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 |
---|---|
59148 | Do you have a defense to present? |
59148 | Is the defendant pleading guilty? |
59148 | Is the defendant ready? |
59148 | What is the percentage compressibility of caesium under 45,000 atmospheres of pressure, and how do you account for it? |
59148 | What kind of a farce is this? 59148 Why should not the scientist use the past without being burdened by it? |
59148 | After all, what right had Holmes to get stuffy at a time like this? |
59148 | He turned challengingly back to Cyber IX, paused for dramatic effect, and asked:"What are the magnitudes of a dream?" |
59148 | The Justice did n''t seem to mind; but who would-- all safe and snug in a nice gold frame? |
59148 | What if you were sitting here, and I was up there in a gold frame? |
59148 | What was old Hammurabi''s dream? |
59148 | What would Justice Holmes think?_[ Transcriber''s Note: This etext was produced from Worlds of If Science Fiction, March 1955. |
59148 | Why should not the lawyer and the judge use the hard- won laws of justice without being the slave of dusty law books?" |
12930 | 4ly, Whey was never on save this nobleman not so much as empanelled for this fault, much lesse put to death? |
12930 | As soon as they understood that,''Who were more forward than they?'' |
12930 | At last we landed at Saumur, but before I leive the,[88] fair Loier, what sall I say to thy commedation? |
12930 | But who can dare to be angry with Sir Walter Scott? |
12930 | Every song, every fiction-- was not that a transmitted piece of the very mind that they wanted to investigate? |
12930 | He answered, Was not the Dewill a fooll man, was he not a fooll? |
12930 | If so, whow could compliance and passive obedience to such a on be treason? |
12930 | Quelle grace n''a tu pas remarquée au ton de sa voix comme en ses paroles et ses beaux yeux; n''out ils pas beaucoup plus parlé que sa belle bouche? |
12930 | Then God wil say, Wheir are the souls thou hest won by your ministery heir thir 17 years? |
12930 | What can a man do when he have no proofes? |
12930 | What family have ye? |
12930 | What s your haste Margerit, is the meat ready yet? |
12930 | Wheirupon the prov: Will ye bid me doe it, Sir? |
12930 | Whey carry ye respect for that peice ye make a crosse of, and no for that ye make the gibet of, since they are both of on matter? |
12930 | Whirof made he him then, Magy? |
12930 | Who made man then? |
12930 | Whow can that be, can 10 turners[279] maintain you a whole day? |
12930 | Whow would ye called then, Robin? |
12930 | Why did you intend to write to me, Sir Walter, about intentions which you have said you were unconscious had any existence? |
12930 | Yes, that I am, what of it? |
12930 | [ 369] Covenanting minister(? |
12930 | [ 635] Sir George Downing, 1623(? |
12930 | qu''ils ont de charmes et de Maieste? |
15894 | Can you tell me what has happened? |
15894 | I''ve just left Charley Owen at the house-- you remember Charley Owen? |
15894 | John, what do you mean? 15894 Lunch? |
15894 | Lunch? |
15894 | May I come in? 15894 Shall I trouble you? |
15894 | Something happened? |
15894 | Uncle,he asked,"will it make things worse if I talk to you?" |
15894 | What do we know about the earth, except effects upon our consciousness? 15894 What is it? |
15894 | What was it-- the startling point you spoke of? |
15894 | Will you wait for me here a few minutes? 15894 After what I''ve gone through, after facing eternity without hope, what are mere years? 15894 Ca n''t you tell clearly if some one has been here-- what it is, in plain English, that has happened? |
15894 | Can you suppose that?" |
15894 | Do you see that you distress me? |
15894 | Do you see what that means?" |
15894 | Do you think you''d be able to describe such an experience?" |
15894 | Does n''t it, father? |
15894 | Has some one been here? |
15894 | He could not affect the mind of the lawyer; might he reach now, perhaps, the soul of the man? |
15894 | He''s not fit to take it in for a few hours-- don''t you think so?" |
15894 | How can I, now? |
15894 | How could he let a human being suffer as this one was suffering? |
15894 | How is he-- how is my uncle?" |
15894 | How is that something the same as the body-- the body that gets old and dies-- how can it be? |
15894 | Is it about-- the trial?" |
15894 | May I stay with you awhile?" |
15894 | The butler waited a moment, watching, hesitating, and then:"Have you had lunch, sir?" |
15894 | There are a hundred hypotheses that would fit the case of Jack''s innocence-- why is it reasonable to settle on the one that means his guilt? |
15894 | There are plenty of other cases where a man has shot his friend by accident-- why should n''t poor Jack be given the benefit of the doubt? |
15894 | Uncle,"he flashed out,"would it tear your soul to have me state the case as I see it? |
15894 | We''ve thought that all along, have n''t we? |
15894 | What can I do? |
15894 | When the organ is broken is the organist dead? |
15894 | Why should the thinking part die then, because the material part dies? |
15894 | Why? |
15894 | You know better than I how often juries make mistakes-- why should you trust this jury to have made none?" |
15752 | But,said the man who had lost and who held the horse,"the bridle certainly belongs to me, he does not take the bridle, does he?" |
15752 | How big was the sack? |
15752 | How much have you been paid for the decision? |
15752 | My dear Mr. Peck,I said,"will you trust me for two weeks''board?" |
15752 | What did the motion that Judge Terry made with his right hand indicate to you? |
15752 | What is this, Lake? |
15752 | And if so, why should the punishment be less? |
15752 | And was it not so in this case? |
15752 | As I entered he looked up and said,"Why, Judge, you do n''t look well, what is the matter?" |
15752 | As soon as I said this the owner of the bridle turned to his adversary and said,"What will you take for the horse?" |
