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 |
---|---|
59559 | Now are there any questions?" |
59559 | Were they communicating-- or was it something else? |
21251 | They attended no college commencements[?]. |
21251 | They lived in rich, elegant style[?]. |
21251 | Would not he and your father have enjoyed a meeting on the slavery question? |
38321 | How many dairymen have compared a circular, 40-cow barn with the common rectangular building containing the same area? |
38321 | Is not such a saving worth while? |
50420 | If corn was worth more outside of the steer than it was in the steer, the farmer argued, why feed cattle? |
50420 | STOCKMEN, ATTENTION Who Can Beat This Record? |
50420 | The question confronting the farmer at this time was:"Why did he continue growing corn and feeding cattle?" |
35275 | A strike did we say, for a Saturday pay- day? |
35275 | But why ask for particulars? |
35275 | Do you suppose that 50,000 or 100,000 men are going to starve and allow their families to die before their eyes without lifting a hand? |
35275 | Is it their fault that their employes do not all come back to them? |
35275 | It is naturally asked, therefore: Why this continued stoppage and stagnation in the building business? |
35275 | Now, last of all, what do we see at the Master Masons''headquarters? |
35275 | The Chicago union will not accept the offer, and where is it to get assistance from? |
45440 | Canst picture Lee and Stark or old Masheena? |
45440 | Or Pemoatam whose consistent pride Forbade him live beneath the Long Knives rule But whom afflictions blow could not withstand? |
45440 | Why then should the great State of Illinois not preserve our Cahokia group? |
31615 | _ Is n''t that an appalling fact? 31615 Do you think these girls( each one is known to the writer personally) have any chance for virtue? 31615 How can it exist? 31615 Is it any wonder when back of this great evil stands at least a hundred million dollars? 31615 What are We Going to Do About the Children? 31615 Who is responsible? 31615 Why does this infamy exist in our cities? 32017 They are running, are they not?" |
32017 | ( Doctor Taylor, what think you of this?) |
32017 | A comrade paused over him and said--"Can I do anything for you?" |
32017 | Does any comrade know anything about Lieutenant McKean''s burial? |
32017 | How would prohibition and Methodism go? |
32017 | Who shall decide when doctors disagree? |
32017 | Why did not the dying man die? |
32017 | Wo n''t I stay with you?" |
32017 | Wo n''t I stay with you?" |
17820 | Ca n''t I go see my mother, first? |
17820 | Why do you want to put that poor young girl in jail? |
17820 | And what better can we do than to live for others? |
17820 | I do n''t suppose the jury was out twenty minutes were they?" |
17820 | Lord, how long, how long?" |
17820 | Yet, how was I to make people believe? |
17820 | the overflowing thankfulness of my grateful heart at that moment, who could picture it? |
15221 | He says:"Where shall we look to recruit the ever- failing ranks of these poor creatures as they die yearly by the tens of thousands? |
15221 | Is it because our modern industrialism is so new that we have been slow to connect it with the poverty and vice all about us? |
15221 | Is it surprising that the average human nature of these young girls can not, in many instances, endure this strain? |
15221 | Which of the little girls of our land shall we designate for this traffic? |
38859 | How did you come by it? |
38859 | Now may I ask you one and will you be as frank with me as I have with you? |
38859 | The hell you say? |
38859 | Whose tobacco is that? |
38859 | Why did n''t they take it with them? |
38859 | Why did n''t you shoot them as they ran? |
38859 | Would you like to have some coffee for your breakfast? |
38859 | And how about the Gray? |
38859 | Have you any water?" |
38859 | I said,"Why did they not take the horses from you?" |
38859 | I said,"Yes, what''s the matter with you Johnny?" |
38859 | I turned and called Dr. Githens, and then said to Jack,"For heaven''s sake, Jack, where did you come from?" |
38859 | The general said,"I do n''t know, why do you say that?" |
35692 | And what was on him? |
35692 | And you got all that money, fourteen thousand dollars in greenbacks? |
35692 | Was that all? |
35692 | Can there be compensation for such unspeakable atrocities which take the best and leave the worst? |
35692 | I said:"Hank, what is the use of riding so fast?" |
35692 | Logan called out:"Boys, what is the matter?" |
35692 | So is it any wonder that I am glad to see you? |
35692 | Some asked:"What are you''ns goin''to do now? |
35692 | The general then turned to a Confederate officer who was present, and said:"Did you say the money was in the tin case?" |
35692 | The question throughout the South was:"Will the Northern man fight?" |
35692 | Turning again to Phelps, he said:"Well Phelps, what was the nature of the papers you got?" |
35692 | Upon our arrival Phelps was called before Logan who said:"Phelps, you got a horse yesterday when you were here, did n''t you?" |
35692 | Why not mount the infantry? |
35692 | Why was all this senseless wandering? |
44116 | But, sir, how many men did you have? |
44116 | Can a mother forget her sucking child? |
44116 | Did you ever stand picket before? |
44116 | How many men had Major McDonald? |
44116 | How many men had you, Major? |
44116 | If I sell you some chickens, sir, will you_ swear_ that you wo n''t steal my geese? |
44116 | Now, sir, what are you going to do for your gun? 44116 Well, sir, how many men will you have to bring those wagons in to- night?" |
44116 | But what did our boys care for their scorn? |
44116 | By whom was this terrible destruction of life? |
44116 | Coming towards the Doctor, she inquired,"Is there a Mason here?" |
44116 | Had some savage foe invaded our once happy and peaceful land? |
44116 | Is it to be wondered at that they were not overtaken? |
44116 | Says Major McDonald to Phillips,"What shall we do with these two men? |
44116 | Suppose I was the enemy, what kind of a fix would you be in?" |
44116 | What is the valuable information you have gained?" |
44116 | Where did the other seven days rations come from? |
44116 | _ Col._--"How many was there of them?" |
44116 | _ Col._--"Was that all? |
44116 | _ Col._--"Were they Yanks?" |
44116 | _ Doctor._--"Why, madame, what do you wish?" |
44116 | shoot them?" |
41663 | ''Well, sir,''said the commanding officer, who overheard him,''are you afraid?'' 41663 And what are you going to do now?" |
41663 | Listen,said the boy, as a second note answered the first;"do you hear that?" |
41663 | Or is it that you are fasting? 41663 The Indians? |
41663 | What are you doing, father? |
41663 | What for? |
41663 | What have you there? |
41663 | Where is Shaw- nee- aw- kee? |
41663 | Who are you? |
41663 | Why, what could you do? |
41663 | Yes,replied his sister, and after a few moments''silence,"do you not hear a rustling among the branches of the tree yonder?" |
41663 | As John was one day walking down the street, a gentleman from New York stopped him and said:"Are you not Johnny Kinzie?" |
41663 | Ca n''t you come and see me? |
41663 | Captain Wells, who was fighting near, beheld the deed, and exclaimed:"Is that their game, butchering the women and children? |
41663 | Do you think there is any chance?'' |
41663 | He said to me,''Do you think they will take our lives? |
41663 | Is it that you are mourning for the friends you have lost in battle?" |
41663 | Paul Greene 14---- James V__tworth(?) |
41663 | The question was, who would hazard his life to bring them to a place of security? |
41663 | This gentleman was the means of saving many lives on the warring(?) |
41663 | What could it mean? |
41663 | What? |
41663 | Where?" |
41663 | Who are you?" |
41663 | Why have you blackened your faces? |
41663 | Will you give me the whisky at all events?" |
41663 | what is that? |
44656 | All day long we have voyaged along the Atchafalaya with a wind from-- where? |
44656 | But how is it more people do not travel by water? |
44656 | But what will it do when the waves are really high? |
44656 | By some plausible story they gain admittance to the cabin and then--? |
44656 | Catch cold, turning out of a warm bed in January? |
44656 | Do the men engaged in it get to take a personal interest in it, as does the trainer of a race horse? |
44656 | For is not all of life simply a question of dollars, and success measurable only in the bank account? |
44656 | Here was an anxious thought-- would the old canal admit our boat? |
44656 | How are all of you? |
44656 | If not, what did they buy? |
44656 | Is it natural? |
44656 | Is it the usual lot of man? |
44656 | Is there any remedy for this complaint, except hard work? |
44656 | Pretty soon the Professor came over, and on seeing the hole in the pie bellowed in an awful voice:"Who took my pie?" |
44656 | Say, tired and listless brethren, do n''t you envy him? |
44656 | The people? |
44656 | The spirit of a man, and a man''s impatience of control-- but what would a boy be worth who did not feel thus? |
44656 | Then why is there no intelligent attempt made to study the question with a view to devising means of attaching him to the place? |
44656 | What are we that we should expect our own lot to be such an exceptional career of good fortune? |
44656 | What are we that we should look for an uninterrupted career of prosperity? |
44656 | What would Ricord have been had he remained in America? |
44656 | Whatchergivinus? |
44656 | Whence come the flies? |
44656 | Who is it said that the commerce of the Mississippi was a thing of the past? |
44656 | Why do people suffer from the winter north when they need not do so? |
44656 | Why is there so much land for sale? |
44656 | Would n''t you like to enjoy the anticipation of such a pleasure that much? |
44656 | Would we like to go again? |
46001 | By the way, Deacon,said Mr. Trevellyan,"what time do we start and which way do we go? |
46001 | (_ Does it._) And now where''s Willis? |
46001 | And how could she, at seventeen, be an Alton brakeman''s mother? |
46001 | And now tell me: with all the world to choose from, why on earth did you go to live at the bottom of that Iowa culvert? |
46001 | But how about your mother? |
46001 | But why did n''t you tell me? |
46001 | CEILA-- If it were, you''d have to execute all of us; but who would n''t fall in love with a railroad man? |
46001 | COUNSELOR-- And that is-- but who are you? |
46001 | COUNSELOR-- And who has dared to brave our high displeasure, And thus defy our definite command? |
46001 | Do n''t you know it''s death to marry a mortal? |
46001 | Gentlemen, what do you think of he? |
46001 | Have you a club handy? |
46001 | Have you settled which of you it is to be? |
46001 | How would you like to be a fairy ticket- taker? |
46001 | I suppose I should, madam----let me see,--what name have you decided upon? |
46001 | LEILA-- What is he? |
46001 | LEILA--(_Who has been attracted by the officers_)--Charming persons, are they not? |
46001 | My legs, I suppose, will die some day, and then what will be the use of my bust? |
46001 | O foolish fay, Think you, because his jacket gay My bosom thaws, I''d disobey Our fairy laws? |
46001 | PHYLLIS-- Because nobody else would have it? |
46001 | PHYLLIS-- How can it possibly concern me? |
46001 | PHYLLIS-- How did you secure the distinction? |
46001 | PHYLLIS-- I beg your pardon-- a what? |
46001 | QUEEN-- Am I tough? |
46001 | STREPHON-- But how about her guardian? |
46001 | Should you like to be a General Passenger Agent? |
46001 | Suppose we leave the choice to you? |
46001 | Thou livest, Iolanthe? |
46001 | WHAT IS IT? |
46001 | WHERE IS IT? |
46001 | WILLIS-- On the Chicago& Alton? |
46001 | Well, have you settled? |
46001 | What''s the use of being half a fairy? |
46001 | Who are you, sir? |
46001 | Why not stop this disgusting protégé of yours? |
36486 | Am I to believe,said he,"that God would cast me or any body else into hell, without giving me a revelation?" |
36486 | But do not the young saints learn the ten commandments,I demanded,"and especially the eighth,''Thou shalt not steal?''" |
36486 | But what will you take for it? |
36486 | Have you a map? |
36486 | In what direction from Palestine is America? |
36486 | Stop,I said;"does not the prophet describe the situation of the land? |
36486 | Very well,I replied;"now tell me in what direction from Palestine is Ethiopia?" |
36486 | Well,said my host,"that may be true; but is not America beyond Ethiopia?" |
36486 | What has become of our fathers? 36486 What price is that?" |
36486 | What,I replied,"do you mean those stripes across the dress of one of Jacob''s wives?" |
36486 | Who has taken your oars? |
36486 | Would you believe him if he should say that English is French? |
36486 | And do you see that big dog looking at the four figures? |
36486 | And how shall Christians effectually avert the calamity? |
36486 | Are they principally in the humble walks of life, or are they of some knowledge and understanding?" |
36486 | Do you see those four little figures? |
36486 | Enquiries are made in reference to other particulars: for example,--"What kind of people reside in this neighbourhood? |
36486 | I demand, therefore, what signs are given to prove his commission?" |
36486 | Now can you open my ears so that I may hear your arguments more distinctly?" |
36486 | Now do you see those steps?" |
36486 | Now to what land could this refer, but to North and South America, which stretched across the world with two great wings, like those of an eagle? |
36486 | Now what shall I think of your prophet?" |
36486 | What opinions have you formed as to the natural bent of their respective dispositions? |
36486 | What places of worship do they frequent? |
36486 | Where are the means which should be provided for the support of a learned clergy in the rising cities of the west? |
36486 | Where are the zealous missionaries who should be flocking to his assistance? |
36486 | Why? |
36486 | Will they be disposed to join us, or will they exercise an influence against us? |
36486 | Would you believe a man calling himself a prophet, who should say that black is white?" |
36486 | have n''t you got wet enough already?" |
36486 | some of the young Latter- day Saints?" |
36486 | will they be damned for not obeying the Gospel, when they never heard it? |
26561 | Adjutant,I said,"What does this mean-- our having to run this way? |
26561 | How are de poys? |
26561 | Huh,said he,"what is it?" |
26561 | Stillwell,asked Sam,"do you think we are going to have a fight?" |
26561 | Well, Allender,inquired Dr. Anthony,"egad, what''s the matter with you?" |
26561 | What did the Colonel say? 26561 What is that?" |
26561 | What regiment is this? |
26561 | What''s that? |
26561 | Where is he? |
26561 | ''John,''I said, speaking low,''what in thunder do you mean? |
26561 | Ai n''t that just perfectly bully?" |
26561 | Ai n''t we whipped?" |
26561 | And with whom hast thou left those few sheep in the wilderness?" |
26561 | But the lady walked towards us and said in a very kind and friendly manner:''Do you men want anything?'' |
26561 | But,--how in the world did I happen to miss him? |
26561 | D''ye moind that, now?" |
26561 | Enoch Wallace came to me and said:"Stillwell, are you going to try to carry your knapsack?" |
26561 | He looked up with an aggrieved air and responded in a tone of cruelly injured innocence,"Have n''t I the right to eat my r- a- a- tion?" |
26561 | He turned towards me, and tilting his can slightly to enable me to see the contents, spoke thus:"Now, ai n''t this nice stuff to give a sick man? |
26561 | I looked in the haversacks of some of the dead to see what they had to eat,--and what do you suppose was found? |
26561 | I said to him:"Enoch, what are those men there for?" |
26561 | I slipped out of ranks and approached the fellow, and when close to him said,"Partner, wo n''t you give me a hardtack?" |
26561 | I turned to Phil in a fury, exclaiming,"What in the hell and damnation do you mean?" |
26561 | I was filling my haversack with bologna when Col. Fry rode up to me and said:"My son, will you please give me a link of that sausage?" |
26561 | Looking at us very sharply, she asked:''Do n''t you men want something to eat?'' |
26561 | Must I just lie here and suffer indefinitely?" |
26561 | One day I said to him,"Doctor, is there nothing that can be done for me? |
26561 | Take care of my watch, will you? |
26561 | The officer scribbled in his note- book, then turned to me,"And yours?" |
26561 | What did that mean? |
26561 | What is that you say?" |
26561 | What should I do? |
26561 | What''s that?" |
26561 | What''s up, Stillwell?" |
26561 | What''s wanted?" |
26561 | Where is Sergeant Stillwell?" |
26561 | Who comes there?" |
26561 | Why do n''t you shoot?" |
26561 | and where had they come from? |
26561 | he exclaimed, as he extended his hand,"why comest thou down hither? |
45558 | And where are the soldiers of General Price? |
45558 | Are you a Confederate soldier? |
45558 | Brasher, did you know that those blankets you loaned me last night were filled with lice? |
45558 | How is it, General, that I see so many Union soldiers out here? |
45558 | What are you, then? |
45558 | What''s up? |
45558 | Where is your master now? |
45558 | Who is General Mitchell, and where is he? |
45558 | Why not move them to the assistance of our brave boys on the left? |
45558 | Why, no; were they? |
45558 | Another matter of discussion is,"where to, next?" |
45558 | As he fell, one of his officers sprang to his side, and inquired anxiously:"Are you hurt?" |
45558 | But here there was no other wood convenient, and the question with the boys was, how are we to make coffee? |
45558 | Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can make laws? |
45558 | Can any one satisfactorily explain the reason why our soldiers are restricted to a certain kind of food? |
45558 | Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens, than laws can among friends? |
45558 | G-- d d-- n you, do n''t you know sir, you should furnish me the exact number?" |
45558 | General Nelson then turned to Governor Morton and said:"By G-- d, did you come here also to insult me?" |
45558 | General Nelson-- violently to the bystanders--"Did you hear the d-- d rascal insult me?" |
45558 | General Nelson--"How many men have you?" |
45558 | How is it that I am here? |
45558 | How was the river to be crossed? |
45558 | In reply to"who comes there?" |
45558 | Is it possible, then, to make that intercourse more advantageous or more satisfactory after separation than before? |
45558 | Is the question an unreasonable one? |
45558 | Is this the hospital? |
45558 | Knowing all these things, why should they not anticipate a speedy termination to their soldier life, and enjoy in anticipation home society once more? |
45558 | Many were the inquiries,"Why are all these thousands of soldiers kept here idle all the day so near the battle- field?" |
45558 | Never again look upon the bright and cheerful faces of those I left behind me there? |
45558 | Now, then, what is the daily occupation of the inhabitants of these tents? |
45558 | Say, what is the meaning of this? |
45558 | Shall I never more behold it? |
45558 | That fellow in the dress of a Union soldier, what is he doing? |
45558 | The question is frequently discussed in camp,"Why are we not better provided for-- why are we compelled to live on hard bread and old bacon?" |
45558 | The question now arose,"how is the river to be crossed?" |
45558 | To lay in the shade here, and have slaves to wait on you-- what more could be desired? |
45558 | Undaunted, and ready for the battle as ever, they inquired:"Who will be our leader?" |
45558 | What does this mean? |
45558 | What is that fellow doing? |
45558 | Why do we not get it? |
45558 | Why not bury it with him? |
45558 | Why not provide the diet as a preventive to the disease? |
45558 | Why remain idle so long? |
45558 | Why should they not? |
45558 | Why was General Fremont removed from the command at this most auspicious moment? |
45558 | Why was it that General Buell did not reinforce that bravely defended garrison? |
45558 | Why was this retrograde movement to be made? |
45558 | Will it be believed? |
45558 | are they going to cut_ all_ our trees?''" |
45558 | said the planter,"and how came you here?" |
45558 | where the hell am I? |
23097 | I appeal to my colleague,he asked,"when did I ever before object to any bill which he was attempting to pass?" |
23097 | What is the alleged cause for this invasion of the rights and authority of the Government of the United States? 23097 Will Cooley take it?" |
23097 | An old soldier came up to speak to me, and glancing down toward the other end of the table, he asked:"Is n''t that old Harris of Tennessee?" |
23097 | And why? |
23097 | Are we to inaugurate this Mexican system in the United States of America? |
23097 | Can we permit nations foreign to us to collect revenues off our products, the fruits of our industry? |
23097 | Can we submit to taxation without representation? |
23097 | Do you really think that position will make votes for us this fall among the farmers? |
23097 | General Grant, hearing us, came into the room and said,"Julia, do n''t you remember that we received cards to the wedding?" |
23097 | Harrison is likely to have a pledged delegation from Indiana, but what good will it do him? |
23097 | He said:"And suppose after all that death does end all? |
23097 | How can we stand this loss of blood and men? |
23097 | How is that to be made good? |
23097 | How many farmers''votes will that give us? |
23097 | I inquired of him:"Who else are you going to appoint on that Commission?" |
23097 | I met Lincoln on the street one day, and said:"Mr. Lincoln, is it true that Douglas has a majority of the Legislature?" |
23097 | I said in opening:"Has Congress any power or authority, under the Constitution, over treaties? |
23097 | If this state of things is allowed to go on, how long before you will have the guillotine in active operation? |
23097 | Is it an honest commission honestly selected by the President of the United States as against a railroad company? |
23097 | Is it the President of the United States as against a corporation? |
23097 | Might we not, if things had turned differently, drifted into chaos and revolution? |
23097 | Morrill did so in these words:"Vest, what is the matter? |
23097 | Senators to support? |
23097 | Shall the Nation endure it longer? |
23097 | Shall we struggle on and on until the welcome day comes when his term shall expire? |
23097 | So Chandler went up to Proctor, and said:"Proctor, do n''t you like me?" |
23097 | That obstacle having been finally removed, the question which next arose was: What route should be selected? |
23097 | The President asked,"What is it about?" |
23097 | The court asked,"Who is Captain McClellan?" |
23097 | The question is often asked,"Who has succeeded Aldrich as leader of the Senate?" |
23097 | The question was:"Should the bill pass the veto of the President regardless thereof?" |
23097 | The vote was taken in the Senate:"Shall the Civil Rights bill pass the veto of the President to the contrary notwithstanding?" |
23097 | Then what is the proposition? |
23097 | What are these arguments? |
23097 | What evidence has been presented that they are insecure? |
23097 | What is the attempt now being made? |
23097 | When in the whole history of this Government have they stood on so firm a basis? |
23097 | When was the Fugitive Slave Law executed with more fidelity than since the inauguration of the present incumbent of the Presidential office? |
23097 | and turning to his Secretary of State, he added,"Seward, you remember my old friend Stuart? |
42830 | Why ca n''t you promise it? |
42830 | Will you make the same pledge about pool rooms,demanded the questioner quickly? |
42830 | :"If the hypothenuse of a right angle triangle is 35 feet and the base 21 feet, what is the altitude? |
42830 | :"What are the duties of Superintendent of Lamp Repairs? |
42830 | Another woman with whom the arrested woman was boarding asked,"What is the matter?" |
42830 | At 30 cents a square yard what is the cost of lining with metal a cubical room 13 feet long? |
42830 | But he was arrested by the Sheriff of Cook County, indicted by the grand jury because the police would not do it? |
42830 | But the pool rooms are running? |
42830 | But why tolerate the deliberate importation and cultivation of this strange oriental bestiality? |
42830 | Ca n''t you assist us in our troubles? |
42830 | Can any sprinter, carrying the same weights, surpass this achievement? |
42830 | Could not the police of the city of Chicago as readily have found these people who have been fined for gambling as the Sheriff? |
42830 | Did any of the 2,500 men ever report anything of that kind to you? |
42830 | Do these vicious vagabonds stand for the decency and intelligence of the party in Chicago?" |
42830 | Do you know of any pool rooms being conducted in this city during the months of October, November and December? |
42830 | Do you mean to say, as Chief of Police, with the men and money at your command, you ca n''t close the pool rooms? |
42830 | Do you say to this committee, that with 2,500 sworn men in this city you are powerless to stop the public running of pool rooms in this city? |
42830 | First, What sort of a Sheriff is he who will keep a man in jail, without a proper commitment? |
42830 | Having discovered them, their haunts, and their aids, if he does not already know of them, will he tolerate them any longer in this community? |
42830 | He then asked,"Did n''t you tell that to me?" |
42830 | How many lamps should a tinner complete in a day? |
42830 | How many pool rooms have you pulled, how many men have been arrested and convicted for pool selling since you have been chief? |
42830 | How many signs should an etcher complete in a day? |
42830 | If 24 gallons of water flow through a 2 inch pipe each minute how many gallons will flow through a 3 inch pipe under the same conditions? |
42830 | If a special assessment were levied and confirmed, what would your duty be to secure the erecting and lighting of the lamps? |
42830 | If it takes eight men five and one half days to make 100 lamps, how long will it take six men to make 350 lamps? |
42830 | If posts were to be erected how would you determine what class of posts would be required? |
42830 | Immediately he was asked,"Have you heard A. was arrested a number of times?" |
42830 | Is that the reason you wanted that stuff to go down there? |
42830 | Name the materials used in the construction of a street lamp? |
42830 | Name three essential qualifications requisite for a foreman?" |
42830 | On what part of the city property should those posts be set? |
42830 | One of the women asked,"What are you for?" |
42830 | The Chief stated the reporters were hounding him to death, when the woman asked him"why he did not show her statement?" |
42830 | They were giving the people a liberal government? |
42830 | Was there any complaint to you of that kind of thing being done? |
42830 | What do you do for your salary as Chief?" |
42830 | What experience have you had to qualify you for this position? |
42830 | What have you got against the people south of Jackson street? |
42830 | What is the capacity in gallons of a sphere 15 inches in diameter? |
42830 | What is the general duty of Superintendent of Lamp Repairs regarding repairs to lamps?" |
42830 | What is the length of the diameter of a circle whose area equals 1,386 square yards? |
42830 | What wonder that many believe the heart is rotten? |
42830 | Why should the police treat it so leniently? |
42830 | Will his continuous Superintendent of Police be further allowed to throw his kindly protection over them? |
42830 | You mean south of Jackson street? |
43631 | But--and she smiles some more--"what do you want, something rather young and new to the game, or a''woman of some experience?'' |
43631 | Damn you, you cheap cur; have you quit hustling or have you another man? |
43631 | --Terrible Examples.--Lure of the Life.--The Pace that Kills.--To the Woman: Death.--How about Your Daughter? |
43631 | AND THIS REEKING, DASTARDLY INFAMY HAS ITS PRICE? |
43631 | And why is Chicago the Hell- hole of the world? |
43631 | And why? |
43631 | Are you convinced that Chicago is the"wickedest city in the world"? |
43631 | Are you looking for more money? |
43631 | But-- WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT? |
43631 | CHAPTER V. What Will You Bid for This Woman? |
43631 | Can she walk out a free woman? |
43631 | Can the condition be remedied? |
43631 | Can they be measured in dollars? |
43631 | Can you see the invisible hand that is doping the racetrack sheet? |
43631 | Could Chicago have a deeper blot of shame, dishonor and disgrace on her escutcheon than the present police department? |
43631 | Could anything be more fiendish? |
43631 | Did they accomplish the work? |
43631 | Do the police dare tamper with these men flaunting their violations of the law in their faces? |
43631 | Do they fatten on the proceeds of this crime, free of trust- tribute? |
43631 | Do you realize that$ 15,000,000 is five per cent of$ 300,000,000? |
43631 | Do you see that"washed- out"bleached blonde with colorless eyes, who smiles at the drinking youth who sits with her? |
43631 | Do you think the friendly game of poker is on"the square"? |
43631 | Do you wonder that they sit hour after hour at a table guzzling beer with their drunken customers? |
43631 | How long, Oh God, how long? |
43631 | In the most defiled pages of the world''s history, can you find a parallel? |
43631 | Is it conceivable? |
43631 | Is it fair to hurl him into the midst of temptations without weapons to fight the demons of sin, crime, vice and corruption? |
43631 | Is it necessary to say why? |
43631 | Is it possible? |
43631 | Is that figure something to startle you? |
43631 | Is there any power that can dig down deep enough to uproot this crying evil? |
43631 | Is there hope that some day criminals may be locked behind barred doors that gold can not pick? |
43631 | It ends--? |
43631 | Mr.... the hotel clerk, tells me you can find me a companion?" |
43631 | Shall it go on interminably:--this reign of the triumvirate- Vice- Graft- Corruption? |
43631 | Surely, you say, these hotels do not figure in the great vice plot which exists in Chicago? |
43631 | The question,"Shall this city( Chicago) become anti- saloon territory?" |
43631 | Then why are they allowed to carry on their thieving trade and fatten on their ill- gotten gains? |
43631 | WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT? |
43631 | WHAT BECOMES OF THEM? |
43631 | WHEN AND WHERE WILL IT END? |
43631 | What Are You Going To Do About It? |
43631 | What agent will deny that to send voters out on the road to work at election time would mean ruin through the loss of his license to do business? |
43631 | What are their varied pasts? |
43631 | What do the agents of the White Slave Traffic pay to barter body and blood? |
43631 | What do you want? |
43631 | What is the result? |
43631 | What of the remaining? |
43631 | What strange circumstances brought them here? |
43631 | Where do these thousands of women come from? |
43631 | Who are their mothers and fathers? |
43631 | Who can depict the crying, aching hearts of these lost women of the levees? |
43631 | Who can imagine the physical pain of the eating, wasting diseases? |
43631 | Who can know of the sleepless nights, of the hours of remorse and despair? |
43631 | Who can really estimate the actual amount of graft reaped from sin which eats into the hearts of a lost and perished womanhood? |
43631 | Who can tell of the agonies undergone in their short existences? |
43631 | Who is accountable to God for this wholesale slaughter in women''s souls? |
43631 | Who shall bring it the"tidings of great joy"? |
43631 | Why are you police bothering me? |
43631 | Why not destroy these vicious people and close the dives and save people from committing suicide? |
43631 | Why not? |
43631 | Why then must others be sought out, trapped, brought, bound and tied, stood on the auction blocks of vice and sold to the thump of the gavel? |
43631 | Why? |
43631 | Why? |
43631 | Would she give her lips to the poison of the inhuman wretch who plots her death? |
43631 | Would she give her pure, white body to the abominations of the Vice Trust? |
43631 | Would she leap into the ever- present abyss? |
43631 | Would she take the first drink? |
43631 | Would you know the hideous truth? |
43631 | [ Illustration: EAT, DRINK AND BE MERRY... AND TOMORROW? |
42322 | And pray, let me ask, where do you intend that desirable operation to be performed? |
42322 | Anything to trink, shur? 42322 Is this proceeding just and honourable"towards that unfortunate race? |
42322 | What''s your_ name_, any how? |
42322 | Who gave you your invulnerable life, Your strength, your speed, your fury, and your joy? 42322 Will you be pleased, sir, to register your name?" |
42322 | Amid what terrible convulsion of the elements did these great ocean- plains heave themselves into being? |
42322 | And did the dust Of these fair solitudes once stir with life And burn with passion? |
42322 | Are they_ indeed_ to us no more than the dull clods we tread upon? |
42322 | Around the couch of suffering humanity, who could not outwatch the stars? |
42322 | But many a year of toil and privation must first have passed away; and who shall record their annals? |
42322 | But what pencil has wandered over the grander scenes of the North American prairie? |
42322 | But where is Joe Smith? |
42322 | But, with such an admission, what is the crowd of reflections which throng and startle the mind? |
42322 | By what race of beings was the vast undertaking accomplished? |
42322 | Can imagination boast, Amid its gay creations, hues like hers? |
42322 | Charles, Mo._ XXIII"Say, ancient edifice, thyself with years Grown gray, how long upon the hill has stood Thy weather- braving tower?" |
42322 | Clair Co., Illinois._ XV"Are they here, The dead of other days? |
42322 | France: who will aver that it was popular_ ignorance_ that rolled over revolutionary France the ocean- wave of blood? |
42322 | Has war, or famine, or pestilence brooded over these beautiful plains? |
42322 | Have we too many memorials of the olden time? |
42322 | Have we visited them with so_ many_ returns of kindness that this would overflow the cup of recompense? |
42322 | If knowledge, pure, defecated knowledge, be a conservative principle, why do we witness these appalling results? |
42322 | Is it in individual villany? |
42322 | Is it in legal enactment? |
42322 | Is it in public sentiment? |
42322 | Is not"knowledge omnipotent to preserve; the salt to purify the nations?" |
42322 | Is there no hallowing interest associated with these aged relics, these tombs, and temples, and towers of another race, to elicit emotion? |
42322 | It is a question daily becoming of more startling import, How may these fatal occurrences be successfully opposed? |
42322 | Many believed-- was there ever faith too preposterous to obtain proselytes? |
42322 | Of what_ other_ nation of Europe, if we except the Highlands of Scotland, may anything like the same assertion with truth be made? |
42322 | On learning, in reply to his inquiry,"Whence do ye come, stranger?" |
42322 | Or can it mix them with that matchless skill, And lose them in each other, as appears In every bud that blooms?" |
42322 | Or to what else shall we refer those collections of enormous seashells, heaped upon the soil, or thrown up to its surface from a depth of fifty feet? |
42322 | Plack your poots, shur? |
42322 | Shall the book of knowledge be taken from the hands of the people, and again be locked up in the libraries of the few? |
42322 | We are reproached as a nation by Europeans for the contemptible vice of avarice; is the censure unjust? |
42322 | What bard has struck his lyre to the wild melody of loveliness of the prairie sunset? |
42322 | What changes in its form and magnitude have taken place? |
42322 | What the associations which throng the excited fancy? |
42322 | What vicissitudes and revolutions have, in the lapse of centuries, rolled like successive waves over the plains at its base? |
42322 | What was its purpose? |
42322 | What woman does not love to tell over those passages of her history in which the_ heart_ has ruled lord of the ascendant? |
42322 | What, then, shall be done? |
42322 | When a scene like this is developed, what shall adequately depict it? |
42322 | When have the French,_ as a people_, exhibited a prouder era of mind than that of their sixteenth Louis? |
42322 | When was this stupendous earth- heap reared up from the plain? |
42322 | Where lies the fault? |
42322 | Who has not gazed with anguish on the sunken cheek and the emaciated frame of the young aspirant for literary distinction? |
42322 | Why did not intelligence save Greece? |
42322 | Why linger fondly around them, and meditate upon the power which reared them and is departed? |
42322 | Why now so lone and desolate? |
42322 | Why tear away the last and only relic of the past yet lingering in our midst? |
42322 | Why, then, does the wanderer from the far land gaze upon them with wonder and veneration? |
42322 | Yet was the emigrant satisfied? |
42322 | [ 128] What are the reflections to which this stupendous earth- heap gives birth? |
42322 | [ 33]_ Ohio River._ IV"Who can paint Like Nature? |
42322 | _ Greene County, Ill._ XVIII"What earthly feeling unabash''d can dwell In Nature''s mighty presence? |
42322 | and all that quiet{ 56} intermingling of heart with heart which divests grief of half its bitterness by taking from it all its loneliness? |
42322 | and what, and where are they and we, when evening''s lengthening shadows are gathering over the landscape of life? |
42322 | for who shall tell the emotions which may swell the bosom of many a dying emigrant who here shall find his long, last rest? |
42322 | mid the swell Of everlasting hills, the roar of floods, And frown of rocks and pomp of waving woods? |
42322 | shave your face, shur?" |
42322 | so she was: but why was not the subtle element neutralized in the cup of_ knowledge_ in which it was administered? |
42322 | to what those vast salt- plains of Arkansas? |
42322 | what do you reckon of sending this young Jack Stewart to Congress?" |
40046 | All right, Johnnie, are you ready? |
40046 | Are you the sergeant of the guards? |
40046 | Aunty, are there any white folks close around here? |
40046 | Do you really want me to do that? |
40046 | Do you take me for a fool? |
40046 | Do you think that I am a fool that I would hide you after you have been robbing me? |
40046 | For de Lawd sake, is dat what you cut cheese wid? |
40046 | For de Lord sake, honey, how you scare me; who is you? |
40046 | Have you got a couple of government horses here? |
40046 | Have you got any corn for my horse? |
40046 | Have you seen any Yanks? |
40046 | Hold on, there,said one of my comrades,"do you want to kill yourself? |
40046 | How many are there of you? |
40046 | I suppose your master is a Union man, is n''t he? |
40046 | Is dem Yanks got away? 40046 Is there any white people around here, Aunty?" |
40046 | Is you all alone, honey? |
40046 | Is your master in? |
40046 | Is your name Smith? |
40046 | It do n''t make any difference who I am,said I;"but, Aunty, can I get anything to eat?" |
40046 | Now, is dat so? 40046 Oh, you are the guards?" |
40046 | Oh,said she,"what''s dat?" |
40046 | So they have had you in irons four days? |
40046 | Then there are no soldiers that come here? |
40046 | Well, aunty,said I,"can I stay here to- night?" |
40046 | Well, did you see any of the Johnnies on your trip from Batesville down? |
40046 | Well, uncle,said I,"what do you think of me?" |
40046 | Well, what about your Colonel? |
40046 | What are you doing that for? |
