing him to start, as it first catches his eye? |
35784 | Why then should I cling to it? |
35784 | Why, may I ask? |
35784 | Why? |
35784 | Will ye let me wake her up? |
35784 | Will your Reverence enlighten me?" |
35784 | Within a mile of their own home, and still within the boundary of the Llangorren land, how could they think of danger such as is threatening? |
35784 | Wonder what it means? |
35784 | Wonder why she did n''t wake me up? |
35784 | Would you desire that?" |
35784 | Wyquoft-- Wyquoft, you say?" |
35784 | Ye remember my tellin''you, mother?" |
35784 | Ye see what comes o''sich as they humbuggin''about in a boat?" |
35784 | Ye understand me, mother?" |
35784 | Ye''ll remember the night we come up from the ball, my tellin''ye I had an engagement the next day to take the young Powells down the river?" |
35784 | Yet, would you believe it, Nelly, notwithstanding all, I sometimes have a strange fear upon me?" |
35784 | You comprehend?" |
35784 | You comprehend?" |
35784 | You do n''t expect the Father, our only visitor, to- night? |
35784 | You have it in the house, I hope?" |
35784 | You know his name?" |
35784 | You know the place-- you know the ring, too?" |
35784 | You mean Captain Ryecroft?" |
35784 | You really admire it?" |
35784 | You see that big poplar standing on the bank there?" |
35784 | You see that building below?" |
35784 | You see that?" |
35784 | You will, wo n''t you?" |
35784 | You''ll stand by me, Mahon?" |
35784 | You''ll stay to dinner with us, Father Rogier?" |
35784 | You''ll stay? |
35784 | _ Comprenez- vous, chèrie?_""_ Parfaitement!_ But how is it to be brought to a termination. |
35784 | a pleasure trip, I suppose?" |
35784 | an''t he, Jack?" |
35784 | and the men in it those whose names he had mentioned? |
35784 | cry both gentlemen in a breath, seeming alike vexed by the intelligence, Shenstone mechanically interrogating:"On the river?" |
35784 | ejaculated the Major, struck by the words, and their despondent tone,"what''s this, old fellow? |
35784 | groans the young girl in despair, flinging herself along the pallet, and for the third time interrogating,"Am I myself, and dreaming? |
35784 | he repeats, with a look of blank astonishment--"What the deuce does it mean?" |
35784 | nigh on the stroke o''eleven? |
35784 | she exclaims involuntarily, adding, in a timid whisper,"Was it, Gregoire?" |
35784 | she exclaims, as if pricked by a pin,"Mademoiselle to be married?" |
35784 | she exclaims, in feigned astonishment,"ye bean''t a comin''from the Ferry that way?" |
35784 | she exclaims,"what are we to do? |
35784 | the Morgans?" |
35784 | this time you_ have_ an errand? |
35784 | what d''ye mean?" |
35784 | what do it mean?" |
35784 | what is to become of me? |
35784 | what shall we do?" |
35784 | what way?" |
35784 | what''s going on at Llangorren?" |
35784 | where am I to find this means?" |
35784 | where?" |
35784 | who can tell? |
35784 | why did I not know it before?" |
35784 | would n''t you like to be sellin''her a pair of kids-- Jouvin''s best-- helpin''her draw them on, eh?" |
35784 | yonder''s a very different sort of pedestrian approaching it? |
35784 | you have learnt something since?" |
35784 | you know it?" |
35784 | you''ll break your journey here, and stay a few days with me? |
20585 | Have you hope? |
20585 | She looks on thee,cried he:"she the fairest, noblest; do not her dark eyes tell thee, thou art not despised? |
20585 | To which of these Three Religions do you specially adhere? |
20585 | What do I see? |
20585 | Which is the great secret? |
20585 | Why talk and complain; above all, why quarrel with one another? 20585 Wuotan?" |
20585 | & c.& c. Or again, has it often been the lot of our readers to read such stuff as we shall now quote? |
20585 | ''"But is it not the deepest Law of Nature that she be constant?" |
20585 | ''"But is not a real Miracle simply a violation of the Laws of Nature?" |
20585 | ''Again, could anything be more miraculous than an actual authentic Ghost? |
20585 | ''And yet, O Man born of Woman,''cries the Autobiographer, with one of his sudden whirls,''wherein is my case peculiar? |
20585 | ''But if such things,''continues he,''were done in the dry tree, what will be done in the green? |
20585 | ''But thou as yet standest in no Temple; joinest in no Psalm- worship; feelest well that, where there is no ministering Priest, the people perish? |
20585 | ''But what boots it(_ was thut''s_)?'' |
20585 | ''Detect quacks''? |
20585 | ''Do we not see a little subdivision of the grand Utilitarian Armament come to light even in insulated England? |
20585 | ''For whether thou bear a sceptre or a sledgehammer, art thou not ALIVE; is not this thy brother ALIVE? |
20585 | ''Gain influence''? |
20585 | ''Great practical method and expertness''he may brag of; but is there not also great practical pride, though deep- hidden, only the deeper- seated? |
20585 | ''How I lived?'' |
20585 | ''Hypocrisy''? |
20585 | ''I asked myself: What is this that, ever since earliest years, thou hast been fretting and fuming, and lamenting and self- tormenting, on account of? |
20585 | ''Is not Belief the true god- announcing Miracle?'' |
20585 | ''Meanwhile what are antiquated Mythuses to me? |
20585 | ''Nevertheless, need I put the question to any Physiologist, whether it is disputable or not? |
20585 | ''Of great Scenes why speak? |
20585 | ''Or thinkest thou it were impossible, unimaginable? |
20585 | ''There is not a leaf rotting on the highway but has Force in it: how else could it rot?'' |
20585 | ''To the eye of vulgar Logic,''says he,''what is man? |
20585 | ''Were it not wonderful, for instance, had Orpheus, or Amphion, built the walls of Thebes by the mere sound of his Lyre? |
20585 | ''What, for example,''says he,''is the universally- arrogated Virtue, almost the sole remaining Catholic Virtue, of these days? |
20585 | ''What, speaking in quite unofficial language, is the net- purport and upshot of war? |
20585 | ''Who am I; what is this ME? |
20585 | --He went out for the last time into the mosque, two days before his death; asked, If he had injured any man? |
20585 | A Voice, a Motion, an Appearance;--some embodied, visualised Idea in the Eternal Mind? |
20585 | A false man found a religion? |
20585 | A humble, solitary man, why should he at all meddle with the world? |
20585 | A man embraces truth with his eyes open, and because his eyes are open: does he need to shut them before he can love his Teacher of truth? |
20585 | A man that devotes his life to learning, shall he not be learned? |
20585 | A mean man he, how shall he reform a world? |
20585 | A new Adamite, in this century, which flatters itself that it is the Nineteenth, and destructive both to Superstition and Enthusiasm? |
20585 | A_ great_ man? |
20585 | Accordingly all persons, from the Queen Antoinette to the Douanier at the Porte St. Denis, do they not worship him? |
20585 | Again Thor struck, so soon as Skrymir again slept; a better blow than before: but the Giant only murmured, Was that a grain of sand? |
20585 | Again, leaving that wondrous Schwarzwald Smithy- Altar, what vacant, high- sailing air- ships are these, and whither will they sail with us? |
20585 | Again, what Cookery does the Greenlander use, beyond stowing- up his whale- blubber, as a marmot, in the like case, might do? |
20585 | Again, what may the unchristian rather than Christian"Diogenes"mean? |
20585 | Again,_ Nothing can act but where it is_: with all my heart; only, WHERE is it? |
20585 | Ah, does not every true man feel that he is himself made higher by doing reverence to what is really above him? |
20585 | Alas, is not this the history of all highest Truth that comes or ever came into the world? |
20585 | Alas, was not his doom stern enough? |
20585 | Alas, yes;--but as Cato said of the statue: So many statues in that Forum of yours, may it not be better if they ask, Where is Cato''s statue?" |
20585 | All crowns and sovereignties whatsoever, where would_ they_ in a few brief years be? |
20585 | Am I a botched mass of tailors''and cobblers''shreds, then; or a tightly- articulated, homogeneous little Figure, automatic, nay alive? |
20585 | Am I to view the Stupendous with stupid indifference, because I have seen it twice, or two- hundred, or two- million times? |
20585 | An unmetaphorical style you shall in vain seek for: is not your very_ Attention_ a_ Stretching- to_? |
20585 | And accordingly was there not what we can call a_ faith_ in him, genuine so far as it went? |
20585 | And did he not interpret the dim purport of it well? |
20585 | And if_ true_, was it not then the very thing to do? |
20585 | And indeed may we not say that intellect altogether expresses itself in this power of discerning what an object is? |
20585 | And knowest thou no Prophet, even in the vesture, environment, and dialect of this age? |
20585 | And now does the Spiritual, eternal Essence of Man, and of Mankind, bared of such wrappages, begin in any measure to reveal itself? |
20585 | And now in this sense, one may ask, Is not all worship whatsoever a worship by Symbols, by_ eidola_, or things seen? |
20585 | And now of you, too, I make the old inquiry: What those same unalterable rules, forming the complete Statute- Book of Nature, may possibly be? |
20585 | And now still, what hinders it from being the name of a Heroic Man and_ Mover_, as well as of a god? |
20585 | And now, for all this perennial Martyrdom, and Poesy, and even Prophecy, what is it that the Dandy asks in return? |
20585 | And then the''honour''? |
20585 | And then? |
20585 | And thereupon the unbelievers sneer and ask, Is this your man according to God''s own heart? |
20585 | And we call it''dissimulation,''all this? |
20585 | And what therefore is loyalty proper, the life- breath of all society, but an effluence of Hero- worship, submissive admiration for the truly great? |
20585 | And who are you that prate of Constitutional Formulas, rights of Parliament? |
20585 | And yet what were all Emperors, Popes and Potentates, in comparison? |
20585 | And yet withal this hypochondria, what was it but the very greatness of the man? |
20585 | And yet, thou brave Teufelsdröckh, who could tell what lurked in thee? |
20585 | Answer it;_ thou_ must find an answer.--Ambition? |
20585 | Are not all dialects''artificial''? |
20585 | Are not our Bodies and our Souls in continual movement, whether we will or not; in a continual Waste, requiring a continual Repair? |
20585 | Are not you yourselves there? |
20585 | Are they base, miserable things? |
20585 | Are they not Souls rendered visible: in Bodies, that took shape and will lose it, melting into air? |
20585 | Are we not Spirits, that are shaped into a body, into an Appearance; and that fade- away again into air and Invisibility? |
20585 | Are we returning, as Rousseau prayed, to the state of Nature? |
20585 | Are we to suppose that it was a miserable piece of spiritual legerdemain, this which so many creatures of the Almighty have lived by and died by? |
20585 | Art not thou the"Living Garment of God"? |
20585 | Art thou not tired, and beaten with stripes, even as I am? |
20585 | Art thou the malignest of Sansculottists, or only the maddest? |
20585 | As for the Old Woman, she was_ Time_, Old Age, Duration; with her what can wrestle? |
20585 | Ask now, What Paganism could have been? |
20585 | At a small cost men are educated to make leather into shoes; but at a great cost, what am I educated to make? |
20585 | Ay, what? |
20585 | Bad methods: but are they so much worse than our methods,--of understanding him to be always the eldest born of a certain genealogy? |
20585 | Ballot- boxes, suffrages, French Revolutions:--if we are as Valets, and do not know the Hero when we see him, what good are all these? |
20585 | Because the THOU( sweet gentleman) is not sufficiently honoured, nourished, soft- bedded, and lovingly cared for? |
20585 | Begging is not in our course at the present time: but for the rest of it, who will say that a Johnson is not perhaps the better for being poor? |
20585 | Besides, of what profit were it? |
20585 | Bright, nimble creatures, who taught_ you_ the mason- craft; nay, stranger still, gave you a masonic incorporation, almost social police? |
20585 | But alas, what help now? |
20585 | But call it worship, call it what you will, is it not a right glorious thing, and set of things, this that Shakspeare has brought us? |
20585 | But how came''the Wanderer''into her circle? |
20585 | But how shall we blame_ him_ for struggling to realise it? |
20585 | But how was this to be done? |
20585 | But if you ask, Which is the worst? |
20585 | But indeed that strange outbudding of our whole English Existence, which we call the Elizabethan Era, did not it too come as of its own accord? |
20585 | But is not this same looking through the Shows, or Vestures, into the Things, even the first preliminary to a_ Philosophy of Clothes_? |
20585 | But nobler than all in this kind, are the Lives of heroic god- inspired Men; for what other Work of Art is so divine? |
20585 | But now, intrinsically, is not all this the inevitable fortune, not of a false man in such times, but simply of a superior man? |
20585 | But what does the writer mean by''Baphometic fire- baptism''? |
20585 | But what next? |
20585 | But what of the awestruck Wakeful who find it a Reality? |
20585 | But what then? |
20585 | But what then? |
20585 | But what was her surname, or had she none? |
20585 | But whence?--O Heaven, whither? |
20585 | But why,''says the Hofrath, and indeed say we,''do I dilate on the uses of our Teufelsdröckh''s Biography? |
20585 | But would it be a kindness always, is it a duty always or often, to disturb them in that? |
20585 | But, alas, what vehicle of that sort have we, except_ Fraser''s Magazine_? |
20585 | By way of proem, take the following not injudicious remarks:''The benignant efficacies of Concealment,''cries our Professor,''who shall speak or sing? |
20585 | By which last wiredrawn similitude does Teufelsdröckh mean no more than that young men find obstacles in what we call''getting under way''? |
20585 | Can I choose my own King? |
20585 | Can a Tartar be said to cook, when he only readies his steak by riding on it? |
20585 | Can any Sovereign, or Holy Alliance of Sovereigns, bid Time stand still; even in thought, shake themselves free of Time? |
20585 | Can he not arrest for debt? |
20585 | Can not a man do without King''s Coaches and Cloaks? |
20585 | Can not we conceive that Odin was a reality? |
20585 | Can not we understand how these men_ worshipped_ Canopus; became what we call Sabeans, worshipping the stars? |
20585 | Can the man say,_ Fiat lux_, Let there be light; and out of chaos make a world? |
20585 | Can we not understand him? |
20585 | Come there not tones of Love and Faith, as from celestial harp- strings, like the Song of beautified Souls? |
20585 | Compared with any speaker or singer one knows, even with Æschylus or Homer, why should he not, for veracity and universality, last like them? |
20585 | Could she have driven so much as a brass- bound Gig, or even a simple iron- spring one? |
20585 | Creative, we said: poetic creation, what is this too but_ seeing_ the thing sufficiently? |
20585 | Death? |
20585 | Did Hero- worship fail in Knox''s case? |
20585 | Did he never stand so much as a contested Election? |
20585 | Did he not, in spite of all, accomplish much for us? |
20585 | Did not the Boy Alexander weep because he had not two Planets to conquer; or a whole Solar System; or after that, a whole Universe? |
20585 | Did that reverend Basket- bearer intend, by such designation, to shadow- forth my future destiny, or his own present malign humour? |
20585 | Did the Westminster Confession of Faith add some new property to the soul of man? |
20585 | Do not Books still accomplish_ miracles_ as_ Runes_ were fabled to do? |
20585 | Do not we feel it so? |
20585 | Do our readers discern any such corner- stone, or even so much as what Teufelsdröckh is looking at? |
20585 | Do we not see well enough how the Fable might arise, without unveracity on the part of any one? |
20585 | Does Legion still lurk in him, though repressed; or has he exorcised that Devil''s Brood? |
20585 | Does any reader''in the interior parts of England''know of such a man? |
20585 | Does like join itself to like; does the spirit of method stir in that confusion, so that its embroilment becomes order? |
20585 | Does not the following glimpse exhibit him in a much more natural state? |
20585 | Dost thou, does man, so much as well know the Alphabet thereof? |
20585 | Each one of us here, let the world go how it will, and be victorious or not victorious, has he not a Life of his own to lead? |
20585 | Effect? |
20585 | England, Scotland, Ireland, all lying now subdued at the feet of the Puritan Parliament, the practical question arose, What was to be done with it? |
20585 | Ever the constitutional Formula: How came_ you_ there? |
20585 | Every such man is the born enemy of Disorder; hates to be in it: but what then? |
20585 | Fame, ambition, place in History? |
20585 | Faults? |
20585 | For Matter, were it never so despicable, is Spirit, the manifestation of Spirit: were it never so honourable, can it be more? |
20585 | For have not I too a compact all- enclosing Skin, whiter or dingier? |
20585 | For is not a Symbol ever, to him who has eyes for it, some dimmer or clearer revelation of the Godlike? |
20585 | For our honour among foreign nations, as an ornament to our English Household, what item is there that we would not surrender rather than him? |
20585 | For this world, and for all worlds, what curse is so fatal? |
20585 | For what is it properly but an Altercation with the Devil, before you begin honestly Fighting him? |
20585 | For which reason it was to be altered, not without underhand satire, into a plainer Symbol? |
20585 | For which, as for other mercies, ought not he to thank the Upper Powers? |
20585 | Forger and juggler? |
20585 | From of old, a thousand thoughts, in his pilgrimings and wanderings, had been in this man: What am I? |
20585 | From of old, was there not in his life a weight of meaning, a terror and a splendour as of Heaven itself? |
20585 | From which is it not clear that the internal Satanic School was still active enough? |
20585 | Given your Hero, is he to become Conqueror, King, Philosopher, Poet? |
20585 | God has made many revelations: but this man too, has not God made him, the latest and newest of all? |
20585 | Had Teufelsdröckh also a father and mother; did he, at one time, wear drivel- bibs, and live on spoon- meat? |
20585 | Had not my first, last Faith in myself, when even to me the Heavens seemed laid open, and I dared to love, been all- too cruelly belied? |
20585 | Had these men any quarrel? |
20585 | Hadst thou not Greek enough to understand thus much:_ The end of Man is an Action, and not a Thought_, though it were the noblest? |
20585 | Hadst thou, any more than I, a Father whom thou knowest? |
20585 | Has he not solved for them the sphinx- enigma of this Universe; given assurance to them of their own destiny there? |
20585 | Has he not the power of articulate Thinking; and many other powers, as yet miraculous? |
20585 | Has it not_ been_, in this world, as a practised fact? |
20585 | Has not each man a soul? |
20585 | Hast thou not a Brain, furnished, furnishable with some glimmerings of Light; and three fingers to hold a Pen withal? |
20585 | Hast thou well considered all that lies in this immeasurable froth- ocean we name LITERATURE? |
20585 | Have any deepest scientific individuals yet dived- down to the foundations of the Universe, and gauged everything there? |
20585 | Have we not seen him disappointed, bemocked of Destiny, through long years? |
20585 | He asked of the Parliament, What it was they would decide upon? |
20585 | He can say to himself:''Tools? |
20585 | He courts no notice: what could notice here do for him? |
20585 | He exclaims,''Or hast thou forgotten Paris and Voltaire? |
20585 | He has the power of holding his peace over many things which do not vitally concern him,--"They? |
20585 | He is the fatal man; unutterably fatal, put in the high places of men.--"Why complain of this?" |
20585 | He was a great_ ébauche_, a rude- draught never completed; as indeed what great man is other? |
20585 | He was a weak child, they told him; could he lift that Cat he saw there? |
20585 | Hear in what earnest though fantastic wise he expresses himself on this head:''Shall Courtesy be done only to the rich, and only by the rich? |
20585 | Here, looking round, as was our hest, for''organic filaments,''we ask, may not this, touching''Hero- worship,''be of the number? |
20585 | Hero- worship,--Odin, Burns? |
20585 | Hero- worship? |
20585 | His love of Music, indeed, is not this, as it were, the summary of all these affections in him? |
20585 | His scorn, his grief are as transcendent as his love;--as indeed, what are they but the_ inverse_ or_ converse_ of his love? |
20585 | Homer yet_ is_, veritably present face to face with every open soul of us; and Greece, where is_ it_? |
20585 | Hot weather? |
20585 | How came he not to study his words a little, before flinging them out to the public? |
20585 | How came it that the Wanderer advanced thither with such forecasting heart(_ ahndungsvoll_), by the side of his gay host? |
20585 | How came it to evaporate, and not lie motionless? |
20585 | How can a man act heroically? |
20585 | How could a man travel forward from rustic deer- poaching to such tragedy- writing, and not fall- in with sorrows by the way? |
20585 | How could he? |
20585 | How could it else? |
20585 | How could the rude Earth make these, if her Essence, rugged as she looks and is, were not inwardly Beauty? |
20585 | How from such inorganic masses, henceforth madder than ever, as lie in these Bags, can even fragments of a living delineation be organised? |
20585 | How happens it that no intelligence about the matter has come out directly to this country? |
20585 | How is this; or what make ye of your_ Nothing can act but where it is_? |
20585 | How much does one of us foresee of his own life? |
20585 | How shall he stand otherwise? |
20585 | How shall_ he_ give kindling, in whose own inward man there is no live coal, but all is burnt- out to a dead grammatical cinder? |
20585 | How then could I believe in my Strength, when there was as yet no mirror to see it in? |
20585 | How then? |
20585 | How thou fermentest and elaboratest, in thy great fermenting- vat and laboratory of an Atmosphere, of a World, O Nature!--Or what is Nature? |
20585 | How to regulate that struggle? |
20585 | How was it, what was it? |
20585 | How was this? |
20585 | How will you govern these Nations, which Providence in a wondrous way has given- up to your disposal? |
20585 | How? |
20585 | However, that is not our chief grievance; the Professor continues:''Why multiply instances? |
20585 | Hypocrite, mummer, the life of him a mere theatricality; empty barren quack, hungry for the shouts of mobs? |
20585 | I do not assert Mahomet''s continual sincerity: who is continually sincere? |
20585 | I said that Imagination wove this Flesh- Garment; and does not she? |
20585 | I? |
20585 | If Hero mean_ sincere man_, why may not every one of us be a Hero? |
20585 | If he loved his Disenchantress? |
20585 | If he owed any man? |
20585 | If it prove otherwise, why should he murmur? |
20585 | If our era is the Era of Unbelief, why murmur under it; is there not a better coming, nay come? |
20585 | If so, what are those_ Prize- Questions_; what are the terms of Competition, and when and where? |
20585 | In Death too, in the Death of the Just, as the last perfection of a Work of Art, may we not discern symbolic meaning? |
20585 | In Pagan countries, can not one write Fetishes? |
20585 | In all that respects openness of Sense, affectionate Temper, ingenuous Curiosity, and the fostering of these, what more could I have wished? |
20585 | In all this what''hypocrisy,''''ambition,''''ca nt,''or other falsity? |
20585 | In fact, if a man have any purpose reaching beyond the hour and day, meant to be found extant_ next_ day, what good can it ever be to promulgate lies? |
20585 | In like manner, ask me not, Where are the LAWS; where is the GOVERNMENT? |
20585 | In such circumstances what was needed? |
20585 | In the commonest meeting of men, a person making, what we call,''set speeches,''is not he an offence? |
20585 | In the one sense and in the other, are we not right glad to possess it? |
20585 | In the same direction have not we their descendants since carried it far? |
20585 | In which country, in which time, was it hitherto that man''s history, or the history of any man, went on by calculated or calculable"Motives"? |
20585 | In which words, indicating a total estrangement on the part of Teufelsdröckh, may there not also lurk traces of a bitterness as from wounded vanity? |
20585 | Increased Security and pleasurable Heat soon followed: but what of these? |
20585 | Independence, in all kinds, is rebellion; if unjust rebellion, why parade it, and everywhere prescribe it?'' |
20585 | Influence? |
20585 | Is he not in most countries a tax- paying animal? |
20585 | Is it by short- clothes of yellow serge, and swineherd horns, that an infant of genius is educated? |
20585 | Is it even of business, a matter to be done? |
20585 | Is it of a truth leading us into beatific Asphodel meadows, or the yellow- burning marl of a Hell- on- Earth? |
20585 | Is it such a blessedness to have clerks forever pestering you with bundles of papers in red tape? |
20585 | Is not God''s Universe a Symbol of the Godlike; is not Immensity a Temple; is not Man''s History, and Men''s History, a perpetual Evangel? |
20585 | Is not Shame(_ Schaam_) the soil of all Virtue, of all good manners and good morals? |
20585 | Is not a man''s walking, in truth, always that:''a succession of falls''? |
20585 | Is not all work of man in this world a_ making of Order_? |
20585 | Is not every leaf of it a biography, every fibre there an act or word? |
20585 | Is not he a Temple, then; the visible Manifestation and Impersonation of the Divinity? |
20585 | Is not such a prize worth some striving? |
20585 | Is not that a sign?'' |
20585 | Is not this the sincerest yet rudest voice of the spirit of man? |
20585 | Is that a real Elysian brightness, cries many a timid wayfarer, or the reflex of Pandemonian lava? |
20585 | Is that a wonder, which happens in two hours; and does it cease to be wonderful if happening in two million? |
20585 | Is the Past annihilated, then, or only past; is the Future non- extant, or only future? |
20585 | Is the heroic inspiration we name Virtue but some Passion; some bubble of the blood, bubbling in the direction others_ profit_ by? |
20585 | Is the pitifullest mortal Person, think you, indifferent to us? |
20585 | It is like Pococke asking Grotius, Where is your_ proof_ of Mahomet''s Pigeon? |
20585 | It was Superstition, Fanaticism, disgraceful Ignorance of Constitutional Philosophy to insist on the other thing!--Liberty to_ tax_ oneself? |
20585 | Joyful to men as the dawning of day from night;_ is_ it not, indeed, the awakening for them from no- being into being, from death into life? |
20585 | Knowest thou none such? |
20585 | Knowest thou that"_ Worship of Sorrow_"? |
20585 | Let the Philosopher answer this one question: What figure, at that period, was a Mrs. Teufelsdröckh likely to make in polished society? |
20585 | Liberty of judgment? |
20585 | Lives the man that can figure a naked Duke of Windlestraw addressing a naked House of Lords? |
20585 | Man is called a Laughing Animal: but do not the apes also laugh, or attempt to do it; and is the manliest man the greatest and oftenest laugher? |
20585 | May we not call Shakspeare the still more melodious Priest of a_ true_ Catholicism, the''Universal Church''of the Future and of all times? |
20585 | Meanwhile, for Andreas and his wife, the grand practical problem was: What to do with this little sleeping red- coloured Infant? |
20585 | Meanwhile, the question of questions were: What specially is a Miracle? |
20585 | Meanwhile, what portion of this inconsiderable terraqueous Globe have ye actually tilled and delved, till it will grow no more? |
20585 | Men speak much of the Printing- Press with its Newspapers:_ du Himmel!_ what are these to Clothes and the Tailor''s Goose?'' |
20585 | Mighty fleets and armies, harbours and arsenals, vast cities, high- domed, many- engined,--they are precious, great: but what do they become? |
20585 | Mirabeau''s ambition to be Prime Minister, how shall we blame it, if he were''the only man in France that could have done any good there''? |
20585 | Miracles? |
20585 | Money? |
20585 | Morality itself, what we call the moral quality of a man, what is this but another_ side_ of the one vital Force whereby he is and works? |
20585 | Mother of God? |
20585 | Mother? |
20585 | Namely, that while the Beacon- fire blazed its brightest, the Watchman had quitted it; that no pilgrim could now ask him: Watchman, what of the Night? |
20585 | Names? |
20585 | Napoleon looking up into the stars, answers,"Very ingenious, Messieurs: but_ who made_ all that?" |
20585 | Napoleon''s working, accordingly, what was it with all the noise it made? |
20585 | Nay I may ask, Is not every true Reformer, by the nature of him, a_ Priest_ first of all? |
20585 | Nay here in these pages, such as they are, have we not two mere Poets, if not deified, yet we may say beatified? |
20585 | Nay not only our preaching, but even our worship, is not it too accomplished by means of Printed Books? |
20585 | Nay, a man preaching from his earnest_ soul_ into the earnest_ souls_ of men: is not this virtually the essence of all Churches whatsoever? |
20585 | Nay, at bottom, what else is alive_ but_ Protestantism? |
20585 | Nay, even for the basest Sensualist, what is Sense but the implement of Fantasy; the vessel it drinks out of? |
20585 | Nay, has not perhaps the Motive- grinder himself been_ in Love_? |
20585 | Nay, in any case, would Criticism erect not only finger- posts and turnpikes, but spiked gates and impassable barriers, for the mind of man? |
20585 | Nay, is it not what all zealous men, whether called Priests, Prophets, or whatsoever else called, do essentially wish, and must wish? |
20585 | Nevertheless, wayward as our Professor shows himself, is there any reader that can part with him in declared enmity? |
20585 | Nevertheless, which of the two was the more cunningly- devised article, even as an Engine? |
20585 | Nevertheless, you will say, there must be a difference between true Poetry and true Speech not poetical: what is the difference? |
20585 | Not so Cromwell:"For all our fighting,"says he,"we are to have a little bit of paper?" |
20585 | Not to pay- out money from your pocket except on reason shown? |
20585 | Notoriety: what would that do for him? |
20585 | O Heavens, is it, in very deed, HE, then, that ever speaks through thee; that lives and loves in thee, that lives and loves in me? |
20585 | Of Odin what history? |
20585 | Of a man or of a nation we inquire, therefore, first of all, What religion they had? |
20585 | Of all acts, is not, for a man,_ repentance_ the most divine? |
20585 | Of what station in Life was she; of what parentage, fortune, aspect? |
20585 | Oliver''s life at St Ives or Ely, as a sober industrious Farmer, is it not altogether as that of a true and devout man? |
20585 | Once more I say, sweep away the illusion of Time; compress the threescore years into three minutes: what else was he, what else are we? |
20585 | Only a torch for burning, no hammer for building? |
20585 | Or are we made of other clay now? |
20585 | Or coming into lower, less_ un_speakable provinces, is not all Loyalty akin to religious Faith also? |
20585 | Or even where is the use of such practical reflections as the following? |
20585 | Or has the Professor his own deeper intention; and laughs in his sleeve at our strictures and glosses, which indeed are but a part thereof? |
20585 | Or hast thou forgotten the day when thou first receivedst breeches, and thy long clothes became short? |