15752 | Aspinwall replied,"But I do n''t know anything about your onions and potatoes; how should I? |
15752 | Broderick?" |
15752 | Can I help you?" |
15752 | Can the authority of the United States for the protection of their officers be less than their authority to protect their property? |
15752 | Customer:"What was done about it?" |
15752 | Did Judge Turner give any directions to the sheriff to arrest Judge Haun, notwithstanding he was holding his court? |
15752 | Did Mr. Field, in consequence of the order of Judge Turner, leave the court- room in company with the deputy sheriff? |
15752 | Did the Court of Sessions of Yuba County hold a session on that day? |
15752 | Did you continue in the District Court or did you go to the Court of Sessions? |
15752 | Did you spurn the wretch away who made a corrupt proposal to you, or did you hold counsel, sweet counsel with him? |
15752 | Do n''t you think it is a large knife?" |
15752 | Do you realize the fact, my dear Judge, that more than a quarter of a century has elapsed since these events transpired? |
15752 | Every one in greeting me, said"It is a glorious country,"or"Is n''t it a glorious country?" |
15752 | Field was fined by Judge Turner and ordered to be imprisoned? |
15752 | Has Mr. Field or Mr. Mulford ever been restored to the bar by the District Court since the order of expulsion on the 10th of June? |
15752 | Has that order ever been vacated on the records of the District Court? |
15752 | He replied,"What is it that worries you?" |
15752 | How then? |
15752 | How was he to be punished? |
15752 | I asked,"Why not?" |
15752 | I hurried back to the saloon; and as the jurors were standing about chatting with each other I exclaimed,"How is this? |
15752 | I replied,"But, suppose a man puts his name down and afterwards do n''t want the lots?" |
15752 | If this be not so, in the language of the Supreme Court,"Why do we have marshals at all?" |
15752 | Just at this moment Mr. Rodman M. Price, formerly Governor of New Jersey, made his appearance and exclaimed,"How is this? |
15752 | Mr. Wigginton said that Mrs. Terry asked her husband what he could do, and he replied, showing more feeling than he had before:"Do? |
15752 | Mrs. Terry took a third seat from him, and seeing him, said:"What, are you in this car too?" |
15752 | Shall it be said that Justice Field ought to have gone to the nearest justice of the peace and obsequiously begged to have Terry placed under bonds? |
15752 | She repeated her question:"Are you going to take the responsibility of ordering me to deliver up that contract?" |
15752 | Then, after a short pause, I remarked,"What is the case against your prisoner? |
15752 | Turning to me he said,"You say it is all right?" |
15752 | Was the order entered on the records of the District Court, expelling Messrs. Field, Goodwin, and Mulford? |
15752 | Was the trial of Cameron against Sutter proceeded with after Mr. Field left? |
15752 | Were any directions given about a posse? |
15752 | Were any members of the bar expelled by Judge Turner on that day? |
15752 | Were you in court on the 10th day of June? |
15752 | What day was that order entered? |
15752 | What useful functions can they perform in the economy of the National Government? |
15752 | What value would there be to a title in one man, with a right of invasion in the whole world? |
15752 | What was to be done with the prisoner? |
15752 | What, then, would your court do? |
15752 | When you had removed the cover you raised the lid slightly, but in a moment said to me,"What is this, Lake? |
15752 | Who can say that her spirit was not then hovering over him and whispering caution in his ear? |
15752 | Who knows but that a mother''s prayer for the protection of her son, breathed years before, was answered then? |
15752 | Who made up the records of the Court of Sessions on that day? |
15752 | Who took the place of Mr. Field after he left? |
15752 | You have sent Turner where there are only grizzly bears and Indians; why not let him remain there? |
15752 | or"Did you ever see a more glorious country?" |
15752 | you have not had your cigars? |
28980 | I suppose you to mean that if He could, I ought to be able to give you what you ask? |
28980 | ''Can a man of your age,''he asks,''have the accumulated capital of knowledge necessary to stand such a periodical expenditure?'' |
28980 | ''Did you ever know your father do a thing because it was pleasant?'' |
28980 | ''Gurney, what''s the difference between justification and sanctification?'' |
28980 | ''How can we sow the seed and refuse to recognise the crop?'' |
28980 | ''I said at last,''he proceeds,''"If Jesus Christ were here, could He say no more than you do?" |
28980 | ''Stephen major,''he once said to my brother,''if you do not take more pains, how can you ever expect to write good longs and shorts? |
28980 | ''Was not that,''says Fitzjames,''a truly British comment?'' |
28980 | ''What difference can it make,''he asks,''whether millions of years ago our ancestors were semi- rational baboons?'' |
28980 | ''Why are you,''asked one of his friends, who was a thorough partisan,''such a devil in politics?'' |
28980 | ''You have done your work and got your fee, and what more do you want?'' |
28980 | ''[ 154] This, therefore, leads to the ultimate question: What, in the utilitarian phrase, is the''sanction''of morality? |
28980 | And even if there be none, why should you not live like a man, Enjoying whatever you have as much and as long as you can? |
28980 | And here, too, in 1891 he published two little volumes of verse:''Lapsus Calami''and''Quo Musa Tendis?'' |
28980 | And what is the end of the law? |
28980 | And why should we maintain morality? |
28980 | Are we bound to treat semi- barbarous nations on the same terms as we consider to govern our relations with France or Germany? |
28980 | