Questions

This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.

identifier question
39516A lady?
39516A year? 39516 And ca n''t I ever see you-- even just a little bit?"
39516And oh, by the way,asks Mrs. Dyemandust, suddenly,"how did you settle the strike?"
39516And where are you going?
39516And where will you go?
39516And who are they?
39516And who was he? 39516 But how can I help the condition of the workingmen?
39516But without money?
39516But, Jim,cried the girl,"what is it?
39516Can you not see, Mary, that there is no place in the world where I could keep you that that woman could not track me to? 39516 Do n''t you hear?
39516Do n''t you know if you want''em, you''ll get''em? 39516 Do n''t you know who''s in that syndicate?"
39516Do something for her, Robbie, wo n''t you? 39516 Do you know me?"
39516Do you mean to be impertinent?
39516Every one on board?
39516Hey?
39516Hey?
39516How can I bear it?
39516How do you mean?
39516How shall I find the girl after that?
39516I imagine the old gentleman did pretty well by you, did n''t he?
39516Jim,she gasped,"what''s to become of me?"
39516Mary,said he,"you know that I''m a married man, do n''t you?"
39516Never came back?
39516Nothing,said he,"that is-- it''s just a queer coincidence; but what was your father''s name?"
39516Now, Robbie,said he,"how long has this been going on?"
39516Strike?
39516Tell me, dearest,said Miss Paragon,"what good news have you heard?"
39516Tell me,he said,"what is the matter?"
39516To go where?
39516Trust me, wo n''t you?
39516Waiting for what?
39516We are off, sir,he said grimly;"where do you wish to go?"
39516Well, what of that?
39516Well,said the son, after dutifully helping him to a chair,"what do you think of it?"
39516Well,said van Rensselaer,"what do you think of it?"
39516Well?
39516Went away?
39516What am I to do?
39516What do I care?
39516What do you mean, Jim?
39516What do you mean?
39516What do you mean?
39516What was the matter with her?
39516What''s going to cause it?
39516What''s her name?
39516What''s the matter?
39516What''s the matter?
39516What''s the matter?
39516Where are we?
39516Where are we?
39516Where to?
39516Who''s Robert van Rensselaer?
39516Why, have n''t you got any?
39516Yes,she said,"but what--""And that I''m a very rich man?
39516You never heard of him? 39516 You promise me?"
39516You really do n''t know me, Robbie?
39516You wo n''t be cross to her?
39516A boy?"
39516And so you want to get married?"
39516And then wait five minutes-- not a second more, do you hear?
39516And what''ll come of it?"
39516And who is it?"
39516And why did n''t you tell me about it when you first got into trouble?"
39516Do you know I hold five thousand of T.& S.?
39516Do you know who my father was?"
39516Do you understand?
39516Do you understand?"
39516Have you got it?"
39516How can you do it without money?"
39516I have always meant to give my son everything a gentleman ought to have; but now I think it''s about time you''d had enough-- don''t you?"
39516Is she here-- in New York?"
39516Lynch?"
39516This is a dreadful place to say it; but what does it matter what these people think?
39516What have you been doing?"
39516What if the workingmen spend much of their wages in intemperance, and then tell me they can not live?
39516What is the matter?"
39516What shall we do?"
39516Where in Heaven''s name am I to go?"
39516Where should I go?
39516Who do you suppose are those fools that are fighting them?"
39516Who do you think it is?
39516Who?
39516Why do n''t you start?"
39516With the wine stirring in his blood, and his stomach purring contentedly, what more could a civilized man desire?
39516You say his wages are not living wages-- but who can decide a question such as that?
39516he echoed; and then he added,"What was your mother''s name?"
39516said he, suddenly;"what do you want?"
39516she cried,"what is it?"
17976And did he do it all right?
17976Are they going all right? 17976 Do you keep on inventing new stories?"
17976Have the men voted?
17976Hello, Carnegie, when did you arrive?
17976How on earth did you come to get this book?
17976How''s that, when you are being carried down to the bottomless pit?
17976Mr. Garrett,I said,"would you consider my personal bond a good security?"
17976Mr. Johnson( who was chairman of the rail converters''committee),"have we a similar agreement with you?"
17976No,he replied;"how could I, with Sir Charles giving me away like that?"
17976Not at all, Naig; if Scotland were rolled out flat as England, Scotland would be the larger, but would you have the Highlands rolled down?
17976Oh, why were n''t you dining with us last night? 17976 Salary,"I said, quite offended;"what do I care for salary?
17976Then why do n''t you?
17976Well, how did you come here?
17976Well, would you let any nation insult and dishonor you because of its size?
17976Well, you admit you changed the character of the correspondence?
17976Well,he said,"what do you propose to do about it?"
17976Well,he said,"what would you take?"
17976Well,said Lincoln,"could you do that now?"
17976What are you here for?
17976What is Spain doing over here, anyhow?
17976What is it, Lou?
17976What is it?
17976What is that?
17976What is the matter with him?
17976What would you call it?
17976What would you have done if they refused?
17976Who have you with you?
17976Why did n''t you come first to see your relative who might have been able to introduce you here?
17976Why did you not tell me before? 17976 Would a duck swim or an Irishman eat potatoes?"
17976Yes, Mr. President, but do you notice what kind of boys they are?
17976Yes,exclaimed the visitor, tremblingly,"I know that and you know it, but does the dog know it?"
17976You do not mean that? 17976 You see our sailors were attacked on shore and two of them killed, and you would stand that?"
17976''Well, who gives me the other?''
17976Am I to be censured if I had little difficulty here in recognizing something akin to the hand of Providence, with Perry Smith the manifest agent?
17976An old friend accosted him:"Well, Jim, how''s this?
17976Bad master, I suppose?"
17976Can you tell me anything about this?"
17976Could I take it?
17976Could you lend an admirer a dollar and a half to buy a hymn- book with?
17976Did they, or did they not, prove to be as we had imagined them?
17976Did you ever hear the like of that?
17976Do you think you could manage the Pittsburgh Division?"
17976During my first fourteen years of absence my thought was almost daily, as it was that morning,"When shall I see you again?"
17976Finally, when Mr. Schwab was presented, the President turned to me and said,"How is this, Mr. Carnegie?
17976Had he seen anything superb?
17976Harcourt or Campbell- Bannerman?
17976He asked:"Why not present him now?
17976He began deprecatingly:"Why are you so hard on me, aunt?
17976He was not disposed to admit anything and said:"What do you mean?"
17976Here we are together, and are we not making a nice couple of fools of ourselves?"
17976How are matters?"
17976How can I leave?"
17976How then could steel be manufactured and sold without loss at three pounds for two cents?
17976I asked:"What did you say?"
17976I came to a muffled figure and whispered:"What does''Gravity''out of its bed at midnight?"
17976I do n''t like''many''; why not''all''the centuries to come?"
17976I said to Harry:"If this is the concern we own shares in, wo n''t you please sell them before you return to the office this afternoon?"
17976If I were not willing to sacrifice myself for the cause of peace what should I sacrifice for?
17976If you made a fortune like that man what place would you make your home in old age?"
17976Is it not disgraceful?
17976It was not even"Captain"at first, but"''Colonel''Eads, how do you do?
17976McLuckie was fairly stunned, and all he could say was:"Well, that was damned white of Andy, was n''t it?"
17976Mr. Gladstone asked:"How long do you give our Established Church to live?"
17976Need I add that it never passed out of my firm grasp again until it was safe in Pittsburgh?
17976Not seldom I have to repeat to myself,"What, so hot, my little sir?"
17976One Sunday, lying in the grass, I said to"Vandy":"If you could make three thousand dollars would you spend it in a tour through Europe with me?"
17976Secondly: Am I willing to lose this sum for the friend for whom I endorse?
17976Should he close?
17976Should we no longer be welcome guests of Mrs. McMillan?
17976The country responded to the cry,"What is Spain doing over here anyhow?"
17976The district was placarded with the enquiry: Would you vote for a"Unitawrian"?