40046 | What is your name? |
40046 | What will pa say when General Curtis comes along and wants to know what has become of the guards he sent? |
40046 | Where are you stationed? |
40046 | Why did you not call off your dogs? |
40046 | Why, what is the matter? |
40046 | You has? 40046 You have n''t? |
40046 | ''John, what have you got in your sack?'' |
40046 | After he had read the contents, he looked me over from head to foot and finally asked,"What regiment do you belong to?" |
40046 | Ah, would this thing never end, or was I doomed to die in rebel hands? |
40046 | Are you?" |
40046 | As we were passing she called out:"Is that what you Yankees call skedaddling?" |
40046 | Could it be possible that I was to get back to see my kind old mother, and my wife and little ones who had mourned for me as dead? |
40046 | Dead? |
40046 | Do n''t you like coffee?" |
40046 | Do n''t you see how the cane is parted where they waded or swam over?" |
40046 | Do n''t you think it is some one chopping?" |
40046 | Do you call yourself a gentleman and stand and see your dogs tear a man to pieces? |
40046 | Do you know when your men are to pass here?" |
40046 | Does ye heah?" |
40046 | Finally he broke out and said:"Now, look here, stranger, do you think you are going to sit there and bulldoze me all night and make me sit here?" |
40046 | Fo''de Lord''s sake; what will become of dis pore niggah? |
40046 | He soon got through with his writing, folded it up, put it in a large envelope and handed it to me, saying,"Sergeant, have you a good horse?" |
40046 | How was it our government left us there to die? |
40046 | I remember on one of our foraging trips we came up to a very nice farm house, and an old lady came out and said,"Are you''ns Yankees? |
40046 | Is dat you? |
40046 | Is de Yanks got loose?" |
40046 | Is you a Yank?" |
40046 | Is you afraid of the white people?" |
40046 | Now just look over the coach of young soldiers in the first flush of manhood; can they all get back to their homes? |
40046 | Now the road is infested with rebels; are you willing to undertake it?" |
40046 | Now, my dear, ca n''t we study up some plan to get away with these Yanks?" |
40046 | Old Aunty goes to the door and said:"Wot''s de matter, massa?" |
40046 | Old aunty walked up to him, snatched the possum out of his hand, gave him a smart box on the ear and said:"Ai n''t you got no manners? |
40046 | Said I,"Mister, supposing they are confederates, what are we to do?" |
40046 | Said I:"Boys, do you think there is any chance for getting anything to eat up there? |
40046 | Said Jim,"Look here, sis, have you any sweet potatoes, butter, chickens, or anything good to eat? |
40046 | Said he:"Master, are you a Union soldier?" |
40046 | Seeing an old lady standing close by the road I spoke to her and said:"Aunty, what do you think of us, anyway?" |
40046 | Seen any Yanks pass this way?" |
40046 | She looked up at him and seeing he was in dead earnest said:"When would you want me to go?" |
40046 | Some of the men in the heat and intensity of their feelings exclaimed,''Is this hell?'' |
40046 | The Johnnie called over,"Are you hit, Yank?" |
40046 | The little fellow put on his suit of gray, and Mrs. Wirz said,"How do you like your clothes?" |
40046 | The old man looked at us and said:"Do you call yourselves gentlemen and force yourselves upon us?" |
40046 | The old man raised up and said:"How do you do, sir; will you sit down on this bench?" |
40046 | The same young lady was sitting where he last saw her, and he walked up to her, made a very polite bow and said,"How do you do, sis?" |
40046 | Then the old gentleman looked around and saw the pigs in a line around the fire and said:"Hello, what have you here, sergeant?" |
40046 | They would say,"Why did you not go and dig up that money?" |
40046 | Was this some horrible dream, or was it real? |
40046 | What brought you out here?" |
40046 | What girl could resist such pleading from such a handsome young fellow as our Jim? |
40046 | What is we to do?" |
40046 | What of that?" |
40046 | What''s the matter, honey? |
40046 | Who is yous?" |
40046 | Wirz said,"What are you doing here?" |
40046 | You niggah, does you hear? |
40046 | has you got store coffee?" |
40046 | how can we forget it, comrades? |
40046 | said Jake;"who is you?" |
40046 | what is that? |
40046 | where did you get your corn?'' |
40046 | who comes there?" |
50302 | Am I, then, to be charged with the acts of others? 50302 Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister to those who shall be heirs of salvation?" |
50302 | Can you start in half an hour? |
50302 | Is it not written in your law, I said, ye are Gods? 50302 Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?" |
50302 | What brethren? |
50302 | What did you say that for? |
50302 | What persons, then,he inquires,"can be surrendered up by the governor of one State to the governor of another?" |
50302 | *** Lay hold of these things, and let not your knees or joints tremble, nor your heart faint; and then what can earthquakes, wars and tornadoes do? |
50302 | *** The Scriptures inform us that Jesus said,"As the Father hath power in Himself, even so hath the Son power"--to do what? |
50302 | *** You ask the wise doctors why they say the world was made out of nothing, and they will answer,"Do n''t the Bible say He created the world?" |
50302 | ****** Would you think it strange if I relate what I have seen in vision in relation to this interesting theme? |
50302 | Again, if he knew not the plan, how did he understand the signal? |
50302 | And if this was not the case, I would ask, how did Paul know so much about Abel, and why should he talk about his speaking after he was dead? |
50302 | And may we contemplate these things so? |
50302 | And what can mobocrats do in the midst of Kirkpatrickites? |
50302 | And what shall separate these men who endured so much for the Gospel''s sake, from the love of God? |
50302 | And when the voice calls for the dead to rise, suppose I am laid by the side of my father, what would be the first joy of my heart? |
50302 | And where is a spark from the watch- fire of''76, by which one candle might be lit that would glimmer upon the confines of Democracy? |
50302 | And where was there ever a father without first being a son? |
50302 | And where was your virtuous populace, the true watch and guard of a State''s honor? |
50302 | And who, that is ambitious for greatness and power, would not have said the same thing? |
50302 | And why did she do it? |
50302 | Are they not the sons of perdition? |
50302 | Are you not a lottery picture, with more than two blanks to a prize? |
50302 | As soon as he had read one of them, he looked upon us with a kind of half frown and said:"What can I do? |
50302 | Besides, why his broken faith? |
50302 | Brother Taylor, is it possible that they have killed both Brother Hyrum and Joseph? |
50302 | But I would ask if it could be any nearer to them than to be in the hands of John? |
50302 | But Joseph turned to Dan Jones and was heard to say,"Are you afraid to die?" |
50302 | But how are they going to help themselves? |
50302 | But what is paradise? |
50302 | But what will the world do? |
50302 | Can you answer? |
50302 | Did I feel to stand in the way of this great, eternal principle, and treat lightly the things of God? |
50302 | Did Joseph ordain any man to take his place? |
50302 | Do you believe it? |
50302 | Does it not reveal the fact that the Pickett episode was merely a ruse-- a pretext for gathering a mob to sack Nauvoo and drive away the Mormons? |
50302 | Does not this look like many others of our persecutions with which you are acquainted? |
50302 | Explaining the matter of interpretation itself, he said: What is the rule of interpretation? |
50302 | For what purpose? |
50302 | Governor Carlin granted the requisition-- was it another case of Herod and Pilate being made friends over the surrender of God''s Prophet? |
50302 | Had they not work to do in Jerusalem? |
50302 | Has any people ever become too good to do good? |
50302 | Have I not seen it? |
50302 | Have his lips ever quivered? |
50302 | Hence, if Jesus had a Father, can we not believe that He had a Father also? |
50302 | Here is Brigham, have his knees ever faltered? |
50302 | How did he know that this signal portrayed their death if he was not in the secret? |
50302 | How does it read in the Hebrew? |
50302 | How doth he yet speak? |
50302 | How have we come at the Priesthood in the last days? |
50302 | How is it with the Kingdom of God? |
50302 | I discovered what the emotions of the people were on my arrival at this city, and I have come here to say,"How do you do?" |
50302 | I inquire, what was the question which drew out the answer or caused Jesus to utter the parable? |
50302 | I prayed and God answered, but what could I do? |
50302 | I thought, Why must the good perish, and the virtuous be destroyed? |
50302 | If a man_ leaves_ the principles of the doctrine of Christ, how can he be saved in the principles? |
50302 | If not what can be the meaning of all this? |
50302 | If not, before whom shall the Mormons institute a trial? |
50302 | If ten thousand men testify to a truth you know, would it add to your faith? |
50302 | If this is in accordance with the New Testament, lo and behold, we have three Gods anyhow, and they are plural, and who can contradict it? |
50302 | If, then, this is the case can we conscientiously vote for a man of this description, and put the weapon in his hands to cut our throats with? |
50302 | In reply, I ask who did Jesus have reference to as being the least? |
50302 | Is it logical to say that the intelligence of spirits is immortal, and yet that it had a beginning? |
50302 | Is not this a plea of justification for the loss of individuals, done in pursuance of the order? |
50302 | Is there no chance for his escape? |
50302 | Is there no power anywhere to redress our grievances? |
50302 | It is correct enough, but how did it get into your heads? |
50302 | Jesus, if they were called Gods unto whom the word of God came, why should it be thought blasphemy that I should say I am the Son of God? |
50302 | Jesus, what are you going to do? |
50302 | Lawyers say the powers of the Nauvoo charter are dangerous; but I ask, is the Constitution of the United States or of this State dangerous? |
50302 | May not they have so far transgressed that they can not repent, and are beyond even the desire for forgiveness? |
50302 | Missouri lacks the disposition, and Congress lacks both the disposition and power(? |
50302 | Need one stop to moralize on the littleness of man when he allows prejudice to dictate his action instead of reason? |
50302 | Now, wherein could they have a more sure word of prophecy than to hear the voice of God saying,"This is my beloved Son?" |
50302 | O ye crowned heads among all nations, is not Mr. Clay a wise man, and very patriotic? |
50302 | On whom has oppression fallen in any quarter of the Union? |
50302 | Or will ten thousand testimonies destroy your knowledge of a fact? |
50302 | Raise mobs? |
50302 | See Genesis 3rd Chapter, 9th, 10th v.,"And the Lord called unto Adam and said unto him, Where art thou? |
50302 | Shall the one become a partaker of glory, and the other consigned to hopeless perdition? |
50302 | Shall they appeal to the legislature of the State of Missouri for redress? |
50302 | Shall they apply to the courts of the State of Missouri? |
50302 | Shall they apply to the federal courts? |
50302 | Shall they summon a jury of the individuals who composed the mob? |
50302 | Shall we bear it any longer? |
50302 | The Prophet in his journal, when speaking of the circumstance, says:"What can be the matter with these men? |
50302 | The same morning, after Hyrum had made ready to go-- shall it be said to the slaughter? |
50302 | Then why pray to God the Father-- And lead us not into temptation? |
50302 | They had not proceeded far when they met some gentlemen who stopped their team and said to the driver:"Mr., what graveyard have you been robbing?" |
50302 | They were"overpowered"(? |
50302 | To which the one addressed said:"Has that time come, think you? |
50302 | Turning to Elder Richards the Prophet said;"If we go to the cell will you go in with us?" |
50302 | Under these circumstances, the question again arises, Whom shall we support? |
50302 | Was Abraham, therefore, under condemnation? |
50302 | Was it ever bad policy to make friends? |
50302 | Was it the Mormons or our enemies who first commenced these difficulties? |
50302 | We had been outrageously imposed upon, and knew not how far we could trust any one; besides, a question necessarily arose, How shall we come? |
50302 | Well, what did I do? |
50302 | What constitutes the Kingdom of God? |
50302 | What could we do, under the circumstances, different from what we did do? |
50302 | What did Jesus say? |
50302 | What events are these that so thunder in the index? |
50302 | What is that, sir? |
50302 | What patriot suffered, but by a traitor''s perfidy? |
50302 | What right had that constable to refuse our request? |
50302 | What shall we do under this state of things? |
50302 | What state has perished but by traitor''s hands? |
50302 | What, then, we would ask, is the remedy for the Mormons? |
50302 | Whenever did a tree or anything spring into existence without a progenitor? |
50302 | Where did it come from? |
50302 | Where did the Kingdom of God begin? |
50302 | Where is the patriotism of a Washington, a Warren, and Adams? |
50302 | Where is the strength of government? |
50302 | Where was there ever a son without a father? |
50302 | Which would the Methodists vote for? |
50302 | While there Joseph came along and said:"Well, Brother Woodruff, you have started on your mission?" |
50302 | Who am I among? |
50302 | Who ever heard of a nation that had too much territory? |
50302 | Who ordered out the Nauvoo Legion? |
50302 | Who told you so? |
50302 | Who told you that man did not exist in like manner upon the same principles? |
50302 | Who was it? |
50302 | Whoever had so great a privilege and glory? |
50302 | Whoever had such a trust committed to him before or since? |
50302 | Whoever had the honor of doing that? |
50302 | Whom shall they sue? |
50302 | Why is it that I must be made accountable for other men''s acts? |
50302 | Why so oblivious to everything pertaining to the Mormon interest, and so alive and interested about the mobocrats? |
50302 | Why, then, do n''t you shoot and have done with it, instead of talking so much about it?" |
50302 | Why, then, need they be troubled about us? |
50302 | Why, then, should we be dragged to Carthage, where the law does not compel us to go? |
50302 | Why? |
50302 | Will it be popular or unpopular? |
50302 | Will it suit the politics of the majority? |
50302 | Will you all help me? |
50302 | Will you all support my pledge, and thus preserve my honor? |
50302 | [ 7] Was this arch traitor, Brockman, hung for his treason against the State? |
50302 | _ Governor_--"Why did you not give a more speedy answer to the posse that I sent out?" |
50302 | _ Is it true?_ No. |
50302 | and because lawlessness and mobocracy abound, am I, when carrying out your instructions, to be charged with not abiding law? |
50302 | and have we not a right to expect foul play? |
50302 | to all parties; and I do now at this time say to all,"How do you do?" |
50302 | why his disregard of what was told him by several parties? |
47445 | ''Want to set my barn afire with your old pipe, do you?'' 47445 ''When did you get out of jail?'' |
47445 | And you do n''t mind, honey? |
47445 | But I''m afraid it looks like imposing on your good nature just a little? |
47445 | But do n''t you think this is ever so much nicer? |
47445 | Can I make my son or daughter learn Yiddish? |
47445 | Did you ever know a man named Gunther? |
47445 | Do you know that a few men, comparatively, have almost changed the nature of the country and village population? 47445 Does anybody look in my pockets nights?" |
47445 | Gentlemen,said the judge, turning toward the jury,"have you agreed upon a verdict?" |
47445 | Guarantee it? 47445 HOLY MOSES"RISES? |
47445 | Have you agreed upon a verdict? |
47445 | Have you got any idea of how the professional conducts himself on the road? 47445 I do n''t like to presume on your good nature, but I know you wo n''t object to a small box of candy?" |
47445 | I have married two wives; what will happen? |
47445 | I''m a perfect lady, ai n''t I, Honey? |
47445 | Is that your staple article of diet? |
47445 | Is the Stool Pigeon in? |
47445 | Old man, do n''t you know it''s Thanksgivin''day? 47445 Say, now,"continued the man,"can you name me one single newspaper in the state of New York that felt sure of Roosevelt''s election as governor? |
47445 | Shall I be a conductor? |
47445 | Shall I be a lady- figure? |
47445 | Shall I be a street cleaner? |
47445 | Shall I be an actor? |
47445 | Shall I be married in court? |
47445 | Shall I buy the goods? |
47445 | Shall I sue my partner? |
47445 | Shall I take my husband into the store as a partner? |
47445 | Shall I take my wife into the store as a partner? |
47445 | Shall my children play with Christians? |
47445 | Shall we have our cigars and coffee here or in th''drawin''room? |
47445 | Suppose I pay for the article instead of the newspaper? |
47445 | Very plausible, but where are these guarantee companies? |
47445 | What are you going to do about it? |
47445 | What is the explanation? 47445 What would be the broker''s fee?" |
47445 | What''s it for? |
47445 | What? |
47445 | Where did he get it? |
47445 | Who are they? |
47445 | Why do n''t I give it up and settle down in city or village and become a respectable member of the community? |
47445 | Why is a sailor a sailor? 47445 Will my partner sue me?" |
47445 | Will the bank fail? |
47445 | Will the landlord put me out? |
47445 | Wot''s de matter wit''fixin''one up on meself? 47445 Yes-- what of it?" |
47445 | You got what you asked for, did n''t you? |
47445 | You remember the speech of Mark Anthony,he said;"how he produced a tremendous effect with the robe of the great CÃ ¦ sar? |
47445 | You wo n''t mind, honey, if I take a pie home, will you? |
47445 | ''Are any of these concerns promising dividends of 50 per cent and such to be depended on''?" |
47445 | 11:20 a. m.: Said he:"Where is my sin? |
47445 | ARE WE FOLLOWING ROME TO THE PIT? |
47445 | ARE YOU A GRAFTER? |
47445 | And did you ever see the same small boy walking half the distance to get a newspaper for his father? |
47445 | And is it right to thus lure children when adults know that their pennies more than pay for what they get-- premiums and all? |
47445 | And what does it mean? |
47445 | And what is the penalty? |
47445 | And what of the love attachment? |
47445 | And, in turn, how many steps are these cigar machines removed from those in the saloons? |
47445 | Are we allowing the moral tone of society to sink? |
47445 | Are we going the way of Greece and Rome? |
47445 | Are you certain that you are not training a criminal, beginning with him at two years old? |
47445 | Art thou thy brother''s keeper? |
47445 | At early manhood''s gate; Your future lies in your own hand-- Will it be low or great? |
47445 | But for all purposes of publicity have not these refusals to answer carried light enough? |
47445 | But how was the money to be raised? |
47445 | But what of the little gamins that throng Chicago''s streets? |
47445 | But who shall say what another six months may bring forth? |
47445 | But why confine this plan, admirable and satisfactory as it is, to tramps? |
47445 | But would the engineer see the signal in time, or would the rain which was beating down in torrents prevent the engineer from seeing the signal? |
47445 | Ca n''t you buy better linen than that?" |
47445 | Can I forgive you? |
47445 | Can not the same results be accomplished with the human being? |
47445 | Can there be any doubt these are used when concerns devote their entire time to manufacturing them and can get such high prices? |
47445 | Can there be anything worse than holding out love potions to married women to compel other women''s husbands to love them? |
47445 | Color of eyes? |
47445 | Color of hair? |
47445 | Complexion? |
47445 | Could anything shout forth the tremendous energy of the man in any plainer terms? |
47445 | Detective Wooldridge replied,"Do you remember Admiral George Dewey at Manila Bay who told Captain Gridley to fire when he got ready?" |
47445 | Did I succeed? |
47445 | Did you ever feel like jumpin''from de bridge fur lack of a stingy little dime fur booze?" |
47445 | Did you ever see a small boy walking ahead of a band, with the music playing? |
47445 | Did you ever see the game? |
47445 | Dig down under the"guarantee"of the company which asks you to invest your savings and what do you find? |
47445 | Do any of the pictures we have submitted to you suit, and will you marry? |
47445 | Do n''t you hear the bells ringin''? |
47445 | Do n''t you see that makes your stock as solid as a government bond? |
47445 | Do our educational methods do as much for our children? |
47445 | Do the big fish bite? |
47445 | Do you reckon I''d dine alone on a day like this? |
47445 | Do you use tobacco or liquor? |
47445 | Do you want me to tell you the five reasons why?" |
47445 | Do you wonder I''m what I am?" |
47445 | Does Dr. B---- cure cancer? |
47445 | Does James Johnson wish to sell his stock at a substantial advance? |
47445 | Even when Guerin followed her to California she dared to wire Mike:"Web Guerin is coming; fear I shall be compromised; shall I come back?" |
47445 | Extent of education: common, high school or university? |
47445 | Get all able- bodied convicts into road- making for a single generation, and what would result? |
47445 | Hain''t it a country out in Asia some place?" |
47445 | Have you learned the old saying of pearls before swine? |
47445 | He has been cured? |
47445 | He went through it like an old goat through a cracker barrel, but he did n''t find anything-- see? |
47445 | How do safe burglars get their tools? |
47445 | How do you like this celery? |
47445 | How is it out in the country? |
47445 | How is it possible for a man or woman to lead an upright, useful life after they once come under the ban of the law? |
47445 | How many of these operations were actually necessary? |
47445 | How many people die from wholly unnecessary operations? |
47445 | How much real estate do you own? |
47445 | How shall he meet and battle with the great world of commerce and labor after twenty years of this? |
47445 | I save such people money, do n''t I? |
47445 | If not, where is the weakness? |
47445 | If we secured you a wife worth$ 250,000 would you be willing to pay us a small commission for our trouble? |
47445 | In what way is this make- believe fitting him for liberty? |
47445 | Income per year? |
47445 | Is he liar, thief-- perhaps of insane ego as he was when he first toddled from his mother''s arms? |
47445 | Is it any wonder, then, that the city brings forth an appalling annual crop of criminals? |
47445 | Is it remorse for a crime, or longing and grief for a dead admirer? |
47445 | Is it right to get something for which no return of money or labor is given? |
47445 | Is not the child as responsive? |
47445 | Is such a life worth living? |
47445 | Is that an alluring spectacle? |
47445 | Is there a menace in the rapid increase of wealth in the United States? |
47445 | Is this the proper training to give children? |
47445 | Is this thy mission in this place-- This idleness which brings disdain? |
47445 | It might be asked in the light of the above exposà © s of so- called specialists, are there no honest ones? |
47445 | Life would be one long, sweet song if everyone paid for goods as soon as they were ordered, would n''t it?" |
47445 | Look at this balance?" |
47445 | MARRIED TWO WIVES; WHAT WILL HAPPEN? |
47445 | Makes you open your eyes, does n''t it? |
47445 | Manufacturer, what arrangements have you made to guarantee your capital stock?" |
47445 | Men have come to us, desperate, despairing men, crying:"For God''s sake, what are we to do? |
47445 | Mills said to Miss Headley, after meeting her the second time:"How anxious are you to marry me? |
47445 | NAW-- WHAT WAS IT? |
47445 | Nationality? |
47445 | No? |
47445 | Or is it despair for a wasted life, a hopeless future, a thousand lost opportunities? |
47445 | Profession? |
47445 | Q. Circumference of chest? |
47445 | Q. Circumference of head( just above ears)? |
47445 | Q. Circumference of neck? |
47445 | Q. Circumference of waist? |
47445 | Should he steal an ax, shovel, plow, sheep, calf or break into the house and steal a watch or clothes, what is he going to do with his plunder? |
47445 | Suppose he did die worth a million dollars, whom will it benefit? |
47445 | That means an hour and a half, and when I thank the farmer for his generosity and get ready to go on, he says:"''Goin'', eh? |
47445 | The cover of the pamphlet bears the assurance:"Are your interests protected? |
47445 | The first question in the fortune tellers book under"Travel and Letters"is,"Where did my husband elope to?" |
47445 | Then he continued:"Does anybody ever see Arthur Meeker take a cab to ride a few blocks? |
47445 | Those who are in doubt about work have many questions to select from, the list starting off like this:"Shall I be a letter carrier?" |
47445 | To illustrate, take this group of questions under the general classifications"Home and Children":"Can I learn English?" |
47445 | Under what possible circumstances could he use it in any legitimate way? |
47445 | Under"Business"some of the questions are:"Shall I remain a peddler or keep a store?" |
47445 | Under"Love and Marriage"are these questions, among many others:"Is my bride''s dowry as big as she says it is?" |
47445 | Under"Luck and Losses"are:"Was I robbed by friends or strangers?" |
47445 | WHAT WILL WE DO WITH THE VAGRANT AND TRAMP? |
47445 | WIFE OR GALLOWS? |
47445 | Weight? |
47445 | What are the elements in its life that breed criminals? |
47445 | What are you doing with your child''s sense of right and wrong? |
47445 | What became of those pearls of mine? |
47445 | What causes thousands of young boys to take up a criminal life? |
47445 | What good will it do? |
47445 | What is my name? |
47445 | What is the matter with Chicago? |
47445 | What is your boy at six years of age? |
47445 | What language do you speak? |
47445 | What must we do to change conditions? |
47445 | What possible benefit can be suggested to offset the evils which we have spoken of? |
47445 | What was to be done to bring the train to a stop so that they could board it? |
47445 | What yer got in there?'' |
47445 | When did I start? |
47445 | When have I heard that word before? |
47445 | Where born? |
47445 | Where can we go and what can we do?" |
47445 | Who would emulate it? |
47445 | Why am I a tramp? |
47445 | Why did the men who worked this scheme to steal the moral support of the big trust company go to so great pains to get it? |
47445 | Why haggard thus thy fair, young face With vigils, passions, aimed at gain? |
47445 | Why is a tramp a tramp? |
47445 | Why not extend it so as to include criminals? |
47445 | Why not reorganize a system of confinement in such a way as to compel criminals to support themselves? |
47445 | Why not use the same precaution when buying stock? |
47445 | Why should a man like that be allowed to carry a pistol at all? |
47445 | Why should we permit men to manufacture and sell instruments of crime-- weapons which are designed for no other purpose? |
47445 | Why? |
47445 | Why? |
47445 | Why? |
47445 | Why? |
47445 | Will he be a better citizen, a more loving father or husband or son, when he is released? |
47445 | Will they find any such glorious end? |
47445 | Will you apologize?" |
47445 | [ Illustration: Can a Man or Woman Know Each Other Before Marriage? |
47445 | [ Illustration: DID YA SEEN IT HEN? |
47445 | [ Illustration: Do they think about us at home? |
47445 | [ Illustration: Raggles--"Why did yer refuse what she offered yer?" |
47445 | [ Illustration: WHICH ROAD SHALL HE TAKE? |
47445 | [ Illustration: WHO SAID I LOST TWENTY DOLLARS?] |
47445 | [ Illustration: What Are YOU Going to Do About It?] |
47445 | [ Illustration: With some of the water out of her food, All profits milked out, too, With little to eat and going dry, What is the poor beast to do?] |
47445 | [ Illustration:"WHEN DID YOU GET OUT OF JAIL?" |
47445 | says the victim,"and I give you fifty dollars, would n''t that repay you for your trouble in writing the article?" |
36591 | And was it that, which caused such roars and roars of laughter from the Trustees''room after I left? |
36591 | And we would also venture to inquire, what is the married woman''s protection under such a Statute law? 36591 But does not the constitution defend the right of religious tolerance to all American citizens?" |
36591 | Can I replevy it as stolen property? |
36591 | Could you forgive Mr. Packard, and live with him again as his wife? |
36591 | Did they? |
36591 | Do you think, Mrs. Packard, that your husband really believes you are an insane person? |
36591 | Husband,said I,"have not I a right to my opinion?" |
36591 | In what estimation is Mr. Packard held in the region where these scenes were enacted? |
36591 | Is he in this city? |
36591 | Is this so? 36591 O, husband,"said I,"you have allowed me no chance for my secret devotions this morning, ca n''t I be allowed this one last request?" |
36591 | Shall I add anything to it; that is, what I said to the Trustees, and so forth? |
36591 | Then,said I,"can I bear such trials as these without God''s help? |
36591 | What are your opinions, Mrs. Packard, which have caused all this rupture in your once happy family? |
36591 | What do you fear he will do? |
36591 | What does your printer say about it? |
36591 | Why not? 36591 Why, Mrs. Packard, do you not get a divorce?" |
36591 | Why, Mrs. Packard, what protection do you need? 36591 Why?" |
36591 | ( One gentleman in the crowd turned to his wife and said,"Wife, were you ever out of bread, and had to make biscuit for dinner? |
36591 | *** And has God less power to execute his kind plans than I have? |
36591 | : religions toleration? |
36591 | Abandon her, turn her out upon the world without a morsel of bread, and no home? |
36591 | And again, how could they imagine, that a man would wish to have the reputation of having an insane wife, when he had not? |
36591 | And can one be prosecuted for doing a legal act? |
36591 | And can you blame me for this manifestation of my heart sympathy for my imprisoned sisters? |
36591 | And could the good and kind Mr. Packard neglect even his poor afflicted wife? |
36591 | And do n''t you think he is changing as fast as we can expect, considering his conservative organization? |
36591 | And do we not practically deny it, when we endorse the revolting doctrine of endless punishment? |
36591 | And does not this legalized despotism put our souls in jeopardy, as well as our bodies, and our children? |
36591 | And is a stagnant, torpid, and retrogressive state of mentality, a natural or an unnatural condition-- a sane, or an insane state? |
36591 | And is not that man a coward who can not stand before such artillery? |
36591 | And is not this help given us in answer to our own prayers? |
36591 | And is not this our petition for protection founded in justice and humanity? |
36591 | And must I? |
36591 | And shall I repine because I am called insane for the same reason? |
36591 | And so would any lady, would they not? |
36591 | And whose will was to be my guide, my husband''s will, or God''s will? |
36591 | And why should she not be legally protected from them as well as a man? |
36591 | Are not God''s simple, common sense teachings, authority enough for our opinions? |
36591 | Are you authorized to stop a man from doing a_ legal_ act?" |
36591 | But how could the Superintendent of the Insane Hospital be a party to so great a wrong? |
36591 | But how could this be done in my penniless condition? |
36591 | But how long do you think I had better make my visit?" |
36591 | But it is so tedious for me to copy anything, how would it do to get a few handbills or tracts printed, and send them where we please?" |
36591 | But just as she was leaving the house, the Doctor asked her, if she had any letter from Mrs. Packard to her children with her? |
36591 | But one thing more I wish your advice about; how can I keep the money I get for my book from Mr. Packard, the legal owner of it?" |
36591 | But where could the$ 3000.00 I have paid out for the expense of printing and circulating these books have been obtained? |
36591 | But you can get along without me, ca n''t you? |
36591 | But, as my Saviour said,"the cup which my Father hath given me, shall I not drink it?" |
36591 | But, in my opinion, Dr. McFarland, does not know a sane from an insane person; or else, why does he keep so many in that Asylum, as sane as himself? |
36591 | Can I ever believe that God loves his children less than I do mine? |
36591 | Can I not truly say my train of thought was engineered by the"Lightning Express?" |
36591 | Can facts be transmuted into fiction by the simple assertion of one man? |
36591 | Can she not even think her own thoughts, and speak her own words, unless her thoughts and expressions harmonize with those of her husband? |
36591 | Can testimony, however abundant, change this truth into a falsehood? |
36591 | Could Christ take upon himself our nature, and yet know no sin, if our natures are necessarily sinful? |
36591 | Could these defenceless States resort to any other means of self- defence from the usurpation of the powerful States than that of secession? |
36591 | Did not"wise men"make the laws, as he often used to assert they did? |
36591 | Did you give up, and neglect your duties? |
36591 | Did you injure any one? |
36591 | Did you tear your clothes, and destroy your things? |
36591 | Do not I always give you an exact account of every cent I spend? |
36591 | Do you think she would have come out unharmed? |
36591 | Does an upright course seek or desire concealment? |
36591 | For what is that love worth, that ca n''t defend its friend in adversity? |
36591 | Forgive us, wo n''t you, for our cruel neglect?" |
36591 | Gentlemen, we married women need emancipation; and will you not be the pioneer State in our Union, in woman''s emancipation? |
36591 | Has a married woman no identity in Statute Book of Illinois?" |
36591 | Has a married woman no rights at all? |
36591 | Have I ever abused this trust? |
36591 | Have we, on this account, any reason or right to call him insane? |
36591 | He then asked be"Have you had anything from Mrs. Packard with you?" |
36591 | He would often say to me,"Mrs. Packard, who are your friends? |
36591 | How was his sympathy manifested?) |
36591 | I say, why? |
36591 | I then said to my printer, supposing he should come with money, and offer to buy the manuscript, what then?" |
36591 | If Mr. Packard_ believed_ his wife to be hopelessly_ insane_, why did he abandon her? |
36591 | If so, why do they not look after you?" |
36591 | Is activity and progression in knowledge and intelligence, an indication of a sane, natural condition, or is it an unnatural, insane indication? |
36591 | Is he not a monomaniac? |
36591 | Is her conscience, and her reason, and her thoughts, all lost in him? |
36591 | Is it because a woman has no individuality, after she is joined to a man? |
36591 | Is not my persecutor guiltless in this matter? |
36591 | Is not this a pretty statute to be incorporated into our laws no more than thirteen years ago? |
36591 | Is that kind of treatment which causes insanity the best adapted to cure insanity? |
36591 | Is the wrong covered up? |
36591 | Is this the way to treat a companion afflicted with insanity? |
36591 | May I not be allowed, husband, to ask this favor of God_ alone_ in my room, before being thus exiled from it?" |
36591 | May I now bring it up? |
36591 | Mrs. Fisher, what can have tempted us ever to doubt this glorious truth? |
36591 | Mrs. Lovel, one of the patients, replied,"Mrs. De La Hay, did you ever have a straight jacket on yourself?" |
36591 | Now I would like to ask Dr. McFarland, where are to be found these"bonds of generous sympathy"to which he refers? |
36591 | Now comes the question: Is this a crime for which I ought to be divorced from all the comforts and privileges of my own dear home? |
36591 | Now what shall I do? |
36591 | Now, I ask, how many men would venture to get married under these laws? |
36591 | Now, I ask, is this so? |
36591 | Now, if the course he has taken with me is not insanity-- that is, an unreasonable course, I ask, what is insanity? |
36591 | Now, what could he do with twelve more such boxes? |
36591 | Or, in other words, is that kind of treatment which caused their insanity the best adapted to cure their insanity? |
36591 | Shall this vow be a witness against me, or shall it not? |
36591 | Should I be appropriating an unreasonable share of time, as a pupil, Mr. Smith, to occupy four minutes of your time in reading them? |
36591 | The great question with me is, how can I soonest earn the$ 2,500.00 necessary to print it with? |
36591 | The question may be asked, how this could happen, especially in Northern Illinois? |
36591 | The questions are often asked me,"Why were you sent here? |
36591 | The time- worn wigs, with error gray, Their dusty locks with pale dismay, Shall shake in vain in wild despair, To see their prostrate castles, where? |
36591 | The wise shall laugh-- the foolish cry-- Both wise and foolish virgins, why? |
36591 | Was it not that we had trained them to respect paternal authority? |
36591 | Was there ever such a case of heartlessness? |
36591 | Well, what did the"feelings"of the community have to do with the court and jury? |
36591 | What dangers do you apprehend?" |
36591 | What did you do that made your friends treat such a good woman so?" |
36591 | What have''the rulers in the church''done about the persecution? |
36591 | What more could he have had if the witness had been present? |
36591 | What shall I do, Doctor?" |
36591 | Why ca n''t the inalienable rights of the lawful wife be_ as much_ respected as those of the open prostitute? |
36591 | Why ca n''t the wife steal all the husband has? |
36591 | Why is this? |
36591 | Why is this? |
36591 | Why not confine the husband at the instance of the wife, as well as the wife at the instance of the husband? |
36591 | Why not? |
36591 | Why was this struggle with our consciences? |
36591 | Will you protect me here?" |
36591 | With shame I ask the question, does not our government here offer a premium on infidelity? |
36591 | Wo n''t you please stop this robbery of our inalienable right to our own property, by some law, dictated by some of your noble, manly hearts? |
36591 | Would he give a crazy woman money to go to the city, and make purchases for herself? |
36591 | Would not this state of the Union endanger the rights of the defenceless ones? |
36591 | Would they not be tempted to ignore the marriage laws of our woman government altogether? |
36591 | Would you have set down in the clothes you had worked in? |
36591 | Yes, Mr. Packard has only treated me as he said the laws of Illinois allowed him to do, and how can he be blamed then? |
36591 | You know I have_ always_ been a true and loving wife to you, and how can you treat me so?" |
36591 | _ Ques._ And did you think that was an evidence of insanity? |
36591 | _ Ques._ Are you much of a theologian? |
36591 | _ Ques._ Did she also include you? |
36591 | _ Ques._ Did she not show more familiarity with the subject of religion and the questions of theology, than you had with these subjects? |
36591 | _ Ques._ Do you believe Mrs. Packard was insane, and is insane? |
36591 | _ Ques._ Do you believe literally that Jonah was swallowed by a whale, and remained in its belly three days and was then cast up? |