20585 | Or how, without Clothes, could we possess the master- organ, soul''s seat, and true pineal gland of the Body Social: I mean, a PURSE?'' |
20585 | Or indeed what of the world and its victories? |
20585 | Or is the God present, felt in my own heart, a thing which Herr von Voltaire will dispute out of me; or dispute into me? |
20585 | Or is this merely one of his half- sophisms, half- truisms, which if he can but set on the back of a Figure, he cares not whither it gallop? |
20585 | Or was there something of intended satire; is the Professor and Seer not quite the blinkard he affects to be? |
20585 | Or what of Scotland? |
20585 | Or, on the other hand, what is there that we can not love; since all was created by God? |
20585 | Our own Wednesday, as I said, is it not still Odin''s Day? |
20585 | Over- population: With a world like ours and wide as ours, can there be too many men? |
20585 | Peace? |
20585 | Perhaps also in the following; wherewith we now hasten to knit- up this ravelled sleeve:''But there is no Religion?'' |
20585 | Plummet''s? |
20585 | Popeship, spiritual Fatherhood of God''s Church, is that a vain semblance, of cloth and parchment? |
20585 | Possible? |
20585 | Precious they; but also is not he precious? |
20585 | Pure? |
20585 | Really his utterances, are they not a kind of''revelation;''--what we must call such for want of some other name? |
20585 | Reform Bill, free suffrage of Englishmen? |
20585 | Remarkable, moreover, is this saying of his:''How were Friendship possible? |
20585 | Rest? |
20585 | Said I not, Before the old skin was shed, the new had formed itself beneath it?'' |
20585 | Say it in a word: is it not because thou art not HAPPY? |
20585 | Seems it not at least presumable, that, under his Clothes, the Tailor has bones and viscera, and other muscles than the sartorious? |
20585 | Seldom reflecting that still the new question comes upon us: What is Madness, what are Nerves? |
20585 | Shall I not have all Eternity to rest in?" |
20585 | Shall we say, then, Dante''s effect on the world was small in comparison? |
20585 | She was a widow; old, and had lost her looks: you love me better than you did her?" |
20585 | Some one''s doing, it without doubt was; from some Idea, in some single Head, it did first of all take beginning: why not from some Idea in mine?'' |
20585 | Spake we not of a Communion of Saints, unseen, yet not unreal, accompanying and brother- like embracing thee, so thou be worthy? |
20585 | Stands he not thereby in the centre of Immensities, in the conflux of Eternities? |
20585 | Sure enough, I am; and lately was not: but Whence? |
20585 | Sword and Bible were borne before him, without any chimera: were not these the_ real_ emblems of Puritanism; its true decoration and insignia? |
20585 | Taxgatherer? |
20585 | Than which paragraph on Metaphors did the reader ever chance to see a more surprisingly metaphorical? |
20585 | That living flood, pouring through these streets, of all qualities and ages, knowest thou whence it is coming, whither it is going? |
20585 | That_ he_ stood there as the strongest soul of England, the undisputed Hero of all England,--what of this? |
20585 | The Age of Miracles past? |
20585 | The Atheistic logic runs- off from him like water; the great Fact stares him in the face:"Who made all that?" |
20585 | The Giant merely awoke; rubbed his cheek, and said, Did a leaf fall? |
20585 | The Overseer(_ Episcopus_) of Souls, I notice, has tucked- in the corner of it, as if his day''s work were done: what does he shadow forth thereby?'' |
20585 | The Poet indeed, with his mildness, what is he but the product and ultimate adjustment of Reform, or Prophecy with its fierceness? |
20585 | The Prophet too has his eye on what we are to love: how else shall he know what it is we are to do? |
20585 | The Time call forth? |
20585 | The Writer of a Book, is not he a Preacher preaching not to this parish or that, on this day or that, but to all men in all times and places? |
20585 | The builder_ cast away_ his plummet; said to himself,"What is gravitation? |
20585 | The crabbed old Schoolmaster used to ask, when they brought him a new pupil,"But are ye sure he''s_ not a dunce_?" |
20585 | The eye too, it looks- out as in a kind of_ surprise_, a kind of inquiry, Why the world was of such a sort? |
20585 | The first ground handful of Nitre, Sulphur, and Charcoal drove Monk Schwartz''s pestle through the ceiling: what will the last do? |
20585 | The human Reynard, very frequent everywhere in the world, what more does he know but this and the like of this? |
20585 | The light which now rose upon them,--how could a human soul, by any means at all, get better light? |
20585 | The poor old Mother!----What had this man gained; what had he gained? |
20585 | The rough words he articulated, are they not the rudimental roots of those English words we still use? |
20585 | The stirring of a child''s finger brings the two together; and then-- What then? |
20585 | The thunder- struck Air- sailor is not wanting to himself in this dread hour: but what avails it? |
20585 | The uses of this Dante? |
20585 | The voice of Prophecy has gone dumb? |
20585 | The withered leaf is not dead and lost, there are Forces in it and around it, though working in inverse order; else how could it_ rot_? |
20585 | The world''s heart is palsied, sick: how can any limb of it be whole? |
20585 | The world- wide soul wrapt- up in its thoughts, in its sorrows;--what could paradings, and ribbons in the hat, do for it? |
20585 | The''imagination that shudders at the Hell of Dante,''is not that the same faculty, weaker in degree, as Dante''s own? |
20585 | Then, have we not a Doctrine of Rent, a Theory of Value; Philosophies of Language, of History, of Pottery, of Apparitions, of Intoxicating Liquors? |
20585 | There are not wanting men who will answer: Does your Professor take us for simpletons? |
20585 | Therefrom he preaches what most momentous doctrine is in him, for man''s salvation; and dost not thou listen, and believe? |
20585 | These Limbs, whence had we them; this stormy Force; this life- blood with its burning Passion? |
20585 | These are Apparitions: what else? |
20585 | They are lamentable, undeniable; but after all what has Luther or his cause to do with them? |
20585 | They called him Prophet, you say? |
20585 | They say scornfully, Is this your King? |
20585 | Think, would_ we_ believe, and take with us as our life- guidance, an allegory, a poetic sport? |
20585 | Thinkest thou there is aught motionless; without Force, and utterly dead? |
20585 | This I call a noble true purpose; is it not, In its own dialect, the noblest that could enter into the heart of Statesman or man? |
20585 | This Rome, this scene of false priests, clothed not in the beauty of holiness, but in far other vesture, is_ false_: but what is it to Luther? |
20585 | This Universe, ah me-- what could the wild man know of it; what can we yet know? |
20585 | This body, these faculties, this life of ours, is it not all as a vesture for that Unnamed? |
20585 | This indeed is properly the sum of his offences, the essential sin; for which what pardon can there be? |
20585 | This is even what I dispute: but in any case, hast thou not still Preaching enough? |
20585 | This is the Work he and his disciples made so much of, asking all the world, Is not that a miracle? |
20585 | This night the watchman on the streets of Cairo when he cries"Who goes?" |
20585 | This was imperfect enough: but to welcome, for example, a Burns as we did, was that what we can call perfect? |
20585 | Thou art still Nothing, Nobody: true; but who, then, is Something, Somebody? |
20585 | Thou hast no Tools? |
20585 | Thou thyself, wert thou not born, wilt thou not die? |
20585 | Though all men walk by them, what good is it? |
20585 | Thought, true labour of any kind, highest virtue itself, is it not the daughter of Pain? |
20585 | Thus has not the Editor himself, working over Teufelsdröckh''s German, lost much of his own English purity? |
20585 | Thus, were it not miraculous, could I stretch forth my hand and clutch the Sun? |
20585 | Thy very Hatred, thy very Envy, those foolish lies thou tellest of me in thy splenetic humour: what is all this but an inverted Sympathy? |
20585 | Till it do come, what have we? |
20585 | Till we know that, what is all our knowledge; how shall we even so much as''detect''? |
20585 | To be Sheik of Mecca or Arabia, and have a bit of gilt wood put into your hand,--will that be one''s salvation? |
20585 | To the eye of Pure Reason what is he? |
20585 | To the"_ Worship of Sorrow_"ascribe what origin and genesis thou pleasest,_ has_ not that Worship originated, and been generated; is it not_ here_? |
20585 | To us also, through every star, through every blade of grass, is not a God made visible, if we will open our minds and eyes? |
20585 | True, you may well ask, What could the world, the governors of the world, do with such a man? |
20585 | Unhappy Teufelsdröckh, had man ever such a''physical or psychical infirmity''before? |
20585 | Utility? |
20585 | Want, want!--Ha, of what? |
20585 | Was Luther''s Picture of the Devil less a Reality, whether it were formed within the bodily eye, or without it? |
20585 | Was Teufelsdröckh also a fringe, of lace or cobweb; or promising to be such? |
20585 | Was her real name Flora, then? |
20585 | Was it Heathenism,--plurality of gods, mere sensuous representation of this Mystery of Life, and for chief recognised element therein Physical Force? |
20585 | Was it by the humid vehicle of_ Æsthetic Tea_, or by the arid one of mere Business? |
20585 | Was it his blame? |
20585 | Was it not the humble sincere nature of the man? |
20585 | Was it not the still higher Orpheus, or Orpheuses, who, in past centuries, by the divine Music of Wisdom, succeeded in civilising Man? |
20585 | Was it not_ true_, God''s truth? |
20585 | Was not such a Parliament worth being a member of? |
20585 | Was not the purpose so formed like to be precisely the best, wisest, the one to be followed without hesitation any more? |
20585 | Was not the whole Norse Religion, accordingly, in some sense, what we called''the enormous shadow of this man''s likeness''? |
20585 | Was she not to him in very deed a Morning- Star; did not her presence bring with it airs from Heaven? |
20585 | Was the attraction, the agitation mutual, then; pole and pole trembling towards contact, when once brought into neighbourhood? |
20585 | Was there so much as a fault, a"caprice,"he could have dispensed with? |
20585 | We all love great men; love, venerate, and bow down submissive before great men: nay can we honestly bow down to anything else? |
20585 | We ask in turn: Why perplex these times, profane as they are, with needless obscurity, by omission and by commission? |
20585 | We figure to ourselves, how in those days he may have played strange freaks with his independence, and so forth: do not his own words betoken as much? |
20585 | Well, answers Luther, what harm will a cassock do the man? |
20585 | Were I a Steam- engine, wouldst thou take the trouble to tell lies of me? |
20585 | Were they not indubitable awful facts; the whole heart of man taking them for practically true, all Nature everywhere confirming them? |
20585 | Were thy three broad Highways, meeting here from the ends of Europe, made for Ammunition- wagons, then? |
20585 | What Act of Legislature was there that_ thou_ shouldst be Happy? |
20585 | What Act of Parliament, debate at St. Stephen''s, on the hustings or elsewhere, was it that brought this Shakspeare into being? |
20585 | What English intellect could have chosen such a topic, or by chance stumbled on it? |
20585 | What am I to believe? |
20585 | What am I to do? |
20585 | What are all earthly preferments, Chancellorships, Kingships? |
20585 | What are all your national Wars, with their Moscow Retreats, and sanguinary hate- filled Revolutions, but the Somnambulism of uneasy Sleepers? |
20585 | What are the supreme lessons which he uses it to convey? |
20585 | What are your Axioms, and Categories, and Systems, and Aphorisms? |
20585 | What argument will avail? |
20585 | What built St Paul''s Cathedral? |
20585 | What cares the world for our as yet miniature Philosopher''s achievements under that''brave old Linden''? |
20585 | What could gilt carriages do for this man? |
20585 | What henceforth becomes of the brave Herr Towgood, or Toughgut? |
20585 | What indeed are faculties? |
20585 | What is Florence, Can della Scala, and the World and Life altogether? |
20585 | What is Life; what is Death? |
20585 | What is it? |
20585 | What is the chief end of man here below? |
20585 | What is the use of health, or of life, if not to do some work therewith? |
20585 | What made it? |
20585 | What make ye of your Christianities, and Chivalries, and Reformations, and Marseillese Hymns, and Reigns of Terror? |
20585 | What man''s heart does, in reality, break- forth into any fire of brotherly love for these men? |
20585 | What then? |
20585 | What we want to get at is the_ thought_ the man had, if he had any: why should he twist it into jingle, if he_ could_ speak it out plainly? |
20585 | What will become of your harvest through all Eternity? |
20585 | What will he do with it? |
20585 | What wonder it runs all wrong? |
20585 | What, for example, are we to make of such sentences as the following? |
20585 | What, for instance, was in that clouted Shoe, which the Peasants bore aloft with them as ensign in their_ Bauernkrieg_( Peasants''War)? |
20585 | What, then, is the moral significance of Carlyle''s"symbolic myth"? |
20585 | What, then, was our Professor''s possession? |
20585 | What_ is_ this unfathomable Thing I live in, which men name Universe? |
20585 | What_ will_ he do with it? |
20585 | Whatever wrongs he did, were they not all frightfully avenged on him? |
20585 | Whence comes it? |
20585 | Whence, then, their so unspeakable difference? |
20585 | Where, then, is that same cunningly- devised almighty GOVERNMENT of theirs to be laid hands on? |
20585 | Where, then, lies the evil of it? |
20585 | Whereby, is not spiritual union, all hierarchy and subordination among men, henceforth an impossibility? |
20585 | Wherefore, like a coward, dost thou forever pip and whimper, and go cowering and trembling? |
20585 | Wherein consists the usefulness of this Apron? |
20585 | Whereto? |
20585 | Whereupon the Professor publishes this reflection:''By what strange chances do we live in History? |
20585 | Whether they shall take him to be a god, to be a prophet, or what they shall take him to be? |
20585 | Which Englishman we ever made, in this land of ours, which million of Englishmen, would we not give- up rather than the Stratford Peasant? |
20585 | Which function of manhood is the Tailor not conjectured to perform? |
20585 | Whither goes it? |
20585 | Whither should I go? |
20585 | Who can refrain from a smile at the yoking together of such a pair of appellatives as Diogenes Teufelsdröckh? |
20585 | Who ever saw any Lord my- lorded in tattered blanket fastened with wooden skewer? |
20585 | Who is called there''the man according to God''s own heart''? |
20585 | Who is there now that can read the five columns of Presentations in his Morning Newspaper without a shudder? |
20585 | Who is there that, in logical words, can express the effect music has on us? |
20585 | Who knows but, in that same''best possible organisation''as yet far off, Poverty may still enter as an important element? |
20585 | Whom I answer by this new question: What are the Laws of Nature? |
20585 | Why can not he lay aside his pedantry, and write so as to make himself generally intelligible? |
20585 | Why could not Dante''s Catholicism continue; but Luther''s Protestantism must needs follow? |
20585 | Why is Idolatry so hateful to Prophets? |
20585 | Why mention our disquisitions on the Social Contract, on the Standard of Taste, on the Migrations of the Herring? |
20585 | Why not; what binds me here? |
20585 | Why not? |
20585 | Why of Shakspeare, in his_ Taming of the Shrew_, and elsewhere? |
20585 | Why should I speak of Hans Sachs( himself a Shoemaker, or kind of Leather- Tailor), with his_ Schneider mit dem Panier_? |
20585 | Why should the Prophet so mercilessly condemn him? |
20585 | Why should we misknow one another, fight not against the enemy but against ourselves, from mere difference of uniform? |
20585 | Why should we? |
20585 | Why was the Living banished thither companionless, conscious? |
20585 | Why, if there is no Devil; nay, unless the Devil is your God''? |
20585 | Will Majesty lay aside its robes of state, and Beauty its frills and train- gowns, for a second- skin of tanned hide? |
20585 | Will all the shoe- wages under the Moon ferry me across into that far Land of Light? |
20585 | Will the whole Finance Ministers and Upholsterers and Confectioners of modern Europe undertake, in jointstock company, to make one Shoeblack HAPPY? |
20585 | Wilt thou know a Man, above all a Mankind, by stringing- together beadrolls of what thou namest Facts? |
20585 | With spurious Popes, and Believers having no private judgment,--quacks pretending to command over dupes,--what can you do? |
20585 | Would he have all this unsaid; and us betake ourselves again to the''matted cloak,''and go sheeted in a''thick natural fell''? |
20585 | Writings of mine, not indeed known as mine( for what am_ I_? |
20585 | Yes, long ago has many a British Reader been, as now, demanding with something like a snarl: Whereto does all this lead; or what use is in it? |
20585 | Yet, at bottom, after all the talk there is and has been about it, what is tolerance? |
20585 | You will burn me and them, for answer to the God''s- message they strove to bring you? |
20585 | Your Cromwell, what good could it do him to be''noticed''by noisy crowds of people? |
20585 | Your harvest? |
20585 | _ Editorial Difficulties_ How to make known Teufelsdröckh and his Book to English readers; especially_ such_ a book? |
20585 | _ Is_ the work a translation?" |
20585 | _ Shooting Niagara: and After?_ 1867( from"Macmillan"). |
20585 | _ Was_ it not such? |
20585 | a little while ago, and he was yet in all darkness; him what Graceful(_ Holde_) would ever love? |
20585 | am not I sincere? |
20585 | and calls it Peace, because, in the cut- purse and cut- throat Scramble, no steel knives, but only a far cunninger sort, can be employed? |
20585 | cries an illuminated class:"Is not the Machine of the Universe fixed to move by unalterable rules?" |
20585 | cries he; what miracle would you have? |
20585 | exclaims Teufelsdröckh:''Have we not all to be tried with such? |
20585 | how did he comport himself when in Love? |
20585 | how should they so much as once meet together? |
20585 | infandum!_ And yet why is the thing impossible? |
20585 | said the Preacher, appealing to all the audience: what then is_ his_ duty? |
20585 | the fearful Unbelief is unbelief in yourself; and how could I believe? |
20585 | thou hast no faculty in that kind? |
20585 | what are they?" |
20585 | what is the sum- total of the worst that lies before thee? |
20585 | what is this paltry little Dog- cage of an Earth; what art thou that sittest whining there? |
20585 | why do I not name thee GOD? |
20585 | why journeyest thou wearisomely, in thy antiquarian fervour, to gaze on the stone pyramids of Geeza, or the clay ones of Sacchara? |