17976The one has been created, why not the other?
17976The query is: where could we get his equal?
17976Then after a pause he asked reflectively:"But why should one go to slaughter houses, why should one hear hogs squeal?"
17976Then:"How''s your father, Miss Ingersoll?
17976They said to him:''What, so hot, my little sir?''"
17976Tom Miller recently alleged that I once spoke nearly an hour and a half upon the question,"Should the judiciary be elected by the people?"
17976Was that true or not, and what was to be the consequence of Tom''s declaration?
17976We had never been separated; why should we be now?
17976What do you say, and how could it be managed?"
17976What do you think of a man who spells Rosebery with two_ r''s_?"
17976What does you tinks of a man like dat?
17976What had I done or not done?
17976What has the child of millionaire or nobleman that counts compared to such a heritage?
17976What is that new building for?
17976What is your population?"
17976What salary do you think you should have?"
17976What was I good for?
17976What was a country without Wallace, Bruce, and Burns?
17976What was the old German ex- Governor going to say-- he who had never said anything at all?
17976When did she ever fail?
17976When he read this to me, I remember that the word"many"jarred, and I said:"Mr. Secretary, might I suggest the change of one word?
17976When the furnaces were reached, Kelly called out to them:"Get to work, you spalpeens, what are you doing here?
17976When the world''s foremost citizen passed away, the question was, Who is to succeed Gladstone; who can succeed him?
17976When we returned home his first words were:"Well, what have you all to say?
17976Where could we find bedrock upon which we could stand?
17976Where is the Eastern Express?"
17976Which has not fall''n in the dry heart like rain?
17976Which has not taught weak wills how much they can?
17976Who can blame them?
17976Who was it who, being advised to disregard trifles, said he always would if any one could tell him what a trifle was?
17976Who will tell me what these are?''
17976Who, then, could so well fill this description as our friend Professor John C. Van Dyke?
17976Why should they, if every man''s signature was required?
17976Will I do as a lecturer?"
17976Will you please accept these ten thousand with my best wishes?"
17976Would he reverse his engine and run back for it?
17976Would he take me with him or must I remain at Altoona with the new official?
17976Would it not be better for you to continue four months longer under this agreement, and then, when you sign the next one, see that you understand it?"
17976Would that be satisfactory?"
17976Would you have any objection to changing that clause, striking out the sum, and substituting''only suitable provision''?
17976You know I have to keep out of the sun''s rays, and where can we do that so surely as among the heather?
17976_ Judge, hesitatingly:_"He did not give you enough to eat?"
17976_ Judge:_"He did not clothe you well?"
17976_ Judge:_"He worked you too hard?"
17976_ Judge:_"You had n''t a comfortable home?"
17976_ Question:_"What you have told me suggests the question, why did Mr. Kloman leave the firm?"
17976_ Slave:_"Not enough to eat down in Kaintuck?
17976how is that?
17976said Mr. Spencer,"in my case, for instance, was this so?"
7213Can you make five thousand at that price?
7213How long will it take you to deliver them?
7213What ought the employer to pay?
7213--"What ought the employee to receive?"
7213A foot is always twelve inches, but when is a dollar a dollar?
7213After throwing the industry into the hands of outside speculators, are the workmen given any better treatment or wages?
7213And are all properly chargeable to the day''s work?
7213And democracy has nothing to do with the question,"Who ought to be boss?"
7213And how can they do this unless they have the means of taking their raw materials, like grain and cattle, and changing them into finished products?
7213And if in the process of manufacturing fewer and fewer men are used, what is going to become of these men-- how are they going to find jobs and live?
7213And if stored, how could they be shipped in the rush season?
7213And is his ability to have a home and family the"profit"?
7213And let him starve?
7213And the saving?
7213And what is there in industry incompatible with all the arts receiving in their turn the attention of those qualified to serve in them?
7213And who can take a loss except those who have something which they can afford to lose?
7213And who would find the money to carry such a stock of cars even if they could be stored?
7213And yet how much of the"development"of Mexico by foreign exploiters ever took account of the development of its people?
7213And, anyhow, who is competent to say just what kind of living we shall base the costs on?
7213And, by the way, was inventive genius ever so sterile as it was during the war?
7213But how about production?
7213But if that business does warrant higher wages and the employer refuses, what is to be done?
7213But what business ever started with the manufacturer and ended with the consumer?
7213But what is more pitiable than a poor, pinched mind spending the rich days and years clutching a few bits of metal?
7213CHAPTER IX WHY NOT ALWAYS HAVE GOOD BUSINESS?
7213CHAPTER X HOW CHEAPLY CAN THINGS BE MADE?
7213CHAPTER XII MONEY-- MASTER OR SERVANT?
7213CHAPTER XIII WHY BE POOR?
7213CHAPTER XV WHY CHARITY?
7213Charles Franks, and the DP Team MY LIFE AND WORK By Henry Ford In Collaboration With Samuel Crowther CONTENTS INTRODUCTION-- WHAT IS THE IDEA?
7213Could Capital gain by crushing Labour?
7213Does a card player add to the wealth of the world?
7213Does that settle anything?
7213Does the manufacturer exist for the consumer or does the consumer exist for the manufacturer?
7213Else where would be the need for union officers?
7213First tractors arrived, when will Smith and others leave?
7213First we ought to find whether it is as well made as it should be-- does it give the best possible service?
7213For when were men ever really put out of work by the bettering of industrial processes?
7213HOW CHEAPLY CAN THINGS BE MADE?
7213Have you ever considered what a wage does or ought to do?
7213He said:"Yes, what about it?"
7213How are you going to figure the contribution of the home to the day''s work?
7213How did all this come about?
7213How does the number of taxicabs compare with the number of horse- cabs when the latter were in their prime?
7213How many of the men would be engaged, not in producing, but in merely carrying from place to place what the other men had produced?
7213How much of a living is reasonably to be expected from work?
7213How much to his position as a citizen?
7213How much to his position as a father?
7213INDEX INTRODUCTION WHAT IS THE IDEA?
7213If every necessary of life were produced so cheaply and in such quantities, would not the world shortly be surfeited with goods?
7213If foodstuffs become too plentiful to be consumed as food, why not find other uses for them?
7213If human sympathy prompts us to feed the hungry, why should it not give the larger desire-- to make hunger in our midst impossible?
7213If such a strike is won by the strikers, is the lot of the workingman improved?
7213If the consumer will not-- says he cannot-- buy what the manufacturer has to offer, is that the fault of the manufacturer or the consumer?
7213If the farmer''s bloc should crush the manufacturers would the farmers be better off?
7213If the farms be deserted, of what use are manufacturers?
7213If the hog business slackens, why should not the farmer turn his corn into tractor fuel?
7213If the manufacturer''s bloc should crush the farmers, would the manufacturers be better off?
7213In transportation why put extra weight in a machine?
7213Is a man more wise with borrowed money than he is with his own?
7213Is a man the happier for starving?
7213Is business good or bad according to the dictates of fate?
7213Is it clumsy?
7213Is it wrong?
7213Is it?
7213Is n''t that nonsense?
7213Is that anything against him?
7213Is the man''s own livelihood to be regarded as the"cost"?
7213Is there no use for corn besides the making of pork or the making of whisky?
7213It is all well enough in a pile- driver, but why move a heavy weight if we are not going to hit anything with it?
7213It is not usual to speak of an employee as a partner, and yet what else is he?
7213MONEY-- MASTER OR SERVANT?
7213Must we accept the conditions as inevitable?
7213No one wants to be fat and heavy of body-- then why of head?
7213Nor the employee by glaring back and asking,"How much can I force him to give?"
7213On what system of figuring is the home going to find its place on the cost sheets of the day''s work?
7213Or Labour by crushing Capital?
7213Or are all these relationships to be considered strictly under head of cost, and the profit to be computed entirely outside of them?
7213Or as a service?
7213Or does a man in business gain by crushing a competitor?
7213Or is it better to put him in the way of a good living?
7213Or is nobody at fault?
7213Or worse fitted?
7213Or would Caruso''s gifts have still remained his own?
7213Should we have been better fitted to go on with our business?
7213Should we have prevented the taxicab because its coming took the bread out of the mouths of the horse- cab drivers?
7213Should we have prohibited the railways and kept the stage- coach drivers?
7213So if we want to work why not concentrate on the work and do it in the quickest possible fashion?
7213Suppose we had borrowed, what would have happened?
7213Take the industrial idea; what is it?
7213That is very much like asking:"Who ought to be the tenor in the quartet?"
7213The basic question is"What can the business stand?"
7213The business limits the wages, but does anything limit the business?
7213The employer can gain nothing by looking over the employees and asking himself,"How little can I get them to take?"
7213The question was already being asked:"How soon will Ford blow up?"
7213Then why flounder around waiting for good business?
7213Then-- are the materials the best or merely the most expensive?
7213Then-- can its complexity and weight be cut down?
7213They say:"What would become of our foreign trade?"
7213Under such conditions why discuss the railroads as a business?
7213WHY BE POOR?
7213WHY CHARITY?
7213WHY NOT ALWAYS HAVE GOOD BUSINESS?
7213We are continually asked:"When will you get to the point of overproduction?
7213We ask a man,"What can you get out of an engine?"
7213Were there more men working with the stage- coaches than are working on the railways?
7213What can be done?
7213What can be fine about paring the necessities of life to the very quick?
7213What can you do to help and heal the world?
7213What difference does it make in the units of energy a man uses in a productive day''s work?
7213What do we mean by high wages, anyway?
7213What does it mean?
7213What good is industry if it be so unskillfully managed as not to return a living to everyone concerned?
7213What have your likes or dislikes to do with the facts?
7213What is the use of putting a tremendous force behind a blunt chisel if a light blow on a sharp chisel will do the work?
7213What is there in life that should hamper normal and wholesome modes of living?
7213What wages should we be able to pay if we trusted a large don''t- care class to their own methods and gait of production?
7213When can a wage be considered adequate?
7213When will there be more cars than people to use them?"
7213Where does the money to make the wheels go round come from?
7213Where or how could any one store half a million cars?
7213Why have only one string to our bow?
7213Why not add it to the load that the machine is designed to carry?
7213Why not two?
7213Why should finance fear?
7213Why should there by any necessity for almsgiving in a civilized community?
7213Why sit down and bemoan the terrible disaster that has befallen the corn market?
7213Why use corn only for hogs and distilleries?
7213Will a billion dollars solve that sort of trouble?
7213Will there not come a point when, regardless of price, people simply will not want anything more than what they already have?
7213Would that have reared another tenor to take his place?
7213You pay the man for his work, but how much does that work owe to his home?
46343''Ah, I was in command of archers, was I?'' 46343 ''And for what ceremony had I come from the Palais de Justice with my hundred and twenty archers?''
46343''And has nothing uncommon happened? 46343 ''And now what are they doing, Cartouche?''
46343''And now,''said I, hiding my mortification,''you''ve told me what you think of my character: what do you think of my handwriting?'' 46343 ''And the soil of this Place de l''Hôtel- de- Ville?
46343''And when did this happen?'' 46343 ''And why do you shrink from these places and from this house in Vielle- du- Temple Street?''
46343''And why not?'' 46343 ''Are there any spots in Paris that you have n''t been able to cross?''
46343''Because of the paving- stones?'' 46343 ''But Cartouche was silent: why are you yelling?''
46343''But why do n''t you arrest me? 46343 ''But why without taking our bearings?''
46343''Corpses?'' 46343 ''Do n''t you know that this was the Place de Grève?''
46343''Do you remember the night you were on duty at the Palais- Royal and stole the Regent''s silver- gilt candlesticks?''
46343''Do you think I''m colour- blind?'' 46343 ''Have you often crossed it?''
46343''How long do you think you could be hungry?'' 46343 ''Is it far from here?''
46343''Is that so?'' 46343 ''Is that you,_ Simon the Auvergnat_?''
46343''Really? 46343 ''Really?
46343''Was I very young?'' 46343 ''Well, you wo n''t be angry, if I''m frank with you?''
46343''What is it he''s done?'' 46343 ''What on earth is that?''
46343''What things?'' 46343 ''What would you do if you were?''
46343''What''s the matter now, Cartouche?'' 46343 ''What?
46343''Where are you going?'' 46343 ''Who told you that piece of idiocy?''
46343''You advise me to?'' 46343 ''You?
46343A good-- what?
46343Accomplished? 46343 Ah, what is it?"
46343Am I really very sorry? 46343 And how long is it before we come back into another body?"
46343And next?
46343And then?
46343And what am I to tell him?
46343And what are we going to do with them?
46343And what did he say to that?
46343And what else is there in the pockets of conjurors?
46343And what has happened?
46343And what''s that-- the base of your column?
46343And where is it to be found?
46343And you''re not afraid of the eyes of a dead calf which look at you?
46343Are the four ladies here?
46343Are you quite sure it was in its place last night?
46343Are you sure?
46343But can we really expect the soil in which the treasures were buried to have remained undisturbed all these years-- over two hundred?
46343But how on earth did Nadar take my photograph?
46343But is this really an eighteenth- century paper? 46343 But what are these things you have dreamt of but never seen?"
46343Ca n''t you see that Signor Petito is in a hurry? 46343 Could you tell me the exact age of this document?"
46343Did n''t you try to stop him?
46343Do I ever dream? 46343 Do n''t you perceive the thick bars across the windows?"
46343Do they express pity for him in the books?
46343Do we look like Germans?
46343Do you know how much it is worth, Signor Petito, the_ Child''s_ head? 46343 Have n''t you got beyond that?"
46343Have you ever heard anyone speak of someone called the_ Child_, Adolphe?
46343He was going to answer when his wife interfered and said:''What are you talking about, Theophrastus? 46343 How are you, Ambrose?"
46343How are you, Theophrastus? 46343 How are you?"
46343How could I have learnt to write unless I knew how to read? 46343 How did that come about?"
46343How did_ my portrait_ get into this house?
46343I notice that whenever you say,''Is that clear?'' 46343 I told Adolphe all this; and he said,''Are there any other places from which you shrink?''
46343I was dismayed; but in a flash of genius I cried:''What is evil?
46343If one showed you a piece of paper you could tell the age of it?
46343In what train?
46343Indeed? 46343 Is n''t it?"
46343M. Longuet appeared to reflect a little; then he said:''Then, if we continued to live in the Catacombs, we should end by no longer having eyes?'' 46343 Never?"
46343Now why, I wonder, did I say''_ You remember_''? 46343 Of many brigands?"
46343Plainly M. de la Nox did not expect that yell, for he said in a tone of surprise,''Why did you yell like that, Cartouche?'' 46343 So you''re going to the Porkers too?"
46343Sometimes? 46343 The violet cat is on the tea- table?"
46343Then Theophrastus said,''What are you waiting for?'' 46343 Then he returned to his fixed idea:"''And in the course of our peregrinations is there any chance of our coming across a way out?
46343There was a pause as M. de la Nox let Cartouche continue on his painful way; then he said:''And where are you now, Cartouche?'' 46343 Three thousand?
46343To the Porkers?
46343We had come just to the end of Paris Street-- you know the passage we call Paris Street at the Conciergerie?
46343Well, what about them?
46343What Black Feather? 46343 What am I waiting for?
46343What are you doing, Marceline?
46343What did he do then?
46343What do you mean?
46343What do you think of that?
46343What do you want me to do with them?
46343What else?
46343What else?
46343What had we been doing? 46343 What is it?
46343What is it?
46343What misfortune?
46343What on earth''s that?
46343What would the Signora Petito think, if you came home without your ears?
46343What?
46343Where am I?
46343Where are you dragging me to?
46343Where is it?
46343Who was I? 46343 Who will ever be able to tell the age of that soil; who will ever be able to tell you the age of those stones?
46343Will not some of the noble rich buy a million copies and see that they are given to those who need them?
46343You agree that_ Cartouche_ is your real name and not a nickname?
46343You are sure of it?
46343You do n''t understand? 46343 You''re really called all that?"
46343Your information is correct?
46343Your portrait?
46343_ In the train which is going to pass under your nose._"What is the train which is going to pass under my nose?
46343_ Who could be surer than I?_said Theophrastus calmly.
46343''And what is your conception of my character, Adolphe?''
46343''Are you quite ignorant of the experimental method?
46343''Do you want to cross the Place de l''Hôtel- de- Ville?''
46343''How do they see?''
46343''Is there really a chance that in the course of our peregrinations we shall come across subterranean piles?''
46343''What is Signor Petito up to at Saint- Germain?
46343''Why should we not believe that in quitting the body which it animates at the moment, it must animate several others in succession?''
46343''You died in 1721 at the Gallows of Montfaucon?
46343A glass of ratafia?
46343Adolphe said nothing; and when he was baiting his hook, Theophrastus said, with a touch of impatience in his tone,"Well?"
46343After a while it grew serene again; and M. de la Nox said:"''And what are you doing now, Cartouche?''
46343After all, does it matter what you have seen,_ since you are dead_?
46343Am I frightening you?
46343Am I to go back to my mother, or are you going to do it?"
46343And if I did n''t know how to write, how could I have written the document I hid in the cellars of the Conciergerie?"
46343And what does it remember if not that it has lived before, and that it has lived in another body?
46343And what had become of the beginning of the train, that is to say, of the engine, the tender, the dining- car, and the three corridor carriages?
46343And you do n''t know what that_ rt_ stands for?
46343Are there many ways out of the Catacombs?''
46343Are they fishes?''
46343Are you going to teach me about Straw Alley?
46343Are you going to teach the guide his business when you''ve never been to the Conciergerie before in your life?''
46343Are you sure he has n''t gone out?"
46343Are you sure?
46343Below it were these words:"Of what use are brands, and torches, and spectacles To him who shuts his eyes that he may not see?"
46343Besides, was I sure?
46343Big and well made?"
46343But at your trial--""Did I have a trial?"
46343But how comes it that this document, which is dated 1721, is, in every part of it which is visible, in your handwriting?"
46343But how do you catch them?''
46343But how many more to kill?...
46343But how on earth does it affect this business which is worrying us?"
46343But how the deuce am I to do it?
46343But is it my fault?...
46343But what little railway station?
46343But what of that?
46343But where am I?...
46343But why have you gone into the corner?
46343But, as a matter of fact, you were, according to the poet Granval, a man who knew you well and chanted your glory--""My what?"
46343CHAPTER II THE SCRAP OF PAPER What did happen?
46343Ca n''t these silly fools see that the names are on the tip of my tongue, and wo n''t come off it?
46343Ca n''t they see that if I do n''t denounce them, it''s because I ca n''t move the tip of my tongue?
46343Consequently your express has vanished-- melted-- flown away?
46343Consequently, there''s no longer any express?
46343Could I have done otherwise?
46343Did he really say''_ Zounds_''?"
46343Did that scrap of paper_ really_ exist?
46343Did you not wish to see your wife happy?
46343Do you notice anything remarkable about it?"
46343Do you understand everything, except that you have n''t seen the train pass K?
46343Do you understand?"
46343Does he in the old eighteenth- century fashion police Bagdad, or does he build up a rubber stamp business in Chicago?
46343Does the unhappy Theophrastus, luckless exile from the Paris he loves, wander through the far East or the far West?
46343Had I not, before falling into this hole, bought half a dozen electric lamps of the latest pattern?
46343Have I made this first proof clear?"
46343Have you experienced no odd feelings?
46343Have you remembered nothing?''
46343He had ceased to ask,"Why am I in this house in Huchette Street?"
46343He sat down with an air of supreme content, and said proudly:"_ What do you think of that, Marie- Antoinette?_""Why do you call me Marie- Antoinette?"
46343He sat down with an air of supreme content, and said proudly:"_ What do you think of that, Marie- Antoinette?_""Why do you call me Marie- Antoinette?"
46343He says in a low voice, so low that she does not even hear him,"Do you hear?"
46343He stood upright again with an air of relief and said:"''What are you doing now, Cartouche?''
46343Here?--what the deuce was here anyway except water?
46343His next question was:"''And where are you now, Cartouche?''
46343Houdry, the butcher''s wife, came to the back door and said to the assistant:"What''s your master doing this morning?
46343How can he better console her than by replacing you?
46343How did he find his way?
46343How did he re- enter Paris?
46343How do you suppose I could have slept on straw in Straw Alley when it was the first time I had ever been in the Conciergerie?
46343How large are they?''
46343How many more to kill to be sure of the silence of all?...
46343However, I''ll do as you want; but just tell me first if Cartouche was as redoubtable as they say: was he a brigand chief?"
46343I ca n''t sleep two nights running in the same place... Where are the days when I had all Paris on my side?
46343I said:"''Here are two passages, which are you going to take?''
46343I was a fine man, was n''t I?
46343I was mounted on a Spanish horse?''
46343I-- I was at K; and I am sure that it did not pass at K... consequently...''"''Consequently?...
46343Incalculable quantities?...
46343Incalculable?...
46343Indeed?"
46343Is it my fault that Cartouche did n''t split?''
46343Is it my habit to keep things which do n''t belong to me?
46343Is it the ring of Ravaillac?
46343Is it the telephone, or the railway, or the motorcars, or the Eiffel Tower?"
46343Is n''t it red?''
46343Is n''t the date false?
46343Is that clear to you?"
46343Is that clear?"
46343Is that so?"
46343It was all quite clear; had he not before slipping out of the study moved the cat?
46343It''s Straw Alley!_''""He said that?
46343It''s my belief, on the contrary, that I was a man of quality-- what do you say to a favourite of the Regent?''
46343Longuet?"
46343Longuet?"
46343Longuet?''
46343Longuet?''
46343Longuet?''
46343Mifroid?''
46343No?...
46343Of what is he dreaming, unhappy wretch, that again and again he shakes his luckless head?
46343On the bank of what river did M. Longuet lay his clothes?
46343On the way Theophrastus said:"Tell me, Adolphe: what was I like?
46343One day you went with some of your school- fellows to Saint- Laurent fair--""Look here, Adolphe: could n''t you put it differently?
46343One eye?''
46343Or Belle- Hélène who keeps the Harp tavern?"
46343Or even Blanche, the Bustler?
46343Presently he nodded his head sagely and said:"Do you ever dream, Theophrastus?"
46343Pretty- Milkmaid, of Pussycat?
46343Savard was smoking his pipe on his door- step; and Duchâtelet said to him,"Is there anyone upstairs?"
46343Shut up in the Châtelet... And his son?...
46343Station B:"What can have happened?
46343Suppose I lit the light?"
46343Suppose I went and opened the door on to the landing, and called the porter?"
46343Taburet, are n''t I right?
46343That means?
46343That means?
46343The Other, then, was a man of energy?''
46343The day of my wedding with Marie- Antoinette?
46343The guide set the party in motion; then he said:"You are French?"
46343Then he whispered:"''Where are you now, Cartouche?''
46343Theophrastus paused in his reading and said,"What on earth do they mean by their new Cartouche?
46343Theophrastus read:"Is Cartouche, then, not dead?
46343Theophrastus turned on him with a savage air, and cried,"What the deuce has it got to do with you?"
46343Theophrastus, who took a pride in showing himself well- informed, said to the guide:"Was n''t it here that the Girondins had their last meal?
46343Was it from fear?
46343Was it not a fact that already things of which in my present existence I was ignorant, were rising from my past?
46343Was it that he had sunk into a deeper sleep?
46343Was it that the Theophrastus of to- day had any connection with the Theophrastus of twenty years ago?
46343Well then, in clipping his ears, did I not demonstrate that there was no need to kill him?
46343What are we to do?
46343What can it mean?"
46343What did certain phrases I had uttered at the Conciergerie mean?
46343What do my fingers want?
46343What do you mean?"
46343What good wind blows you here?"
46343What has become of my pocket- book?"
46343What have you found out?"
46343What have you seen?...
46343What is good?
46343What is that that is thrusting, thrusting forth?
46343What is the origin of the old Frankish palace?
46343What is the thought of my fingers?
46343What is this theory of transformation except that living beings_ transform themselves into one another_?
46343What is three quarters of a mile of bones out of three hundred and ten miles of Catacombs?''
46343What should he do?
46343What the deuce is that infernal violet cat up to?"
46343What was then my name?
46343What were those crimson flames below, in whose glow he walked, doing?
46343What will you have to drink?
46343What would_ you_ do?
46343What''s he doing in your house, by the way, that skeleton, instead of resting quietly on Saint- Chaumont Hill?
46343When I asked what were you waiting for, I meant what are you waiting for to arrest me?''
46343When he began to deal with the calf''s ears, Theophrastus cried, with angelic delight:"The ears?
46343When they were under the trees, among the throng of careless strollers, Adolphe said:"You''ve heard of the water- finders?"
46343Whence does this man, or rather this shadow of a man, this sad shadow of a man, with his hands in his pockets, come?
46343Where are you going to?
46343Where are you now, Cartouche?''
46343Where are you now, Cartouche?''
46343Where did he go?
46343Where did this end of a train come from?
46343Where have I seen it?''
46343Where in Heaven''s name are we going now?
46343Where is Uncle Tanton now?
46343Which First of April?
46343Who can compare with her?
46343Who could have believed that pain would be so_ effective_ at the end of two hundred years?''
46343Who shall ever re- compose it?
46343Who shall ever repeat it?
46343Who wants Cartouche?''...
46343Who was Simon the Auvergnat, whose name had risen twice to my burning lips?
46343Who will dare to say that they are not retrospective visions of events which have taken place before our present existence?"
46343Whom does he perceive on the threshold of a cottage at the entrance to the village?...
46343Why did n''t Cartouche move the tip of his tongue?
46343Why do n''t the idiots take them off it?
46343Why do you tear the white locks from your brow?...
46343Why should he have spoken?
46343Why that deep groan?
46343Why then, my dear Signor Petito, are you making that intolerable face?
46343Why?
46343Would it not be stupid indeed to devote all my faculties to reviving the Theophrastus of twenty years ago?
46343You are still awake, are you-- as late as this?"
46343You died at the Gallows of Montfaucon?''
46343You know that Marie Antoinette went to her death down that passage?"
46343You laugh, M. Houdry?
46343You talk of Reason;_ but what use is Reason in a brain which does not know by which end to take hold of it_?
46343You understand?
46343_ Do you understand now?
46343_ Have you got the carving- knife?_""I ca n''t find the fork,"replied the trembling voice of Marceline.
46343_ What does that portmanteau contain?_ Theophrastus, his face working with intense emotion, crosses the room to his old friend.
46343and what was he saying to you?"
46343at La Belle Hélène''s, who,_ you remember_, kept the Heart tavern?
46343what have you seen in the drawing- room?...
46343what is that it lights up?...
20068''''Ave you''eard that Luke Mickleroyd nearly lost his little Ruth in the night?''
20068''''Ave you, my dear?''
20068''''Ow dare you talk similar to that, Sarah?''
20068''A hundred?''
20068''Ah, Sykes, you want your wages?
20068''Ah, how''s that?''
20068''And I thought you came to Ousebank to do some business?''
20068''And do n''t you?''
20068''And get it copied at once?''
20068''And if it is, what good will it do you to know it, even if she owned up, which she wo n''t, you may be sure?''
20068''And now, I suppose, we can go and have our dinner?''
20068''And that''s what you wanted to do-- amuse yourself with the sight of infuriated Yorkshiremen?''
20068''And what about me?
20068''And what are you two lasses doing in Ousebank alone and on foot?''
20068''And what do you suppose he expects to happen?''
20068''And where''s the police?''
20068''And you used that five minutes''power to give the men their way?
20068''And, who knows?
20068''Apologise?
20068''Are you coming, mother?''
20068''Are you hitting at me?''
20068''Are you ill, miss?
20068''Are you sorry?''
20068''Are you sure the danger''s over?''
20068''Are you?''
20068''Begging your pardon, I have n''t eaten anything yet; and talking of grub, what do you say to coming and having some?
20068''Besides what?''
20068''Bonfire of weeds?
20068''Build it up again?
20068''But I do n''t suppose I am allowed to buy it wholesale like this?''
20068''But am I to sleep here?
20068''But are you going to keep this as a rink?
20068''But how did you do it?
20068''But if he wo n''t have any by- and- by, why do n''t you save it up for then?''
20068''But she is a very nice girl, mamma, and I may go, may n''t I?''
20068''But the fire?
20068''But where is Naomi, and why was my dress not put out for me?''
20068''But why did they suddenly do that?
20068''But, Sarah, if there is any chance of such a thing, why do n''t you begin to save up?''
20068''But, do n''t you see?
20068''But, my dear, w''yever did n''t you mention it before we started?
20068''Ca n''t we all go on our way to the mills?
20068''Can I see my father, sir?''
20068''D''ye think I''m a fool?
20068''Dear mater, what does it matter whether you are learned or not?
20068''Did n''t I always laugh and make jokes at school?
20068''Did n''t you?
20068''Did you ask them to help us?''
20068''Dinner?''
20068''Do they?
20068''Do what?''
20068''Do you believe that?''
20068''Do you believe that?''
20068''Do you mean that you think mother is n''t safe at Balmoral?''
20068''Do you mean to say it costs a thousand a week to keep the mills going?''
20068''Do you mean you thought I was a heathen?''
20068''Do you particularly want to walk home, Horatia?''
20068''Do you really mean that?
20068''Do you really want to go?
20068''Do you think he really is my father?''
20068''Does n''t it make them deaf or make their heads ache?''
20068''Eh, what, are you a Yorkshire lassie, then, that you talk so pat about ginnels?
20068''Excuse me, but this is my business, and my orders must be obeyed.--Get out of this, do you hear, Tom Fox?''
20068''Father,''cried Sarah indignantly,''how can you think such a dreadful thing of me?
20068''Fire?''
20068''For the minute?
20068''George, what are you thinking of?''
20068''George, what do you think he''s going to do?''
20068''George,''said Sarah after lunch,''what''s he up to?''
20068''Going out, George?
20068''Had n''t you better go after him?''
20068''Had n''t you better tell them to come in?''
20068''Has n''t father gone to the mill?''
20068''Has n''t the new dye taken at all?''
20068''Has the gong gone?
20068''Have n''t I got any money?''
20068''Have the hands gone back, Naomi?''
20068''Have you got right yet?''
20068''Have you paid every one else?''
20068''How am I changed?
20068''How can I tell?
20068''How can they if they''re foreigners?''
20068''How can you be surrounded by carpets?''
20068''How could they get an air- ship?''
20068''How dare you accuse me of such mean behaviour?
20068''How dare you drive my car at that speed, with my daughter and the Duke of Arnedale''s granddaughter in the car?
20068''How did I do it?
20068''How did he get in?
20068''How did he get them?''
20068''How did it happen?
20068''How did you hear about it?''
20068''How do you do, Mr Clay?
20068''How do you know that?''
20068''How do you know what things I do n''t like?''
20068''How do you know?
20068''How do you know?''
20068''How do you mean for life or death?''
20068''How does she do it, Naomi?
20068''How has he done it?''
20068''How much longer can you hold out?''
20068''How on earth did that tree catch fire,''Horatia suddenly ejaculated as a tall poplar was seen blazing,''and after such a wet day as yesterday?''
20068''How should I know, miss?
20068''How should one rink when people_ are_ looking?
20068''How''s the market, dad?''
20068''How, then?
20068''However can they keep on their feet with they wheels under their boots?''
20068''I always wonder how many more entertainments Mark Clay will hold out for?''
20068''I ca n''t go to the mills-- our own mills, Naomi?
20068''I do n''t see how you are obliged to do anything unless you like; but was that what they wanted you to do?''
20068''I say, mother, would you mind if I went for a week''s shooting to Scotland?''
20068''I say, will it come off?''
20068''I suppose you are talking about me; but do n''t I show you any feeling, Luke?''
20068''I suppose you''d mind dreadfully if we did lose all our money?''
20068''I thought Sykes was seeing to all that, and housing the people till we could settle with them?''
20068''I thought you wanted to see the mill?''
20068''I wonder if I ought to tell mother?''
20068''I''ve a right to be proud of my children, have n''t I?
20068''I?
20068''If she wants to fish, why should n''t she?''
20068''If we give up the mills, what have we to live on?
20068''Is Sarah callin''us stalled oxen?''
20068''Is Uncle Howroyd''s money gone?''
20068''Is it near the house?''
20068''Is my father-- dead?''
20068''Is my mother dressed for dinner?''
20068''Is n''t this horrid, Sarah?''
20068''Is she an orphan, and what does she mean by being all alone?
20068''Is that a joke, or do you expect me to believe you''d rather live in the workhouse than this place?''
20068''Is that really Balmoral?
20068''It''s better than a magic- lantern, is n''t it, my dear?''
20068''It''s not a bad word, is n''t that?
20068''It''s not near the house, Uncle Howroyd; it''s only a bonfire.--What are you all so upset about?''
20068''It''s not quite so lovely, is it, after all?''
20068''It''s not really bad, my lad?''
20068''It''s the dinner- gong, then?''
20068''Knew what?
20068''Know what?
20068''Liza Anne''s in Clay''s Mills, is n''t she?''
20068''Lying down with Horatia?''
20068''Make me deaf?
20068''Mercy on us, Sarah, w''atever''appened to the car or Tom?
20068''Miss Horatia, my dearie, what are you thinking about?
20068''Miss Sarah, suppose anybody is in the house?''
20068''Miss''Oratia, w''at is it?
20068''Mother, do n''t you hear?
20068''Naomi, have you seen the mills to- day?
20068''Naomi, was Jane Mary in this?''
20068''None of us, ma''am?
20068''Nonsense; he couldn''t.--How did you get past the pickets, George?''
20068''Not been croaking, has he?''
20068''Now then, now then; have I just come in time for fireworks?''
20068''Now, Sally, what are you looking so glum about?
20068''Now, what villainy have you been up to?''
20068''Now?
20068''Of mine?
20068''Oh George, do you think we are ruined, or anything?''
20068''Oh George, how on earth did you get here?''
20068''Oh Mrs Clay, what have I done?
20068''Oh Naomi, what is it?''
20068''Oh Uncle Howroyd, is n''t it lovely?
20068''Oh dear,''ave they''urt''i m?''
20068''Oh uncle, why did you come so soon?
20068''Oh, ai n''t she beautiful on they things?
20068''Oh, and what may you want to know?''
20068''Oh, are we going straight home?
20068''Oh, but he wo n''t fail.--Will you, George?''
20068''Oh, dear Bill, I''ope there''s nothin''wrong between you an''Mark?
20068''Oh, did I ask a lot of questions?''
20068''Oh, have n''t you seen the lakes?''
20068''Oh, have you got a mill, and can I come and see it?''
20068''Oh, have you really?
20068''Oh, of course, if your mother does not allow it, we ca n''t; but do you think I had better apologise to your man?''
20068''Oh, the hands?
20068''Oh, were they?
20068''Oh, what is it?
20068''Oh, what is it?''
20068''Oh, will they?
20068''Oh, you do n''t, do n''t you?
20068''Oh, you think I''ve more than my share, do you, like all the rest of them?
20068''Oo are you w''isperin''to out there?''
20068''Oo do you want to shoot, Sykes?''
20068''Oo''s she goin''to shoot?
20068''Ought to be?
20068''Ow can I order a man about in''is own''ouse?
20068''Ow could you earn enough money to buy a gown like that, do you suppose?
20068''Put the pieces on what?''
20068''Sarah, tell me, why wo n''t Naomi''s sister come near Balmoral?''
20068''See that speck yonder?
20068''See whom-- Uncle Howroyd?''
20068''Shall I go and see who it is?
20068''Shall we be fined?''
20068''She''s a nice young lady, Mark, this friend o''Sarah''s, is n''t she?''
20068''She''s a nice, dear girl, is n''t she, Mark?''
20068''Sir John?
20068''So you prefer Bill Howroyd''s way?
20068''So you think the men will laugh the last?
20068''So you''ve been to Howroyd''s Mill messing with his dyes, have you?
20068''Stalled oxen?
20068''Stalled oxen?''
20068''That''s awfully nice of you, mater; but why did n''t you ask me about it?
20068''The Red House?''
20068''The marble staircase wo n''t burn, will it?''
20068''Then I suppose you''ll be giving them all the profits next, and we shall see you working as a hand yourself?''
20068''Then it''s one fashion thee''ll ha''to onlearn, dost hear?
20068''Then what do you mean by telling me such a story?
20068''Then what do you mean to do?
20068''Then what on earth are you making this fuss about?
20068''Then what''s the good of their doing work if no one will buy it?''
20068''Then will you come and see father?
20068''Then you do know something about it?''
20068''Then you do n''t know?''
20068''There are none so ignorant as those that wo n''t know, eh, Naomi?''
20068''They are not sold, then?''
20068''Thinking of?
20068''To- day, Miss Sarah?
20068''Uncle Howroyd, do you think it is a sinking ship?''
20068''W''at did''e call''isself Mr Brown for, then?
20068''W''atever do you mean by talkin''such nonsense?''
20068''W''atever do you mean, Mark?''
20068''W''y, Sairey, ai n''t you goin''to begin to dress?
20068''W''y, you do n''t never mean to say that, George, an''after all the pounds dad''s paid for''er?
20068''Wanted?''
20068''Wants to see me?
20068''Was that really what you wanted to ask me?''
20068''Wat''s the good o''talkin''nonsense, Sarah?
20068''Well, George, anything wrong?''
20068''Well, Miss Horatia, what will you touch with your fairy wand next, eh?
20068''Well, Naomi, what is it?
20068''Well, boy, what''s this story?
20068''Well, it''s this: why do you hate being rich?''
20068''Well, men, is t''mill burnt down that I ca n''t even eat my dinner in peace, but must come at once to speak with you?''
20068''Well, mother, have you got victuals for seventy or so?''
20068''What are you after now, lass?''
20068''What are you going to do there?
20068''What are you going to do with my approval, my lad?''
20068''What are you sighing for, Sarah?
20068''What are you so pleased for, then?''
20068''What ca n''t he do?''
20068''What can he be thinking of?
20068''What did the papers say?
20068''What did you expect them to look like?''
20068''What do you mean by that?''
20068''What do you say, sir?
20068''What do you think they''ll do?''
20068''What do you want to ask me about?''
20068''What do you want, my lass?
20068''What does he mean about your being a millionaire for five minutes?''
20068''What does he mean?''
20068''What does she mean?
20068''What does this mean, Miss Cunningham?''
20068''What does?''
20068''What else did Naomi say?''
20068''What food have they, and how did you get enough in for them?''
20068''What has happened, Naomi?
20068''What has happened?
20068''What have you done, sir?''
20068''What in the world are you talking about?
20068''What is it, mother?
20068''What is it?''
20068''What is odd about it?''
20068''What is the matter with father?''
20068''What is the matter, Mary?
20068''What is the matter, Naomi?''
20068''What is the name of the house?''
20068''What kind of trouble?''
20068''What nonsense are you talking, Nanny?
20068''What question?
20068''What question?
20068''What story?
20068''What tone?''
20068''What was it?''
20068''What was that, Miss Sarah?''
20068''What were you talking to Uncle Howroyd about?''
20068''What would you do?
20068''What''ll he be going to do at t''old mills?''
20068''What''s a Yorkshire welcome like?
20068''What''s a fettler, and what is to fettle a machine?''
20068''What''s a"ligger- on,"Naomi?''
20068''What''s going to be the end of it all?''
20068''What''s he wanting?''
20068''What''s no joke?
20068''What''s the governor been doing to upset her now?''
20068''What''s wrong with Clay?
20068''What''s your plan, Mr Clay?''
20068''Whatever could they have been thinking of to leave it there?
20068''Whatever would be the good of that, Miss Sarah, upsetting of Mr Clay for nothing, let alone that I never told no story?
20068''Where are you going, George?''
20068''Where do they sleep, and what do they eat?''
20068''Where is it?''
20068''Where is this house?''
20068''Who can that be?''
20068''Who is Mr Blakeley?''
20068''Who should there be in the house?
20068''Who''s talking about Buckingham Palace?''
20068''Why am I so nasty to him?''
20068''Why did n''t you tell us before?''
20068''Why do n''t you say we''re all ignorant and vulgar?
20068''Why do n''t you want visitors, father?''
20068''Why does she hate him?
20068''Why is every one nasty to him?
20068''Why not wear your white flannel?
20068''Why not, lad?
20068''Why not?
20068''Why not?''
20068''Why of course?''
20068''Why should it be something horrid?''
20068''Why should n''t he be?
20068''Why this excitement?
20068''Why, Nanny, who would have thought you''d be such a coward?
20068''Why, is he shaky?''
20068''Why, what can you find to enjoy already?''
20068''Why, what''s been doing here?
20068''Why?
20068''Why?
20068''Why?''
20068''Why?''
20068''Will be in a rage?
20068''Will you wait till this afternoon, father?''
20068''Wo n''t you come and have some tea?''
20068''Wool''s going up, you hear?
20068''Would you like me to go and see if he is still there?''
20068''Would you like me to say what I really think?''
20068''Yes I do, a little; but why should you think so much about education and titles and things?
20068''You are really going, dear?''
20068''You are sure you did n''t come to beg these people off their punishment?''
20068''You can scarcely expect me to feel very secure, can you?''
20068''You did n''t say a word about what them young lads said they''d do-- you know what?''
20068''You do n''t know?
20068''You do n''t want me to go carrying tales from the servants''hall, do you?
20068''You know that story, surely, do n''t you, miss?''
20068''You mean he might make himself unpleasant?''
20068''You mean that I tell untruths?''
20068''You mean that the foreigners have gone-- without a minute''s warning?''
20068''You mean the hands, father?''
20068''You wo n''t leave to- night, miss?''
20068''You''re sure there''s no mistake, mother?
20068''You''ve seen it, then?
20068After Sykes''s offer, and Tom Fox''s?
20068All your beautiful, expensive education an''all?''
20068Am I light- headed, Polly, or what''s that bell I heard?''
20068An''''ow can you want your poor father to open''is eyes an''look upon the ruins o''''is beautiful mansion?
20068An''what might you know about wool?
20068And Tom Fox here---- Why do n''t you speak up, Tom?''
20068And how could they do the work?
20068And if I write and tell them''----''Tell them what, pray?''
20068And now, what are you going to do with an empty mill, whose hands have all struck, and whose head is lying unconscious?''
20068And what brought you back a week before your time?''
20068And what has her grandfather to do with it?''
20068And what particular one do you want to go up-- the ginnel against my mill?''
20068And where''s the rest of you?
20068And who''s to settle that but me?''
20068And why has it only been saved for the minute?
20068Any relation to the great Nelson?''
20068Any truth in it?
20068Anything special on?''
20068Are n''t they behaving all right?''
20068Are the chimneys all standing just as usual?''
20068Are they burnt down or damaged in any way?''
20068Are you Miss Clay, then?''
20068Are you so fond of this schoolfellow, or do you find home dull?''
20068Are you sure you''re not sorry that your friends are going to get into trouble, eh?
20068At the title, the youth in the arm- chair roused himself, and said in quite a different tone,''Were you reading that, mater?
20068Besides, where did he get them from, and when did they come?
20068Besides, you do n''t know their faces, do you?''
20068Build up Balmoral again?
20068But I ca n''t imagine why you should n''t; she looks a very nice girl, and you are great friends, are n''t you?
20068But all your book- learnin''--w''at are you goin''to do wi''all that?
20068But are you ill, Miss Sarah?''
20068But do you suppose they wo n''t know you, miss?''
20068But how did mother take it?''
20068But that would be cutting off his nose to spite his ears, would n''t it?
20068But the mills, and my father-- are you sure that-- that he''s alive and well?''
20068But what difference would that make?
20068But wherever''s she going?
20068But why did n''t you coom to dinner, lad?''
20068But, I say, George, why did you go and suggest my inviting Horatia Cunningham to come and stay here?
20068But, I say, you have n''t got company, I hope?''
20068Ca n''t we send a special messenger?
20068Ca n''t you wait till then?''
20068Could n''t you ask some one to stay with you-- one of your schoolfellows, perhaps?''
20068Could n''t you have waited one day more?''
20068Did he get burnt?
20068Did he talk business, eh?''
20068Did n''t Sarah tell you?
20068Did n''t you know I was staying there?''
20068Did n''t you tell me Miss Horatia was to be of the party?
20068Do n''t excuse yourself, but take yourself off this moment, and never show your face in Ousebank again, or I''ll have you locked up, do you hear?''
20068Do n''t you know it''s dinner- time?''
20068Do n''t you look grand to- night, Sairey?''
20068Do n''t you see you''d be runnin''them on''is credit?
20068Do they go in for politics at that school, then?''
20068Do you hear?
20068Do you know anything, or do n''t you?''
20068Do you know of any plot to burn the house?
20068Do you know, Nanny?''
20068Do you mean not even me?''
20068Do you mean to say that you thought my father''s behaviour refined this afternoon?''
20068Do you see that the mills are workin''again?''
20068Do you see what''s happened at Balmoral?''
20068Do you suppose I should be here and not with her if she were n''t?''
20068Do you think they''ll burn the mills down?''
20068Do you want to ride?''
20068Does every one have one here?''
20068Does he want to come to terms, do you think?''
20068Does n''t he mind about the fire?''
20068Does n''t she work in his mills?''
20068For I suppose that''s what you''ve come for, is n''t it?''
20068For the life of her, Sarah could not show any great joy, but only inquired,''Has he asked for me, or is it only George he wants to see, mother?''
20068George Clay lit a cigarette, with a''May I?''
20068George understood his sister better, and, answering her look, said,''What''s the matter, Sarah?
20068Has anything more happened?''
20068Has she no guardian or chaperon?''
20068Have they been tried and let off?
20068Have you got into any mess?
20068He gave no sign of anything at all unusual being amiss, for he was always very grave, till his master said in a grim tone,''Had any visitors, Sykes?''
20068Horatia was not only a year younger than her schoolfellow, but she was far less fond of study, and she said frankly,''What''s intuition?
20068How are you going to get poor?
20068How could he?
20068How could the mills work without the hands?
20068How is she?''
20068How much did tha gown cost?
20068How much will that be?''
20068How should I know why Naomi''s sister hates Mr Clay?
20068How would you like that, pray?''
20068How''s that?
20068I do n''t want her to come here; ca n''t you see why not?
20068I said so, did n''t I, Nanny?''
20068I saw some country men and women get in, and I just followed them; and, oh Sarah, what does"ginnel"mean, and a"fettle"?''
20068I shall only be too thankful to have her safe by me; though who knows whether any of us are safe anywhere?''
20068I suppose he does some good with his money?
20068I suppose he''s gone to the mills?''
20068I suppose it is hidden behind those trees?''
20068I suppose it would n''t be safe for one of you to leave the gate?''