36591 | _ Ques._ He had been charging her with insanity, had he not, at the table? |
36591 | _ Ques._ She called Mr. Packard the unfruitful works of darkness? |
36591 | _ Ques._ Then would you call yourself insane? |
36591 | _ Ques._ This was about the time that her husband was plotting to kidnap her, was it not? |
36591 | _ Ques._ Was not that a new idea to you in theology? |
36591 | _ Ques._ What else did she say or do there, that showed marks of insanity? |
36591 | _ Ques._ What would you have done under similar circumstances? |
36591 | _ Question._ Dr., what particular idea did she advance on the subject of religion that led you to the conclusion that she was hopelessly insane? |
36591 | _ Question._ Was it an indication of insanity that she wanted to leave the Presbyterian Church? |
36591 | _ Question._ What did she do then? |
36591 | _ Re- cross- examined._--_Question._ Did you deem that an evidence of insanity? |
36591 | and endanger the Union also? |
36591 | and what will the children do for their summer clothes without me to make them?" |
36591 | and when asked by his guests, who often mistook me for the matron,"why he kept so intelligent a lady in an Insane Asylum?" |
36591 | have you any in the wide world? |
36591 | if you or your darling daughter were in their places, would you feel like reproaching me as a fanatic, for thus volunteering in your defence? |
36591 | in the region of the west, or in the east? |
36591 | said I,"Can you get along without me three months? |
36591 | said I,"can you sleep while your wife is in such agony?" |
36591 | said I,"how can you leave me in such a place? |
36591 | the guilty party allowed to go unchallenged lest"the cause"suffer by exposure? |
36591 | where is he now? |
36591 | where is her only daughter, Elizabeth, of thirteen years, and her George Hastings, of ten years, and her darling baby, Arthur Dwight, of five years? |
36591 | will you not protect us from such liabilities? |
12183 | ''Well, sir,''said the commanding officer, who overheard him,''are you afraid?'' 12183 A dream? |
12183 | Ah, captain, what are you going to build here? |
12183 | And do you know me also? |
12183 | And the Puans-- are any of them left? |
12183 | And the harvest-- how is that? |
12183 | And what becomes of John then? |
12183 | And where are all our people now? |
12183 | And you can not consume them all yourselves? |
12183 | Are you satisfied now, Plante? |
12183 | But are we going to stop there? |
12183 | But are we to stay here? |
12183 | But why are not your breakfast- things washed, and your kitchen swept? 12183 Can it be possible,"said I to myself,"that this poor creature has only these scanty rags to cover her?" |
12183 | Can we not sleep out- of- doors? |
12183 | Can we not stop and rest for a few moments under one of the trees? |
12183 | Could she not spare Florence on some hour of the day? 12183 Did I not tell you?" |
12183 | Did he find the drawer open? |
12183 | Do the Indians speak French? |
12183 | Do you know me, Thérèse? |
12183 | Do you not think it wiser,inquired I of a blustering young officer,"to be prepared against possible danger?" |
12183 | Does Monsieur John pay you for bringing his family down? |
12183 | Est- il beau? |
12183 | Guardapié,said I,"do you intend to leave us here?" |
12183 | Had he the means to carry him there? |
12183 | Have you disturbed the remains of the chief''s beautiful daughter? |
12183 | Have you seen Thomas? |
12183 | He barked her to death once, and who knows what he may do next time? |
12183 | How did he know it was kept there? |
12183 | How do you say that in English? |
12183 | How is Whip? |
12183 | How many children? |
12183 | How much do you pay for each one? |
12183 | I''m Krissman; did n''t you mean, sir, that the men should have any liquor to- night? |
12183 | Is it true,asked Louisa, one day,"that Pillon and Plante were once prairie- wolves?" |
12183 | Is not this charming? |
12183 | Is she dead, then? |
12183 | Is that woman a''Winnebago''? |
12183 | Is the mill at work? |
12183 | Is there no place,inquired the traveller,"where I can obtain a lodging?" |
12183 | Listen,said the boy, as a second note answered the first;"do you hear that?" |
12183 | Louis Frum_ dit_ Manaigre-- is he living? |
12183 | No; do you not see we are going back to the fort? |
12183 | Now? |
12183 | Oh I madame,said the poor little girl, her teeth chattering with cold and fright,"wo n''t we be drowned?" |
12183 | Or is it that you are fasting? 12183 Pray, ma''am,"said she,"what are these things put in here for?" |
12183 | Should you like to go and see your father and mother,said he to me, one morning,"and show them how the West agrees with you?" |
12183 | So unexpected-- so unprepared for? |
12183 | Soldier,cried I,"will you run to the young officers''quarters and ask Dr. Finley to come here for a moment?" |
12183 | The Indians? 12183 This water looks very deep-- are you sure we can cross it on horseback?" |
12183 | Tshah- ko- zhah? |
12183 | Was the key in the drawer? |
12183 | Well, Krissman, how do you like the service? |
12183 | What are we to do, then? 12183 What are you going to do?" |
12183 | What do they mean by this? 12183 What do you think about it?" |
12183 | What does this mean? |
12183 | What have you there? |
12183 | What is that for? |
12183 | What is that, Walter? 12183 What is that?" |
12183 | What is that? |
12183 | What is the matter with him? 12183 What is the meaning of these two sticks that remain?" |
12183 | What then do you do with them? |
12183 | What would my friends at the East think,said I to myself,"if they could see me now? |
12183 | Where are the rest of the cakes, Louisa? |
12183 | Where can you put us for the night? |
12183 | Where is my husband? |
12183 | Where is the Shaw- nee- aw- kee? |
12183 | Where is your granddaughter? 12183 Where is your lodge?" |
12183 | Who are you? |
12183 | Who are you? |
12183 | Who is there? 12183 Who knows,"said he, gravely,"but they may be lurking in this neighborhood yet? |
12183 | Who''s dead? |
12183 | Whose cabins are these? |
12183 | Why does he call you Shee- shee- banze, and invite you to visit Way- gee- mar- kin? |
12183 | Why had she not asked her mother''s leave before carrying it away? |
12183 | Will you trust yourself alone over the river? |
12183 | Yes,said the man;"do you talk English?" |
12183 | Yes,was the reply, and, after a few moments''silence,"do you not hear a rustling among the branches of the tree yonder?" |
12183 | _ Comment se portent Madame Rolette et les enfans?_( How are Mrs. Rolette and the children?) |
12183 | _ Comment se portent Madame Rolette et les enfans?_( How are Mrs. Rolette and the children?) |
12183 | _ Eh bien_--have they finished the new house? |
12183 | _ Et comment se porte Madame la Chatte_? |
12183 | _ Et la cheminée, fume- t- elle?_( Does the chimney smoke?) |
12183 | _ Et la cheminée, fume- t- elle?_( Does the chimney smoke?) |
12183 | _ Et tous les petits Chatons_? |
12183 | ''Halloo,''said I,''what on earth does this mean?'' |
12183 | ( And all the kittens?) |
12183 | ( How is the mother cat?) |
12183 | ( My dear Mr. Cat, how do you do?) |
12183 | ( What is it?) |
12183 | ( What is it?) |
12183 | As I addressed her with my ordinary phrase,"_ Tshah- ko- zhah_?" |
12183 | BOURGEOIS.--Ou est- ce qu''il est? |
12183 | But do you know a very strange thing has happened since you were here? |
12183 | Can you take us across?" |
12183 | Catharine,"said I,"will you run over and ask Dr. Finley to come here a moment? |
12183 | Could it be that one of the squaws had stolen it? |
12183 | Could they have been stolen by the Indians? |
12183 | Could we be sufficiently grateful to that kind Providence that had brought us safely through such dangers? |
12183 | Did I not tell you I wished you to come up and learn your lessons?" |
12183 | Did not we find your blanket there? |
12183 | Did the father ever send a thought or an inquiry after the fate of his child, or of the young being whose life he had rendered dark and desolate? |
12183 | Do you not see we shall all be killed?" |
12183 | Do you remember me?" |
12183 | Do you think there is any chance?'' |
12183 | Doyle entered, and, addressing Lieutenant Foster, said,"Will you please tell me, lieutenant, what I am confined for?" |
12183 | Had the rogues been trying to cheat them, by putting these strange nondescripts into their place? |
12183 | Has not Kilgour given out your rations?" |
12183 | Have you forgotten Madame John, who taught you to read-- you and all the little girls at the Portage?" |
12183 | Have you heard it?" |
12183 | Have you heard some good news?" |
12183 | He said to me,''Do you think they will take our lives? |
12183 | How do you do?] |
12183 | How do you dos?" |
12183 | How do you like her?" |
12183 | How is your sister?" |
12183 | I approached the subject cautiously, with an inquiry to this effect:"Are there none among the officers who are religiously disposed?" |
12183 | I could not but suggest the inquiry, when these sad particulars were narrated to me,--"Mother, is it not possible this might have been a dream?" |
12183 | I felt a strong sympathy with the child, which was increased when the little spokeswoman, in answer to my inquiry,"Has he no father?" |
12183 | If we decided to take the trail, should we go north or south? |
12183 | Is it not better to take it for granted that I can do what you and others of your sex have done?" |
12183 | Is it that you are mourning for the friends you have lost in battle?" |
12183 | It was question and answer, like Cock Robin:"Who can mend the harness?" |
12183 | Jumping off the canal- boat upon the lock, he ran up to the first man he met, and, thrusting forward his face, cried out,"Talk Eengeesh?" |
12183 | Kinzie?" |
12183 | La branche a cassé-- CHORUS.--Michaud a tombé? |
12183 | Madame Kinzie, who do you think has come? |
12183 | My husband, smiling and taking up the same little tone, cried, in return,--"Do you wish to look at yourself, mother?" |
12183 | On the journey, the question naturally addressed to them by people not familiar with Western Indians was,--"Do you talk English?" |
12183 | Only one year ago I travelled it, and can I forget so soon? |
12183 | She welcomed us very cordially, but to our inquiry,"Can you accommodate us?" |
12183 | Should he go now, and bring his daughter the next time he came?" |
12183 | Should they return to the Portage for supplies? |
12183 | Sometimes a dialogue like the following occurs:"How many have you in your lodge?" |
12183 | The Agent lays aside two sticks"How many women?" |
12183 | The Indian carefully, and with great ceremony, counts his bundle of sticks--"Fifteen""How many men?" |
12183 | The question was, who would hazard his own life to bring them to a place of safety? |
12183 | There my husband insisted on my putting on dry shoes and stockings, and( must I confess it?) |
12183 | There were the original bodies, it is true, but where were their manes and tails? |
12183 | They appeared greatly relieved when Mr. Kinzie addressed them in the Pottowattamie language,--"What are you doing here?" |
12183 | They did not love the Americans-- why should they? |
12183 | They greeted their Father with vociferous joy--"_Bon- jour, bon- jour, Shaw- nee- aw- kee_,""_ Hee- nee- kar- ray- kay- noo?_"( how do you do?) |
12183 | They greeted their Father with vociferous joy--"_Bon- jour, bon- jour, Shaw- nee- aw- kee_,""_ Hee- nee- kar- ray- kay- noo?_"( how do you do?) |
12183 | True, but they were on horseback-- the difficulty was, could we get the carriage through? |
12183 | We were continually startled by the crashing of the falling trees around us, and who could tell but that the next would be upon us? |
12183 | What are you doing there?" |
12183 | What can you do?" |
12183 | What could be imagined more enchanting? |
12183 | What could be the matter? |
12183 | What could it mean? |
12183 | What could they be? |
12183 | What does that mean?" |
12183 | What for you kill M. Rolette''s calf? |
12183 | What is it?" |
12183 | What is it?" |
12183 | What shall I do? |
12183 | What should we do? |
12183 | What should we gain by changing ourselves into white men? |
12183 | What then? |
12183 | What was to be done with the bones? |
12183 | What was to be done? |
12183 | What was to be done? |
12183 | What were we about to hear?" |
12183 | What will he think of us?" |
12183 | What would become of us should we fail to do so? |
12183 | What would poor old Mrs. Welsh say? |
12183 | What? |
12183 | When Captain Wells, who was fighting near, beheld it, he exclaimed,--"Is that their game, butchering the women and children? |
12183 | When are they coming, that I may be let out?" |
12183 | When attacked by General Stillman''s detachment, they defended themselves like men; and I would ask, who would not do so, likewise? |
12183 | When the invitation was brought to the red fox, he inquired,"What are you going to have for supper?" |
12183 | Where is he? |
12183 | Where?" |
12183 | Who among our people there are living?" |
12183 | Who are_ you_?" |
12183 | Who knew if we should ever meet again? |
12183 | Who''s dead?" |
12183 | Why did they not come? |
12183 | Why do you ask such a foolish question?" |
12183 | Why do you ask?" |
12183 | Why have you blackened your faces? |
12183 | Will you give me the whiskey at all events?" |
12183 | Will you take a ride on my shoulders?" |
12183 | You have no market?" |
12183 | You remember that-- Manaigre having two names?" |
12183 | for what, then, were you hired?" |
12183 | grandmother,"cried he,"is this the way you keep watch?" |
12183 | have I been making myself at home in this manner in a private family?" |
12183 | mon bourgeois,"would the light- hearted Canadian reply,"would I tell you this is the road if I were not quite certain? |
12183 | mon cher Monsieur le Chat: comment vous portez- vous_?" |
12183 | was it possible there were snakes at Fort Winnebago?" |
12183 | what could it portend? |
12183 | what is that? |
12183 | what would Monsieur Johns say, to see you nows?" |
12183 | what? |
12183 | what? |
12183 | who can wonder that they do not love the whites? |
12183 | why did we tell him so suddenly? |
50034 | ''F''r God''s sake,''says I,''child, what are you doing here?'' 50034 ''How much for this?'' |
50034 | And Mr. O''Donnell had his arms around Miss Gingles? |
50034 | And Mr. O''Donnell was sitting near the bed? |
50034 | And did n''t you have a photograph taken in one of Mrs. Thornton''s lace dresses? |
50034 | And you are not sure whether she had on stockings or not? |
50034 | Are you sure? |
50034 | As Ella Gingles? |
50034 | As a matter of fact, were there not three stockings? 50034 Between the time you cut Ella Gingles loose and we got there were any clothes taken off or put on Ella Gingles?" |
50034 | But there was a mist, was n''t there? |
50034 | Can the state accept you as a juror with confidence that you will do your full duty and not be swayed by outside influences? |
50034 | Did Captain O''Brien say anything about you proving that it was your necklace? |
50034 | Did Ella Gingles go away with the women? |
50034 | Did Miss Barrett say anything to you that night about losing lace? |
50034 | Did Miss Barrett say in your presence and a maid that she missed things? |
50034 | Did Miss Barrett tell you to take it? |
50034 | Did a physician come? |
50034 | Did all go out? |
50034 | Did any men enter the room? |
50034 | Did any one ask you to befriend Miss Gingles? |
50034 | Did it rain that night? |
50034 | Did n''t he attend you when you were ill? |
50034 | Did n''t the nurse and Mrs. Thornton object to having you go back to work? |
50034 | Did n''t you have a room at 300 Indiana street? |
50034 | Did n''t you know there was a policeman in the Wellington hotel? |
50034 | Did n''t you sign a confession that you had taken goods from a department store? |
50034 | Did she answer your letter? |
50034 | Did she call him by his first name? |
50034 | Did she ever live at your house? |
50034 | Did she see Ella wearing the necklace? |
50034 | Did she show you the dress? |
50034 | Did she tell you what she wanted you to go there for? |
50034 | Did the man offer you any money? |
50034 | Did you call Miss Barrett any names that night? |
50034 | Did you ever stop at the Wellington hotel? |
50034 | Did you give her anything to eat? |
50034 | Did you go to the bathroom on the fifth floor of the hotel? |
50034 | Did you have any conversation with anybody there about your mother in Ireland? |
50034 | Did you have any money? |
50034 | Did you know Miss Gingles before? |
50034 | Did you know a Dr. Gibson there? |
50034 | Did you know at the time that Miss Barrett had gone to your room and taken the lace and other articles that you are now charged with stealing? |
50034 | Did you know that Miss Gingles was starving between January 4 and February 16? |
50034 | Did you make Irish lace? |
50034 | Did you meet Mary Brennan at the door of Miss Barrett''s room as she testified? |
50034 | Did you run all the way home? |
50034 | Did you see Miss Barrett? |
50034 | Did you see a liquid in the bathroom? |
50034 | Did you see any people while you were running? 50034 Did you see me take the gag off her?" |
50034 | Did you see other bruises and injuries on the girl''s body? |
50034 | Did you show the letter to Captain O''Brien? |
50034 | Did you tell Captain O''Brien? |
50034 | Did you tell Miss Barrett that you lived at the Wellington hotel? |
50034 | Did you tell anybody-- any of the policemen who went around with you, about it? |
50034 | Did you tell him that you had been attacked? |
50034 | Did you try to get Miss Gingles a position in a department store? |
50034 | Did you write to Daisy Young? |
50034 | Do I look that way? 50034 Do n''t you know that Ella Gingles claims she never read but one book in her life, and that one of Dickens''novels?" |
50034 | Do you know Mrs. Kenyon''s sister? |
50034 | Do you know how Ella Gingles came to have this lace? |
50034 | Do you know that Ella Gingles had ten wounds altogether? |
50034 | Do you remember handling the cords with which Ella Gingles was tied? |
50034 | Dope? 50034 Ella Gingles did n''t tell you what they did to her?" |
50034 | Had she her own stockings on? |
50034 | Have any of the girls in this place saved money except you? |
50034 | Have you any sisters? |
50034 | Have you ever seen her wearing jewelry? |
50034 | Have you read about this case? |
50034 | Have you the letter Daisy Young wrote? |
50034 | Hello, Mr. W----, where have you been for the last couple of weeks? |
50034 | How about her wounds? |
50034 | How are you paid in this place? |
50034 | How did you get home to 474 La Salle avenue? |
50034 | How did you go down stairs? |
50034 | How did you know she had been tied and that those were the cords? |
50034 | How far is 300 Indiana street from 474 La Salle avenue? |
50034 | How long after she came to your house did you see her wearing them? |
50034 | How long did it take you to get home? |
50034 | How long do you think you will be able to keep up this life? |
50034 | How long have the majority of them been leading this life? |
50034 | How long have you had these baby clothes? |
50034 | How long were the women with Ella Gingles-- to the best of your knowledge? |
50034 | How long were you at the hospital? |
50034 | How long were you in the bathroom with Ella Gingles before you untied her? |
50034 | How long were you in this room? |
50034 | How many beads were there on Ella''s necklace? |
50034 | How much larger were you going to make these clothes? |
50034 | How old do you say you are? |
50034 | How''d you expect me to guess on these stiffs? |
50034 | I''d quit now, but what''s the use? 50034 I''m not a-- what do you call it-- meterologist?" |
50034 | In what way? |
50034 | Is Mrs. Kenyon living or dead? |
50034 | Is n''t there anything that I can do to cause you to come with me and do right? |
50034 | Is this the necklace Ella wore? |
50034 | Is this the property you refer to? |
50034 | Just told them you had been robbed of$ 100 worth of lace? |
50034 | Look at this signature signed December 6, 1908--is that your signature? |
50034 | Miss Gingles did admit that some of the lace belonged to Miss Barrett, did she? |
50034 | Miss Gingles is Irish-- does that make any difference? |
50034 | Mrs. Kenyon said to Miss Barrett:''Where is the other girl? 50034 Mrs. Schwartz, is n''t it?" |
50034 | No trouble there, did you? |
50034 | No white slave about that? |
50034 | Nobody suggested that she be sent to a hospital? |
50034 | Now, how many cuts did you find? |
50034 | Now, if this girl had taken laudanum, what would have been the condition of the pupils of her eyes? |
50034 | Now, tell the jury if there was any property in your room that did n''t belong to you? |
50034 | Oh, indict me, why do n''t you? |
50034 | Oh, you did n''t go direct to the Wellington hotel from your home to the Wellington when you heard that Ella Gingles was being murdered? |
50034 | On February 17, were you called to attend Ella Gingles? |
50034 | On what grounds? |
50034 | Schwartz? |
50034 | She was in bed? |
50034 | That was when Miss Barrett had gone to your room and taken the lace and other things which she claimed you had stolen? |
50034 | Then what happened? |
50034 | There were lots of people in the hotel office, was n''t there? |
50034 | There were many cuts, altogether? |
50034 | This confession you signed to Miss Barrett was n''t the first confession you ever signed, was it? |
50034 | Uncle Dave? 50034 Was any of your property found in Miss Gingles''room?" |
50034 | Was n''t your curiosity excited? |
50034 | Was one of her arms tied with a stocking? |
50034 | Was she brought to the bed in the same condition you took her from the bathroom? |
50034 | Was that before you went to work in the Wellington? |
50034 | Was the light burning? |
50034 | Was the ring valuable? |
50034 | Was there any trouble over a necklace? |
50034 | Was there anything much the matter with her aside from being hysterical? 50034 Was your mother in the kitchen at the time?" |
50034 | Well, I took it out of her neck- band because she was tearing at herself, did n''t I? |
50034 | Were there any books in Miss Gingles''trunk? |
50034 | Were they large or small? |
50034 | Were they slip knots? |
50034 | What are you going to do then? |
50034 | What did Miss Barrett say about the watch and bank book? |
50034 | What did Miss Barrett say? |
50034 | What did he do? |
50034 | What did she call him? |
50034 | What did she do? |
50034 | What did she do? |
50034 | What did she say? |
50034 | What did she say? |
50034 | What did she scream? |
50034 | What did you do here? |
50034 | What did you do then? |
50034 | What did you do with the original piece of lace? |
50034 | What did you do? |
50034 | What did you next do? |
50034 | What did you see? |
50034 | What does the average girl make in this place? |
50034 | What else did they take? |
50034 | What else happened? |
50034 | What else happened? |
50034 | What for? |
50034 | What happened then? |
50034 | What is that? |
50034 | What is your occupation? |
50034 | What kind of a night was January 4, 1909? |
50034 | What kind of clouds were there? |
50034 | What position was Miss Gingles in when you found her in the bathroom? |
50034 | What time did she return? |
50034 | What time did you leave the Wellington hotel? |
50034 | What was her condition? |
50034 | What was her condition? |
50034 | What was the doctor''s name? |
50034 | What was the first thing you did when you got home? |
50034 | What was the lace kept in? |
50034 | What''s the matter with the girl? |
50034 | What''s the matter-- sick, is she? |
50034 | What? |
50034 | What? |
50034 | When and how did you meet Agnes Barrett? |
50034 | When did the sky clear? |
50034 | When were you taken ill? |
50034 | When you left you are sure she had on a black skirt? |
50034 | When you went back to the Thornton home from the hospital did the doctor go back with you, or did you ask him to speak to them? |
50034 | When you went to Miss Barrett''s room what happened? |
50034 | When you were at the Thornton house did n''t the family go away? |
50034 | Where are you taking her? |
50034 | Where did she work? |
50034 | Where did you come from to Chicago after leaving the Thorntons? |
50034 | Where did you go when you went to Chicago? |
50034 | Where did you next work? |
50034 | Where is she from? |
50034 | Where was it you saw her wearing the beads? |
50034 | Where was she? |
50034 | Where''s Mabel? |
50034 | Which leg? |
50034 | Which way did you go? |
50034 | Who are you? 50034 Who does it serve?" |
50034 | Who made the hat you are now wearing? |
50034 | Who went with you to the room? |
50034 | Why did n''t you start at these? |
50034 | Why do n''t you give it up and go home? |
50034 | Why? |
50034 | Would it make any difference if Miss Gingles belongs to a different religion than you do? |
50034 | Would you know his handwriting? |
50034 | Yes, but what could I do? 50034 You are sure you saw her wearing the beads?" |
50034 | You did n''t give it to her? |
50034 | You did n''t have any money to pay your car fare? |
50034 | You did n''t have this taken in Belleville? |
50034 | You did n''t mention anything, not to a man anyway, about what you have related as occurring in Miss Barrett''s room? |
50034 | You had lots of time? |
50034 | You have said you were born in Ireland? |
50034 | You lived in Belleville, Ontario, before coming to Chicago? |
50034 | You never had any trouble with them? |
50034 | You remember a big crowd of newspaper men being in the room, do n''t you? |
50034 | You saw people in the streets, but you did n''t stop and tell any of them to call a policeman? |
50034 | You say Ella Gingles was a raving maniac? |
50034 | You say you were a good girl-- a perfectly good girl-- up to the time you met Agnes Barrett? |
50034 | You went direct to Ella Gingles''room, did n''t you? |
50034 | You went into Miss Barrett''s lace store for the first time in November? |
50034 | You went to see Captain O''Brien the next day, did you? |
50034 | You were at home on the night Miss Barrett and the other woman called to see Miss Gingles at the La Salle avenue home? |
50034 | You would have given her money if you knew she were starving in your home? |
50034 | Assistant State''s Attorneys Short and Furthman questioned prospective jurors along these lines:"Do you know anything about the Irish lace store?" |
50034 | At the first necessity for importation, how easy is the traffic? |
50034 | Been waiting long?" |
50034 | By Mr. O''Donnell:"And tell us, had she a cut on the inside of the thigh, running crosswise?" |
50034 | Can every one I meet read what I am?" |
50034 | Can you understand? |
50034 | Could an innocent young woman sustain the horror of such a climax? |
50034 | Did n''t you call yourself Ella Raymond?" |
50034 | Did n''t you see me take it out of her nightgown?" |
50034 | Did not Ella have her own stockings on?" |
50034 | Did you ever see that before?" |
50034 | Did you really see any cuts?" |
50034 | Did you see the scratches on her arms and body?" |
50034 | Do you remember my address?" |
50034 | Do you want corroborative evidence? |
50034 | Do you want to investigate this story for yourself? |
50034 | Got any new ones?" |
50034 | He said to me,"Can you make lace?" |
50034 | Her testimony follows:"Do you know Ella Gingles?" |
50034 | Here are a few samples of questions asked veniremen by Attorney O''Donnell of the defense:"Are you married?" |
50034 | His examination, conducted by Mr. Short, follows:"Do you remember seeing Miss Barrett and Ella Gingles on January 5, 1909?" |
50034 | Linderman?" |
50034 | Now suppose I wanted to be good, would mothers you know want their nice, innocent daughters associating with me? |
50034 | O''Donnell?" |
50034 | O''Donnell?" |
50034 | Page 165, added missing answer"Yes"after"Was that before you went to work in the Wellington?" |
50034 | Page 168, split"What was the lace kept in?" |
50034 | Page 184, corrected period to question mark after"aside from being hysterical?" |
50034 | Schwartz her real name? |
50034 | See them pictures?" |
50034 | She described the marking on the linen, and then was asked:"If Mr. Thornton said you took linen from his house, he is wrong?" |
50034 | She then said:"Did you tell that interrupting beast?" |
50034 | Should he go at once to her parents and tell them of the finding of their daughter, that she was alive? |
50034 | Sure you got the name right?" |
50034 | Surely you can--""Catch her? |
50034 | The man said,"Is it about anything in particular?" |
50034 | This affiant asked,"What is the matter with my head; what is the matter here, and what is wrong?" |
50034 | Thornton?" |
50034 | Thornton?" |
50034 | Was Ella Gingles, the little blonde Irish lace- maker, on trial for stealing$ 50 worth of lace from Agnes Barrett? |
50034 | What did she count in that vast host? |
50034 | What''s this? |
50034 | Where did you hear that word?" |
50034 | Who do you think you are talking to?" |
50034 | Will you be willing to take this case? |
41052 | ''As soon as the rain stops?'' 41052 ''Lucky?'' |
41052 | A burgoo? |
41052 | A museum? 41052 A new position? |
41052 | A silver lining to what cloud, Ned? |
41052 | A three- foot rise? 41052 Ah, Mr. Hallowell? |
41052 | And he gave you the wampum in payment? |
41052 | And that funny, grass- green cabin, set on wooden stilts, up that little hill-- that play- house? |
41052 | And the little white glove? |
41052 | And this is your sister, Miss Hallowell? 41052 Anything we two can help about?" |
41052 | Are n''t you shocked at folks that eat in their kitchen? |
41052 | Are we really going to Mrs. Chrisenberry''s? 41052 At what time had we best start back to Saint Louis?" |
41052 | Burgoo? 41052 But how will you bring it up to camp?" |
41052 | But wo n''t it put you to a lot of trouble, sir,asked Burford,"to take the hands off their regular farm- work in that way?" |
41052 | Ca n''t we help you with the clothes first? |
41052 | Ca n''t you start the pumping engine, boys? 41052 Ca n''t you stop long enough to go to church with me, even? |
41052 | Come along-- where? |
41052 | Conover? |
41052 | Could I do some of the work for you, Rod? |
41052 | Crosby? 41052 Did n''t the doctor order you to spend a dull summer? |
41052 | Do n''t I know, sure? 41052 Do we go on up- river after nightfall? |
41052 | Do you not agree with me, Mr. Crosby? 41052 Do you realize that by making that move we shall risk wrecking the dredges? |
41052 | Does n''t she like to look at pictures? 41052 Five hundred damages? |
41052 | For those babies? 41052 For three hundred, is it?" |
41052 | Half- back? 41052 Has something gone wrong with the work? |
41052 | Have n''t you just said that you could n''t stand it to be left behind? 41052 Have n''t you time to pass the time o''day?" |
41052 | Have you lost your last wit, Ned? |
41052 | He did? 41052 Help things along? |
41052 | Here, where''s Smith? |
41052 | How are you feeling this fine, muggy morning? |
41052 | How are you, Mr. Burford? 41052 How can you work here?--or sleep, either?" |
41052 | How do they go about digging those ditches? 41052 How far up is the cave- in, Mulcahy?" |
41052 | How on earth can you entertain such high mightinesses? |
41052 | How should I know he was a friend of yours, commodore? 41052 How will you live?" |
41052 | I do wonder----"Ye''re lookin''at me keepsakes? |
41052 | Is it? |
41052 | Is n''t he sumptuous, though? |
41052 | Is n''t it, Marian? 41052 It''s a queer way to spend Sunday, is n''t it, Sis? |
41052 | It''s nice while they''re little, is n''t it? |
41052 | May I come in? 41052 Mercy, what is that? |
41052 | Miss Hallowell, will you go and bring Sally Lou? 41052 Miss Hallowell?" |
41052 | Mr. Carlisle is mighty brave, is n''t he? 41052 Of Stephen A. Douglas, the famous orator? |
41052 | Oh, you and Sally Lou have made a play- house of that platform? 41052 Payment? |
41052 | Quinine? |
41052 | Rod, what did that messenger boy bring? 41052 Rod, what do you mean? |
41052 | Rod, why do n''t you answer me? |
41052 | Sally Lou, are you daft? 41052 So you want to thank me for this job, eh? |
41052 | Take you up to the cave- in, you mean? 41052 That grand big cat of yours, ma''am? |
41052 | That letter? 41052 The coal shipment? |
41052 | The dipper- bail broken_ again_? 41052 The dipper- handle? |
41052 | The_ Queen_? 41052 Think you can see all right?" |
41052 | Think you dare ask her to take down her barb- wire barricade and lay away her shot- gun? 41052 This is a real sterling- silver lining to our cloud, is n''t it, Hallowell? |
41052 | Those horrid flat- boats heaped with coal? |
41052 | Those red and blue pencils of Rod''s, you mean? 41052 Tired, Sis?" |
41052 | We''ve been counting the hours till we should dare to go to call on Miss Northerner, have n''t we, kiddies? 41052 Well, what if it does take all afternoon? |
41052 | Wet weather for putting in your garden, is n''t it? |
41052 | What about the lower laterals? |
41052 | What can we abandon? 41052 What do ye say, sir? |
41052 | What does ail his highness? 41052 What does district drainage work mean, anyway?" |
41052 | What has happened? 41052 What is a barbecue, pray? |
41052 | What is that queer box- shaped red boat, set on a floating platform? |
41052 | What more can we do? 41052 What of them? |
41052 | What sort of a day was it, Sis? |
41052 | What''s the news, I say? 41052 Whatever ails you, Burford?" |
41052 | Where are you bound, Rod? 41052 Where did that pup come from? |
41052 | Where is Roderick, Ned? |
41052 | Where is your boat, sir? 41052 Who has been overhauling my desk? |
41052 | Why are you taking all those time- books, Rod? 41052 Why do n''t you come up to the Gates farm- house and sleep there?" |
41052 | Why does n''t the company send you a book- keeper? |
41052 | Why not? 41052 Why not?" |
41052 | Why? 41052 Why?" |
41052 | Why? |
41052 | Will I talk to the commodore? 41052 Will you look at that old yellowed pilot''s map and certificate in the acorn frame? |
41052 | Will you show me how to steer? 41052 With this big search- light? |
41052 | Ye''ll sit here, behind the wheel, and watch me swing herself up the river? 41052 You do n''t propose to leave Mount Vernon Street for the wilds of Illinois without a struggle, do you, Empress?" |
41052 | You mean that you must work on the contract all day Sunday? 41052 You surely think I''m a goose, do n''t you, to bring my gold teaspoons, and my wedding linen, and my finest tea- set down to a wilderness like this? |
41052 | You think it''s as bad as all that? |
41052 | You think that I can be a help to Rod? 41052 You''re expecting your launch, Miss Hallowell? |
41052 | _ Where_ did you learn to handle a baby like that? |
41052 | ''To save''--to save_ what_? |
41052 | ''To save--''Surely he meant for us to save the dredges?" |
41052 | A Chicago call? |
41052 | A special- delivery letter? |
41052 | Am I such a poor stenographer?" |
41052 | And did n''t they roll you in warm blankets, and then bandage your poor little throat with goose- grease and camphor and red pepper?" |
41052 | And if you really need somebody to talk to their wives and be gracious and all that, why ca n''t Mrs. Burford do it better than I? |
41052 | And the captain-- what will he say?" |
41052 | And the launch? |
41052 | Another break in the machinery? |
41052 | Anything doing to- day?" |
41052 | Are n''t we rushing the whole plant to the danger notch of speed as it is?" |
41052 | Are n''t you a competent engineer?" |
41052 | Are they safe, no matter how high the water may rise?" |
41052 | Are you actually planning to ask her for the right of way?" |
41052 | Are you hurt? |
41052 | Are you ill? |
41052 | Are you never going to tell me what is in that letter?" |
41052 | As to being cut off from my friends-- aren''t you the best chum I ever had? |
41052 | As to home comforts-- isn''t it home, wherever we two are together? |
41052 | Ask him to come on deck and talk to Hallowell, of the Breckenridge Company, will you?" |
41052 | Breckenridge_ who is speaking? |
41052 | Burford, what ails you?" |
41052 | Burford? |
41052 | Burford?" |
41052 | Burford?" |
41052 | But does n''t it just rest your heart to look at it? |
41052 | But how can they hold you back, Rod? |
41052 | But how did you dare to bring your little children down here? |
41052 | But is that all that you have to tell me, Ned?" |
41052 | But what makes you speak so queerly, Rod? |
41052 | But where is Mulcahy? |
41052 | But where shall we dine?" |
41052 | But why do you ask such questions? |
41052 | But, Rod, where can I stay? |
41052 | But, in high wather, whoever expects a Mississippi packet to be on time? |
41052 | CHAPTER II TRAVELLERS THREE"Ready, Marian? |
41052 | CHAPTER IX THE MAGIC LEAD- PENCIL"Bad news, is it?" |
41052 | CHAPTER VII THE COAL AND THE COMMODORE"Ready for breakfast, Miss Hallowell?" |
41052 | CHAPTER XI A LONG PULL AND A STRONG PULL"What is the latest bulletin, Sally Lou?" |
41052 | CHAPTER XII PARTNERS AND VICTORIES"What time is it, miss?" |
41052 | Ca n''t I drive you to Mr. Gates''s? |
41052 | Ca n''t you ask Mr. Gates to hitch up and bring you down to camp right away? |
41052 | Ca n''t you stay to lunch, Marian? |
41052 | Can you beat that?" |
41052 | Carlisle?" |
41052 | Could the work stand a three- foot rise?" |
41052 | Did ever ye hear of the Little Giant?" |
41052 | Did ever you see such a beautiful grouch?" |
41052 | Did n''t he prescribe bread and milk and sleep?" |
41052 | Did n''t they teach you geography at Wellesley? |
41052 | Did n''t you bully me into giving up to your wishes, by threatening to refuse this position unless I''d come West with you? |
41052 | Did n''t you drag me out here willy- nilly? |
41052 | Did n''t you ever have the croup when you were young, Miss Northerner? |
41052 | Did n''t you hear Mrs. McCloskey praise it, too?" |
41052 | Did n''t you say you''re living on the drainage job? |
41052 | Did you ever in all your life see anybody change as she has done? |
41052 | Did you rig up this whole contrivance, all for me? |
41052 | Do n''t you mind about them red pencils?" |
41052 | Do n''t you remember, three months ago, how you fretted and hesitated about taking the position that you are holding to- day? |
41052 | Do n''t you want to catch that nice birdie?" |
41052 | Do ye remember? |
41052 | Do you feel like tackling your job again, Burford?" |
41052 | Do you realize that your playful little game will cost the company a lawsuit and a small fortune besides?" |
41052 | Do you remember the figures?" |
41052 | Do you remember what I told you last week about the law that governs the taxing of the land- owners for the making of these ditches?" |
41052 | Do you see us putting in that cheery news?" |
41052 | Do you see, that means we''ll make a new channel for the whole stream? |
41052 | Do you see?" |
41052 | Do you see?" |
41052 | Do you see?" |
41052 | Does n''t central answer? |
41052 | Dress up in my best, and come down to camp at nine in the morning, and on Sunday morning at that?" |
41052 | Especially on Ned''s account, do n''t you see?" |
41052 | Feel like tackling it? |
41052 | Hallowell?" |
41052 | Have the boys met with more ill- luck on the contract?" |
41052 | Have you anything better to do?" |
41052 | Have you finished the upper laterals? |
41052 | He''s a real worker, is n''t he? |
41052 | Hear that? |
41052 | How are you, Rod? |
41052 | How can you be spared?" |
41052 | How can you keep still now? |
41052 | How can you look so pensive and perplexed? |
41052 | How could you keep still and not tell the Burfords? |
41052 | How do you suppose I like being cut off from you, brother?" |
41052 | How goes it? |
41052 | How many callers will we have? |
41052 | How will you manage without me?" |
41052 | If I go West, where will you go? |
41052 | If I''m obliged to share my boat with your impudent riffraff----""Mr. Marvin, will you kindly come here a moment?" |
41052 | In that little red launch, see? |
41052 | Into a lumber- yard?" |
41052 | Is Captain Lathrop, of the_ Queen_, round about?" |
41052 | Is it anything interesting?" |
41052 | Is it not grand to know that your brother is giving the power of his hands and his brains to such a big, helping work as all that?" |
41052 | Is it yourself that''s turned highway robber? |
41052 | Is it-- Is it head- quarters? |
41052 | Is n''t he a stunner for a year old?" |
41052 | Is n''t she magnificent? |
41052 | Is not this a most disheartening outlook? |
41052 | Is she, Tom Tucker?" |
41052 | Is that Dredge A crew? |
41052 | Is this all there is to it? |
41052 | Is your captain aboard? |
41052 | Just yellow, tumbling water, and mud, and fog?" |
41052 | Marvin?" |
41052 | May n''t Finnegan and I tag along?" |
41052 | May n''t we take you aboard to see?" |
41052 | My faith, do you remember the race that we two ran, down in Pike County in''63?" |
41052 | On the big dredge? |
41052 | Or do we stop at some landing?" |
41052 | Or trouble among the laborers, or what?" |
41052 | Packed in all right, Mammy? |
41052 | Queer, is n''t it? |
41052 | Remember the smothery feather- beds, and the ice- cold pickled beets and pie for breakfast? |
41052 | S''pose Mammy Easter would make us a pot of coffee, Sally Lou? |
41052 | See that?" |
41052 | See?" |
41052 | See?" |
41052 | Shall I leave you long enough to get our bags and Empress?" |
41052 | Shall I take it and my own, too?" |
41052 | So ye''ve lost the bail dimensions? |
41052 | So you and Mr. Burford here think that I ought to stand by the job, hey,''and not let my private quarrels influence me into deserting the contract?'' |
41052 | Sort of a shot- gun quarantine, see? |
41052 | Steam up, Mulcahy? |
41052 | Steer by it? |
41052 | Sure it wo n''t tire you to talk business?" |
41052 | Surely you will not have time to make up your week''s reports during that three- hour trip on the train?" |
41052 | Tart and grim, like Mrs. Chrisenberry, I suppose, or else kindly and bashful and''woodsy,''like the Gateses? |
41052 | That visitors''Sunday, do n''t you remember?" |
41052 | Then what about your watch to- night? |
41052 | They do n''t come aboard your house- boat?" |
41052 | Think it will take us all night?" |
41052 | Truly?" |
41052 | Want to see what the lady''s got for you, Mamie?" |
41052 | Was he aboard?" |
41052 | Was n''t he a dear to think of taking us?" |
41052 | Was n''t she brave to come out to this cold, lonesome country all for me? |
41052 | We''ll have to see to it that they get a lot of coddling so''s to keep them cheered up, wo n''t we?" |
41052 | We''ll love to have you; wo n''t we, babies?" |
41052 | Well, Hallowell?" |
41052 | What about Jackson River?" |
41052 | What about you, Sis? |
41052 | What can you mean? |
41052 | What could she do to make Rod''s quarters more comfortable? |
41052 | What did he say?" |
41052 | What do ye say?" |
41052 | What do you say?" |
41052 | What do you suppose a burgoo may be?" |
41052 | What do you suppose this telegram says?" |
41052 | What has happened?" |
41052 | What if you get sick, Rod?" |
41052 | What is goose- grease, pray?" |
41052 | What is his name?" |
41052 | What is it, dear?" |
41052 | What is that blazing light away up the ditch? |
41052 | What is the man talking about? |
41052 | What is the old lady like, Rod?" |
41052 | What may a burgoo be?" |
41052 | What more could his reply need? |
41052 | What of them?" |
41052 | What sort of people will they be? |
41052 | What was your letter, Rod?" |
41052 | What''s yer pleasure, sir?" |
41052 | When you have worked fourteen hours a day, ever since you came West?" |
41052 | Where are you telephoning from?" |
41052 | Where can they find laboring men to do the work, away out in the country?" |
41052 | Where do they all come from?" |
41052 | Where under the shining sun did you come from?" |
41052 | Where were you trying to steer us? |
41052 | Wherever was ye brought up? |
41052 | Who ever saw a dipper break her bail twice on the same job? |
41052 | Why are you carrying so much steam? |
41052 | Why not make it five hundred dollars per ton? |
41052 | Why on earth should you go? |
41052 | Why should I come down to the work? |
41052 | Why, how did you swing the dredge downstream so quickly?" |
41052 | Why, sir? |
41052 | Why-- why, did_ you_ do this for me, sister? |
41052 | Why?" |
41052 | Why?" |
41052 | Will I disturb you if I tell you a good joke on Hallowell?" |
41052 | Will that sand cut give you much trouble?" |
41052 | Will they stop by on their way home from church, or will they come promptly after dinner and spend the afternoon?" |
41052 | Will you come downstairs?" |
41052 | Will you hear that, Hallowell? |
41052 | Will you join me, an''prove once more which one of us is the rale winner?" |
41052 | Will you talk with him?" |
41052 | Will you tell me what she meant?" |
41052 | Wires down again, do you s''pose?" |
41052 | Wo n''t you stop and talk with us a while?" |
41052 | Wo n''t you, lamb?" |
41052 | Would Commodore McCloskey know? |
41052 | Would that help things along?" |
41052 | Ye''ve heard of her, sure? |
41052 | You are n''t going to give goose- grease to your own babies, I hope?" |
41052 | You girls do n''t play, I suppose?" |
41052 | You hear that, I reckon?" |
41052 | You here, Miss Hallowell? |
41052 | You stodgy tortoise, why ca n''t you be pleased, too?" |
41052 | You wire them straight off, will you? |
41052 | You''ll go with me, wo n''t you, Marian? |
41052 | You''re here to see the greased- pig race? |
41052 | [ Illustration]"What will your work be, Rod?" |
41052 | _ Barbecue?_"Marian spoke the mystic words over, bewildered. |
34266 | ''Hain''t Tom Grayson h- yer?'' 34266 ''They hain''t, sonny?'' |
34266 | ''WHERE IS HE?'' 34266 ''What murderer?'' |
34266 | A crowbar? 34266 Abra''m, do you remember me?" |
34266 | Air you the son of Lijy Markham? |
34266 | An''how did the master fale about that? |
34266 | And a good provider? |
34266 | And just how the barrel was hung to the stock? |
34266 | And yet light enough from the moon came through these thick beech- trees to let you know Tom Grayson? |
34266 | And you could see him shoot? |
34266 | And you could see what kind of a pistol it was? |
34266 | And you do n''t care for her any more? |
34266 | And you full twenty feet away? |
34266 | And you twenty feet or more away? |
34266 | Are n''t you going to go and help her? |
34266 | Are n''t you_ ever_ going to get married? |
34266 | Are they going to try it again? |
34266 | Are you sure you were as much as ten feet away? |
34266 | Aw, you shet up yer jaw, now wonchoo? |
34266 | Beech- leaves are pretty thick in August? |
34266 | But do n''t you think it might have been a little less than half a mile? |
34266 | But how was he killed? |
34266 | But wha''choo doin''away f''om home, I''d thes like to know, when they''s so much a- goin''on in your diggin''s? 34266 By the time Tom came up you''d got-- how far away? |
34266 | By the way, Ike,he said,"did you know that Dave Sovine got back last week?" |
34266 | Ca n''t we sit out on the porch? |
34266 | Ca n''t you git Butts''s? |
34266 | Ca n''t you guess what it is that I''m coming at? |
34266 | Ca n''t you think? |
34266 | Come in, Bob, wonch yeh? 34266 Come un shet me up, wonch you?" |
34266 | Could n''t you get him to defend you? |
34266 | Could n''t you move him into the east room? |
34266 | D''joo h- yer about the carner''s eenquest, Bob? |
34266 | D''you hear that scratchin''in the chimbley? |
34266 | D''you remember the pistol? |
34266 | D''you think, Barb''ry,''t I''d let a shif''less kind uv a man like Big Bob have my money to gamble it away to that Sovine? 34266 Dave Sovine? |
34266 | Did Dave hurt Tom much? |
34266 | Did I talk that way last summer? |
34266 | Did I-- make you mad, Barbara? |
34266 | Did I? 34266 Did either George Lockwood or Tom have a candle?" |
34266 | Did he tell_ you_, S''manthy? |
34266 | Did the trouble cost you much money? |
34266 | Did you go to Perrysburg? |
34266 | Did you have it at the camp- meeting? |
34266 | Did you hear anything from mother and Barbara? |
34266 | Did you hear anything of Tom? |
34266 | Did you know it was Tom before he fired? |
34266 | Did you see him to- day? |
34266 | Didn''you say as you''lowed the sher''f was expectin''Jake? |
34266 | Do n''t you believe I''d make a good husband? |
34266 | Do n''t you wish you knew? |
34266 | Do n''t you_ know_ whether you''re going to marry him or not? |
34266 | Do you know that pistol? |
34266 | Do you know the prisoner? |
34266 | Do you mean Bob McCord? |
34266 | Do you mean my gambling with Dave Sovine? |
34266 | Do you remember what you said then? |
34266 | Do you think I could learn it? |
34266 | Do you think my folks are such idiots? 34266 Do you want to sell it?" |
34266 | Do? |
34266 | Does he drink? |
34266 | Fer what? 34266 Goin''to be in town long?" |
34266 | Goin''to take the young feller away? |
34266 | Got a b''ar, did n''choo? |
34266 | Hain''choo h- yeard about her brother? |
34266 | Hain''t I all- ays said so? 34266 Has Uncle Tom turned you off?" |
34266 | Have yer hoss fed some corn? |
34266 | Have you seed a man go a- past h- yer weth a bag of wheat on his hoss? |
34266 | Have you thought about a lawyer? |
34266 | He wo n''t, wo n''t he? |
34266 | He''s done everything he could not to put out the boys, and what''u''d''e shoot for? 34266 Hold on,"he said, more to himself than to her; and added,"What were you doing when I came?" |
34266 | How could you see Tom and know that it was he that fired, when the only light was nearly a mile away, and inside a circle of tents? |
34266 | How far away from Mason and Lockwood were you when the shooting took place? |
34266 | How far away were you from Lockwood when the murder took place? |
34266 | How far away were you from the pulpit and meeting- place? |
34266 | How long shall I stay away? 34266 How''d it go?" |
34266 | How''d the boys come out las''night down''t Moscow? |
34266 | How''s the corn crap out your way? |
34266 | Howdy, Rachel? 34266 Howdy, Tom?" |
34266 | I declare to goodness,she said, as she fumbled among the bits of string and other trumpery on the shelf,"where''s that piece of candle gone to? |
34266 | I only want to know one thing, Mr. Mason, and that is whether you-- whether you really and truly want me? |
34266 | I say, Bob,he said, coming closer and speaking low,"_ is_ they goin''to be shootin''to- night?" |
34266 | I say, Ike,she said, coaxingly,"where did you see Tom?" |
34266 | I say, Sher''f,he called,"how many men''d you say they wuz in that air fust mob?" |
34266 | I say, Uncle Lazar, ez this a''ax_ ur_ a saw? 34266 I suppose you know about poor Tom?" |
34266 | I wonder''f you hadn''better light out? |
34266 | I? 34266 In a friendly way?" |
34266 | Is it a bargain, good and fast? |
34266 | Is n''t that purty girl that was here yesterday your sweetheart? |
34266 | Is that a fack? |
34266 | Is that_ all_? |
34266 | Is this little Barby? |
34266 | Is yon hoss yourn, on t''other side of the branch? |
34266 | It might have been 11? |
34266 | Jealous? 34266 Know his name?" |
34266 | Let who come? |
34266 | Look down on_ you_? |
34266 | Looky here, Rache,and Henry gave his shoulders a twitch,"the two farms jine; now, what if you and me was to jine?" |
34266 | Magill, who is that girl? |
34266 | May I see you safe home? |
34266 | Me, Barb''ry? |
34266 | Me? 34266 Middlin''small?" |
34266 | More than three- quarters of a mile away from the place where the murder took place? |
34266 | Mr. Britton,he called,"which way''d Zeke go?" |
34266 | Mrs. Grayson''s friend? |
34266 | Mrs. Grayson, ainh? 34266 Mrs. Grayson, wo n''t you let me stay with you a few days, now you''re in trouble, and help you through?" |
34266 | No; which brother? 34266 None of my business, ainh? |
34266 | Nor Tom Grayson, I suppose? |
34266 | Nor before 9? |
34266 | Not over a mile? |
34266 | Now I''m your sweetheart, ai n''t I? |
34266 | Oh, you had? |
34266 | One eye a leetle crossed? |
34266 | Only just come? 34266 Only just got here?" |
34266 | Perrysburg? |
34266 | Play a game of seven- up? |
34266 | SAY, TOM, WON''T YOU WAIT FOR ME? |
34266 | Say, Barbara,Janet went on,"are you going to marry that Mr. Mason that was here yesterday?" |
34266 | Say, Bob,said Uncle Lazar, whose curiosity was piqued beyond endurance,"what''s in the wind? |
34266 | Say, Tom, wo n''t you wait for me? |
34266 | Say, where did that mob come from that got you out? |
34266 | Shootin''? |
34266 | So long ago that you do n''t care to renew the subject? |
34266 | TELL ME TRULY, TOM, DID YOU DO IT? |
34266 | Tell me truly, Tom,she whispered in his ear,"did you do it? |
34266 | Tell me what''s the color of his hair, Pate? |
34266 | The shairiff seems to have one eye on Broad Run, ainh Pate? |
34266 | There were no lights nearer than three- quarters of a mile? |
34266 | They had pistols, did n''t they? |
34266 | They''ve taken your boy, and you''ll let me fill his place a little while, wo n''t you, now? |
34266 | To me? 34266 Tom, are you there? |
34266 | Tom, where air you? |
34266 | Tom, who''s_ your_ sweetheart? |
34266 | Trouble? 34266 W''y, lawsy, don''choo know''t she hain''t got nary nuther one? |
34266 | W''y, not Tom? |
34266 | WHERE''S THAT PIECE OF CANDLE GONE TO? |
34266 | Was it a very bad one? 34266 Was it like this?" |
34266 | Well, now, you tell me this: Is Jake Hogan a- goin''to town weth the boys to- night? |
34266 | Well, shoot me-- d''you think I care? 34266 Well, what on earth_ would_, then?" |
34266 | Well, what on yerth did he come over yer fer, S''manthy? |
34266 | Well, you know the road, do n''t you? |
34266 | Well,retorted Jake,"what would ole Tom do for young Tom''t this time? |
34266 | Were you not pretty close to him when he was shot? |
34266 | Wha''choo talkin''? |
34266 | Wha''joo mean? |
34266 | Whach yeh go''n''to do? |
34266 | Whach yeh go''n''to do? |
34266 | Whaddy yeh say, Rachel? 34266 What air you up to now?" |
34266 | What am I goin''to do weth you, Tom? |
34266 | What are you going for? 34266 What did Grayson do when he had shot George, and what did you do?" |
34266 | What did Tom shoot with? |
34266 | What did you see there? 34266 What did you win that night from Tom?" |
34266 | What do you mean? |
34266 | What does he want to come a- maiddlin''wi''us fer? |
34266 | What does''n oath amount to with a pistol at your head? |
34266 | What had you and George Lockwood been doing together? |
34266 | What have I done, Rachel? |
34266 | What kind of a lookin''creetur wuzzy? |
34266 | What kind of a pistol? |
34266 | What makes you think so? |
34266 | What noise? |
34266 | What seems to be the matter? |
34266 | What should we have a candle for? |
34266 | What sort of trees were there on the ground? |
34266 | What time of night was it? |
34266 | What was it? |
34266 | What was n''t? |
34266 | What wuz you lookin''over the cliff fer? |
34266 | What''ll Jake say to you fer lettin''yer mar''go off, when one uv his boys had the promise? 34266 What''s Jake goin''to do nex''thing?" |
34266 | What''s that? |
34266 | What''s the matter, Barb''ry? 34266 What''s the matter, Bob?" |
34266 | What''s the matter, Sam; can you make out? |
34266 | What''s the matter? |
34266 | What''s this I hear about Tom Grayson, Cap''n? |
34266 | What''s this about lynching Tom? |
34266 | What''s this, Lincoln? 34266 What''s to come off to- night?" |
34266 | What? |
34266 | What? |
34266 | What_ are_ you laughing about? |
34266 | What_ shall_ I do when you''re gone? |
34266 | Where is Tom? |
34266 | Where is he? |
34266 | Where were the lights on the camp- ground? |
34266 | Where yeh boun''fer? |
34266 | Where''s Bob McCord? |
34266 | Where''s Jake Hogan? |
34266 | Which one, Judge? |
34266 | Who can say the verse? |
34266 | Who could they be? 34266 Who is it, Ike?" |
34266 | Who proposed to Tom to play with you? |
34266 | Who told you? |
34266 | Who told you? |
34266 | Who wuz the other fellow? |
34266 | Who''d you hear it from? |
34266 | Who''s there? |
34266 | Who, if anybody, lent him the money to get back his things which you had won? |
34266 | Why ca n''t I? |
34266 | Why did you put him in the dungeon? |
34266 | Why do n''t you go to see Rachel? |
34266 | Why not take up algebra? |
34266 | Why? |
34266 | Will they let them come if you ask''em? |
34266 | Will you go and ask Martha and Barbara to come over? |
34266 | Will you let me look at it? |
34266 | Will you, indeed, and double deed? |
34266 | Wo n''t you come over and see us sometime? |
34266 | Y''ai n''t heern nothin''''v no bears a- cap''rin''''round h- yer lately, eh?'' 34266 Yeh do n''t think ez he''s arter b''ars, do yeh, S''manthy? |
34266 | Yes, hurt him? 34266 Yes; but you''ll let it out, un then what''ll Bob say to me?" |
34266 | You a- goin''along? |
34266 | You are not obliged to criminate yourself,said the coroner again;"but did n''t you see Lockwood killed?" |
34266 | You did n''t have any candle in your hand, did you, at any time during the evening? |
34266 | You do n''t mean to say that the platform torches up by the preachers''tent gave any light three- quarters of a mile away and in the woods? |
34266 | You do n''t think I measured it, do yeh? |
34266 | You might have been mistaken about its being Tom then? |
34266 | You parted from him as a friend? |
34266 | You said you were with Lockwood just before the shooting? |
34266 | You say it, Ginnie,said her sister;"but whose turn first?" |
34266 | You think he did n''t? |
34266 | You want to know what Bob tole S''manthy? 34266 You would n''t ixpict it to vote for a man with a clane shirt on, now would ye?" |
34266 | You would n''t try to whale the whole crowd with it, would you? |
34266 | You''ll come back into the office again, wo n''t you, Tom? |
34266 | You''ve played cards with him, have n''t you? |
34266 | You? 34266 Your mare''s a- goin''to town to- night, un ef she sh''d git a bullet- hole put into her who''d pay the funeral ixpenses?" |
34266 | Zeke, d''you see that short piece of candle that was here on the shelf? |
34266 | Zeke,said Britton, as he drew his chair to the table,"what''s the matter with ole Gray?" |
34266 | Zeke,said McCord, when once they were seated on the hackberry log,"you''n''me''s all- ays been frien''s, hain''t we?" |
34266 | _ Him_ shoot? |
34266 | _ That_ would mend matters, would n''t it? |
34266 | _ You_ hain''t? 34266 A week? |
34266 | After a few moments she mustered courage to ask timidly:"Would the book cost much?" |
34266 | Ainh? |
34266 | All well''t your house?" |
34266 | And is it necessary to keep his handcuffs on?" |
34266 | And now you wo n''t spurn me, will you?" |
34266 | And when at length the people were quieted a little, Mrs. Grayson spoke up, with a choking voice:"Jedge, ai n''t you a- goin''to let him go now?" |
34266 | And will you forgive me for keeping you in purgatory, as you call it, all this time?" |
34266 | Any nooze about the trial?" |
34266 | Are_ you_ in there, too, Barbara? |
34266 | As Magill put one foot into the stirrup he said:"Mason, how would yeh like to come down to Moscow an''help me write up me books? |
34266 | Britton?" |
34266 | But Bob only asked,"What''ll we do fer pistols''?" |
34266 | But Lockwood turned to call after the departing youth:"You wo n''t mention that to anybody, will you, Ike?" |
34266 | But how could he endure to quit defeated? |
34266 | But how could he tell her of Tom''s unlucky gambling? |
34266 | But if a lot of men comes, what can one man do? |
34266 | But what time''s Jake goin''?" |
34266 | But what''s the use a- bein''so smart an''then bein''sech a simple into the bargain? |
34266 | But where would she get the money to buy a text- book? |
34266 | But would n''t she stay to supper? |
34266 | But you''re too old a hand to set much store by talk?" |
34266 | By the way, where has Bob stowed Tom for the night?" |
34266 | Ca n''t you show''em that he never done it?" |
34266 | Can you ketch?" |
34266 | Could n''t you give me something to do, so that I could earn my board at your house?" |
34266 | D''yeh think Jake Hogan do n''t know a feller as the rope''s already got a slip- knot onto?" |
34266 | Did he get took up?" |
34266 | Did it smell of powder? |
34266 | Did they give you any breakfast?" |
34266 | Did they say you must?" |
34266 | Do n''t you remember? |
34266 | Do you know Dave Sovine?" |
34266 | Do you know, Cyrus?" |
34266 | Do you think I do n''t know what it was for? |
34266 | Do you think I do n''t see through your winter wheat? |
34266 | Does he think I''m made out of money? |
34266 | Doin''well at it, ai n''t yeh?" |
34266 | Don''choo know''t the sheriff''s gi''n bonds, un''f''e lets a prisoner go he''s got to pay the damages? |
34266 | Don''choo''low S''manthy could rake up a cole dodger summers about?" |
34266 | Ef he''s goin''to Perrysburg----""Perrysburg? |
34266 | Eh?" |
34266 | Felt kind- uh cold un creepy like, did n''t it now, Hank Plunkett, when its muzzle was agin yer head, un it cocked, besides? |
34266 | Fer savin''the life uv a innercent man? |
34266 | Folks would find out what sort of people the Graysons were now; and what would become of all Barbary''s fine match with the master? |
34266 | For what, indeed, that could happen now would be sufficient to turn back such a tide of popular condemnation? |
34266 | George Lockwood will have you bound over to keep the peace if you stay, and now you''re out with your uncle, who''s going your bail?" |
34266 | Grayson?" |
34266 | Had Rachel discovered that her face was at its best when her long eyelashes were lowered in this fashion, or was the action merely instinctive? |
34266 | He extended his hand to her with a hearty,"Well, Rache, how are you? |
34266 | He''s friendly to you, is n''t he?" |
34266 | Hey? |
34266 | How could he serve the Graysons better than to be where he could see Tom every day, and look after his interest in any contingency that might arise? |
34266 | How could he wait? |
34266 | How did he come to do it?" |
34266 | How did you come to shoot Lockwood?" |
34266 | How in creation did they kill him, then?" |
34266 | How much does Bob want?" |
34266 | How much light does even a full moon shed in a beech woods like that on the Union camp- ground? |
34266 | How''s the hangin''business a- gittin''along these days? |
34266 | I do n''t want to intrude, but why ca n''t you let me be your best friend and-- help you if I can?" |
34266 | I''low that''s got sumpin''to do weth the business afore the meetin''hain''t it?" |
34266 | If I have you, do you think anything else will trouble me?" |
34266 | If he should happen in to- night, what do you think would become of you?" |
34266 | Is it a bargain?" |
34266 | It was plain to be seen that she was inwardly asking,"What_ can_ Henry Miller be up to, anyhow?" |
34266 | It was this half- evolved conscience that made him wish-- what shall I say?--to atone for the harm he had but half- intentionally done to Tom? |
34266 | Len''me your mare to git this''ere varmint home?" |
34266 | Looking for Ike?" |
34266 | Magill?" |
34266 | McCord?" |
34266 | Now I say sass fer the goose is--""Aw, well, what''s sass got to do weth the question, Jake? |
34266 | Now what can I do for the bah- y? |
34266 | Now what if the evidence proves that he did?" |
34266 | Now why does David Sovine go to all this trouble to perjure himself? |
34266 | Now will that do? |
34266 | Now you tell me, what''s Uncle Lazar''s whisky- jug got to do weth that? |
34266 | Now, whaddy yeh say? |
34266 | Now, what''s the use of fooling and nonsense betwixt you and me? |
34266 | Of course, teaching her was a delight; but who could help feeling delight in teaching such a learner? |
34266 | Of what use was this battle, which might keep him miserable awhile longer, but which could end in but one way? |
34266 | Perhaps Snyder would see Blackman, so that Lockwood need not appear in the matter? |
34266 | Presently he said, in a half- tipsy tone:"S''manthy, you''n''me wuz all- ays good frien''s, wuz n''t we?" |
34266 | Say, Bob, ef you''re sech a frien''why on yerth don''choo tell a- body what fotcht you over h- yer to- day?" |
34266 | That''d be a purty howdy- do, now would n''t it? |
34266 | The first that Zeke made out was that Jake was relieving his mind in a little speech:"D''yeh know they''ve gone un set up the k- yards onto us, boys? |
34266 | The head of the proprietor came out of one of the lower windows with an abrupt"Who''s there?" |
34266 | The one that''s in Moscow?" |
34266 | The story goes that he was a man with a red goatee--""Un what fer sized man?" |
34266 | Then he added on his own account:"We wo n''t have no tricks; d''yeh h''yer?" |
34266 | Then he turned full on Bob and said:"Could I depend on you to be in court at the trial without fail, and without my sending a subpoena?" |
34266 | Then laying down his knife, he asked:"You''ll be back at school next week?" |
34266 | Then, after awhile, he asked,"Been over to his house?" |
34266 | Think I couldn''make him tell? |
34266 | Tom regarded Mason a moment in silence, and presently said with emotion:"How can I make anybody believe the truth? |
34266 | Un what''ll the folks say when they find out you knowed, un let''em be fooled by Big Bob? |
34266 | W''y, he''s the son of old Bill Sovine; he''s the boy that ran off four years ago, do n''t you remember? |
34266 | Was it any wonder that Barbara spoke to him with severity when she found her cherished vision becoming an intangible illusion? |
34266 | Was not his grandfather yet alive in Pennsylvania, while his great- grandfather had not been dead many years? |
34266 | Was the pistol hot when you found it? |
34266 | Wha''d joo turn off Pete Markham fer? |
34266 | Whaddy you think of the plan?" |
34266 | Whadje expeck?" |
34266 | Whar''ve they tuck''m to?" |
34266 | What does he want to get me hanged for? |
34266 | What trouble?" |
34266 | What would Lincoln do? |
34266 | What would you do with a crowbar, Bob?" |
34266 | What wuz it fotcht you all the way over h- yer un the eenquest a- goin''on so closte to your house?" |
34266 | What''d they have candles for?" |
34266 | What''ll happen if you go on in this heels- over- head way? |
34266 | What''s a feller want to go sparkin''a Friday night fer? |
34266 | What''s eddication good fer, anyhow, ef''t ai n''t to git a feller out uh the hot sun?" |
34266 | What''s the needcessity uv so much jaw?" |
34266 | What''s the use of thinking? |
34266 | What_ could_ he do?" |
34266 | What_ has_ happened?" |
34266 | When the indictment was read, the judge, looking from under his overhanging, grizzled eyebrows, said,"When can we try this case?" |
34266 | Where are you going, Janet?" |
34266 | Where''s the horse? |
34266 | Where''s yer spunk, I''d like to know? |
34266 | Who''d a''believed they''d''a''got up on the shelf?" |
34266 | Who''s killed?" |
34266 | Why did n''t you hide Tom summers? |
34266 | Why does he wish to swear away the life of that young man who never did him any harm?" |
34266 | Why don''choo tell us, anyways? |
34266 | Why had he not moved for a change of venue? |
34266 | Why had he not objected to much of it, why had he not cross- questioned, why did he not ask for a change of venue yesterday? |
34266 | Why had he subpoenaed no witnesses? |
34266 | Why had the lawyer not done anything to help Tom? |
34266 | Why not get her father to do as well by her as the Millers would by Henry, or to do better, seeing he was the richer and had but two children? |
34266 | Why should he try to maintain a fast- and- loose relation with Barbara? |
34266 | Why?" |
34266 | Will you go along down?" |
34266 | Wo n''t you wait and give me a little time? |
34266 | Would Rachel excuse him? |
34266 | Would he plead necessary self- defense, or would Tom plead guilty and throw himself on the mercy of the governor? |
34266 | Would that suit you?" |
34266 | You did n''t kill anybody, did you?" |
34266 | You do n''t say? |
34266 | You do n''t want to take Magill, do you?" |
34266 | You think there are things that will keep us from making an equation between Barbara and Hiram?" |
34266 | You''n''Zeke Tucker''ll make a purty fist uv it a- lickin''all Broad Run, now, wonch yeh? |
34266 | You''re livin''''t ole man Britton''s now, ainch yeh?" |
34266 | [ Illustration:"''WHERE IS HE?'' |
34266 | [ Illustration:"SAY, TOM, WON''T YOU WAIT FOR ME?"] |
34266 | [ Illustration:"TELL ME TRULY, TOM, DID YOU DO IT?"] |
34266 | [ Illustration:"WHERE''S THAT PIECE OF CANDLE GONE TO?"] |
34266 | broke out Bijy; and turning to his fellow- loafers he said,"That''ll rile Jake purty consid''able, now wo n''t it?" |
34266 | for goodness''sake, what brought you out? |
34266 | he called,"what''s the price uh rope? |
34266 | he wants pay, does he?" |
34266 | how can I? |
34266 | is that all?" |
34266 | is that you?" |
34266 | nothing; but why do n''t you eat your breakfast, Barb? |
34266 | or, to remove the unfavorable impression that Tom evidently had of his conduct? |
34266 | said Mrs. Britton to her husband;"did n''t you hear that noise?" |
34266 | say_ Hiram_, wo n''t you?" |
34266 | the brother- in- law inquired;"an''what''s the use of bonds if your hands are tied? |
34266 | they would have thought his manner perfect; but he bowed blandly to Jake Hogan, and said,"Have something to drink, wo n''t you?" |
34266 | what''s the use of giving up? |
34266 | who would tell such an infernal lie on a fellow in my fix? |
7988 | ''Marcey-- Marcey?'' 7988 ''Twenty years?'' |
7988 | ''What are you going to do?'' 7988 A queer old boy, is n''t he?" |
7988 | Ai n''t it, though? |
7988 | Amazing? 7988 And is this the woman?" |
7988 | And now,spake on the spokesman of the wanderers,"what can I do for you?" |
7988 | And then,went on the spokesman for the wanderers,"Our speed, eh? |
7988 | And we were to have debated once more next week-- on''Is There Immortality?'' 7988 And what are you doing here?" |
7988 | And what did you do before you roasted chestnuts? |
7988 | And what does Pitzela''s son say, Feodor? |
7988 | And what does Pitzela''s son say? |
7988 | And why better? 7988 And why do n''t he?" |
7988 | And you have nothing to say? 7988 Anything in rings? |
7988 | Are you busy? |
7988 | Are you waited on, madam? 7988 Blanche, how long has this been going on?" |
7988 | Business good? |
7988 | But ca n''t you just turn the lights off? |
7988 | But how did it end? 7988 But then what happen? |
7988 | But what about the rent? 7988 But what they arrest you for, Blanche? |
7988 | But who was the party with the star and why the pinch? |
7988 | Can you pay the rent? |
7988 | Classy, eh? 7988 Did you see any of the revolution, Ginkel?" |
7988 | Did you write that about Chicago, Sing Lee? |
7988 | Do n''t you ever wonder what keeps these people out or where they''re going at this time of night? |
7988 | Do you like them there? |
7988 | Do you? |
7988 | Does n''t look as if it will clear up, either, does it? |
7988 | Does n''t the world seem to have changed, to you? |
7988 | Does she bring her money home? |
7988 | Ever see him before? |
7988 | Ever seen her before, officer? |
7988 | Get a job? |
7988 | Have a cigar? |
7988 | Have you a Des Moines newspaper? |
7988 | Have you ever been arrested before, Blanche? |
7988 | How are they coming? |
7988 | How come, Louis? |
7988 | How old are you? |
7988 | How old are you? |
7988 | How''d you remember my name? |
7988 | Human nature is slow to decline and there are people who still realize that if you got a handsome watch what do you want to do to it? 7988 I should go and turn the lights out? |
7988 | If he means the birds why do n''t he say birds instead of children? 7988 It is n''t long enough? |
7988 | Know that guy? |
7988 | Madam is reducing, then, signor? |
7988 | May I ask, without meanin''to be puhsonal, jes''what is your depahtment? 7988 Me? |
7988 | Men? 7988 Never caught her, though, officer?" |
7988 | New music for your act, signor? |
7988 | Oh, yes,said the hostess,"he was the leader of all that terrible thing, was n''t he?" |
7988 | Pretty tired, washing, ironing all day, eh? |
7988 | Say? 7988 She spent all her insurance money on a crazy funeral,"the neighbors said,"and did you hear about it? |
7988 | Taking in the sights? |
7988 | The Wellington? |
7988 | Think of this town? 7988 Wanna look at it, Mike?" |
7988 | Want to sell them? |
7988 | Well, that''s him there, see? 7988 What about it, Mottka?" |
7988 | What about, Sing Lee? |
7988 | What are you doing here, Tobias? 7988 What are you going to do with them?" |
7988 | What banquet, Feodor? |
7988 | What can he say? 7988 What did he bring you in for?" |
7988 | What do you make of our magnanimous friend? |
7988 | What do you think of this town? |
7988 | What do you want of me? |
7988 | What does it read on the back? 7988 What is it, miss? |
7988 | What is it, sir? |
7988 | What is the use? |
7988 | What was the charge against them? |
7988 | What was the matter with the policeman? |
7988 | What''ll it be, gentlemen? |
7988 | What''ll you have to drink, gentlemen? |
7988 | What''s a matter, Joe? |
7988 | What''s a matter, Joe? |
7988 | What''s the matter here? |
7988 | What''s the trouble? |
7988 | What''s your name? |
7988 | What, suh? 7988 What?" |
7988 | What? |
7988 | Whatsamatter? |
7988 | When are you going to put in a laundry machine? |
7988 | When are you going to quit, Sing Lee? |
7988 | When''d I come here? 7988 When''d you come here?" |
7988 | Where do you live, Mottka? |
7988 | Which way you going? |
7988 | Who''s Sklarz? |
7988 | Who? |
7988 | Why do n''t he? 7988 Why do you like serving as a juror?" |
7988 | Why not go? |
7988 | Why? |
7988 | Yes? 7988 You can go anywhere on Maxwell Street and ask anybody you meet do they know Pitzela and they will say:''Do we know Pitzela? |
7988 | You do n''t call a man an exile who runs away from a country he has always despised and fought against? |
7988 | You do n''t mind my sitting here and smoking a pipe, eh? |
7988 | You must have been in Russia while the revolution was going on, were n''t you? |
7988 | You see this? |
7988 | You wanna read more? 7988 You writer?" |
7988 | Your father wore them at court? |
7988 | ''How''s the gas mine business?'' |
7988 | ''Member what Duse said as I was the greatest artist, an''member how Sarah Bernhardt sent me roses in Frisco an''says,''To a fellow artist''? |
7988 | ***** They were to have debated on"Is There Immortality?" |
7988 | *****"Can I have a light, please?" |
7988 | *****"Do you remember the Leggett mystery?" |
7988 | *****"What you talking to me for?" |
7988 | *****"When does this dance- hall open?" |
7988 | ... have I any authority? |
7988 | ... he thinks... who am I? |
7988 | ... what will happen to him if he does n''t obey the whistle? |
7988 | A man 110 years old is an unusual thing, is n''t it?" |
7988 | A pause, however, and he went on:"Have you ever seen such a crowd like this? |
7988 | A plot in our head, but who''s the villain and who''s the heroine and the hero? |
7988 | A ring? |
7988 | A stranger do n''t ever think, now, does he? |
7988 | A terrible thing, is n''t it, to kill a pig that keeps squealing in the bathtub and splashing mud all day? |
7988 | A thing the cabaret ladies sing,"Do You Think of Me?" |
7988 | AN OLD AUDIENCE SPEAKS Tired, madam? |
7988 | About a piano player in Coney Island that he called-- what was it? |
7988 | About how you happened to get into this sort of thing? |
7988 | Above the music he heard the childishly strident voice of the flapper:"Where you been hiding yourself? |
7988 | After a pause he gestures slightly with his pipe in his hand and says:"Quite a crowd, eh?" |
7988 | Ah, you hear that music? |
7988 | Aha, but she must stop, or what become of me, the great Salvini, who have 200 medals? |
7988 | Ai n''t he rich? |
7988 | Ai n''t he the berries? |
7988 | All right, then why did you do it? |
7988 | Alzo vat matter does it make? |
7988 | An opened page reads,"he took her in his arms...."Who would not buy such a book on a rainy day? |
7988 | And I sit here and think''Where will it all end?'' |
7988 | And are you ashamed and willing to apologize and kiss and make up? |
7988 | And at what? |
7988 | And did you ever notice anything odd about your customers? |
7988 | And do n''t I give them the berries, quick? |
7988 | And if I can not blame myself how can I blame the world? |
7988 | And if he''s going to wear a dress suit, if he insists upon wearing a dress suit, why does n''t he press his pants? |
7988 | And if you got a handsome skin, what then? |
7988 | And if you were to ask him about things he would say:"Tell something? |
7988 | And me? |
7988 | And not interesting at all? |
7988 | And then? |
7988 | And there''s always kind of comical company, see? |
7988 | And what does he do? |
7988 | And what does he say? |
7988 | And what does the pig do? |
7988 | And what for? |
7988 | And what has kept them up? |
7988 | And what if he had under his name the word Philadelphia? |
7988 | And what kind of a man was he? |
7988 | And what pig likes to sleep on hard wood floors? |
7988 | And what was it in them that stared? |
7988 | And what''s good for a pig? |
7988 | And when did Heifetz ever take a run like that? |
7988 | And where are they going or coming from? |
7988 | And where was the Rotary Club? |
7988 | And where''s he now?" |
7988 | And who were these staring ones? |
7988 | And why do you suppose they buy ten- cent wedding rings, Madge? |
7988 | And why? |
7988 | And will the ladies and gentlemen of the audience applaud according to the merit of each performer? |
7988 | And yours? |
7988 | And, besides, are they beggars? |
7988 | Are you crazy? |
7988 | As we do? |
7988 | As we remember other dancers? |
7988 | Ask anybody on Maxwell street do they know Pitzela''s son and they will tell you:''Do we know Pitzela''s son? |
7988 | Bah, is that a man? |
7988 | Because the question then arises:''Who am I that the mirror reflects, and what am I? |
7988 | Blanche had been arrested by a policeman for-- well, for what? |
7988 | Broun says,''You want a drink, Max? |
7988 | But I say,''How did the great Salvini make such a mistake? |
7988 | But are they? |
7988 | But how did a man with a face like this ever happen to think he could fiddle? |
7988 | But if one is insane, if one has inherited one''s grandfather''s characteristics as idler, loafer, lounger, dreamer, lover or picaroon, what then? |
7988 | But is that a reason to beat your wife and nearly kill her? |
7988 | But tell me, Cyril, for whom is our baron showing off-- for whom? |
7988 | But that does n''t begin to answer the question the letters ask,"Who is it?" |
7988 | But what could she do? |
7988 | But what does Anton do when he comes home and finds his pig killed? |
7988 | But what if he wanted to buy some papers? |
7988 | But what they arrest you for, Blanche? |
7988 | But where''s the kids?" |
7988 | But who taught him how to hold a fiddle like that? |
7988 | But who the devil wants art? |
7988 | But who the devil was Tartarin? |
7988 | But why is he so pale and worn if the country whence he comes is so remarkable? |
7988 | But, you know, what''s it all amount to, the courting and the things you say and do before you get married? |
7988 | Can you beat it? |
7988 | Can you beat it? |
7988 | Can you beat it?" |
7988 | Can you beat it?" |
7988 | Can you beat it?" |
7988 | Can you imagine a man 110 years old? |
7988 | Can you imagine anybody sending a thing like that in? |
7988 | Can you imagine such a thing?" |
7988 | Class, eh? |
7988 | Constantinus? |
7988 | Da- ah- ah- ah--"Why was this? |
7988 | Dickie Davis of the Sun? |
7988 | Did anybody ever hear such an idiotic orchestra? |
7988 | Did he crack nuts with his teeth? |
7988 | Did he dance jigs? |
7988 | Did he drink like a fish?" |
7988 | Did the flesh fail, and topics give out, and the typewriter became an enemy? |
7988 | Did this happen as your wife says, Anton? |
7988 | Did you beat her up? |
7988 | Did you do this thing? |
7988 | Did you know him? |
7988 | Did you read that?" |
7988 | Do n''t we own a picture insured for$ 2,000? |
7988 | Do n''t you love your wife? |
7988 | Do we want riches? |
7988 | Do you hear, Joe?" |
7988 | Do you know him?" |
7988 | Do you know the dark windows of the city, you gentlemen who write continually of temples and art? |
7988 | Do you like the story?" |
7988 | Do you make him? |
7988 | Do you recall the gay, dark glow of ornate auditoriums, and do you remember when you were young and there were many tomorrows? |
7988 | Do you remember other audiences, madam? |
7988 | Do you think it''s crazy? |
7988 | Do you? |
7988 | Does n''t it?" |
7988 | Does the noise sound ghastly? |
7988 | Doing what? |
7988 | Engrave it, ai n''t it? |
7988 | For fish? |
7988 | Fought the bloody Boers, fought the Irawadi, fought the bloody Huns, and what was it Lady B. said at the dinner in his honor only two years ago? |
7988 | Go on, says the judge, what happened? |
7988 | Good pay? |
7988 | Got it?" |
7988 | Grown old, Tobias, eh? |
7988 | He do n''t talk English much, but when you ask him,''Pitzela, how do you feel today?'' |
7988 | He had a dame wit''him who I know, see? |
7988 | He says to her: I''m Weintraub-- Weintraub, d''ye understand?'' |
7988 | He says:"Would n''t it be odd if it were always like this? |
7988 | How come?" |
7988 | How do you know? |
7988 | How does it look for me to go around with a son who not only ca n''t walk, but has a beard that makes him look like Father Abraham himself?''" |
7988 | How does it sound in the wings to you, madam, our applause? |
7988 | How old are you?'' |
7988 | Hunting him? |
7988 | Hurrying? |
7988 | I picked it up from the dame he''s goin''wit'', see? |
7988 | I started talking and said:''Well, what are you doing here? |
7988 | I think I''d like it better, would n''t you? |
7988 | I walk in the street and she come up and talk to me and say,''You wanna come home with me?''" |
7988 | I''d recognized him through the window and gone inside and shaken hands; and I asked him:"''Do you remember John Marcey?'' |
7988 | I''m just looking at it, see? |
7988 | I''m standin''here, see?" |
7988 | If I give you until January 10, do you think you can pay it?" |
7988 | If I tell you his name is Yankel or Berella or Chaim Duvit do you know any more than if I tell you his name is Pitzela?" |
7988 | If you saw Pitzela''s son you would say:''Why do n''t this dying man go home and sit down instead of running around like this?'' |
7988 | In a terrible hurry, ai n''t they? |
7988 | In front of him a curious row of literary gargoyles--"The Astral Light,""What and Where Is God? |
7988 | In the meantime would we drink his health again? |
7988 | In the street? |
7988 | Instead of the other way around? |
7988 | Is life a matter of names and addresses or is it something else?" |
7988 | Is she tattooed?" |
7988 | Is tha''so? |
7988 | Is there food there, are there houses there, is there milk for children and synagogues in which to pray? |
7988 | It is not yet worth$ 2,000, but in a few years more, who knows? |
7988 | Jes''murders and murderuhs and-- and things like tha''? |
7988 | Let''s see; what was I thinking about? |
7988 | Like what? |
7988 | Look at the dancers and singers they have, and who is there that tattooes any more? |
7988 | Luncheons with prominent persons? |
7988 | Martin?" |
7988 | Martin?" |
7988 | Martin?" |
7988 | Me? |
7988 | NIGHT DIARY Where is the moon? |
7988 | Next on the program? |
7988 | No, whatsamatter with you? |
7988 | Not so? |
7988 | Nothin''else? |
7988 | Now what does it mean? |
7988 | Now, what''s the matter? |
7988 | Nuts, see? |
7988 | Of the dream that took form in your firm wrist? |
7988 | Of the soul that your fingers captured? |
7988 | Of the twenty years, the twenty well- spent years? |
7988 | Of what good were the prayers and the night after night readings in the old sea captain''s Bible stolen forty years ago? |
7988 | Of what? |
7988 | On the porches and stone steps? |
7988 | One naturally inquires, where? |
7988 | One of the pack? |
7988 | PITZELA''S SON"His name?" |
7988 | Perhaps this illusion makes it seem as if the lake were asking an old question as you ride along its edge--"Where you going?" |
7988 | Pessimistic? |
7988 | Pretty good, eh?" |
7988 | Pretty, ai n''t she? |
7988 | Propaganda? |
7988 | Quite so, where are there men and women in the city? |
7988 | Rather meaningless, eh? |
7988 | Said he''d cut his throat before playin''in a roughneck orchestra and who did she think he was to do such a thing? |
7988 | Scared? |
7988 | See? |
7988 | See? |
7988 | See? |
7988 | She is going to accompany something on cares? |
7988 | She was red- eyed and dressed in black and the real estate man said:"What do you want?" |
7988 | Sikora?" |
7988 | Sikora?" |
7988 | So she said aloud,"Wanna ice cream, Joe?" |
7988 | So what I do if madam keep on growing fatter? |
7988 | So what has he to do with Pitzela? |
7988 | So what is there to be gained by calling him Chaim Yankel?" |
7988 | So why should you go see Pitzela?" |
7988 | Stephen Crane? |
7988 | Strange, is n''t it? |
7988 | Tell me if you would n''t think he was my father and I was his son? |
7988 | Tell me that ai n''t going good? |
7988 | That''s the kind you want, ai n''t it?" |
7988 | The first question they ask you is,''What have you heard about this case and what have you read or said about it?'' |
7988 | The letters all ask,"Who is this one?" |
7988 | The neighbors said:"Are you going to Mr. Sikora''s funeral? |
7988 | The other goes on:"Where are they going?" |
7988 | The stuff''s getting rottener and rottener, do n''t you think? |
7988 | The way he''s movin''his hands? |
7988 | Them? |
7988 | Then I asked with my heart in my mouth,''What''s become of him?'' |
7988 | Then I say, what if Charlie Ross was tattooed? |
7988 | Then he says:"They do n''t look at anything, eh? |
7988 | Then if you ask him,''How old are you, Pitzela?'' |
7988 | Then she said she wanted a half- dozen of them, and was there a discount when bought in such quantity? |
7988 | Then the neighbors said:"Did you hear about it? |
7988 | Then what are they looking at, hour after hour, under the hot sun? |
7988 | Then, too, there is the question,"Where you going?" |
7988 | There''s many a good guy in this place that''s been gave a tumble by them, see? |
7988 | Therefore the answer lay in the question:"What had he been waiting for?" |
7988 | Think? |
7988 | This tin- pan alley ballad throbbing liquidly from the strings of your fiddle--"When you''re flirt- ing with another do you ever think-- of-- me?" |
7988 | Tough guys ai n''t no different from soft guys, see? |
7988 | Und vat vas we talking aboud? |
7988 | Vat vas ve talking aboud? |
7988 | Vat''s de use of living und vy go on drinking beer und becoming a vorse und bigger bum? |
7988 | Was n''t that it? |
7988 | Well, and how did he like Publicity? |
7988 | Well, now, what do you want to know in particular?" |
7988 | Well, then, why? |
7988 | Well, what of that? |
7988 | Well, what''s up? |
7988 | Well, why did n''t they come into this street? |
7988 | What are we tired about? |
7988 | What became of the captain when they found out he could n''t pay his bill and all that? |
7988 | What can he say? |
7988 | What did she sing? |
7988 | What did the policeman say? |
7988 | What do I want of him? |
7988 | What do you know about that?" |
7988 | What do you mean? |
7988 | What do you say to another shot of hootch? |
7988 | What does he see? |
7988 | What does he want? |
7988 | What does it matter how old I am? |
7988 | What for? |
7988 | What for? |
7988 | What for? |
7988 | What good were the prayers if they could n''t keep him pious? |
7988 | What harm could ice cream do? |
7988 | What if they did come? |
7988 | What in Sam Hill is my motif?''" |
7988 | What is it all about? |
7988 | What is it all about?" |
7988 | What is it we applaud? |
7988 | What is there to tell? |
7988 | What is this? |
7988 | What kind? |
7988 | What kind?" |
7988 | What man? |
7988 | What was he saying? |
7988 | What was he saying? |
7988 | What was the matter? |
7988 | What was the song that mumbled itself through the laughter and the rain of pennies? |
7988 | What were the men in the grass waiting for? |
7988 | What will poor Mrs. Sikora do now? |
7988 | What would the judge do? |
7988 | What''s a faun, Mike? |
7988 | What''s at play? |
7988 | What''s he nodding about? |
7988 | What''s the complaint? |
7988 | What''s the difference? |
7988 | What''s the matter with Anton? |
7988 | What''s the name of the guy?" |
7988 | What''s the sense of saying''children of the ice''when he means birds?" |
7988 | What''s wrong with that? |
7988 | What? |
7988 | What? |
7988 | What? |
7988 | When did you do that?" |
7988 | When? |
7988 | Where can one put a pig in a flat, your honor? |
7988 | Where do we go from here? |
7988 | Where is he now, I wonder? |
7988 | Where is the moon? |
7988 | Where was the court where he should go? |
7988 | Where would he be exactly this time a week from now? |
7988 | Who are these passengers through the night? |
7988 | Who buys these wedding rings, Madge? |
7988 | Who was he? |
7988 | Who would n''t? |
7988 | Who? |
7988 | Who? |
7988 | Who? |
7988 | Why I write them out? |
7988 | Why amazing? |
7988 | Why did n''t this happen? |
7988 | Why did they arrest Blanche? |
7988 | Why did they stare like this? |
7988 | Why do n''t he say''birds of the ice''? |
7988 | Why does he come every evening and stand and watch the little hotel parade? |
7988 | Why does she eat, eat, eat? |
7988 | Why does she grow fat? |
7988 | Why is he here? |
7988 | Why must Sofie weep over that? |
7988 | Why not? |
7988 | Why the devil do n''t you die?" |
7988 | Why the insult? |
7988 | Why they arrest her? |
7988 | Why will people drop coins into his hat? |
7988 | Why you dreamed of him as you stood working in the factory? |
7988 | Why you ran home to him and fed him and sat and looked at him and whispered"Nice little pig?" |
7988 | Why? |
7988 | Why? |
7988 | Why? |
7988 | Why? |
7988 | Why? |
7988 | Will Anton let anybody kill his pig? |
7988 | Will we applaud? |
7988 | Will you be their little guide? |
7988 | With the north wind blowing and the gray seas standing on their heads? |
7988 | Wo n''t you look her up and write it out? |
7988 | Wo n''t you sit down-- so I will feel more at ease? |
7988 | Would he be lost then? |
7988 | Would he be lost to- day? |
7988 | Yeh, I ask you what would old Barnum say if he should come back and see me sitting here? |
7988 | Yes, what is the other side? |
7988 | You get me? |
7988 | You hear her? |
7988 | You know Broun? |
7988 | You know what he wants?" |
7988 | You know what naïve means? |
7988 | You know what? |
7988 | You know why? |
7988 | You mean the one with the long nose? |
7988 | You think I''m the janitor?" |
7988 | You thought you could put that over on me without my seein''through it, did n''t you? |
7988 | You want to hang around the house like you were an old man? |
7988 | You''d like to know that? |
7988 | cried the captain,"and where is this rendezvous of skill and daring? |
7988 | he says to you right back,''Oi, me? |
7988 | he says,"I leave this pig anywhere? |
7988 | he says:''Old? |
7988 | repeated the captain to one of the members,"I would but the devil take it, how can a man go around asking for a job in a dress suit? |
7988 | said Policeman Billings,"you do, eh? |
17890 | ''T is true, you would be my choice; but do you realize the peril involved? |
17890 | ''Tis Indian tying,he said earnestly;"you have been in the hands of the savages?" |
17890 | ''Twas not the dying,he protested;"but did you see her, Wayland? |
17890 | A Catholic? |
17890 | A chief of the Wyandots? |
17890 | A dead woman? 17890 A gentleman? |
17890 | A girl? |
17890 | A maiden,--Elsa Matherson? |
17890 | All is to be over between us from this hour? 17890 Alone, say you?" |
17890 | Alone? |
17890 | An''be you the boy I met? |
17890 | And are you indeed returned, Master Wayland? |
17890 | And has Captain de Croix returned also? |
17890 | And have you stopped here long? |
17890 | And is that the way of a French soldier? |
17890 | And pray, why not, Monsieur? 17890 And pray, why not?" |
17890 | And that meeting, perchance, was so pleasant that it has taken your thought from all else? 17890 And the Fort?" |
17890 | And the coming of the French gallant has doubtless freshened your remembrance of the past? |
17890 | And the powder- puff, the small hand- mirror, and the curling- iron? |
17890 | And this, my son? |
17890 | And what say you, Lieutenant Helm? 17890 And why not? |
17890 | And why? |
17890 | And you surely do know? |
17890 | And you, Black Partridge? |
17890 | And you? 17890 And you?" |
17890 | And''t was Sister Celeste who told you whom I sought? |
17890 | Anger? 17890 Angry?--I?" |
17890 | Are the outer gates ever opened at night? |
17890 | Are the savages gathering without? |
17890 | Are we, then, so close to the lake? |
17890 | Are you mad, Wayland? |
17890 | Are you the white man I guided? |
17890 | Are you white? |
17890 | Attacked? 17890 Back, are you, Master Wayland?" |
17890 | Been given? |
17890 | Boy, where are your eyes not to have seen that every step we have taken this day has been but by sufferance of the Pottawattomies? 17890 Burns? |
17890 | Burns? 17890 But Captain de Croix,--he was not seriously injured, I trust? |
17890 | But are you quite alone here, and without guards? |
17890 | But are you strong enough to walk? |
17890 | But are you sure they are there, and safe? 17890 But dare you?" |
17890 | But how came you here? |
17890 | But how comes she here, Monsieur, living in the Pottawattomie camp? 17890 But how knew he you were to be here?" |
17890 | But of what width is the strip of earth between? |
17890 | But the Fort is strong? |
17890 | But the young girl we seek,he insisted;"must she also be brought here upon the return?" |
17890 | But this Elsa Matherson,--she is not here, then? |
17890 | But what think you they propose doing with us here? |
17890 | But what will you do? |
17890 | But where? 17890 But who are you? |
17890 | But why,I protested,"should you, at least, take part in such hazard? |
17890 | But you will aid me in whatever way you can? |
17890 | But, Heald,he said,"what means all this litter of garrison equipment lying scattered about? |
17890 | But, William, what other alternative offers us any hope? |
17890 | Chicagou? |
17890 | Come, lad, the truth,--what reply did Black Partridge make to this Indian mummery? |
17890 | Could we reach there, think you, unobserved? |
17890 | De Croix,I asked,"know you if the Indians have destroyed the house that stood by the fork of the north river, where the settler Ouilmette lived?" |
17890 | De Croix? |
17890 | Did he fall? |
17890 | Did you see that white woman there, with the long skirt and red hair? |
17890 | Do I? 17890 Do you have any idea where we may be?" |
17890 | Do you mean what you say, Toinette? |
17890 | Do you truly mean, sir, that I am to go in search of the little girl? |
17890 | Do you truly wish it? |
17890 | Do you wish me to say with frankness what I thought of your appearance under such disadvantages? |
17890 | Does he come for peace or war? |
17890 | Does the maid love you? |
17890 | Done what? |
17890 | Doth Shaw- nee- aw- kee go east also with the white men? |
17890 | Doth the water of the river come to the very foot of these logs? |
17890 | Elsa Matherson? |
17890 | Evacuate? |
17890 | Explore? 17890 Fall? |
17890 | For what? |
17890 | For whom do you mistake me? |
17890 | Forever a quarrel? |
17890 | Go with you? 17890 Had we not better be going?" |
17890 | Has De Croix been here? |
17890 | Has any one passed here lately? |
17890 | Has he spoken yet? |
17890 | Has something new occurred,I questioned anxiously,"that makes you more alarmed?" |
17890 | Has the time come? |
17890 | Have I ever been a coward,he asked indignantly,"that I should turn and run for a threat? |
17890 | Have the Indians attacked us? |
17890 | Have the Pottawattomies spoken well? |
17890 | Have they already left us? |
17890 | Have you arranged a banquet in honor of the Frenchman? |
17890 | Have you ever found me of cowardly heart, Monsieur? |
17890 | Have you got back your nerve, Monsieur? |
17890 | Have you journeyed there before? |
17890 | Have you killed him? |
17890 | Have you special reason? |
17890 | Have you, then, never learned that a woman is full of whims, Monsieur? |
17890 | He threatened? |
17890 | He was a dandified young fellow? |
17890 | He was a trader, you told me once? |
17890 | Here, at Dearborn? |
17890 | Here-- at Hawkins''s, mean you? 17890 Here?" |
17890 | Here? |
17890 | Here? |
17890 | How failed? |
17890 | How know you my name? |
17890 | How know you she lives? |
17890 | How know you this? |
17890 | How many have you in the garrison? |
17890 | How? |
17890 | I asked, why are you here? |
17890 | I believe I have failed to learn your name? |
17890 | I know not by what strange fortune I meet you here, but surely you will not refuse greeting to an old friend? |
17890 | I presume this is Captain Wells, from Fort Wayne? |
17890 | I sought Elsa Matherson,--are you she? |
17890 | I? |
17890 | In which direction is the Kinzie house? |
17890 | Indeed? |
17890 | Indeed? |
17890 | Indians? |
17890 | Is it not true, Monsieur? |
17890 | Is it so very far, father, to where I must go? |
17890 | Is it still garrisoned, or have we come too late? |
17890 | Is it the French dandy as was at Hawkins''s? |
17890 | Is some one there? |
17890 | Is the way yet long? |
17890 | Is this not so? |
17890 | Is this yere Major Wayland''s place? |
17890 | It is capable of resisting an attack? |
17890 | Josette, you ask me? 17890 Leave you? |
17890 | Love her? |
17890 | May I ask where that home is? |
17890 | May I hope you are seeking me? |
17890 | Me? 17890 No? |
17890 | Nor the pledge you gave to that white captain when he brought you safely to Detroit? |
17890 | Not John? |
17890 | Not fairly won? |
17890 | Of whom do you speak, Toinette? |
17890 | Oh, is that all? 17890 Oh, surely not that, David?" |
17890 | Oh, what can we do now? |
17890 | Overboard? |
17890 | Perchance, then,I urged, doubtfully,"you may prefer remaining quietly here rather than risk the peril of trying to escape?" |
17890 | Recall you a day twelve years ago on the River Raisin? |
17890 | Remember him? |
17890 | Sam,it called,"have you found either of the scoundrelly rascals?" |
17890 | So this is not your Captain de Croix? |
17890 | So those devils have let you go unharmed? 17890 So you have spurs, and think you can use them? |
17890 | Surely you can not rejoice at such a loss? |
17890 | Surely, Mademoiselle, you can not mean that you take your promise to the half- breed so seriously as voluntarily to remain in captivity? |
17890 | Surely,she urged,"your wits will conceive some way in which it may be done?" |
17890 | The lake?--water? |
17890 | The mysterious spirits of the starry night? |
17890 | The same whom the Americans name Billy Caldwell? |
17890 | The sand? |
17890 | The young girl yonder with De Croix? 17890 Then you are not the one I seek?" |
17890 | Then you keep no sentry posted on the platform? |
17890 | Then your decision is unchanged? |
17890 | They ai n''t seen ye stealin''outer the camp? |
17890 | They do? 17890 Think you she would greatly care?" |
17890 | Think you so, Monsieur? |
17890 | Think you so? |
17890 | Think you then, Monsieur, I do not look so ill? |
17890 | Think you we shall find shelter and friends there? |
17890 | Think you, Captain de Croix, that you can play such tricks in this wilderness, and not be made to pay for them? |
17890 | To find her? |
17890 | Unguarded? 17890 Was it from dread of venturing once more upon the water that you held back so long?" |
17890 | Wayland, did you say? |
17890 | Wayland,he faltered feebly,"is this you? |
17890 | Wayland,he questioned anxiously,"what is this I hear about a strange portent in the eastern sky last night? |
17890 | Wayland? |
17890 | We would bid her welcome also; yet surely she can not be that little child for whose sake we sent you forth? |
17890 | Were any of the women brought alive to the camp? |
17890 | Were you ever there, Seth? |
17890 | What French mockery is this? |
17890 | What is a name? |
17890 | What is it that has so driven you out of your senses? |
17890 | What is it that so greatly disturbs your Miamis? |
17890 | What is it, John? |
17890 | What is it? |
17890 | What journey? 17890 What mean you, Mademoiselle?" |
17890 | What seeks the White Chief? |
17890 | What? 17890 Where go you?" |
17890 | Where is Mademoiselle? |
17890 | Where is this Fort Dearborn, and how am I to journey in reaching there? 17890 Where is this lodge in which they hold her?" |
17890 | Where is your master to be found? |
17890 | Where white woman? |
17890 | Who are you? 17890 Who are you? |
17890 | Who is he? |
17890 | Who is it? |
17890 | Who was it? |
17890 | Why did you tell Sister Celeste that you came to Dearborn seeking Elsa Matherson? |
17890 | Why hid you from me with such care the object of your search? |
17890 | Why is it I am made the subject of your quarrel? |
17890 | Why she not come help me? |
17890 | Why think you thus? |
17890 | Why you bring them? |
17890 | Why, boy, I thought you were bred to the border; and can you ask me such a question? 17890 Why, what has become of the Indians?" |
17890 | Will not this Sister Celeste consent to leave the Indians? |
17890 | Will they permit even you to pass unharmed? |
17890 | Will you show me the nearest way to the Kinzie house? |
17890 | Will you stand back, Monsieur? |
17890 | With whom were you conversing just now, Monsieur? |
17890 | Would I be here, think you, otherwise? |
17890 | Ye called the feller De Croix, did n''t ye? |
17890 | Yes, I know,impatiently;"but I mean her name?" |
17890 | Yet know you who among the whites have thus far preserved their lives? |
17890 | Yet you are often happy? |
17890 | You also sought a girl in this wilderness,--may I ask, have you yet found trace of her? |
17890 | You are Sau- ga- nash? |
17890 | You are anxious to die? 17890 You are ill-- faint?" |
17890 | You are not afraid of the perils before us? |
17890 | You are not angry at my presumption? |
17890 | You are now connected with the French army? |
17890 | You are sure you love this maiden? |
17890 | You believe it a prophecy of evil? |
17890 | You do not look like those others,--are you a man? |
17890 | You do not understand that? |
17890 | You feel, then, that the die is cast? |
17890 | You found her there? 17890 You go upon this strange journey willingly, my son?" |
17890 | You have a plan, then? |
17890 | You have found her? |
17890 | You have no desire to go with me, then? |
17890 | You have the freedom of the camp yonder? |
17890 | You knew this Elsa Matherson? |
17890 | You know him, then? |
17890 | You know, then, of his danger and deliverance? |
17890 | You look for trouble? |
17890 | You mean that? |
17890 | You mean the destruction of the liquor will anger them? |
17890 | You mean the sister who interposed to save you? |
17890 | You mean when Captain de Croix and I leaned above the eastern palisades? |
17890 | You must live near here, then? |
17890 | You question my courage to venture it? |
17890 | You realize this sense of loneliness?--this absence of all that makes life beautiful and worth the living? |
17890 | You remember the fellow, William? 17890 You say a mistake,--what mistake?" |
17890 | You say the White Father is strong, and will drive the red- coats into the sea: did he at Mackinac? |
17890 | You seek some lady, then, at Fort Dearborn? |
17890 | You spoke with her? |
17890 | You think there are savages on this shore? |
17890 | You will be both kind and thoughtful with Roger Matherson''s little girl? |
17890 | You will fight, then? |
17890 | You will go with me? |
17890 | You will go, then, whenever and wherever I say? |
17890 | You will send aid to him? |
17890 | You will trust me, then? |
17890 | You? 17890 You?" |
17890 | Your wife? |
17890 | ''T is good to meet with such open honesty; and when did maid ever have before so unselfish a cavalier to do her honor? |
17890 | A prisoner? |
17890 | All dead, you say? |
17890 | Am I not right to do this? |
17890 | An''ye''re no Injun?" |
17890 | And do you believe the one I seek will be found with them?" |
17890 | And how comes it that you sought another in this wilderness, if you were already long wedded?" |
17890 | And know you what they intend as to his future?" |
17890 | And pray, why not?" |
17890 | And so you found Josette?" |
17890 | And what is this man''s name?" |
17890 | And you are truly unhurt of the struggle?" |
17890 | And you deliberately choose to devote your life to the redemption of these savages?" |
17890 | Are you a Protestant?" |
17890 | Are you also prisoner to the Indians? |
17890 | As these partially ceased, I asked:"Has a date been set for the abandonment of the Fort?" |
17890 | At sight of a stranger she drew back slightly, yet paused to ask:"Did you wish to see some one here?" |
17890 | Be ye goin''ter stay thar long?" |
17890 | Be ye the lad what downed Bud Eberly at the meetin''over on the Cow- skin las''spring?" |
17890 | But come, Messieurs, why do you hesitate so long? |
17890 | But do you yet remember the day I drew you out of the rout at Saratoga, and bore you away safely, though the Hessians shot me twice? |
17890 | But was she the only one?" |
17890 | But what are you two young fellows doing here? |
17890 | But what brought you here? |
17890 | But what has all this to do here?" |
17890 | But what mean you by happy ending? |
17890 | But why does the angel of their mercy hold back from me so long?" |
17890 | But why should I remain here to discuss matters of such small import, with all this work unfinished which fronts strong men to- night? |
17890 | But why worry him? |
17890 | But you mention not where you are bound?" |
17890 | But you, Wayland,--know you aught of her?" |
17890 | But you, who are you? |
17890 | CHAPTER XXXIII AN INTERVENTION OF FATE"Form one of our party?" |
17890 | Can not the girl so much as move without your permission, Monsieur?" |
17890 | Can you tell me where this girl is to be found?" |
17890 | Captain de Croix, she was far from being a stranger to you in those other days at Montreal,--will you not add your entreaties to ours?" |
17890 | Come, how happened it that this gay sprig outfooted you?" |
17890 | Come, you imp of darkness, know you aught of these?" |
17890 | Could it be De Croix? |
17890 | Could it be possible that he meant Toinette? |
17890 | David, in memory of it, will you not give my little orphan child a home? |
17890 | Did any Pottawattomie send to White Chief to come to council?" |
17890 | Did ever mortal behold so grewsome a sight before? |
17890 | Did you advise with him?" |
17890 | Did you leave all your courtesy behind in Montreal, or dream that in this wilderness I should cringe to any words you might speak? |
17890 | Do I flatter you by thus showing my interest? |
17890 | Do you observe nothing, like that fine gentleman yonder? |
17890 | Do you say you are also a prisoner? |
17890 | Do you still greatly wish to find this Elsa Matherson?" |
17890 | Do you suffer greatly? |
17890 | Do you think I should be here otherwise? |
17890 | Does such decision come from a council?" |
17890 | Elsa Matherson!--and at Dearborn?" |
17890 | For what have the white men come to disturb Gomo and his warriors?" |
17890 | Gentlemen, will you not come in?" |
17890 | Have I risked my life in coming here for no other end than this?" |
17890 | Have the redskins captured our French friend?" |
17890 | Have you also personal scruples?" |
17890 | Have you such a prejudice against that great people that you need speak of them with so glum a voice? |
17890 | Have you such small respect for me, Mademoiselle, as to think I could consent to leave you here alone and at the mercy of these red fiends? |
17890 | How came you here?" |
17890 | How chances she to be here? |
17890 | How could creatures shaped like men prove themselves such fiends, such hideous devils of malignity? |
17890 | How old be ye, anyhow?" |
17890 | How soon can John be ready, mother?" |
17890 | How would she greet me? |
17890 | I asked, as we paused before the dark outline,"or must I also help you to explore within?" |
17890 | I asked:"But you have not explained to me how you learned all this of which you spoke?" |
17890 | I beg you answer me; will you go?" |
17890 | I cried, in my excitement clutching his naked arm,"who is that white girl yonder, and how comes she here?" |
17890 | I have lived in the woods, and gone forth with your war- parties; am I less a warrior, now that I fight with the people of my own race? |
17890 | In all the time I have been the White Chief at Dearborn, have I ever done wrong to a Pottawattomie?" |
17890 | Into what tragic unknown fate had this earliest comrade of my manhood been remorselessly swept? |
17890 | Is Toinette dead?" |
17890 | Is it known to any Indian that you are alive and within this camp?" |
17890 | Is their loss a part of Indian torture?" |
17890 | Is this the way of it?" |
17890 | It is not possible you are the same who brought a message to Major Wayland on the Maumee?" |
17890 | It must indeed be so, or why is it that Master Wayland doth not claim of me the stake of the wager?" |
17890 | Kinzie?" |
17890 | Knew she you by some other?" |
17890 | Knew you the savage?" |
17890 | Know ye not, Master Wayland, that we hope to be at this Fort Dearborn upon the morrow, and''t is there I meet again the fair Toinette? |
17890 | Know you anything about the management of boats?" |
17890 | Know you anything of what fate has befallen other of our friends of the garrison?" |
17890 | Know you him?" |
17890 | Know you not I am here, at the very end of the world, for you?" |
17890 | Know you not, Master Wayland, that the lives of helpless women and children may depend upon our haste? |
17890 | Mark you, Wayland, how much farther to the south the limit of their camp extends than when the sun sank last night? |
17890 | Master Wayland, is it not time for you fitly to greet Captain de Croix? |
17890 | May I ask if you are Elsa Matherson?" |
17890 | May I not hope it has won me restoration to your good graces?" |
17890 | May we pass on to your camp?" |
17890 | Might not I answer better as his substitute?" |
17890 | Monsieur, have you never known how restful it sometimes is to be alone?" |
17890 | O God, how could such deeds be done? |
17890 | Ol''Tom Burns?" |
17890 | Or was it the half- breed with some secret message he dared not deliver openly? |
17890 | Out in the rude shed, which, answered as a kitchen during summer weather, I ventured to ask:"Mother, do you suppose he will take the little girl?" |
17890 | Perchance they also thought me a ghost, who knows? |
17890 | Perhaps one of the officers here present possesses courage enough for the venture?" |
17890 | Perhaps, sir, you can explain the contradiction?" |
17890 | Pray tell me, Monsieur,--I am so curious to know,--do you truly think Josette fairer than I?" |
17890 | Prefer to remain here? |
17890 | Really, Monsieur, you do not think I would withhold so small a reward from the winner?" |
17890 | Recall you this, Sau- ga- nash?" |
17890 | Sam, by any foul chance did you overlook the lavender water?" |
17890 | Sam, where was it I saw the last one?" |
17890 | Saw you anything terrifying there?" |
17890 | She was ever an odd creature,--but what can bring her here, walking so freely about in this camp of vengeful savages?" |
17890 | Should I learn my fate from her tell- tale eyes, or by a sudden gleam of surprise in her lovely face? |
17890 | Spoke he not even the name of the woman?" |
17890 | Surely no rude backwoodsman is to come between us now?" |
17890 | Surely she can not be of Indian blood?" |
17890 | Surely you are not a savage?" |
17890 | Surely you are not unattended in this wilderness?" |
17890 | Surely you can not be that same Frenchman we helped entertain last night?" |
17890 | Surely you have no present intention to leave the Fort, in face Of that savage mob out yonder?" |
17890 | Surely you have no wish to linger in this pleasant spot?" |
17890 | Surely you, for instance, have met with but little hardship thus far at the hands of Little Sauk?" |
17890 | Surely, De Croix, you are not permanently located in this delightful spot?" |
17890 | Surely, that home might also prove your refuge?" |
17890 | Tell me, Monsieur, was she by any chance of fate the heroine who last night plucked Captain de Croix from the flames of torture?" |
17890 | Ten days, as I live; would you believe I could ever have survived so grievous a siege?" |
17890 | That broad face was not wholly Indian; could this be the half- breed chief of whom I had so often heard? |
17890 | The French girl? |
17890 | Then I added,"What journey do you contemplate?" |
17890 | Then you will leave me here?" |
17890 | They watch me with some care at night,--yet of what use can their guarding be? |
17890 | Think you it can be made if you lean hard on me?" |
17890 | Think you it would be possible to walk?" |
17890 | Think you she is not a stranger?" |
17890 | Think you she is the one you seek?" |
17890 | Think you that because I am a girl I must therefore be all selfishness? |
17890 | Think you that he truly loved her?" |
17890 | Think you that you could find it through the night?" |
17890 | Think you, Topenebe, that I fear to sing the death- song? |
17890 | To what chief?" |
17890 | Was all indeed well with him? |
17890 | Was it acting, for some purpose unknown to me,--or what might be the secret of these strange expressions? |
17890 | Was she crazed, driven mad by some extremity of suffering at which I could only guess? |
17890 | Was there not one with you yonder at the house? |
17890 | What answer made the savages?" |
17890 | What answered Black Partridge?" |
17890 | What can you and I hope to accomplish in so mad a search amid all these savages? |
17890 | What care I for this Frenchman, that I should risk my life to save him? |
17890 | What dark figure is that, even now leaning over the logs yonder?" |
17890 | What day is this?" |
17890 | What did she there, passing with such apparent freedom from restraint among those fierce warriors? |
17890 | What had become of Roger Matherson''s orphan child? |
17890 | What has Captain de Croix done now to make you seek him so vengefully?" |
17890 | What has become of your hair and beard? |
17890 | What have I ever said in our brief intercourse that could cause you to conceive I care greatly for that? |
17890 | What have we been following since first we entered this valley?" |
17890 | What in Heaven''s name has happened to leave you with such a poll? |
17890 | What is the girl to you?" |
17890 | What is the man''s name? |
17890 | What mean all these sly tricks of speech and action?--this hurried message to the ear of Mademoiselle? |
17890 | What means the portent?" |
17890 | What need have I to dwell upon the love that bade her welcome? |
17890 | What say you, Mademoiselle?" |
17890 | What seek you here?" |
17890 | What were you doing down here?" |
17890 | What ye a- goin''fer, enyhow?" |
17890 | Where have the savages confined him? |
17890 | Where knew you her?" |
17890 | Which two?" |
17890 | Who brought the message, and when?" |
17890 | Who is he?" |
17890 | Who may ye be, anyhow, stranger? |
17890 | Who spoke the words of the pledge?" |
17890 | Who this man, White Chief? |
17890 | Why are you here in the midst of these savages? |
17890 | Why did I not reach the stockade? |
17890 | Why did he cry out so loudly, and fall?" |
17890 | Why did you do that?" |
17890 | Why have you failed to reach the stockade?" |
17890 | Why not stay with Big Turtle? |
17890 | Why should Wyandots and Sacs wish to burn a Frenchman?" |
17890 | Why, if White Father so strong, you leave Fort and go way off?" |
17890 | Will you not speak a word of mercy now?" |
17890 | Will you take him thither at midnight, together with the rifle I left in the council lodge?" |
17890 | Will you wait?" |
17890 | Would the strange woman forget me now, or would she venture upon a return with her message? |
17890 | Would you believe it? |
17890 | Ye''re quite a lad, ai n''t ye? |
17890 | Yet is there any cause for quarrel because this young gentleman has preserved my life?" |
17890 | Yet surely it is not your purpose to halt here long?" |
17890 | Yet what''s the use of wasting life like that? |
17890 | Yet why should we stay here? |
17890 | Yet, even though I confess your conclusion partially true, what cause does it yield why you should seek a quarrel with my good friend, John Wayland?" |
17890 | You also made a pledge, even before mine was given; was it not your purpose to abide by it?" |
17890 | You are English, then?" |
17890 | You are here? |
17890 | You are only seeking a way of escape from the savages?" |
17890 | You desire that he be kept within the Fort, ignorant of this commission?" |
17890 | You go to explore?" |
17890 | You know him, you say,--for how long?" |
17890 | You love some one then, Monsieur?" |
17890 | You saw all of it?" |
17890 | You say your name is Burns?" |
17890 | You speak harsh words,--words that under other conditions I should make you answer for with the sword; but what is the good of it all? |
17890 | You understand that, Monsieur de Croix; now, will you go or stay?" |
17890 | an''for what cause did ye jump down yere on me?" |
17890 | and have you at last mustered courage to break away from the commander of this most notable company?" |
17890 | and how was I ever to reach her with any hope of rescue, even if she desired it? |
17890 | and how?" |
17890 | and why not? |
17890 | by whom?" |
17890 | can it indeed be that you have come to save me?" |
17890 | can this indeed be you?" |
17890 | did I not have a full hundred days of such pleasure when first I left France? |
17890 | do I not show you great honor in thus seeking you out, after your avoidance of me all these hours?" |
17890 | have the spirit of a Jesuit, perchance, and are ambitious of martyrdom?" |
17890 | have you become crazed by the hard march? |
17890 | he questioned, looking out into the darkness,"or the dim figures of your own imagination?" |
17890 | he said, catching sight of me,"do you happen to know where I am most likely to find Captain de Croix?" |
17890 | he said, haughtily, dropping his hand upon the hilt of his rapier,"or shall I show you how a gentleman of France deals with such impertinence?" |
17890 | how could I ever hope to find my way alone through the wilderness? |
17890 | is not the prize enough?" |
17890 | is that your aim? |
17890 | of course,"he returned carelessly;"if she chooses to dismount and rejoin her friends, what has that to do with John Wayland? |
17890 | or had the Nemesis of a wrong once done dealt its fatal stroke at last? |
17890 | or that I would ever permit you thus to sacrifice yourself unnecessarily for me? |
17890 | questioned the old chief, sternly,"or have our words wronged our brothers?" |
17890 | she pleaded,"can it be possible you would flee from me?" |
17890 | she questioned in return, parrying with quick skill,"that you should think any bodily terror could hold me back? |
17890 | she questioned,"and by whom?" |
17890 | was it really a living woman who stood there, or a ghost returned from the other world to haunt me and make living worse than death?" |
17890 | was that it, then?" |
17890 | what care I what may be done with the girl? |
17890 | what danger threatens, that he needs to be warned against?" |
17890 | what of that? |
17890 | who is she?" |
17890 | why, have I not died a hundred deaths already? |
17890 | you?" |
59617 | ''Tis Indian tying,he said earnestly;"you have been in the hands of the savages?" |
59617 | ''Tis true, you would be my choice; but do you realize the peril involved? |
59617 | ''Twas not the dying,he protested;"but did you see her, Wayland? |
59617 | A Catholic? |
59617 | A chief of the Wyandots? |
59617 | A dead woman? 59617 A gentleman? |
59617 | A girl? |
59617 | A maiden,--Elsa Matherson? |
59617 | All is to be over between us from this hour? 59617 Alone, say you?" |
59617 | Alone? |
59617 | An''be you the boy I met? |
59617 | And are you indeed returned, Master Wayland? |
59617 | And has Captain de Croix returned also? |
59617 | And have you stopped here long? |
59617 | And is that the way of a French soldier? |
59617 | And pray, why not, Monsieur? 59617 And pray, why not?" |
59617 | And that meeting, perchance, was so pleasant that it has taken your thought from all else? 59617 And the Fort?" |
59617 | And the coming of the French gallant has doubtless freshened your remembrance of the past? |
59617 | And the powder- puff, the small hand- mirror, and the curling- iron? |
59617 | And this, my son? |
59617 | And what say you, Lieutenant Helm? 59617 And why not? |
59617 | And why? |
59617 | And you surely do know? |
59617 | And you, Black Partridge? |
59617 | And you? 59617 And you?" |
59617 | And''twas Sister Celeste who told you whom I sought? |
59617 | Anger? 59617 Angry?--I?" |
59617 | Are the outer gates ever opened at night? |
59617 | Are the savages gathering without? |
59617 | Are we, then, so close to the lake? |
59617 | Are you mad, Wayland? |
59617 | Are you the white man I guided? |
59617 | Are you white? |
59617 | Attacked? 59617 Back, are you, Master Wayland?" |
59617 | Been given? |
59617 | Boy, where are your eyes not to have seen that every step we have taken this day has been but by sufferance of the Pottawattomies? 59617 Burns? |
59617 | Burns? 59617 But Captain de Croix,--he was not seriously injured, I trust? |
59617 | But are you quite alone here, and without guards? |
59617 | But are you strong enough to walk? |
59617 | But are you sure they are there, and safe? 59617 But dare you?" |
59617 | But how came you here? |
59617 | But how comes she here, Monsieur, living in the Pottawattomie camp? 59617 But how knew he you were to be here?" |
59617 | But of what width is the strip of earth between? |
59617 | But the Fort is strong? |
59617 | But the young girl we seek,he insisted;"must she also be brought here upon the return?" |
59617 | But this Elsa Matherson,--she is not here, then? |
59617 | But what think you they propose doing with us here? |
59617 | But what will you do? |
59617 | But where? 59617 But who are you? |
59617 | But why,I protested,"should you, at least, take part in such hazard? |
59617 | But you will aid me in whatever way you can? |
59617 | But, Heald,he said,"what means all this litter of garrison equipment lying scattered about? |
59617 | But, William, what other alternative offers us any hope? |
59617 | Chicagou? |
59617 | Come, lad, the truth,--what reply did Black Partridge make to this Indian mummery? |
59617 | Could we reach there, think you, unobserved? |
59617 | De Croix,I asked,"know you if the Indians have destroyed the house that stood by the fork of the north river, where the settler Ouilmette lived?" |
59617 | De Croix? |
59617 | Did he fall? |
59617 | Did you see that white woman there, with the long skirt and red hair? |
59617 | Do I? 59617 Do you have any idea where we may be?" |
59617 | Do you mean what you say, Toinette? |
59617 | Do you truly mean, sir, that I am to go in search of the little girl? |
59617 | Do you truly wish it? |
59617 | Do you wish me to say with frankness what I thought of your appearance under such disadvantages? |
59617 | Does he come for peace or war? |
59617 | Does the maid love you? |
59617 | Done what? |
59617 | Doth Shaw- nee- aw- kee go east also with the white men? |
59617 | Doth the water of the river come to the very foot of these logs? |
59617 | Elsa Matherson? |
59617 | Evacuate? |
59617 | Explore? 59617 Fall? |
59617 | For what? |
59617 | For whom do you mistake me? |
59617 | Forever a quarrel? |
59617 | Go with you? 59617 Had we not better be going?" |
59617 | Has De Croix been here? |
59617 | Has any one passed here lately? |
59617 | Has he spoken yet? |
59617 | Has something new occurred,I questioned anxiously,"that makes you more alarmed?" |
59617 | Has the time come? |
59617 | Have I ever been a coward,he asked indignantly,"that I should turn and run for a threat? |
59617 | Have the Indians attacked us? |
59617 | Have the Pottawattomies spoken well? |
59617 | Have they already left us? |
59617 | Have you arranged a banquet in honor of the Frenchman? |
59617 | Have you ever found me of cowardly heart, Monsieur? |
59617 | Have you got back your nerve, Monsieur? |
59617 | Have you journeyed there before? |
59617 | Have you killed him? |
59617 | Have you, then, never learned that a woman is full of whims, Monsieur? |
59617 | He threatened? |
59617 | He was a dandified young fellow? |
59617 | He was a trader, you told me once? |
59617 | Here, at Dearborn? |
59617 | Here-- at Hawkins''s, mean you? 59617 Here?" |
59617 | Here? |
59617 | Here? |
59617 | How failed? |
59617 | How know you my name? |
59617 | How know you she lives? |
59617 | How know you this? |
59617 | How many have you in the garrison? |
59617 | How? |
59617 | I asked, why are you here? |
59617 | I believe I have failed to learn your name? |
59617 | I know not by what strange fortune I meet you here, but surely you will not refuse greeting to an old friend? |
59617 | I presume this is Captain Wells, from Fort Wayne? |
59617 | I sought Elsa Matherson,--are you she? |
59617 | I? |
59617 | In which direction is the Kinzie house? |
59617 | Indeed? |
59617 | Indeed? |
59617 | Indians? |
59617 | Is it not true, Monsieur? |
59617 | Is it so very far, father, to where I must go? |
59617 | Is it still garrisoned, or have we come too late? |
59617 | Is it the French dandy as was at Hawkins''s? |
59617 | Is some one there? |
59617 | Is the way yet long? |
59617 | Is this not so? |
59617 | Is this yere Major Wayland''s place? |
59617 | It is capable of resisting an attack? |
59617 | Josette, you ask me? 59617 Leave you? |
59617 | Love her? |
59617 | May I ask where that home is? |
59617 | May I hope you are seeking me? |
59617 | Me? 59617 No? |
59617 | Nor the pledge you gave to that white captain when he brought you safely to Detroit? |
59617 | Not John? |
59617 | Not fairly won? |
59617 | Of whom do you speak, Toinette? |
59617 | Oh, is that all? 59617 Oh, surely not that, David?" |
59617 | Oh, what can we do now? |
59617 | Overboard? |
59617 | Perchance, then,I urged, doubtfully,"you may prefer remaining quietly here rather than risk the peril of trying to escape?" |
59617 | Recall you a day twelve years ago on the River Raisin? |
59617 | Remember him? |
59617 | Sam,it called,"have you found either of the scoundrelly rascals?" |
59617 | So this is not your Captain de Croix? |
59617 | So those devils have let you go unharmed? 59617 So you have spurs, and think you can use them? |
59617 | Surely you can not rejoice at such a loss? |
59617 | Surely, Mademoiselle, you can not mean that you take your promise to the half- breed so seriously as voluntarily to remain in captivity? |
59617 | Surely,she urged,"your wits will conceive some way in which it may be done?" |
59617 | The lake?--water? |
59617 | The mysterious spirits of the starry night? |
59617 | The same whom the Americans name Billy Caldwell? |
59617 | The sand? |
59617 | The young girl yonder with De Croix? 59617 Then you are not the one I seek?" |
59617 | Then you keep no sentry posted on the platform? |
59617 | Then your decision is unchanged? |
59617 | They ai n''t seen ye stealin''outer the camp? |
59617 | They do? 59617 Think you she would greatly care?" |
59617 | Think you so, Monsieur? |
59617 | Think you so? |
59617 | Think you then, Monsieur, I do not look so ill? |
59617 | Think you we shall find shelter and friends there? |
59617 | Think you, Captain de Croix, that you can play such tricks in this wilderness, and not be made to pay for them? |
59617 | To find her? |
59617 | Unguarded? 59617 Was it from dread of venturing once more upon the water that you held back so long?" |
59617 | Wayland, did you say? |
59617 | Wayland,he faltered feebly,"is this you? |
59617 | Wayland,he questioned anxiously,"what is this I hear about a strange portent in the eastern sky last night? |
59617 | Wayland? |
59617 | We would bid her welcome also; yet surely she can not be that little child for whose sake we sent you forth? |
59617 | Were any of the women brought alive to the camp? |
59617 | Were you ever there, Seth? |
59617 | What French mockery is this? |
59617 | What is a name? |
59617 | What is it that has so driven you out of your senses? |
59617 | What is it that so greatly disturbs your Miamis? |
59617 | What is it, John? |
59617 | What is it? |
59617 | What journey? 59617 What mean you, Mademoiselle?" |
59617 | What seeks the White Chief? |
59617 | What? 59617 Where go you?" |
59617 | Where is Mademoiselle? |
59617 | Where is this Fort Dearborn, and how am I to journey in reaching there? 59617 Where is this lodge in which they hold her?" |
59617 | Where is your master to be found? |
59617 | Where white woman? |
59617 | Who are you? 59617 Who are you? |
59617 | Who is he? |
59617 | Who was it? |
59617 | Why did you tell Sister Celeste that you came to Dearborn seeking Elsa Matherson? |
59617 | Why hid you from me with such care the object of your search? |
59617 | Why is it I am made the subject of your quarrel? |
59617 | Why she not come help me? |
59617 | Why think you thus? |
59617 | Why you bring them? |
59617 | Why, boy, I thought you were bred to the border; and can you ask me such a question? 59617 Why, what has become of the Indians?" |
59617 | Will not this Sister Celeste consent to leave the Indians? |
59617 | Will they permit even you to pass unharmed? |
59617 | Will you show me the nearest way to the Kinzie house? |
59617 | Will you stand back, Monsieur? |
59617 | With whom were you conversing just now, Monsieur? |
59617 | Would I be here, think you, otherwise? |
59617 | Ye called the feller De Croix, did n''t ye? |
59617 | Yes, I know,impatiently;"but I mean her name?" |
59617 | Yet know you who among the whites have thus far preserved their lives? |
59617 | Yet you are often happy? |
59617 | You also sought a girl in this wilderness,--may I ask, have you yet found trace of her? |
59617 | You are Sau- ga- nash? |
59617 | You are anxious to die? 59617 You are ill-- faint?" |
59617 | You are not afraid of the perils before us? |
59617 | You are not angry at my presumption? |
59617 | You are now connected with the French army? |
59617 | You are sure you love this maiden? |
59617 | You believe it a prophecy of evil? |
59617 | You do not look like those others,--are you a man? |
59617 | You do not understand that? |
59617 | You feel, then, that the die is cast? |
59617 | You found her there? 59617 You go upon this strange journey willingly, my son?" |
59617 | You have a plan, then? |
59617 | You have found her? |
59617 | You have no desire to go with me, then? |
59617 | You have the freedom of the camp yonder? |
59617 | You knew this Elsa Matherson? |
59617 | You know him, then? |
59617 | You know, then, of his danger and deliverance? |
59617 | You look for trouble? |
59617 | You make me feel that we go forward into real peril,I said, wondering that he should seem so fearful of the outcome,"Have you special reason?" |
59617 | You mean that? |
59617 | You mean the destruction of the liquor will anger them? |
59617 | You mean the sister who interposed to save you? |
59617 | You mean when Captain de Croix and I leaned above the eastern palisades? |
59617 | You must live near here, then? |
59617 | You question my courage to venture it? |
59617 | You realize this sense of loneliness? 59617 You remember the fellow, William? |
59617 | You say a mistake,--what mistake? |
59617 | You say the White Father is strong, and will drive the red- coats into the sea: did he at Mackinac? |
59617 | You seek some lady, then, at Fort Dearborn? |
59617 | You spoke with her? |
59617 | You think there are savages on this shore? |
59617 | You will be both kind and thoughtful with Roger Matherson''s little girl? |
59617 | You will fight, then? |
59617 | You will go with me? |
59617 | You will go, then, whenever and wherever I say? |
59617 | You will send aid to him? |
59617 | You will trust me, then? |
59617 | You? 59617 You?" |
59617 | Your wife? |
59617 | ''Tis good to meet with such open honesty; and when did maid ever have before so unselfish a cavalier to do her honor? |
59617 | A prisoner? |
59617 | All dead, you say? |
59617 | Am I not right to do this? |
59617 | An''ye''re no Injun?" |
59617 | And do you believe the one I seek will be found with them?" |
59617 | And how comes it that you sought another in this wilderness, if you were already long wedded?" |
59617 | And know you what they in tend as to his future?" |
59617 | And pray, why not?" |
59617 | And so you found Josette?" |
59617 | And what is this man''s name?" |
59617 | And you are truly unhurt of the struggle?" |
59617 | And you deliberately choose to devote your life to the redemption of these savages?" |
59617 | Are you a Protestant?" |
59617 | Are you also prisoner to the Indians? |
59617 | As these partially ceased, I asked:"Has a date been set for the abandonment of the Fort?" |
59617 | At sight of a stranger she drew back slightly, yet paused to ask:"Did you wish to see some one here?" |
59617 | Be ye goin''ter stay thar long?" |
59617 | Be ye the lad what downed Bud Eberly at the meetin''over on the Cow- skin las''spring?" |
59617 | But come, Messieurs, why do you hesitate so long? |
59617 | But do you yet remember the day I drew you out of the rout at Saratoga, and bore you away safely, though the Hessians shot me twice? |
59617 | But was she the only one?" |
59617 | But what are you two young fellows doing here? |
59617 | But what brought you here? |
59617 | But what has all this to do here?" |
59617 | But what mean you by happy ending? |
59617 | But why does the angel of their mercy hold back from me so long?" |
59617 | But why should I remain here to discuss matters of such small import, with all this work unfinished which fronts strong men to- night? |
59617 | But why worry him? |
59617 | But you mention not where you are bound?" |
59617 | But you, Wayland,--know you aught of her?" |
59617 | But you, who are you? |
59617 | CHAPTER XXXIII AN INTERVENTION OF FATE"Form one of our party?" |
59617 | Can not the girl so much as move without your permission, Monsieur?" |
59617 | Can you tell me where this girl is to be found?" |
59617 | Captain de Croix, she was far from being a stranger to you in those other days at Montreal,--will you not add your entreaties to ours?" |
59617 | Come, how happened it that this gay sprig outfooted you?" |
59617 | Come, you imp of darkness, know you aught of these?" |
59617 | Could it be De Croix? |
59617 | Could it be possible that he meant Toinette? |
59617 | David, in memory of it, will you not give my little orphan child a home? |
59617 | Did any Pottawattomie send to White Chief to come to council?" |
59617 | Did ever mortal behold so grewsome a sight before? |
59617 | Did you advise with him?" |
59617 | Did you leave all your courtesy behind in Montreal, or dream that in this wilderness I should cringe to any words you might speak? |
59617 | Do I flatter you by thus showing my interest? |
59617 | Do you observe nothing, like that fine gentleman yonder? |
59617 | Do you say you are also a prisoner? |
59617 | Do you still greatly wish to find this Elsa Matherson?" |
59617 | Do you suffer greatly? |
59617 | Do you think I should be here otherwise? |
59617 | Does such decision come from a council?" |
59617 | For what have the white men come to disturb Gomo and his warriors?" |
59617 | Gentlemen, will you not come in?" |
59617 | Have I risked my life in coming here for no other end than this?" |
59617 | Have the redskins captured our French friend?" |
59617 | Have you also personal scruples?" |
59617 | Have you such a prejudice against that great people that you need speak of them with so glum a voice? |
59617 | Have you such small respect for me, Mademoiselle, as to think I could consent to leave you here alone and at the mercy of these red fiends? |
59617 | How came you here?" |
59617 | How chances she to be here? |
59617 | How could creatures shaped like men prove themselves such fiends, such hideous devils of malignity? |
59617 | How old be ye, anyhow?" |
59617 | How soon can John be ready, mother?" |
59617 | How would she greet me? |
59617 | I asked, as we paused before the dark outline,"or must I also help you to explore within?" |
59617 | I asked:"But you have not explained to me how you learned all this of which you spoke?" |
59617 | I beg you answer me; will you go?" |
59617 | I cried, in my excitement clutching his naked arm,"who is that white girl yonder, and how comes she here?" |
59617 | I have lived in the woods, and gone forth with your war- parties; am I less a warrior, now that I fight with the people of my own race? |
59617 | I whispered cautiously"Who is it?" |
59617 | In all the time I have been the White Chief at Dearborn, have I ever done wrong to a Pottawattomie?" |
59617 | Into what tragic unknown fate had this earliest comrade of my manhood been remorselessly swept? |
59617 | Is Toinette dead?" |
59617 | Is it known to any Indian that you are alive and within this camp?" |
59617 | Is their loss a part of Indian torture?" |
59617 | Is this the way of it?" |
59617 | It is not possible you are the same who brought a message to Major Wayland on the Maumee?" |
59617 | It must indeed be so, or why is it that Master Wayland doth not claim of me the stake of the wager?" |
59617 | Kinzie?" |
59617 | Knew she you by some other?" |
59617 | Knew you the savage?" |
59617 | Know ye not, Master Wayland, that we hope to be at this Fort Dearborn upon the morrow, and''tis there I meet again the fair Toinette? |
59617 | Know you anything about the management of boats?" |
59617 | Know you anything of what fate has befallen other of our friends of the garrison?" |
59617 | Know you him?" |
59617 | Know you not I am here, at the very end of the world, for you?" |
59617 | Know you not, Master Wayland, that the lives of helpless women and children may depend upon our haste? |
59617 | Mark you, Wayland, how much farther to the south the limit of their camp extends than when the sun sank last night? |
59617 | Master Wayland, is it not time for you fitly to greet Captain de Croix? |
59617 | May I ask if you are Elsa Matherson?" |
59617 | May I not hope it has won me restoration to your good graces?" |
59617 | May we pass on to your camp?" |
59617 | Might not I answer better as his substitute?" |
59617 | Monsieur, have you never known how restful it sometimes is to be alone?" |
59617 | O God, how could such deeds be done? |
59617 | Ol''Tom Burns?" |
59617 | Or was it the half- breed with some secret message he dared not deliver openly? |
59617 | Out in the rude shed, which answered as a kitchen during summer weather, I ventured to ask:"Mother, do you suppose he will take the little girl?" |
59617 | Perchance they also thought me a ghost, who knows? |
59617 | Perhaps one of the officers here present possesses courage enough for the venture?" |
59617 | Perhaps, sir, you can explain the contradiction?" |
59617 | Pray tell me, Monsieur,--I am so curious to know,--do you truly think Josette fairer than I?" |
59617 | Prefer to remain here? |
59617 | Really, Monsieur, you do not think I would withhold so small a reward from the winner?" |
59617 | Recall you this, Sau- ga- nash?" |
59617 | Sam, by any foul chance did you overlook the lavender water?" |
59617 | Sam, where was it I saw the last one?" |
59617 | Saw you anything terrifying there?" |
59617 | She was ever an odd creature,--but what can bring her here, walking so freely about in this camp of vengeful savages?" |
59617 | Should I learn my fate from her tell- tale eyes, or by a sudden gleam of surprise in her lovely face? |
59617 | Spoke he not even the name of the woman?" |
59617 | Surely no rude backwoodsman is to come between us now?" |
59617 | Surely she can not be of Indian blood?" |
59617 | Surely you are not a savage?" |
59617 | Surely you are not unattended in this wilderness?" |
59617 | Surely you can not be that same Frenchman we helped entertain last night?" |
59617 | Surely you have no present intention to leave the Fort, in face of that savage mob out yonder?" |
59617 | Surely you have no wish to linger in this pleasant spot?" |
59617 | Surely you, for instance, have met with but little hardship thus far at the hands of Little Sauk?" |
59617 | Surely, De Croix, you are not permanently located in this delightful spot?" |
59617 | Surely, that home might also prove your refuge?" |
59617 | Tell me, Monsieur, was she by any chance of fate the heroine who last night plucked Captain de Croix from the flames of torture?" |
59617 | Ten days, as I live; would you believe I could ever have survived so grievous a siege?" |
59617 | That broad face was not wholly Indian; could this be the half- breed chief of whom I had so often heard? |
59617 | The French girl? |
59617 | Then I added,"What journey do you contemplate?" |
59617 | Then you will leave me here?" |
59617 | They watch me with some care at night, yet of what use can their guarding be? |
59617 | Think you it can be made if you lean hard on me?" |
59617 | Think you it would be possible to walk?" |
59617 | Think you she is not a stranger?" |
59617 | Think you she is the one you seek?" |
59617 | Think you that because I am a girl I must therefore be all selfishness? |
59617 | Think you that he truly loved her?" |
59617 | Think you that you could find it through the night?" |
59617 | Think you, Topenebe, that I fear to sing the death- song? |
59617 | To what chief?" |
59617 | Was all indeed well with him? |
59617 | Was it acting, for some purpose unknown to me,--or what might be the secret of these strange expressions? |
59617 | Was she crazed, driven mad by some extremity of suffering at which I could only guess? |
59617 | Was there not one with you yonder at the house? |
59617 | What answer made the savages?" |
59617 | What answered Black Partridge?" |
59617 | What can you and I hope to accomplish in so mad a search amid all these savages? |
59617 | What care I for this Frenchman, that I should risk my life to save him? |
59617 | What dark figure is that, even now leaning over the logs yonder?" |
59617 | What day is this?" |
59617 | What did she there, passing with such apparent freedom from restraint among those fierce warriors? |
59617 | What had become of Roger Matherson''s orphan child? |
59617 | What has Captain de Croix done now to make you seek him so vengefully?" |
59617 | What has become of your hair and beard? |
59617 | What have I ever said in our brief intercourse that could cause you to conceive I care greatly for that? |
59617 | What have we been following since first we entered this valley?" |
59617 | What in Heaven''s name has happened to leave you with such a poll? |
59617 | What is the girl to you?" |
59617 | What is the man''s name? |
59617 | What mean all these sly tricks of speech and action?--this hurried message to the ear of Mademoiselle? |
59617 | What means the portent?" |
59617 | What need have I to dwell upon the love that bade her welcome? |
59617 | What say you, Mademoiselle?" |
59617 | What seek you here?" |
59617 | What were you doing down here?" |
59617 | What ye a- goin''fer, enyhow?" |
59617 | Where have the savages confined him? |
59617 | Where knew you her?" |
59617 | Which two?" |
59617 | Who brought the message, and when?" |
59617 | Who is he?" |
59617 | Who may ye be, anyhow, stranger? |
59617 | Who spoke the words of the pledge?" |
59617 | Who this man, White Chief? |
59617 | Why are you here in the midst of these savages? |
59617 | Why did I not reach the stockade? |
59617 | Why did he cry out so loudly, and fall?" |
59617 | Why did you do that?" |
59617 | Why have you failed to reach the stockade?" |
59617 | Why not stay with Big Turtle? |
59617 | Why should Wyandots and Sacs wish to burn a Frenchman?" |
59617 | Why, if White Father so strong, you leave Fort and go way off?" |
59617 | Will you not speak a word of mercy now?" |
59617 | Will you take him thither at midnight, together with the rifle I left in the council lodge?" |
59617 | Will you wait?" |
59617 | Would the strange woman forget me now, or would she venture upon a return with her message? |
59617 | Would you believe it? |
59617 | Ye''re quite a lad, ai n''t ye? |
59617 | Yet is there any cause for quarrel because this young gentleman has preserved my life?" |
59617 | Yet surely it is not your purpose to halt here long?" |
59617 | Yet what''s the use of wasting life like that? |
59617 | Yet why should we stay here? |
59617 | Yet, even though I confess your conclusion partially true, what cause does it yield why you should seek a quarrel with my good friend, John Wayland?" |
59617 | You also made a pledge, even before mine was given; was it not your purpose to abide by it?" |
59617 | You are English, then?" |
59617 | You are only seeking a way of escape from the savages?" |
59617 | You desire that he be kept within the Fort, ignorant of this commission?" |
59617 | You go to explore?" |
59617 | You know him, you say, for how long?" |
59617 | You love some one then, Monsieur?" |
59617 | You saw all of it?" |
59617 | You say your name is Burns?" |
59617 | You speak harsh words,--words that under other conditions I should make you answer for with the sword; but what is the good of it all? |
59617 | You understand that, Monsieur de Croix; now, will you go or stay?" |
59617 | _ Sacre!_ did I not have a full hundred days of such pleasure when first I left France? |
59617 | _ Sacre!_ how could I ever hope to find my way alone through the wilderness? |
59617 | _"Mon Dieu!_ You are here? |
59617 | an''for what cause did ye jump down yere on me?" |
59617 | and at Dearborn?" |
59617 | and have you at last mustered courage to break away from the commander of this most notable company?" |
59617 | and how was I ever to reach her with any hope of rescue, even if she desired it? |
59617 | and how?" |
59617 | and why not? |
59617 | by whom?" |
59617 | can it indeed be that you have come to save me?" |
59617 | can this indeed be you?" |
59617 | do I not show you great honor in thus seeking you out, after your avoidance of me all these hours?" |
59617 | have the spirit of a Jesuit, perchance, and are ambitious of martyrdom?" |
59617 | have you become crazed by the hard march? |
59617 | he questioned, looking out into the darkness,"or the dim figures of your own imagination?" |
59617 | he said, catching sight of me,"do you happen to know where I am most likely to find Captain de Croix?" |
59617 | he said, haughtily, dropping his hand upon the hilt of his rapier,"or shall I show you how a gentleman of France deals with such impertinence?" |
59617 | is not the prize enough?" |
59617 | is that your aim? |
59617 | of course,"he returned carelessly;"if she chooses to dismount and rejoin her friends, what has that to do with John Wayland? |
59617 | or had the Nemesis of a wrong once done dealt its fatal stroke at last? |
59617 | or that I would ever permit you thus to sacrifice yourself unnecessarily for me? |
59617 | questioned the old chief, sternly,"or have our words wronged our brothers?" |
59617 | she pleaded,"can it be possible you would flee from me?" |
59617 | she questioned in return, parrying with quick skill,"that you should think any bodily terror could hold me back? |
59617 | she questioned,"and by whom?" |
59617 | this absence of all that makes life beautiful and worth the living?" |
59617 | was it really a living woman who stood there, or a ghost returned from the other world to haunt me and make living worse than death?" |
59617 | was that it, then?" |
59617 | what care I what may be done with the girl? |
59617 | what danger threatens, that he needs to be warned against?" |
59617 | what of that? |
59617 | who is she?" |
59617 | why, have I not died a hundred deaths already? |
59617 | you?" |
32533 | After you left Ottawa where did you go? |
32533 | And committed for what? 32533 And men were betrayed?" |
32533 | And you heard the loud words directly afterward? |
32533 | Are you opposed to the execution of the death penalty? 32533 Are you reading that testimony of Dr. Perkins correctly?" |
32533 | Are you sure about that? |
32533 | At that time who were the Executive? |
32533 | At the time of the existence of this so- called Triangle, Sullivan, Boland and Feeley, do you know of their betraying any members of the order? |
32533 | But, gentlemen, why was this floor painted, if there was an ox killed there, or if a dog were killed in there, or if a guinea pig were killed there? 32533 Can you tell to a certainty whether two drops of blood come from the same body?" |
32533 | Could these men whom you believe to have been betrayed, have been betrayed without the knowledge of the Executive? |
32533 | Could you distinguish the loud words you heard? |
32533 | Did he get up as if he intended to leave the car? |
32533 | Did he have a box or parcel in his hand? |
32533 | Did he have any parcels? |
32533 | Did he speak to the man in the buggy before the latter drove away? |
32533 | Did the servants? |
32533 | Did you hear any loud words before the man from the buggy entered? |
32533 | Did you hear any sounds that would indicate that a scuffle was in progress? |
32533 | Did you not suspect that he might expose you? |
32533 | Did you notice how he was dressed? |
32533 | Did you notice the man in it? |
32533 | Did you notice whether anybody was with him when he stepped out at Frederick Street to board your car? |
32533 | Did you plan for a man to call at your office and request you to go out to the ice- house and attend a patient? |
32533 | Did you present him to your father and mother? |
32533 | Did you read of the arrest of O''Sullivan and Coughlin? |
32533 | Did you see an undersized man with a heavy mustache and a slouch hat? |
32533 | Did you see how he was dressed? |
32533 | Did you see the man''s face? |
32533 | Do I understand you to say,interrupted Mr. Donahoe,"that Mulcahey swore he was out of the house?" |
32533 | Do any other persons entertain this theory? |
32533 | Do n''t you know? |
32533 | Do you believe, Mr. Dillon, that Dr. Cronin''s opinion of Sullivan was correct? |
32533 | Do you know the reason why Alexander Sullivan left the order? |
32533 | Do you remember whether he knocked for admission? |
32533 | Do you see the man? |
32533 | Do you think that a man of less principle or brains might do so? |
32533 | Do you think your solitary passenger was under the influence of liquor? |
32533 | Forest then says to you:''It is strange, is n''t it, that they drove right down toward the city, where they could be seen by the police force?'' 32533 Gentlemen"said he"are there any more witnesses that you would wish me to call?" |
32533 | Had he reference to the trial committee? 32533 Have you any opinion as to who is responsible for his death?" |
32533 | Have you any opinion,queried Mr. Donahoe,"outside of what you read in the newspapers, that Dr. Cronin was murdered?" |
32533 | Hello, Doc; what are you doing here? |
32533 | How about Patrick O''Sullivan? 32533 How can you tell whether certain blood is that of a human being, or of some animal?" |
32533 | How did the horse start when he turned out? 32533 How did you come to engage him as physician to your family and workmen, when you live six miles from his office?" |
32533 | How did you leave Chicago? |
32533 | How do you happen to know so much about Cronin''s St. Louis record? |
32533 | How far did he ride? |
32533 | How is the money to be made? |
32533 | How often do you hear the expression that a man is not fit to belong to a church, or is not fit to belong to a political body? 32533 How was it that you noticed him then?" |
32533 | How was the man dressed? |
32533 | How would testimony to that effect benefit Parnell? |
32533 | I want to know, if your Honor please, if there is any evidence of any claquers having been placed in this court in this case? |
32533 | If he died of apoplexy,cried the State''s Attorney,"why were his shirt and pantaloons cut to get them off him? |
32533 | If known, where would those outside receive their information from? |
32533 | Indeed,the doctor continued,"why should I be the enemy of Mr. Sullivan? |
32533 | Is Dr. Cronin in? |
32533 | Is Mr. Sullivan at home? |
32533 | Is he considered such now? |
32533 | Is he the Frank Williams you saw? |
32533 | It was quite natural, was it not? 32533 Now was it appointed? |
32533 | Now what sort of a defense-- because I propose to deal with that first-- what kind of a defense is made by these five prisoners? 32533 Now, gentlemen, have you any doubt about that furniture going to that number? |
32533 | Now, how is that met? 32533 Now, if he made that remark-- that it was to report to him alone-- where is the man that will assert that there was no committee appointed? |
32533 | Revenge for what? |
32533 | Singular, is it not? 32533 Soloman,"said Tschappatt,"what kind of a man do you take me for? |
32533 | That you ought to take life? |
32533 | That''s strangereplied Finegan, coming up"how the deuce could a dog get in there?" |
32533 | The Lake Shore drive, man, is two miles from here,I said,"ca n''t you see there is no roadway here?" |
32533 | Then you did not call on Dr. Cronin, or send for him? |
32533 | Then you do not know how it happened that he was summoned to your ice house? |
32533 | They were not known to anybody outside of the Triangle? |
32533 | This proceeding was not altogether unexpected? |
32533 | Under your own name? |
32533 | Was Dr. Cronin a spy? |
32533 | Was Le Caron a member of a camp in Illinois? |
32533 | Was he known to be such before Le Caron testified? |
32533 | Was he once considered a good member of the order? |
32533 | Was he tall? |
32533 | Was it Parkhurst? |
32533 | Was it a top buggy? |
32533 | Was there not an accident in your ice house? |
32533 | Well, Doctor, back again? |
32533 | Well, did the judge in the English court say you were a dangerous man? |
32533 | Well, now, as to why you left Chicago? |
32533 | Well, what is your name? |
32533 | Well, why did you leave Ottawa? |
32533 | Were there any lights in the house? |
32533 | What address did you give? |
32533 | What are you so excited about? |
32533 | What did he do with it when he sat down? |
32533 | What else? 32533 What for?" |
32533 | What is it? |
32533 | What is the evidence against Kunze? 32533 What is the matter?" |
32533 | What is your name? |
32533 | What name did you give? |
32533 | What number from your left? |
32533 | What other evidence do you want to show that that trunk came out of that cottage? 32533 What other names have you got?" |
32533 | What position did he hold? |
32533 | What prompted you to do that? |
32533 | What sort of a horse was attached to the buggy? |
32533 | What was the verdict? |
32533 | When did you get to Montreal? |
32533 | When did you leave Montreal? |
32533 | When was the convention to be? |
32533 | When you got to Montreal where did you intend going? |
32533 | Where are you stopping in town? |
32533 | Where did he sit down? |
32533 | Where did the trouble begin? 32533 Where did you go?" |
32533 | Where did you put up in Ottawa? |
32533 | Where did you put up? |
32533 | Where did you then go? |
32533 | Where have you been for the past two hours? |
32533 | Where is he? |
32533 | Where shall I have the goods delivered? |
32533 | Where was the concealment then? 32533 Where were you from 9 o''clock till the_ Empire_ reporter met you on Yonge street?" |
32533 | Who are you looking for? |
32533 | Who owned the rig in which Dr. Cronin was driven to the assassin''s den? |
32533 | Who saw Cronin at your house? |
32533 | Why did Cronin have any enmity toward Sullivan? |
32533 | Why did he say he expected to be arrested on the Cronin business? 32533 Why did n''t he occupy this cottage? |
32533 | Why did n''t you bring Cronin out to your house? |
32533 | Why did n''t you say so in your dispatches? 32533 Why did that wretch want to employ Dr. Cronin? |
32533 | Why did you leave Montreal, and when did you do so? |
32533 | Why did you not then go on to New York? |
32533 | Why did you wish to see him? |
32533 | Why do I say this? 32533 Why do you think so?" |
32533 | Why should I? |
32533 | Why should the casket be opened? |
32533 | Why should you have left Chicago without letting your friends know? |
32533 | Why, Cronin, is it possible that you do n''t remember me? |
32533 | Why? |
32533 | Yes, sir; in Braidwood, Ill."Who is Le Caron? |
32533 | Yes,was the answer,"why should n''t I? |
32533 | You believe they were arrested, do n''t you? |
32533 | You do not claim that I said that? |
32533 | You know what kind of a man Sullivan is, do n''t you? |
32533 | ''Has that committee reported?'' |
32533 | ''I contracted for the horse and buggy to drive you to death?'' |
32533 | ''Is he a good doctor?'' |
32533 | ''Will you go down and introduce me to him?'' |
32533 | Again, why was the use of a card necessary? |
32533 | And did he preserve himself unspotted from the world? |
32533 | And now, my dear friends, have we reason to be sorry to- day? |
32533 | And then slapping him on the shoulder continued:"Have you been summoned as a venireman?" |
32533 | Andrews and Moyer? |
32533 | Approaching him with extended hand, he said:"Hello, Tschappatt, what are you doing here?" |
32533 | Are such men worthy of your confidence? |
32533 | Are the gentlemen for the State satisfied with that? |
32533 | Are they in a conspiracy with the other associates, the members of the same camp as John F. Beggs, Daniel Coughlin and Martin Burke? |
32533 | Are those isolated men, scattered over the city, having no bond of harmony? |
32533 | Are we not to have conscience in this matter at all? |
32533 | Are we to follow these men blindly in every enterprise to which fancy or ambition leads them, including schemes of American politics? |
32533 | Are you a fool that you wo n''t accept it?" |
32533 | Are you gentleman ready to violate your oaths by sustaining it?" |
32533 | Are you waiting for a murder more atrocious? |
32533 | Burke had an abiding place, and why should he go to that store on Sunday, the 5th of May, and buy a shirt? |
32533 | But he asked Martin Burke one question,''What do you think of Cronin''s disappearance?'' |
32533 | But suppose that the hot- headed Presbyterians had said, we do not believe that this man ought to be permitted to live? |
32533 | But were they at O''Sullivan''s that afternoon? |
32533 | But who was it that was familiar with all this? |
32533 | But why had he enemies? |
32533 | By Dr. Cronin-- Did Lomasney attend the district convention held in Chicago in 1884? |
32533 | Can any organization of intelligent, self- respecting men tolerate such a state of affairs? |
32533 | Can not you learn from that fact some lessons? |
32533 | Can you as twelve men making up your minds upon the evidence have any doubt but that it was Dr. Cronin who was driven into that cottage? |
32533 | Condemned and executed by whom? |
32533 | Condemned for what? |
32533 | Conklin?" |
32533 | Could they look the prisoner''s wife in the face and say to her,"I sent your husband to prison upon the words of Major Sampson?" |
32533 | Cronin?" |
32533 | Cronin?" |
32533 | Cronin?" |
32533 | Cronin?" |
32533 | Cronin?" |
32533 | Cronin?" |
32533 | Cronin?" |
32533 | Cronin?'' |
32533 | Did I not tell you that those witnesses were remarkable witnesses? |
32533 | Did any one else move from there that day? |
32533 | Did he do that? |
32533 | Did he fulfil his vocation; I ask you here in the presence of his mortal remains, did he carry out his vocation? |
32533 | Did he not at one time try to hurt your reputation?" |
32533 | Did he tell you there was anything wrong with the horse that drove Dr. Cronin away? |
32533 | Did it ever occur to any man connected with the prosecution or the defense that any question of that kind could enter into the breasts of this jury? |
32533 | Did n''t he talk a long time about that? |
32533 | Did this man who traveled all the way from New Jersey tell you what kind of knees the horse had? |
32533 | Did you consider that proposition I made you?" |
32533 | Did you ever hear of a policeman taking a revolver and two old knives worth 10 cents to the Fidelity Bank because he was responsible for the property? |
32533 | Did you ever think since this trial-- have you heard of anybody having any feeling against Dr. Cronin? |
32533 | Did you notice the peculiarity of the witnesses? |
32533 | Do I say that they perjured themselves? |
32533 | Do n''t you know it is the same old cover of Irish slander? |
32533 | Do n''t you notice the urgency there was how to get him to express an opinion? |
32533 | Do n''t you see how important it was? |
32533 | Do n''t you see that stand out plainly and distinctly? |
32533 | Do n''t you see what remarkable feats they perform? |
32533 | Do n''t you see? |
32533 | Do you believe it was a guinea pig''s blood that was on that cake of soap or in the trunk or in the cottage? |
32533 | Do you believe there was a guinea pig killed in that cottage? |
32533 | Do you believe there was an ox killed in that cottage? |
32533 | Do you believe, gentlemen, that there is a conspiracy here to convict innocent men? |
32533 | Do you have any doubt now but that Dr. Cronin was driven to the Carlson cottage? |
32533 | Do you know them?'' |
32533 | Do you propose to guess my clients guilty and then hang them?" |
32533 | Do you remember that about a half hour after that time, about half a mile south of the Carlson cottage, a wagon was seen with a trunk in it? |
32533 | Do you see this blood in the trunk? |
32533 | Do you suppose there is much difference between the leaders of the two wings? |
32533 | Do you think that the Carlson family went around there and never touched any thing? |
32533 | Do you want anything else in reference to that key and lock? |
32533 | Do you wonder at it? |
32533 | Does it give him character? |
32533 | Does it throw open the record? |
32533 | Does that show the associations of every man who has shaken the President''s hand? |
32533 | Dr. Cronin had been charging the triangle with misappropriation of the funds-- and what else? |
32533 | Dr. Cronin-- Did the term report show any loss to Maroney? |
32533 | Ein doctor no man can heal und he don''d know the woondt; und I vant der chudge to tell me vat I am chail in for to- day anyhow?" |
32533 | Finally, Cronin requested that questions should be put to him, and the following conversation took place:"When did you leave Chicago?" |
32533 | Foreman?" |
32533 | Had not Miss Murphy seen him on the car? |
32533 | Has that anything to do with the case at issue? |
32533 | Has there been a man that dare come to the front and say that any investigation had been made-- that anything had been done? |
32533 | Has there been any evidence of any other person on earth that would be likely to kill Dr. Cronin? |
32533 | Have we reason to mourn that our friend has gone from us? |
32533 | Have you an opinion as to whether or not Martin Burke, one of the defendants, was the tenant of said cottage? |
32533 | Have you an opinion that the Clan- na- Gael Society is in any way to blame for the death of Dr. Cronin? |
32533 | Have you any doubt as to what was in that trunk? |
32533 | Have you any doubt as to who guided that wagon and directed its course? |
32533 | Have you formed an opinion as to whether or not Dr. Cronin was killed in pursuance of a conspiracy? |
32533 | Have you formed an opinion as to whether or not Martin Burke, one of the defendants, was a tenant of the Carlson cottage? |
32533 | Have you formed an opinion as to whether or not any of these defendants was concerned in said conspiracy, or was a member of said conspiracy? |
32533 | Have you formed an opinion as to whether the tenant or tenants of the Carlson cottage had anything to do with said murder? |
32533 | Have you formed any opinion as to whether or not Dr. Cronin was killed in the Carlson cottage? |
32533 | He said,"do n''t you see the Clan- na- Gaels at work? |
32533 | How can they tell the cause of death? |
32533 | How could we prove that the clothes were not over the sea if accident had not turned them up in the sewer in Lake View? |
32533 | How did Martin Burke know this cottage was for rent? |
32533 | How did he get one of O''Sullivan''s new cards? |
32533 | How did he know of the contract? |
32533 | How did he know there was a vacant cottage out there near Patrick O''Sullivan? |
32533 | How did he know where to go to rent that cottage unless some one of those parties had talked to him, either Dan Coughlin or Patrick O''Sullivan? |
32533 | How did they know the history of this man Sampson unless they got it from Coughlin? |
32533 | How did they know what he had done in Michigan? |
32533 | How did this man Williams know that this cottage was for rent? |
32533 | How do you know? |
32533 | How does the wing that sits in the witness seat conduct itself? |
32533 | How is it done? |
32533 | How much evidence do you want? |
32533 | How settled? |
32533 | How would you like to enter a scheme where you could make a thousand dollars?" |
32533 | I asked if there was any organization in Australia? |
32533 | I asked"Where is it?" |
32533 | I said, Why did you mention Alexander Sullivan''s name? |
32533 | I said,''Why did you mention Alexander Sullivan''s name? |
32533 | I would not ask you to convict the men unless you feel that the evidence justified you in doing so, but their defense, what is it? |
32533 | If Burke rented the Carlson cottage for a lawful purpose, why should he go to Winnipeg and thence to the old country? |
32533 | If Martin Burke rented it intending that his sister should keep house for himself and his brother, why did n''t they keep house? |
32533 | If he had learned of it through one of the three men who were present at the time, how did he happen to get one of the new cards? |
32533 | If that argument had been made to me, and these clothes had not been discovered would not I have given it weight? |
32533 | If that is so, then what is the duty of those police officers; what was their duty as men put on the force to look after the interests of this city? |
32533 | If the brain was so far disintegrated that they could not tell one thing, how could they tell the other? |
32533 | If they do not know, how do you know? |
32533 | If they were guilty of if, do you suppose that they could do it without my knowing it? |
32533 | In the name of heaven when do you expect to hear of one? |
32533 | Instead of going to Dr. Fenger or other prominent medical men and asking their opinion, what do they do? |
32533 | Is he corroborated? |
32533 | Is it an open book of his character to go and shake the hand of President Harrison? |
32533 | Is it for that purpose, or what does he mean by it? |
32533 | Is it for us to say whether they pried open that trunk or kicked it open from the rear? |
32533 | Is it to intimidate the people''s representatives, so that they would not dare go further in this hellish conspiracy? |
32533 | Is that the reason why he introduced this speech that Beggs had made to President Harrison? |
32533 | Is that your recollection of what took place? |
32533 | Is the fame of Ireland so great that it can afford to condone murder? |
32533 | Is there any explanation on earth except that it was purchased and moved in for the very purpose for which it was used thereafter? |
32533 | Is there anything in the camp that shows it was amicably settled? |
32533 | Is your rent due?'' |
32533 | It involves the entire prosecution, and how does it feel toward my client? |
32533 | It runs on now to the 24th of March, and what do we find? |
32533 | Jonas Carlson went there and said:''How about those tenants? |
32533 | Lomasney? |
32533 | Long declined to answer, but said that he had a copy of the pamphlet entitled,"Is It A Conspiracy?" |
32533 | Make a statement? |
32533 | Most assuredly, my friends, he did so And why did he do so? |
32533 | Mr. Boland-- Did you see him at Boston? |
32533 | Mr. Donahoe--"You will concede that every Irishman knew who it was that gave Le Caron his credentials?" |
32533 | Mr. Feeley-- Was your charge denied by Maroney? |
32533 | Mr. Feeley-- When was Maroney''s debt paid? |
32533 | Mr. O''Boyle-- Upon whom was the check drawn? |
32533 | Mr. Rogers-- Had this not been a prior date? |
32533 | Mr. Rogers-- What did Maroney say when you gave him the money? |
32533 | Mr. Rogers-- You swear you called the attention of Boland and Carroll to her condition? |
32533 | Mulvaney said:"Why do n''t you see Boland?" |
32533 | No matter whether I had five, six, or a dozen assistants, the question is, What are the facts? |
32533 | No one had told him that any one drove a white horse, and why should he say to Dinan,''Do n''t mention it, because Cronin and I were not friends?'' |
32533 | Not necessarily with his own hand, but was he a part and parcel of a conspiracy to destroy the life of Patrick H. Cronin? |
32533 | Now jump on to the 22d, the next meeting of Camp 20, where these minutes are approved, and what do you find? |
32533 | Now what do they do? |
32533 | Now what is the effect of this? |
32533 | Now why should he go over to see O''Sullivan? |
32533 | Now, Gentlemen, do you believe there was a dog killed in that cottage? |
32533 | Now, if the doctors say they can not, can you? |
32533 | Now, if witnesses were urged here, what do you suppose was urged upon them outside? |
32533 | Now, is that hard to say of a man who is dead? |
32533 | Now, is that your name written on this ticket?" |
32533 | Now, let me pass on up- stairs?" |
32533 | Now, that is not fair, is it? |
32533 | Now, what do we find? |
32533 | Now, what effect do you suppose that will have upon his zeal in giving evidence? |
32533 | Now, what else is disputed? |
32533 | Now, what was he doing at 117 South Clark street, if he was not engaged in that conspiracy? |
32533 | Now, why was that flat rented? |
32533 | O''Sullivan would say to them,''Do n''t you remember that I was here?'' |
32533 | On the 22d of February in the line of his letters, in the line that he hopes that no trouble will result, what does he do? |
32533 | P. O''Sullivan talks to Mr. Carlson, and says to him:''Is the cottage rented?'' |
32533 | Q-- Did I ask you to get the amount right as representing R. D.? |
32533 | Q-- When and to whom did you complain on your return to this country? |
32533 | Q.--By Mr. Boland-- The conversations were in the presence of Kerwin, were they not? |
32533 | Q.--By Mr. Feeley-- Did you present any objection at district convention as to your statement as to district? |
32533 | Q.--By Mr. Rogers-- What did you give the money to Dillon for? |
32533 | Q.--Did Maroney do any work after that? |
32533 | Q.--Did the matter come up in relation to your treatment at Chicago? |
32533 | Q.--Did you ask for help? |
32533 | Q.--Did you present any evidence, other than your statement, in relation to any of the acts mentioned? |
32533 | Q.--Did you see Carroll at New York? |
32533 | Q.--Did you want to accept the Presidency of the league? |
32533 | Q.--Do you know of his having left on a certain motive? |
32533 | Q.--Do you recollect my opposing the representation of Australia by any person in that body? |
32533 | Q.--Do you recollect that a vote was taken in regard to District A.? |
32533 | Q.--Do you remember the last time he went? |
32533 | Q.--Has any difficulty since that made you say why you were on R. D.? |
32533 | Q.--Have they been seen since? |
32533 | Q.--How many operations did you perform? |
32533 | Q.--How much did it cost for Mackey''s work? |
32533 | Q.--How much money have you received from the organization since? |
32533 | Q.--How much since? |
32533 | Q.--Pending the discussion of the report you left the convention? |
32533 | Q.--Until August, 1886, what was her condition? |
32533 | Q.--Was any one elected from your D.? |
32533 | Q.--Were you a delegate at the time you got the money? |
32533 | Q.--Were you appointed on foreign relations or finance committee? |
32533 | Q.--What did he say to you on the subject of his work? |
32533 | Q.--What family had he? |
32533 | Q.--What was Mrs. Lomasney''s condition before his going? |
32533 | Q.--What was the relation between Maroney and the executive? |
32533 | Q.--When again did you call upon Mr. Sullivan? |
32533 | Q.--Who were with him? |
32533 | Q.--Would Lomasney tell you if he had been selected a delegate by any one outside of D.? |
32533 | Q.--Would he have gone there, if not elected a delegate? |
32533 | Q.--You charged that the executive used the funds of the organization to pay Maroney''s debts, did you? |
32533 | Q.--You do n''t know of operations outside of your own? |
32533 | Q.--You do n''t know who I appointed? |
32533 | Q.--You saw me in 1886, was it not? |
32533 | Question by Mr. Dillon-- Do you know that Mrs. L. is an economical woman? |
32533 | Question by Mr. Ryan-- How much money in all did you receive? |
32533 | Question by Mr. Ryan-- What became of this man? |
32533 | Should I fail in my duty when invited into this case by the State''s Attorney to assist him in its prosecution? |
32533 | Some of it took place before you were elected? |
32533 | Suppose it was so, what has that got to do with the guilt or innocence of Beggs? |
32533 | Suppose the body was burned after a man was poisoned, would you be able to prove that he was poisoned? |
32533 | Swing but these men who said he was unworthy to live, and that men said he ought to be killed, and these men had themselves invited him out? |
32533 | Swing? |
32533 | Take that circumstance and what have you got? |
32533 | Talk about reading between the lines? |
32533 | That is why Mr. Beggs said to me when he was brought face to face with the record that a committee had been appointed, but does he explain? |
32533 | The Court glanced over the contents and then inquired:"Have you any further business to transact, gentlemen?" |
32533 | The burden of proof is on them and they must prove the cause of death, and how do you know it? |
32533 | The chief asked:''Where did you know Smith?'' |
32533 | The idea struck him at once,''Here are Mahoney and Dr. Cronin, great friends,''and afterward he said to Mahoney:''Do you know Cronin well?'' |
32533 | The officials did not ask him a single question, and when one of the bystanders approached him and asked:"Have you anything to say to- night?" |
32533 | The plain and simple question is, did John F. Beggs kill Dr. Cronin? |
32533 | The prisoners excitedly asked each other and the spectators:"What''s in the wind? |
32533 | The question arises, was not that Patrick O''Sullivan? |
32533 | The question with them is, shall their personal reputations be destroyed, or the organization be ruined? |
32533 | Then he answers:''Why did n''t you call Tom Murphy?'' |
32533 | Then who did it? |
32533 | Then, why was it that this man, Beggs, said that it had been amicably settled? |
32533 | They say that he claimed friendship for Alexander Sullivan-- I shall refer to that hereafter-- but did he ever denounce Cronin? |
32533 | This much accomplished, however, the next question was, could Burke be identified? |
32533 | Those three witnesses swear that Frank Williams rented it, and do you think that Williams was anybody else except this man Burke? |
32533 | To whom did Beggs refer when he spoke of"these men who are continually breeding disorder in the ranks?" |
32533 | Was he ever a man opposite or opposed to the good of his fellow- man? |
32533 | Was he not ever anxious to improve the lot and well- being of his fellow- men? |
32533 | Was it because Foster had to advertise at the expense of his client? |
32533 | Was it because he had to read the Irish history that he had copied into his manuscript? |
32533 | Was it because he was trimmed for a speech? |
32533 | Was it concealment? |
32533 | Was not this patriotic? |
32533 | Was that committee appointed? |
32533 | Was the committee appointed? |
32533 | We called Michael J. Kelly, another member of that organization, a junior guardian in Camp 20, and what does he say? |
32533 | Well, did the police do it? |
32533 | What are the material allegations in the indictment? |
32533 | What better eulogy can we pronounce upon him than this? |
32533 | What did O''Sullivan do with these cards? |
32533 | What did Spelman mean when he said he had hoped for a reunion and for better results? |
32533 | What did he do? |
32533 | What did they carry down from that flat? |
32533 | What do they say? |
32533 | What do you want?" |
32533 | What does he do? |
32533 | What does that show? |
32533 | What effect has this had upon the witnesses? |
32533 | What explanation is there to give for its being rented? |
32533 | What for? |
32533 | What for? |
32533 | What for?" |
32533 | What for?" |
32533 | What had they done in the camp? |
32533 | What has he done to me that I should, as he says, single him out for personal enmity?" |
32533 | What intelligent man will bind himself to promote all measures adopted by the Triangle,"whether known or unknown?" |
32533 | What is murder? |
32533 | What is the effect of it? |
32533 | What is the fact? |
32533 | What is the reason for it? |
32533 | What is your object in doing it? |
32533 | What justification could you have made in the forum of your own consciences to yourselves? |
32533 | What justification could you have made in your prayers to your God? |
32533 | What more was needed? |
32533 | What more was wanted? |
32533 | What offense did he commit? |
32533 | What other man among the two thousand lawyers at the Chicago bar except William J. Hynes, is the man to whom their attention is called?" |
32533 | What protection could a card guarantee? |
32533 | What report had been made? |
32533 | What statute draws a line between the salesman and the head of a business? |
32533 | What statute recognizes a distinction between the laborer and the man who hires him? |
32533 | What steps had been taken to investigate the matter? |
32533 | What was he doing there all the month? |
32533 | What was his avocation and mission in life? |
32533 | What was his reply? |
32533 | What was the first thing to do? |
32533 | What was the motive? |
32533 | What were they? |
32533 | What would you have thought at that time? |
32533 | What would you have thought if you had been a brother in the camp with Dr. Cronin? |
32533 | What wrong had he done to any person or any cause? |
32533 | What, then, were Long''s motives in giving currency to these dispatches? |
32533 | When that old man got on the stand, Forrest was yelling at the top of his voice,''How do you know, how do you know?'' |
32533 | Where did they get those letters which he wrote to Spelman and received from Spelman? |
32533 | Where do we learn of this conspiracy first?" |
32533 | Where do you find it? |
32533 | Where do you go, where do you get the starting point in this great conspiracy? |
32533 | Where has been the concealment of a fact? |
32533 | Where has there been an exception to the ruling of the court? |
32533 | Where has there been any objection against testimony? |
32533 | Where was the third man? |
32533 | Where was the trunk found? |
32533 | Which result shall it be? |
32533 | Who could have dreamed that such a thing was possible in the State of Illinois? |
32533 | Who did he give them to? |
32533 | Who ever heard of a second- class lawyer, or even a police court shyster, claiming that that identification was not perfect? |
32533 | Who is there that corroborates his testimony? |
32533 | Who knows best, and what is the value of recollection as to the hour when the thing occurred? |
32533 | Who was he referring to? |
32533 | Who was it brought it to his ears, unless it was Daniel Coughlin or Patrick O''Sullivan? |
32533 | Who was this strange man? |
32533 | Whoever said it was the organization or a part of the Clan- na- Gael which formed that inner circle? |
32533 | Whose rig was it that took him to it? |
32533 | Whose was the guiding hand that induced him to take so great a risk? |
32533 | Why ca n''t you let me go? |
32533 | Why did O''Sullivan need an introduction to Dr. Cronin? |
32533 | Why did he devote his time to talking about that? |
32533 | Why did n''t O''Sullivan step up to the Doctor that night and make his contract? |
32533 | Why did they know it? |
32533 | Why did they not say so to his face if they had anything to say? |
32533 | Why did they not say so to his face? |
32533 | Why did you tell another story the other morning?" |
32533 | Why do n''t they move in? |
32533 | Why does she say that? |
32533 | Why is that office sought for? |
32533 | Why should he flee the State of Illinois? |
32533 | Why should he tell that he was a spy? |
32533 | Why should not the people of the State of Illinois have ability as well as the defendants? |
32533 | Why should old man Carlson, who scarcely knew O''Sullivan, walk over to him to inquire about his tenant? |
32533 | Why was Dan Coughlin thinking then of this subject? |
32533 | Why was Dr. Cronin slain? |
32533 | Why was he induced to believe that that horse had taken Dr. Cronin to his death? |
32533 | Why was he stripped, his body put in one sewer and his clothes in another? |
32533 | Why was that inquiry made? |
32533 | Why was this done? |
32533 | Why was this furniture purchased? |
32533 | Why was this investigating committee appointed? |
32533 | Why, in God''s name, if men are sincere, will they insist upon opening old sores? |
32533 | Why, then, is such an investigation refused? |
32533 | Why? |
32533 | Why? |
32533 | Why? |
32533 | Why? |
32533 | Why? |
32533 | Why? |
32533 | Why? |
32533 | Will you guess at it? |
32533 | Would not the alibi for the Hylands be just as good as their alibi for Saturday night? |
32533 | Would not the word of a caller have answered just as well? |
32533 | Would you have stood there as a stone? |
32533 | Yet he would have you believe he said''How do you know?'' |
32533 | You do not believe that he died from poison, do you? |
32533 | You do not believe that the man in that trunk died from apoplexy do you? |
32533 | You find it in Camp 20, in Turner Hall? |
32533 | You know as well as I do that when you go and buy a ready- made shirt there is only one question asked you-- What is the size of your collar? |
32533 | and where did the learned counsel who cross- examined him for the defense learn the man''s record, except from Dan Coughlin? |
32533 | and why moreover was his death so greatly desired? |
32533 | or was it because he thought there was something against his client? |
32843 | A fire, broken out in the city? 32843 Am I different, dear? |
32843 | An ox, Jim, is n''t it? 32843 And He did, did n''t He?" |
32843 | And now we''re here, what will you do with us? |
32843 | And the ears of the dying? 32843 And then?" |
32843 | And you let''em, Kit, you let''em? |
32843 | And you think He will not waste time with three wild runaways? |
32843 | Are they better there? 32843 Be you all through, then? |
32843 | Because a person is a fool once, need he remain so always? |
32843 | Blessings? 32843 Boy, what are you saying?" |
32843 | But Gaspar, Father Abel? 32843 But did you not see what happened to him? |
32843 | But do n''t you think, dear Feather- man, that our Wahneenah will soon come? |
32843 | But that wo n''t do, Wahneenah, will it? 32843 But this is out- door keep, is n''t it?" |
32843 | But what ails my Gaspar, Other Mother? |
32843 | But what will you give me, Man- Who- Kills? 32843 But why, Other Mother? |
32843 | But, Abel, why not have brought the bedstead with you, if she loved it so? 32843 But, my dear, do you consider? |
32843 | But-- where are we? 32843 Can not the Truth- Teller compel his sons to his own habit?" |
32843 | Can you sing, or play music? |
32843 | Catch her, Three? 32843 Cooled off? |
32843 | Could n''t I just put an advertisement in the papers? 32843 Crowded? |
32843 | Did He? |
32843 | Did n''t I say I was n''t thinkin''of gettin''one, even so be I could, in this hole in the mud? 32843 Did she ride Chestnut?" |
32843 | Did somebody hurt him when the guns fired? |
32843 | Did the nice Feather- man bring you all softly, little posies? 32843 Did what? |
32843 | Do you like stitching shirts for that old man? |
32843 | Do you really stop to think about the eating? 32843 Do you suppose I will find any of the dear white''mothers''who were so good to me? |
32843 | Does n''t everybody? 32843 Does not the tribe see to it that you have food and drink set within your wigwam, once during each journey of the sun? |
32843 | Does the poor, sick Feather- man want another drink? 32843 Drudgery, Mercy? |
32843 | Eh? 32843 Eh? |
32843 | Even if any grown folks should try to stop you? 32843 Five hundred, sir? |
32843 | For what is my manhood or my courage worth to her now? 32843 For what purpose, my brother?" |
32843 | For what will you look, Other Mother? 32843 Foreign? |
32843 | Friend of yours, Sun Maid? 32843 Gaspar, will Wahneenah understand it? |
32843 | Glad to see me, be you? 32843 Go away? |
32843 | Has He? 32843 Has the father of his tribe no message for his sister?" |
32843 | Has you lost your tongue, too? 32843 Have the pretty ponies been naughty? |
32843 | Have you seen the Sun Maid? |
32843 | He always hears, does n''t He? |
32843 | He was''splendid''in all things, was n''t he, Sun Maid? |
32843 | Hear of her? 32843 Help me out? |
32843 | Hey? 32843 Hey? |
32843 | How do you know this? |
32843 | How far-- nice Other Mother? |
32843 | How old is the Sun Maid-- as you white people reckon ages? |
32843 | How will you endure it here, where, according to your ideas, the houses are so very close? |
32843 | How''d you know what was in my mind, Mercy? |
32843 | How''s this? |
32843 | How, my love? 32843 How? |
32843 | How? 32843 How? |
32843 | I guess that''s just like Kitty, is n''t it? |
32843 | I''low you''ve seen sights, now, hain''t you? |
32843 | I, father? 32843 I-- I wonder if you can understand, if I do tell you?" |
32843 | If the arrows are not in the quiver, can the warrior shoot? 32843 Is it here you have spent this long day, papoose?" |
32843 | Is it? 32843 Is my life more precious than theirs?" |
32843 | Is not the Brother of the Sun Maid now become a mighty warrior? |
32843 | Is that his work? 32843 Is there any trouble?" |
32843 | Is there one that should be named with mine? 32843 Is you hungry, Feather- man? |
32843 | It is needed, then? 32843 It is such a problem, is n''t it? |
32843 | It''s a regular''bedlam,''is n''t it? 32843 Kitty must have had the spirit, must n''t she, Other Mother? |
32843 | Kitty was dreadful bad, was n''t she? 32843 Left what?" |
32843 | Looked up to? 32843 Mercy, do you remember the red- covered Bible? |
32843 | My son, that young person? 32843 Oh? |
32843 | Our village? 32843 Put on your war paint, eh?" |
32843 | Rude? |
32843 | Shall you not be at the feasting, dear Other Mother? 32843 She''ll come through anything, Sunny Maid will; right straight through this open door into her old Father Abel''s arms, eh? |
32843 | Ships? 32843 So quick, papoose?" |
32843 | Starvation, Gaspar? 32843 Suppose it was n''t? |
32843 | Take her away, my brother? 32843 That they are discouraged? |
32843 | The Indians? 32843 The black gelding?" |
32843 | Tired, old Tempest, boy? 32843 To_ protect_ her? |
32843 | Wahneenah? 32843 Walked? |
32843 | Well, I did ride a long, long way, did n''t I? 32843 Well, he sold out sudden, did n''t he? |
32843 | Well, it''s a real likely house, now, ai n''t it? 32843 Well? |
32843 | Well? 32843 What ails you? |
32843 | What are their names? 32843 What are they, dear?" |
32843 | What can I say but that the Black Partridge is as generous as he is brave, and that his readiness to support a minister of the gospel amazes me? 32843 What can you mean?" |
32843 | What did she mean? |
32843 | What do you mean, you funny boy? |
32843 | What do-- you-- mean? |
32843 | What is the end that has begun, Man- Who- Cannot- Lie? |
32843 | What is the evil that my brother, the chief, beholds with his inner vision? |
32843 | What shall we do to celebrate your birthday, my child? |
32843 | What''s that? 32843 What''s the use learnin''anything more, then?" |
32843 | What''time''? |
32843 | What? 32843 When? |
32843 | Where do I come in, Mercy? |
32843 | Which? |
32843 | Who breaches our castle when its lord is absent? |
32843 | Who is she? 32843 Who took her to the Snowbird''s corral? |
32843 | Why am I so dressed up? 32843 Why should I run? |
32843 | Why should we be angry, one with another, my son? 32843 Why, it''s another picnic, is n''t it? |
32843 | Why-- will there be trouble? 32843 Will my chief eat the food I prepare for him?" |
32843 | Wo n''t go, ma? 32843 Wo n''t it, sir? |
32843 | Would it? 32843 Yes, ai n''t it? |
32843 | Yes, yes; what? 32843 You are going, Gaspar?" |
32843 | You heard that? 32843 You were a fool then? |
32843 | You would go away, and-- leave me here? 32843 You''re what?" |
32843 | Your hospital? 32843 _ What_ is it?" |
32843 | A friend of an Indian family, sonny?" |
32843 | A heathen? |
32843 | A messenger to the Indians, eh? |
32843 | A sombre memory rose to frighten him, and he caught his breath as he asked:"Do you think there will be any trouble, Captain Heald? |
32843 | About Wahneenah and money?" |
32843 | After all these years of sorrow for her, she is still alive? |
32843 | Against the man who steals up in the rear, can one be prepared? |
32843 | Ai n''t I been makin''stirabout for you these forty years? |
32843 | Ai n''t I leavin''you to get your own breakfast, in case I do n''t come back? |
32843 | Ai n''t I tellin''the truth?" |
32843 | Ai n''t she a talker? |
32843 | Ai n''t that funny? |
32843 | Ai n''t there no men around?" |
32843 | Also to ask you, my sister, shall I carry away the Sun Maid to her own people? |
32843 | And I run over to see if you''d let me have ary dish you''ve got, or shall I give''em their stuff right in their hands? |
32843 | And how long have I got to go on watchin''that wild Osceolo? |
32843 | And is n''t it by seeing wherein we blunder and avoiding the pitfall a second time that we learn to walk surely and swiftly? |
32843 | And now-- what was this in the parting of the tent curtains? |
32843 | And say, Gaspar Keith, have you heard the news? |
32843 | And that''s Chicago, is it?" |
32843 | And who do you think done the fishing? |
32843 | And, Mercy-- is it really you?" |
32843 | And, lassie, are you as close- mouthed as you used to be when you made a promise? |
32843 | Are a coward, eh? |
32843 | Are all the heathen as pretty as she is?" |
32843 | Are n''t these the prettiest posies yet?" |
32843 | Are n''t you complaining about so much hard work, and have n''t you the right? |
32843 | Are n''t you contradicting yourself? |
32843 | Are n''t you glad to see me? |
32843 | Are n''t you glad you''ve come to live with Kitty? |
32843 | Are the soldiers coming? |
32843 | Are there many new neighbors?" |
32843 | Are those pies-- regular pies, on the shelves?" |
32843 | Are you afraid?" |
32843 | Are you almost ready?" |
32843 | Are you another?" |
32843 | Are you beside yourself? |
32843 | Are you ill, Wahneenah, dearest?" |
32843 | Are you out your head?" |
32843 | As the Sun Maid said, shall we not do? |
32843 | At last, when her brooding thought forced utterance, she inquired:"Can not the wisdom of the Black Partridge hinder these days of calamity? |
32843 | At whom?" |
32843 | Be you hungry? |
32843 | Besides the schools for white children, ca n''t we have those for the Indians?" |
32843 | Besides, do you remember that once, against my stubborn will, you resisted for duty''s sake? |
32843 | Boy, do you know what you have done? |
32843 | But a girl-- did you ever hear of the Sun Maid?" |
32843 | But how could you?" |
32843 | But is the Sun Maid ever afraid? |
32843 | But the lad lingered on the threshold and asked with chattering teeth, which showed how chilled he was:"Can Wahneenah come too?" |
32843 | But what did you do, Father Abel?" |
32843 | But what of that? |
32843 | But where''s Abel?" |
32843 | But wo n''t he be pleased with our little lad in feathers and buckskin?" |
32843 | But you do n''t have to spell things, do you? |
32843 | But you tell me--_she is alive_? |
32843 | But-- snow- shoes in the springtime?" |
32843 | By the way, where are the youngsters now? |
32843 | Ca n''t I cal''late the size of your mind the same way? |
32843 | Ca n''t we make another fire, one that we can control, and get a bit of supper? |
32843 | Can I do less? |
32843 | Can they still hear and remember? |
32843 | Can they, Other Mother?" |
32843 | Can you do it and not be taken?" |
32843 | Can you tell Bible stories?" |
32843 | Come, pretty thing, do you want Kitty''s breakfast? |
32843 | Cried Wahneenah, rising suddenly, and now feeling somewhat the effects of her late sitting:"Can it be sun- up already? |
32843 | Did I make you afraid, I laugh so much? |
32843 | Did any harm come to him, sir?" |
32843 | Did anybody whip you with a musket, poor, poor Osceolo?" |
32843 | Did he think his pupils had ridden away to their own destruction?" |
32843 | Did n''t I raise him?" |
32843 | Did n''t he know she loved him better than anybody and would mind him always? |
32843 | Did n''t you have ary home to stay in? |
32843 | Did n''t you know she was here yet? |
32843 | Did n''t you say you had a brother out East who was a miller?" |
32843 | Did the man buy?" |
32843 | Did the things actually happen back there as I thought? |
32843 | Did you hear anything else? |
32843 | Did you know all the time what a good warm fire was here? |
32843 | Did you know it?" |
32843 | Did you put them to bed, too, Other Mother?" |
32843 | Did you write about the orchestra? |
32843 | Do n''t I know the size of your appetite? |
32843 | Do n''t you know folks ca n''t bawl in a settlement as they do in the backwoods? |
32843 | Do n''t you know me? |
32843 | Do n''t you know me? |
32843 | Do n''t you remember our sanctuary? |
32843 | Do n''t you understand? |
32843 | Do you know him?" |
32843 | Do you know something? |
32843 | Do you know that out there, on the prairie where you have sent her, the spirit of murder is abroad? |
32843 | Do you know that, Sunny Maid? |
32843 | Do you know, that Indian hain''t never let on a single word about that business yet? |
32843 | Do you like pies?" |
32843 | Do you live here all alone?" |
32843 | Do you not guess, then, who she is?" |
32843 | Do you remember the horse- racing last year?" |
32843 | Do you think she knew she was going to run away as she was?" |
32843 | Do you want a drink, Other Mother? |
32843 | Do you, nice Other Mother? |
32843 | Does she wish to stay too; to nurse the pale- faces, the men who have come here to fight her own race?" |
32843 | Does your face ache you to make it screw itself all this way?" |
32843 | Eh? |
32843 | Even if Abel or Mercy?" |
32843 | Exactly?" |
32843 | Feather- man, did you put Kitty on the nice cool grass? |
32843 | Gaspar, where is she? |
32843 | Gaspar, will you let her do it?" |
32843 | Had he brought the white baby as a hostage from the distant garrison, in pledge that the compact of its commandant would surely be kept? |
32843 | Had not the child Gaspar''s eyes? |
32843 | Hain''t Kitty fetched you a couple of squaws to do your steps and dish washin''? |
32843 | Has Wahneenah, my sister, observed how the store she left in the old cave has grown? |
32843 | Has it been as bad as that?" |
32843 | Has she not the three gifts? |
32843 | Has she told you anything about him yet? |
32843 | Have I not clothed her with the garb of our people? |
32843 | Have n''t you got Gaspar and Kitty?" |
32843 | Have you it still?" |
32843 | He could n''t have come, could he? |
32843 | Hear me?" |
32843 | Heathen, you say? |
32843 | Her? |
32843 | Hey? |
32843 | How about that?" |
32843 | How came you here? |
32843 | How came you here? |
32843 | How can I feel so when there is so much in life to do and enjoy? |
32843 | How could it hold a spoon was bigger''n itself-- when its hands have never grown? |
32843 | How long ago was it since the wagon and the fair- haired babies went away? |
32843 | How many Snowbirds have you owned in your lifetime, Grandmother?" |
32843 | How many do you imagine would have to be fed? |
32843 | How many fish do you want for your supper?" |
32843 | How says my brother, the wise medicine- man?" |
32843 | How''d you get along? |
32843 | How''s Abel? |
32843 | How''s Gaspar and the youngsters?" |
32843 | How, then, can you dream of them?" |
32843 | How? |
32843 | I ca n''t help it if I''m not, can I?" |
32843 | I can not help that, can I? |
32843 | I did forget it, did n''t I? |
32843 | I guess I''m pretty tired, ai n''t I?" |
32843 | I tell you-- Well, what you laughing at, Gaspar Keith? |
32843 | I was poking around to see----""If you could find anything to eat? |
32843 | I will tie Gaspar''s, too; and shall your Chestnut stay here with them two?" |
32843 | I wish-- are you too busy to hear my story, and will you advise me? |
32843 | I wonder have her trials ended? |
32843 | I wonder-- will I ever see her again? |
32843 | I, too? |
32843 | If I should go----""If what, Gaspar Keith?" |
32843 | If I suspected evil where there was none, is it a wonder? |
32843 | If she belonged to folk they''d do it would n''t they?" |
32843 | In this heat, all that distance? |
32843 | Indian settlement, was n''t it? |
32843 | Is he about?" |
32843 | Is he sick, Other Mother? |
32843 | Is it because you are growing up so fast, I wonder? |
32843 | Is it for Kitty? |
32843 | Is it in a Fort, as Kitty does? |
32843 | Is it not still safe and a refuge for all unfortunates among the nations?" |
32843 | Is it to teach a lot of women and a worthless pale- faced lad that I have left the comfort of my own lodge this hot summer day?" |
32843 | Is n''t it beau''ful warm? |
32843 | Is n''t it, posies? |
32843 | Is n''t there a better place?" |
32843 | Is she not a child of the sky, and forever safe, as Katasha said? |
32843 | Is that a white mother''s custom? |
32843 | Is that your ma? |
32843 | Is the White Pelican a man of dreams?" |
32843 | Is the deed for good or evil?" |
32843 | Is there no place in this world where I can hide?" |
32843 | Is this another?" |
32843 | Is you hungry, too, Dark- Eye?" |
32843 | Is you hurted now? |
32843 | Is you thirsty, too, like the sick one and Kitty?" |
32843 | Is your quiver well supplied?" |
32843 | It is an island, is n''t it? |
32843 | It might rain or snow, ary one, an''then where''d I be?" |
32843 | It was cold out of doors, was n''t it, Other Mother? |
32843 | It''s better, is n''t it, to understand thing in the beginning?" |
32843 | Jim and Pete? |
32843 | Just because you do n''t like it?" |
32843 | Kit, you do n''t mean that?" |
32843 | Kitty? |
32843 | Kitty? |
32843 | Lad, do you know how many Indians are in camp near us, or have broken camp this morning to join us?" |
32843 | Let us go and get something to eat first; and what were you intending to do with that load of stuff?" |
32843 | Like the jointed dolls of the papooses, eh? |
32843 | May I have all I can gather?" |
32843 | May I pull it?" |
32843 | More than that, when our first- born came to us, do you remember how we clasped his tiny hand and resolved always to lead it onward to the right? |
32843 | Mourner? |
32843 | Must I always, always see such awful things? |
32843 | Must they be tied up, too?" |
32843 | My child, where?" |
32843 | My practical new daughter growing a star- gazer, like the foolish old man? |
32843 | None? |
32843 | Notice that bedstead? |
32843 | Now, Kit, where''s Gaspar?" |
32843 | Off now to see some folks burned their own barn up----""W- H- A- T?" |
32843 | One called after her, as they started homeward:"How are the sick ones to- day?" |
32843 | Only that white dress and hair a- streamin''; be you dressed for a party, child?" |
32843 | Only-- where to house them?" |
32843 | Only-- will you do as I say? |
32843 | Or Bugler Jim, who used to play me to sleep under the trees in the corner? |
32843 | Or did n''t you know she was still alive?" |
32843 | Or had some other tribe anticipated their own in obtaining the gifts to be distributed? |
32843 | Or shall she abide with you?" |
32843 | Out front? |
32843 | Rest? |
32843 | See that?" |
32843 | See the poor gray squirrel? |
32843 | See yonder, where the trees fringe the river? |
32843 | Shall I get him now? |
32843 | Shall Kitty fetch it now?" |
32843 | Shall she cook you some fish, Black Partridge?" |
32843 | Shall we clasp hand upon it?" |
32843 | Shall we keep our promise and our honor, or shall we become traitors to the truth?" |
32843 | She ca n''t be given up but once, can she? |
32843 | She''s as close- mouthed as she ever was; but there''s more to hear than you could hark to in a day''s ride, and-- Where you going, Gaspar?" |
32843 | So early, and with the horses, too? |
32843 | So presently we shall be able to do even better than they----""Give them another dose of Yankee Doodle?" |
32843 | So rapt did her gaze become that little Four stole his pudgy hand into hers and inquired, beneath his breath:"What is it, Kitty? |
32843 | So, at last-- you''ve heard about worms turnin'', hain''t you? |
32843 | So? |
32843 | So? |
32843 | Studying what? |
32843 | Surely, you and Mercy remember Gaspar Keith, whom you sheltered for so many years, and who treated you so badly at the end?" |
32843 | Talking is easier than fighting, any time, and why should I peril my life, following this mad war- path of theirs to that far- away Fort Wayne? |
32843 | That little sissy, that used to have to stand on a three- legged stool to turn the stirabout, grown like she has? |
32843 | That rule of yours, to''put yourself in his place,''is a pretty good one, after all, is n''t it?" |
32843 | That was to play during Saturday''s supper?" |
32843 | The Snake- Who- Leaps? |
32843 | The Sun Maid? |
32843 | The White Necklace from the shore of the Sea- without- end? |
32843 | The daughter of your own tribe? |
32843 | The gloomy passage, the big, dark room-- See?" |
32843 | The home of all our people? |
32843 | The moonlight made mortal? |
32843 | The shakes? |
32843 | The sight was as helpful to the soldiers as it was amusing, and they fell into line with a ready step as the band struck up-- what was that tune? |
32843 | The words he had heard seemed incredible; yet he was shrewd and practical by nature, and he promptly inquired:"Why? |
32843 | Their equals? |
32843 | Then I remembered that my other peoples to my Fort tell all the children to be good and I was good, was n''t I? |
32843 | They be thick, ai n''t they? |
32843 | This is how lonesome you be when I leave you, is it?" |
32843 | Though, Honoria, my daughter, shall I count upon you?" |
32843 | Till, on one especial day, the younger woman demanded:"Well, why should it not, my Mother? |
32843 | To keep, forever and ever? |
32843 | Took prisoner, was you?" |
32843 | War? |
32843 | Was it not to the red men that the victory came, but so brief time past? |
32843 | Was it the Sun Maid, though? |
32843 | Was it thus done?" |
32843 | Was it"in the air,"as the Sun Maid protested, that indomitable courage and faith to do and dare, to plan, to begin, and to achieve? |
32843 | Was n''t the woman glad and grateful; and do n''t you see, laddie, that it is better as I planned? |
32843 | Was she, a chief''s daughter, to be thus flouted by a baby, a pale- face at that? |
32843 | Was that why we came?" |
32843 | Well as your eyes, that you ca n''t look up? |
32843 | Well, my dear, what''s the good word? |
32843 | Well, what do you say, my son?" |
32843 | Well, why did n''t you say so? |
32843 | Well--_I-- burnt-- it!_""Burned it? |
32843 | Were we here all night? |
32843 | Were you speaking of''old''ladies?" |
32843 | What about that, papoose?" |
32843 | What ails you? |
32843 | What are they?" |
32843 | What are you seeking?" |
32843 | What did you mean about saving Wahneenah''s life? |
32843 | What do you see? |
32843 | What do you see?" |
32843 | What do you see?" |
32843 | What do you think of that?" |
32843 | What does she here, in the lodge of the outcast? |
32843 | What for, Mother Mercy?" |
32843 | What harm should? |
32843 | What has come over you? |
32843 | What is it you are keeping back?" |
32843 | What is it, child; what is it makes you so different from other folks?" |
32843 | What is it? |
32843 | What is it?" |
32843 | What is it?" |
32843 | What is it?" |
32843 | What is the mare, Snowbird, but a creature bewitched? |
32843 | What makes them bark so?" |
32843 | What makes you look so queer?" |
32843 | What need you, Spotted Adder?" |
32843 | What on earth else could they do with it? |
32843 | What sort of Indian was he?" |
32843 | What trash are you talking? |
32843 | What was that? |
32843 | What were all the pale- faces, in their gaudy costumes, with their music and their guns and their childish way of battle? |
32843 | What will the pigeons say? |
32843 | What will you do with his horse, Man- Who- Kills?" |
32843 | What you think? |
32843 | What you up to?" |
32843 | What you want of Kit?" |
32843 | What''s he after? |
32843 | What''s struck you crosswise, sonny?" |
32843 | What''s that? |
32843 | What''s that? |
32843 | What''s the matter?" |
32843 | What''s the use of rushin''through life''s if you was tryin''to break your neck?" |
32843 | What''s yonder? |
32843 | What''s your name? |
32843 | What? |
32843 | What? |
32843 | What? |
32843 | What? |
32843 | When did you get home?" |
32843 | When? |
32843 | When? |
32843 | Whence did she come? |
32843 | Where are we going? |
32843 | Where do you live? |
32843 | Where in the world did you hail from to be out in such weather? |
32843 | Where is he?" |
32843 | Where is he?" |
32843 | Where is she?" |
32843 | Where is the horse you rode?" |
32843 | Where is the justice, then, of my labor going for naught?" |
32843 | Where is your duty, if not to me and to our children?" |
32843 | Where shall we go when we get rested, boy?" |
32843 | Where the Black Partridge came to eat the fish you caught? |
32843 | Where was you bound? |
32843 | Where will she go?" |
32843 | Where''d you come from now? |
32843 | Where? |
32843 | Which? |
32843 | Who do you suppose?" |
32843 | Who has n''t, in these parts? |
32843 | Who is tempted by money? |
32843 | Who saw them?" |
32843 | Who that dwells in a log cabin needs fine carvings or would appreciate them if they had them?" |
32843 | Who will come after them and destroy them? |
32843 | Who''s that out in the back yard, with feathers in his hair, an''a blue check shirt, grinnin''like a hyena, an''a knife stickin''out his pocket? |
32843 | Who''s that walking? |
32843 | Who? |
32843 | Why are you here alone, so far from the Fort, Kitty Briscoe?" |
32843 | Why did we ride so fast, Wahneenah? |
32843 | Why do I fear? |
32843 | Why do n''t you say something?" |
32843 | Why do n''t you speak? |
32843 | Why does n''t he speak to me?" |
32843 | Why does one come now?" |
32843 | Why is it?" |
32843 | Why is the Sun Maid here, at this hour?" |
32843 | Why not, since it''s the only instrument we have?" |
32843 | Why not?" |
32843 | Why should I? |
32843 | Why will the Indian chief bestow so rich a gift upon his white boy- prisoner? |
32843 | Why, dear, do n''t you remember old Katasha and her prophecy? |
32843 | Why, what is this? |
32843 | Why? |
32843 | Why?" |
32843 | Will my squaw, Sorah, flout me now? |
32843 | Will she be accursed, too? |
32843 | Will she believe it is right for you to do what is wrong for another to do? |
32843 | Will the Spotted Adder take my message to the men I have lost? |
32843 | Will the soldier men pay you-- just a boy, so-- the money, real money, for her, anyway?" |
32843 | Will you come and live in our home, dear Sun Maid?" |
32843 | Will you give Kitty another drink of water? |
32843 | Will you tell me why?" |
32843 | Will you?" |
32843 | Wonderful, ai n''t it, how our girl came through?" |
32843 | Would you drink to your own death? |
32843 | Would you fancy one for yourself?" |
32843 | Yet, what use to resist? |
32843 | You are n''t dead, then? |
32843 | You are not hurt? |
32843 | You do n''t think I''d leave him to manage_ business_, do you?" |
32843 | You hain''t growed up very sensible, have you?" |
32843 | You here? |
32843 | You here? |
32843 | You know the copy in your writing- book?" |
32843 | You know where she is? |
32843 | You say that to me, after the raisin''I gave you? |
32843 | You taunt me? |
32843 | You was a master hand at that business, was n''t you, girl? |
32843 | You wo n''t let the people go anywhere else than to your house as long as there''s room to squeeze another body in; and----""Ai n''t it the tavern?" |
32843 | Your home? |
32843 | Your house? |
32843 | Yours and Mercy''s? |
32843 | [ 1] The White Bow from the eternal north? |
32843 | _ Her?_ She had always hated pain and despised it. |
32843 | _ The Dead March?_ By whose ill- judgment this? |
32843 | _ The Dead March?_ By whose ill- judgment this? |
32843 | an''her''s? |
32843 | an''the little tacker''s? |
32843 | and the White Snowbird, into which entered the white soul of a blameless virgin? |
32843 | and which way does the''crowd''you mean go? |
32843 | and why? |
32843 | or are there more in store before she is made perfect? |
32843 | or the home of the soul of a dead maiden, who would rather live thus with her people than without them as a spirit in the Great Beyond? |
32843 | or the homesickness when a feller''s right to home? |
32843 | or what in the land do you mean?" |
32843 | she does? |
32843 | well, Gaspar Keith? |
32843 | where in the world did you drop from? |
32843 | will you?" |
32843 | with the Doctor''s saddle on his back and his botanizing box, and-- What does it mean? |
33773 | A go of what? |
33773 | A man? |
33773 | About when do you think you can tackle your job again? |
33773 | Ah, and would you mind walking over to my home with me? |
33773 | Ah, would you object to my helping you with your work, and then taking a bachelor''s supper with you? |
33773 | Ai n''t that feller a bird? |
33773 | All by yourself? |
33773 | Almost afraid? 33773 Am I the first stranger that ever happened along here?" |
33773 | Am I to hear that again? |
33773 | And how can it be in a place so beautiful? 33773 And if there is, why should I want to marry the Bunker girl?" |
33773 | And if you do n''t go to the country I am not to know where you are? |
33773 | And shall we go over into the woods where the mandrakes are in bloom? |
33773 | And they tried to guy you about me, did they? |
33773 | And you do n''t remember whether she''s got good sense or not? |
33773 | And you mean that you will leave me there as you did the other night? |
33773 | And you will send me your address? |
33773 | And your house? |
33773 | Any insanity in your family? |
33773 | Are you always going to be a wild man? |
33773 | Are you going to take any one with you on your trip? |
33773 | Are you so honest? |
33773 | Are you stalled in sight of the stable? |
33773 | Are you? |
33773 | Bill, I thought you had more sympathy than----"Sympathy for a man who has failed to beat a woman out of her property? 33773 Bill,"he asked,"do you ever expect to wear a boiled shirt all the week and sleep till after sun- up?" |
33773 | Blast his impudence, what right----"Anything wrong, Bill? |
33773 | Bob, do you know anything about boxing? |
33773 | But I could''ve got one, could n''t I? 33773 But I would n''t kill myself for no woman, would you, Bill?" |
33773 | But are women never to marry the men they love? |
33773 | But did n''t he say things you did not remember, but continued to feel? |
33773 | But did you? |
33773 | But do n''t you think he''s peculiar? |
33773 | But do n''t you think she''s handsome? |
33773 | But do you think I would, Bob? |
33773 | But do you want me to-- do you care if I come? |
33773 | But have n''t they-- haven''t they any faith in their kind? |
33773 | But how can I tell whether or not she''s lonesome to see me? |
33773 | But how can a man be too smart? |
33773 | But how do I know that? 33773 But is he not a very smart man?" |
33773 | But that mysterious something? |
33773 | But what difference does it make, mother? |
33773 | But what does he know about it? 33773 But what have I got to do with all this?" |
33773 | But what have you done when you do it? |
33773 | But what makes you run away from''em? 33773 But who are you to talk so morally?" |
33773 | But why should a man that believes as you do have a record to hold him down? |
33773 | But why should you care what they say? |
33773 | But you do n''t want nobody to smoke it, do you? |
33773 | But you wo n''t fail to see George, will you? 33773 But you''ve heard her talk, have n''t you?" |
33773 | But, Bob, you did n''t really love her, now, did you? |
33773 | Ca n''t you make it up with her? |
33773 | Could n''t we have helped him in some way? |
33773 | Cynic? |
33773 | Did I ask more than one? 33773 Did he run away?" |
33773 | Did he? 33773 Did n''t I mention it? |
33773 | Did n''t find no market, then, for his book? |
33773 | Did n''t he run a hotel at one time? |
33773 | Did n''t she agree that it was the very thing for the Doctor? 33773 Did n''t you say that all-- something could not keep us apart? |
33773 | Did she say she was the same? |
33773 | Did she show you any of her drawings? |
33773 | Did you disown him? |
33773 | Did you ever catch a bass with his mouth full of rusty hooks? 33773 Did you ever hear of her?" |
33773 | Did you ever read the Bible? |
33773 | Did you expect anybody to meet you? |
33773 | Did you find Mrs. Goodwin much scared about you last night? |
33773 | Did you kill him? |
33773 | Did you know Gunhild before she came out here? |
33773 | Did you see her? |
33773 | Did you see me wave at you when you stand on the high place in the oats? |
33773 | Did you see the cowboy preacher that came West? |
33773 | Did you speak English before you came to this country? |
33773 | Did you wrap the collar so it wo n''t hurt the horse''s shoulder? |
33773 | Did you? 33773 Divorces? |
33773 | Do I deserve that reproach? 33773 Do n''t guess you''ve got a newspaper about you?" |
33773 | Do n''t he owe you for one? |
33773 | Do n''t suppose I want to drink out of the rain barrel, do you? |
33773 | Do n''t you see the churches? 33773 Do n''t you think she''s handsome?" |
33773 | Do you believe he can come back? |
33773 | Do you like his voice? |
33773 | Do you put it off because it is so hard to tell? |
33773 | Do you think you be? |
33773 | Do you want board? |
33773 | Do you want to see me about a horse? 33773 Engagement to dine?" |
33773 | George, dear, do you hear that? 33773 George, do you hear that? |
33773 | Going? |
33773 | Got your crop under your arm? |
33773 | Gunhild, my dear, do you catch the drift of it? |
33773 | Guy me? 33773 Has she quit her school?" |
33773 | Have n''t you learned enough not to ask that? |
33773 | Have you anything in view? |
33773 | Have you no respect for the aged? |
33773 | Home? 33773 Honey sociable?" |
33773 | How about any woman''s woman? |
33773 | How can you keep it up so long? 33773 How did you happen to mention her?" |
33773 | How do these pants set? |
33773 | How long do you expect to stay out here? |
33773 | How long do you expect to stay? |
33773 | How often? |
33773 | How so? |
33773 | How''s that? |
33773 | How? 33773 I beg your pardon,"she said,"but are you related to the Milfords that live down in Peoria County?" |
33773 | I came here quietly, did n''t I? 33773 I can not subscribe to a sentiment so ruffled and furbelowed with-- shall I say tawdry flounces? |
33773 | I know, but is n''t there something strange about his being here as he is, working on a farm? |
33773 | I know, but what of that? |
33773 | I say you are a scoundrel? |
33773 | I wish you would-- I wish you''d choke me to death, and----"And what? |
33773 | I''d be foolish to shut off my supplies, would n''t I? |
33773 | If I had, do you suppose I''d tell you? |
33773 | If you were afraid the old fellow would come back, why did n''t you marry him? |
33773 | In me? 33773 Indeed? |
33773 | Is he ever serious? |
33773 | Is he your lost brother? |
33773 | Is it because you do n''t want to be seen with me? |
33773 | Is it clearing away? |
33773 | Is it raining yet? 33773 Is n''t once enough?" |
33773 | Is n''t she a peach? |
33773 | Is n''t that enough for you? |
33773 | Is she skittish, Bill? |
33773 | Is she the woman? |
33773 | Is that pa? |
33773 | Is that you, Bill? 33773 Is that you, Miss Strand?" |
33773 | Is this place haunted? |
33773 | Is what that bad, Mrs. Goodwin? 33773 It would? |
33773 | Land''s sakes, are you goin''to keep him all winter? 33773 Letter from her, ai n''t it?" |
33773 | Lewson, are you here? |
33773 | Lewson, is that you? |
33773 | Made what up? |
33773 | Make it up with her? 33773 May I go now?" |
33773 | May I see you again soon? |
33773 | May I trouble you for a drink of water? |
33773 | Must I rope you every time I want you? |
33773 | No more than that? 33773 No? |
33773 | Not even to please me? |
33773 | Not if she should request it? |
33773 | Not in the interest of clear elucidation? |
33773 | Now that you find out that I have been a laborer? 33773 Now what''s the matter with you, Lewson?" |
33773 | Oh, George, do n''t you know that there are distinctions? |
33773 | Oh, are you not ashamed? 33773 Oh, is it that bad?" |
33773 | Oh, is that you? 33773 Oh, she has? |
33773 | Oh, what is the matter? |
33773 | Oh, yes, I''m satisfied, but did it occur to you that the law might have to be satisfied? |
33773 | Oh, you do n''t say so? 33773 On important business, I presume?" |
33773 | Or at least you set store by it, for did n''t you give Tennyson to the preacher? |
33773 | Over where? |
33773 | Philosophy? |
33773 | Please me? |
33773 | Professor, have you ever written anything? |
33773 | Read it to them? 33773 Say, Bill, what are divorces worth?" |
33773 | Second, ai n''t it? |
33773 | See the cliffs? |
33773 | Shall I tell them to stop? |
33773 | Shall we go out on the veranda? |
33773 | She wo n''t? 33773 Sure enough? |
33773 | That I''m thinkin''of marryin''? 33773 That so? |
33773 | That thing, there? 33773 That''s all right, but do you feel thankful for it?" |
33773 | That''s all well enough, too,said he,"but what''s the use of tying a ribbon around your neck in a snow- storm, when what you need is an overcoat? |
33773 | The law? |
33773 | The man that drew the bird? |
33773 | The women have? 33773 Them slashes have about got the best of you, have n''t they, Bill? |
33773 | Then I must hope that sometime I may sell myself? |
33773 | Then how do you know he wo n''t run away again? |
33773 | Then what the devil do I want to say it for? 33773 Then what''s the use of lovin''her? |
33773 | Then why not a man? |
33773 | There, do n''t you see? 33773 Up against what?" |
33773 | Upon Gunhild''s decision? |
33773 | Wan''t that the Professor shoutin''out there? |
33773 | Was it a good shift? |
33773 | Was n''t that Steve Hardy that you rode up with? |
33773 | Was that word fewer contemplated or was it an accident? 33773 We have had her now going on-- how long have we had her, my dear?" |
33773 | Well, how is everything? |
33773 | Well, how was I to tell''em somethin''I did n''t know? 33773 Well, is what you''ve got to say so bad as all that?" |
33773 | Well, sir,said Mills,"what can I do for you? |
33773 | Well, well, who ever heard of such a thing? 33773 Well, what about it?" |
33773 | Well, what do you come tellin''me about it for? 33773 Well, what is it?" |
33773 | Well, who ever heard of the like? 33773 What are you doing there?" |
33773 | What are you going to do? |
33773 | What are you saying? 33773 What could be more pitiable? |
33773 | What did you say her name was? |
33773 | What did you say, George? |
33773 | What difference will it make to you? 33773 What do you mean?" |
33773 | What do you take me for? |
33773 | What do you want to see the man for? 33773 What effect could they have?" |
33773 | What is it? |
33773 | What is your line, Bill? |
33773 | What is your name? |
33773 | What is? |
33773 | What makes a dog so glum on cats? |
33773 | What makes you grab after the newspaper so? |
33773 | What makes you so stupid? |
33773 | What sort of a looking fellow is he? |
33773 | What sort of looking man is he? 33773 What was it you whispered?" |
33773 | What will you do, Bill? |
33773 | What would you shout, Professor? |
33773 | What''s all off? |
33773 | What''s become of her? |
33773 | What''s the matter, Nan? |
33773 | What''s the matter, ma''am? |
33773 | What''s the trouble? |
33773 | What''s to be the end of this rush? |
33773 | What''s your name? |
33773 | What''s your object? |
33773 | When am I to see you again? |
33773 | When are you goin''to take another lesson? |
33773 | When did you meet her? |
33773 | When do you think I can see you again? |
33773 | When she knows, what will she think? 33773 When''s the money due?" |
33773 | Where is she? |
33773 | Where is your field? |
33773 | Which question shall I answer first? |
33773 | Who is so far gone as that? |
33773 | Who is that? |
33773 | Who is this? |
33773 | Who told you all that rubbish? |
33773 | Who was that letter from you got this mornin''? |
33773 | Who would thought it? 33773 Who, the girl?" |
33773 | Why ca n''t a man be genuine? |
33773 | Why ca n''t you folks talk sense? 33773 Why did he drown himself?" |
33773 | Why did n''t you tell me you were going to send it? |
33773 | Why did n''t you tell them? |
33773 | Why did you come across this rough place? |
33773 | Why did you do that? |
33773 | Why do n''t they get acquainted with their husbands? |
33773 | Why do n''t they send him to the Congress? |
33773 | Why do n''t you let that old life insurance go? 33773 Why do n''t you say something?" |
33773 | Why do n''t you? 33773 Why do you want to dress up to meet a fool?" |
33773 | Why does a heart put on, talk to itself, and strut? |
33773 | Why, I thought you had enough? |
33773 | Why, do n''t you know that we meet many persons, and become quite well acquainted with them, and yet never feel that they belong to our atmosphere? 33773 Why, has he said anythin''about goin''away?" |
33773 | Will you go with me to the penitentiary? |
33773 | Will you let me go out on my word of honor? 33773 Wo n''t you come to the house to supper?" |
33773 | Would I? 33773 Would he not have had a wild steer if he had roped your soul?" |
33773 | Would n''t I? 33773 Would you mind telling us something of the wild life in the West?" |
33773 | Would you rather live in the country? |
33773 | Yes, I know, but what has it to do with an article on medicine? |
33773 | Yes, but why do n''t you know the truth? |
33773 | Yes, well, now what''s the matter with you? 33773 Yes,"he said, and looked as if he wanted to add:"Now what are you going to do about it?" |
33773 | You ask,said he, speaking to Milford,"what does he know about it? |
33773 | You did? 33773 You did? |
33773 | You do n''t mean at eighteen dollars? |
33773 | You do n''t mean the same woman? |
33773 | You do n''t see me out of it, do you? |
33773 | You do n''t? 33773 You do? |
33773 | You in love? |
33773 | You mean spiritually stronger, do n''t you? 33773 You say the fellow''s mouth was mashed?" |
33773 | You''re in a mighty hurry now, ai n''t you? 33773 You''re not afraid, are you?" |
33773 | ''About such a thing as I am?'' |
33773 | ''And is this you, Bob?'' |
33773 | ''Please do this,''and''Please do that,''and''How do you feel this mornin'', dear mamma?'' |
33773 | A very intelligent woman, do n''t you think?" |
33773 | About how many women have you married, sir?" |
33773 | Am I a brute? |
33773 | Am I going to pay it? |
33773 | Am I too inquisitive? |
33773 | And are they so very rare?" |
33773 | And do n''t you think a man ought to help his brother in distress? |
33773 | And if he could, why did n''t he? |
33773 | And now, sir, do you know I begin to fall down, as the idiomatics would have it? |
33773 | And now, sir,"he added, turning to Milford,"upon what does success depend? |
33773 | And the veritist-- what was he? |
33773 | And the woman who did not care whether he were engaged to a thousand women? |
33773 | And what did I do? |
33773 | And what did he say? |
33773 | And what do they do? |
33773 | And what has it all come to? |
33773 | And what saved me, if I am saved? |
33773 | And what was art? |
33773 | And what was it all about? |
33773 | And where did you get the money?" |
33773 | And who is it that accompanies her? |
33773 | And who is it that is lost out there among the briars? |
33773 | And why could n''t he let me know that much? |
33773 | Are they so blamed scarce that a man ca n''t get''em? |
33773 | Are you a spiritualist?" |
33773 | Are you comin''? |
33773 | Are you done with that horse?" |
33773 | Are you from the West?" |
33773 | Are you goin''to bring her here?" |
33773 | Are you goin''to set up here and read that book all day? |
33773 | Are you goin''to the house with me, Bill?" |
33773 | Are you going to bed?" |
33773 | Are you in love with that man?" |
33773 | Are you still mopin''about? |
33773 | Bah, why do n''t you get down to somethin''? |
33773 | Bill, why have n''t you been over here?" |
33773 | Bill, you lump of mud, do n''t you think about dyin''?" |
33773 | Bring a detective, eh? |
33773 | But ai n''t it awful,"she added, speaking to Milford,"that we''ve got to go? |
33773 | But are we to forget him? |
33773 | But are you sure he is the same man?" |
33773 | But do you expect to go back there?" |
33773 | But does the wrong concern me?" |
33773 | But have you got any cause to be afraid of a detective, Bill?" |
33773 | But if property made a woman beautiful to the rich, why should it make her ugly to the poor?" |
33773 | But is n''t that glorious news from George? |
33773 | But is there to be no better understanding between us?" |
33773 | But say, where did you get your education?" |
33773 | But sometimes in the hour of my heaviest solemnity I may appear light; and why? |
33773 | But this serious talk? |
33773 | But what about it?" |
33773 | But what are you goin''to do about it?" |
33773 | But what will you do over there? |
33773 | But why do you leave it with me?" |
33773 | But why should I ask you to have confidence? |
33773 | But why should she have told more than the truth? |
33773 | But wo n''t you let me write to you?" |
33773 | But you are so full of hope that--""Full of hope, madam?" |
33773 | But you do not live here?" |
33773 | By the way, Mr. Dorsey has gone back to town, has n''t he?" |
33773 | By the way, what''s the name of the woman I am going to see?" |
33773 | Ca n''t I come to see you in town?" |
33773 | Can she talk without smilin''all the time?" |
33773 | Can you explain?" |
33773 | Can you not walk faster?" |
33773 | Come, who are you?" |
33773 | Did I tell you that I had lost my place at the mill?" |
33773 | Did anybody send after you?" |
33773 | Did n''t I take you when nobody else would? |
33773 | Did n''t she acknowledge that it would spread the news of his high standing as a physician and a thinker?" |
33773 | Did she say that she would send it off at once?" |
33773 | Did the abstruse parts seem to impress her?" |
33773 | Did you ever happen to break out in a spot called Grayson?" |
33773 | Did you ever have a suit put up to your own notion?" |
33773 | Did you ever hear of a French marquise that ran stage lines and shot fellows out West? |
33773 | Did you ever see a bigger fool? |
33773 | Did you ever see anythin''like that? |
33773 | Did you fix the fence where the sheep broke in?" |
33773 | Did you go to school much when you was a boy?" |
33773 | Did you hear me, George?" |
33773 | Did you see that girl? |
33773 | Do n''t she know a tune? |
33773 | Do n''t you know that just a word, even though lightly spoken, may sometimes spur one to renewed action? |
33773 | Do n''t you recollect?" |
33773 | Do n''t you remember your promise? |
33773 | Do n''t you see how I''m sufferin''? |
33773 | Do n''t you think I ought to know it?" |
33773 | Do n''t you think he''s crazy?" |
33773 | Do n''t you think so, Bob?" |
33773 | Do n''t you think so? |
33773 | Do n''t you think so?" |
33773 | Do n''t you think so?" |
33773 | Do n''t you think so?" |
33773 | Do n''t you think so?" |
33773 | Do n''t you think you may be just a little unnatural yourself?" |
33773 | Do n''t you think you''d better come over to the house and stay durin''the winter?" |
33773 | Do n''t you think you''d better get two while you''re at it? |
33773 | Do n''t you, really?" |
33773 | Do you expect to come back out here this summer?" |
33773 | Do you expect to reside here permanently? |
33773 | Do you go this way? |
33773 | Do you hear me? |
33773 | Do you know her?" |
33773 | Do you know of a publication that would buy a paper upon the decadence of the modern drama? |
33773 | Do you know the Bunker girl? |
33773 | Do you know what I did? |
33773 | Do you know what I''d do? |
33773 | Do you know what they used to call me? |
33773 | Do you like me?" |
33773 | Do you reckon I want to give Nan a chance to drag that cat over my grave?" |
33773 | Do you reckon I want to make it up with her? |
33773 | Do you reckon I''d stoop that much?" |
33773 | Do you remember the night at the house where they said the spirits are? |
33773 | Do you s''pose I care? |
33773 | Do you study to find such niceties of distinction?" |
33773 | Do you suppose I expect the girl to come?" |
33773 | Do you think so?" |
33773 | Do you think so?" |
33773 | Do you think you could?" |
33773 | Do you think-- think you could kiss me, Mary Ann?" |
33773 | Do you understand that? |
33773 | Do you understand?" |
33773 | Do you understand?" |
33773 | Do you?" |
33773 | Does n''t that satisfy you?" |
33773 | Even the poor and the ignorant grow weary of singing; then who can expect music from the wise? |
33773 | Ever married, Bill?" |
33773 | Find everythin''in town all right?" |
33773 | George, do you hear them? |
33773 | Git married?" |
33773 | Goin''anywhere to- day?" |
33773 | Goin''out my way?" |
33773 | Goin''out to anybody''s house?" |
33773 | Goin''somewhere to- night?" |
33773 | Goin''to put it on?" |
33773 | Goin''to take a bath?" |
33773 | Got any smokin''tobacco?" |
33773 | Got him there? |
33773 | Got through seeing me about the horse?" |
33773 | Had n''t they moved? |
33773 | Had she seen old mills? |
33773 | Has any one ever disputed the fact? |
33773 | Has he asked you to marry him?" |
33773 | Has his light been strong enough to dazzle us?" |
33773 | Have n''t I been kind to you? |
33773 | Have n''t changed your mind about not wantin''her here, have you?" |
33773 | Have n''t got enough to eat, have you?" |
33773 | Have you been working hard to- day?" |
33773 | Have you ever chanced to live in Kansas?" |
33773 | Have you got any such notion?" |
33773 | Have you quit the mill?" |
33773 | Have you read it to the ladies?" |
33773 | He said that he had seen me-- he said--""But what did he say? |
33773 | How about that? |
33773 | How about that? |
33773 | How about that? |
33773 | How about that? |
33773 | How about that?" |
33773 | How about that?" |
33773 | How about that?" |
33773 | How are you gettin''along over at the house?" |
33773 | How are you getting along over there?" |
33773 | How can I tell that she''s trying not to seem glad?" |
33773 | How can that change your plans or have any bearing upon them?" |
33773 | How could a refined woman be so full of the devil''s poisonous juice? |
33773 | How do you know that you wo n''t need to worry? |
33773 | How is everything with you?" |
33773 | How long before you''ll have this thing done?" |
33773 | How much more have you?" |
33773 | How the deuce am I going to keep still when she''s knocking me down all the time? |
33773 | How''s everything?" |
33773 | I abhor debt, but do you think you could make arrangements for me to get two, or three? |
33773 | I beg pardon for even the appearance of infringement, but do you expect to reside here permanently?" |
33773 | I know it''s preposterous to ask you, but will you do it?" |
33773 | I said,''why do n''t dear mammy get out and stir around?'' |
33773 | I wonder why she has n''t been over here?" |
33773 | If you force the rule on her before you''re married, she''ll force it on you afterwards, and then where''ll you be? |
33773 | In what part of the country have your labors been mostly confined?" |
33773 | Industry? |
33773 | Is it all here? |
33773 | Is it because that, at times, I am incapable of-- shall I say inspiring?" |
33773 | Is n''t that a wild pigeon with the sun on its back?" |
33773 | Is n''t that sweet? |
33773 | Is not that understanding enough?" |
33773 | Is that Bobbie crying? |
33773 | Is that cigar up by the clock, one that the prize- fighter give you? |
33773 | Is that it?" |
33773 | Is that it?" |
33773 | Is that it?" |
33773 | Is that it?" |
33773 | Is that the way you want to fight?" |
33773 | Is there any water in the rain barrel?" |
33773 | Is there anything so mysterious about that? |
33773 | Louise,"he added, playfully touching his wife''s hand,"how is it you took to me when you have a knack of finding such interesting fellows?" |
33773 | May I tell you more?" |
33773 | May we ask why you struck him?" |
33773 | Milford?" |
33773 | Milford?" |
33773 | Milford?" |
33773 | Milford?" |
33773 | Milford?" |
33773 | Milford?" |
33773 | Mind? |
33773 | More than once? |
33773 | Must she know? |
33773 | Never were married, were you, Bob?" |
33773 | Not goin''to dig any more to- night, are you?" |
33773 | Now what are you pokin''round in this rain for? |
33773 | Now, what does he want to go to Antioch for? |
33773 | Now, what does that man out there want?" |
33773 | Now, what shall we do first?" |
33773 | Now, whose team is that goin''along the road? |
33773 | Of course, I ought not to say anything, but I should think that you would hold a brighter picture of some one who is waiting-- but what am I saying? |
33773 | Oh, is it Mr. Milford? |
33773 | Oh, they can invent their machines and all that, but why do n''t they find out the truth?" |
33773 | Old Whittier? |
33773 | Only seven years old? |
33773 | See this?" |
33773 | Shall I be plain? |
33773 | Shall I fill the jug?" |
33773 | Shall we shake hands?" |
33773 | She is worth----""I thought you said you did n''t know her till she came out here?" |
33773 | She would n''t stoop to set up a conquest over him, so much in love was she with her husband, but what right had this woman to cut in? |
33773 | Smart woman, Bill?" |
33773 | So you do n''t know how long you''ll remain here?" |
33773 | So you would n''t cut her throat?" |
33773 | Suppose the women was to mope that way? |
33773 | Tell me, is it true that certain flowers disappeared with the buffalo?" |
33773 | That tall critter that was out here? |
33773 | Then what made him lie to me? |
33773 | Then what? |
33773 | Think so?" |
33773 | Thinking about going somewhere?" |
33773 | This is Mr.--What- his- name? |
33773 | WHOSE SOUL HAVE I NOW? |
33773 | Was that the Professor man with you over there on the hill? |
33773 | Was the girl waving flowers at him? |
33773 | Was the old man robbing hens''nests in the spiritual world? |
33773 | Was there ever such luck? |
33773 | Well,"he added, as Milford continued to stand there,"anything else?" |
33773 | Were you ever engaged in any educational work?" |
33773 | Wesley, when is your insurance due?" |
33773 | What I want to know is, can we come back? |
33773 | What am I talking about? |
33773 | What are you doin''with that boiled shirt lyin''out there? |
33773 | What are you doing here, anyway?" |
33773 | What are you goin''to do now?" |
33773 | What are you saying? |
33773 | What are you staring at? |
33773 | What are you trying to do?" |
33773 | What became of your uncle?" |
33773 | What cause have you to be interested in me? |
33773 | What could she have expected of him? |
33773 | What day of the month is this?" |
33773 | What did he say?" |
33773 | What did she say?" |
33773 | What did you do, Bill?" |
33773 | What did you go for?" |
33773 | What did you want with a saw- mill?" |
33773 | What do you expect to give her?" |
33773 | What do you mean?" |
33773 | What do you say about her comin''?" |
33773 | What do you say?" |
33773 | What do you say?" |
33773 | What do you think of it all?" |
33773 | What do you think of it?" |
33773 | What do you want to hope for? |
33773 | What do you want with him?" |
33773 | What does she want to snort around for like a confounded heifer? |
33773 | What does your girl say in her letter?" |
33773 | What else can I do?" |
33773 | What have you been doing?" |
33773 | What have you there? |
33773 | What is eccentricity but a loose joint, a flaw in the machinery? |
33773 | What is it? |
33773 | What line have you failed in, mostly?" |
33773 | What made you box with that Irishman? |
33773 | What makes you so glum on women, Bill?" |
33773 | What proof have you got? |
33773 | What right had he, a laborer, to expect anything? |
33773 | What shall we call them?" |
33773 | What sort of work do you want?" |
33773 | What thanks do you reckon she''ll ever give you? |
33773 | What the deuce are you workin''for? |
33773 | What the devil are you talking about?" |
33773 | What then? |
33773 | What will become of the Dutch girl when she goes over?" |
33773 | What wise man could have warned him against it? |
33773 | What''s all the smart men doin''that they do n''t find out? |
33773 | What''s become of her?" |
33773 | What''s become of that woman-- out here last year? |
33773 | What''s his name? |
33773 | What''s the difference? |
33773 | What''s the wrangle?" |
33773 | What''s to become of us all? |
33773 | What''s wrong?" |
33773 | What''s your aim, anyway?" |
33773 | What''s your object in not wantin''to bring her here?" |
33773 | What, is this all you''ve got, just bread and bacon? |
33773 | When am I to see you again?" |
33773 | When do you expect to see her again?" |
33773 | When do you leave?" |
33773 | Where did you get that money?" |
33773 | Whitson?" |
33773 | Who are you, Bill? |
33773 | Who is she? |
33773 | Who is this?" |
33773 | Who the-- the deuce am I? |
33773 | Who told you to break out?" |
33773 | Who told you to come? |
33773 | Who was he, to be sulking? |
33773 | Who''s dead?" |
33773 | Why are women so unforgiving? |
33773 | Why ca n''t you stay here and behave yourself? |
33773 | Why did n''t he explain himself? |
33773 | Why did n''t he stand out where every one could see him? |
33773 | Why did you do it, Milford? |
33773 | Why do n''t you buy the farm and bring her out here? |
33773 | Why do n''t you drive her away?" |
33773 | Why do n''t you find out? |
33773 | Why do n''t you say you hate to go?" |
33773 | Why do you stay here and dig? |
33773 | Why have had more than truth to tell? |
33773 | Why is it? |
33773 | Why make an outcast of himself? |
33773 | Why not take the Professor? |
33773 | Why should he crow just as she glanced at the eggs? |
33773 | Why the devil ca n''t she walk? |
33773 | Why was James the First a pedantic ass? |
33773 | Why, she looks like a cat, do n''t she? |
33773 | Why, what harm? |
33773 | Why?" |
33773 | Why?" |
33773 | Will there ever come another summer like that? |
33773 | Will you do me a favor? |
33773 | Will you go quietly with me, or shall I send for an officer?" |
33773 | Will you have anything to eat?" |
33773 | Will you please come over to the house to see him?" |
33773 | Wo n''t you come in?" |
33773 | Wo n''t you join me?" |
33773 | Would n''t I, Bill?" |
33773 | Would you mind taking this thing along and handing it to her the next time you see her? |
33773 | Would you resort to anything like that?" |
33773 | Would you, Bill?" |
33773 | Yes, about how many women have you married?" |
33773 | Yes; and what''s the use in worrying? |
33773 | You about done?" |
33773 | You did n''t see the Professor''s daughter when you was over there, did you?" |
33773 | You do n''t know Peterson, do you? |
33773 | You do n''t profess to be so awful honest, do you?" |
33773 | You must not be a-- what would you call it?" |
33773 | You wo n''t fail to come, will you? |
33773 | Your horse?" |
33773 | how is that for idiom? |
33773 | when did he take to tellin''the truth? |