20068I suppose it''s some o''your college friends as''ave asked you?
20068I suppose you did n''t know anything about it beforehand?
20068I suppose you do n''t think we''re grand enough for your duchess- friend?
20068I thought we could, perhaps, go to Fountains Abbey to- day, and you would come with us?''
20068I thought you used it as a barn in the autumn and winter?''
20068I wo n''t be a minute,''Horatia answered her; and then, stepping into the passage, she said hurriedly,''Nancy, who told you that?
20068I would like''----''To have mud thrown at you?''
20068I''m glad to be your child; but, oh, why did you marry that man?
20068I''m going to see her this morning, so will you, please, go to the mills with Horatia?''
20068I''m only good to make money, eh?''
20068If you got on wi''your father there''d be no occasion for''er to do as she does; but if she''adn''t interfered to- night w''at would''ave''appened?
20068If you remember, I said to you when we first came here that it was no place for us, and now you see how true my words have come?''
20068In a different way?''
20068Incite them to more outrages?
20068Is Tom Fox, the chauffeur, ill, and have I got to do his work?''
20068Is it all goin''to be wasted?
20068Is it any use my trying?''
20068Is it different from any other kind of welcome?''
20068Is it my copy?''
20068Is it the house that''s on fire, and which part?''
20068Is mother ill?''
20068Is n''t that how it goes?''
20068Is there any chance of it?''
20068Is there no one to tell me anything?''
20068It would be too silly of them, to begin with; and, besides, why should they burn the trees?
20068It''s hot, is n''t it?''
20068Look what this man can do?
20068May I do what I like just for the first day or two?''
20068More trees burnt?''
20068Mr Mark Clay is it?''
20068Now then, what are ye scowling at?''
20068Now, Horatia, as will have been noticed, acted and spoke upon impulse, so she now asked eagerly,''What trouble has it saved?
20068Now, skating I can understand; it''s healthy exercise, and you might make use of it in cold countries; but rinking-- what''s the use on''t?''
20068Now, what would you like to hear-- the opera at Covent Garden, the Queen''s Hall concert, or what?''
20068Oh, do you mean that I was right about father''s revenge?''
20068Oh, whether there''s any chance of your ever going to the workhouse?''
20068Oh, whether there''s anything to croak about?
20068Oh,''as a thought struck her,''is there anything the matter?
20068One hears of kings becoming beggars, so why not Mr George Clay?''
20068One of the pickets, you say?
20068Our hands have gone out on strike?''
20068Perhaps I ought not to have asked to go over your mill?
20068Perhaps you are busy, and do n''t want us, like Mr Clay?''
20068Perhaps you prefer his home to mine?
20068Sally?
20068Sarah shot a quick look of surprise at her friend, who added,''You said I might choose what I liked best to do every day, did n''t you, Sarah?''
20068She''s really jolly, ai n''t she?
20068So I have been teaching you your holiday- lesson, have I?''
20068So she felt no shyness with Mr Blakeley, and said,''What difference do the changes make, Mr Blakeley?
20068Speak up, my lass; why are they ringing my bell?
20068Suddenly she lifted her head--''What holiday- essay are you going to write this summer?''
20068Suppose he had heard his brother called an"old buffer"?''
20068Surely they''ve never left those beautiful cars to burn themselves up?''
20068Surely you were n''t coming to Ousebank without coming to see me?''
20068Tell me, is there?
20068That is your wish, is it not?''
20068The band, a local one, struck up''La Rinka,''and even Mr Clay exclaimed,''That''s something to look at, Polly, ai n''t it?
20068The chauffeur told you so, do n''t you remember?
20068Then out spake brave Horatius... And how can man die better Than facing fearful odds, For the ashes of his fathers And the temples of his gods?
20068Then what are you going to do?
20068There''s been an accident''----''An accident?
20068This time it was George who spoke, inquiring,''Is there anything to croak about, then?''
20068To whom?''
20068To- morrow?''
20068To- night?''
20068W''at should be the matter?
20068W''at''as Ruth got?''
20068W''atever can you mean?''
20068W''ere''s the good of''avin''riches if you ca n''t enjoy it?''
20068W''y did n''t you come in time for it, Bill?
20068W''y should Naomi want a gun to shoot wi''?
20068W''y''asn''t Naomi put out your things?''
20068Was it in honour of little, insignificant me?
20068We got home in seven minutes last time; do you think we could do it in five to- day?''
20068We shall be friends again then as we used to be, sha''n''t we?''
20068Wear it at your big reception, will you?''
20068Were you all going to strike if he had n''t seen you?''
20068What am I to do if you go off and leave me all alone?
20068What are you going to do to- day?
20068What are you living on to- day-- air or excitement?
20068What are you looking at me like that for?
20068What can I do?
20068What d''ye say lads, shall we let her come into t''town if he wo n''t let us go into his park, or shall we turn her back same as he did us?''
20068What did Naomi say?''
20068What did she stain her hands for?
20068What did you go to him for, and what did he say?''
20068What do I pay to the hospitals for if it is n''t for them to be useful to me?
20068What do you mean?
20068What do you mean?
20068What do you mean?
20068What do you suppose the mistress would say to that?''
20068What do you think she said yesterday?
20068What do you want to go there for when you could come to mine, eh?
20068What do you want to rink for?
20068What has my father done now?''
20068What have I said wrong now?''
20068What have you heard or seen?
20068What is the girl like?''
20068What is the name of the house, then?''
20068What kind of place is the barn?''
20068What made you think anything was wrong?''
20068What on earth can it be, Sarah?
20068What on earth for, George?
20068What ought I to wear?
20068What will he do or say?''
20068What will you do with them?''
20068What''s doing?''
20068What''s gone crooked between you two?''
20068What''s her mother there for?''
20068What''s the matter?''
20068What''s wrong with the others, eh?''
20068Whatever did she go to see you for?
20068When Horatia saw what she had done she made a funny little face, and said in an undertone to Sarah,''I say, Sarah, ca n''t we walk to your house?''
20068When are they going to set fire to the house?
20068When could we have them?
20068When was it done?
20068Where is he?''
20068Where on earth did you spring from?''
20068Where t''been?''
20068Where''s Sarah?
20068Where''s the difference?''
20068Who do you think you''re talkin''to?
20068Who told you so?''
20068Who''d trust George if they thought''e was responsible?
20068Who''ll help to save a Yorkshireman''s home, however much he has blundered, for a Yorkshire family?''
20068Why are you so nice to my father?''
20068Why did n''t she stop and say good- mornin''to her dad?
20068Why did n''t you say Uncle Howroyd would stand surety, and refer them to Hurst?
20068Why did n''t you stop?''
20068Why did you come?''
20068Why do n''t you do the same thing?''
20068Why do n''t you go?''
20068Why do n''t you weave a lot of coat- lengths of that new shade?
20068Why does it interest you so much?''
20068Why does that frighten you so?
20068Why should we pack up and go away just because a granary and a few trees are burnt down?
20068Why, what''s the matter, Miss Sarah?
20068Will you take me to my father?''
20068With a little cry Naomi turned, to see herself confronted by Sykes, who exclaimed,''Whatever are you up to, Naomi?
20068Work?''
20068Would you, Horatia?''
20068You do n''t expect them to nod to me, do you?''
20068You do n''t want to be the talk of the town, do you?
20068You''ll only lose it, an''then w''ere will you be?''
20068You''re sure he_ is_ my father?
20068You''ve made money, then, Sykes?''
20068You''ve often been up a passage, I suppose?''
20068Your eyes must be sharper than mine,''he remarked; and then turning to Tom Fox, he said,''Can you see aught, Tom?''
20068beard the lion in his den?
20068ca n''t you see my place is burning?''
20068cried Horatia;''or is it a gramophone?''
20068did you hear what yon man said?''
20068how dare you go guessing at your uncle''s private affairs like that?''
20068however could you?
20068is n''t that just like a woman?
20068it''s you, is it?
20068who would have thought it?
20068you, Sally?''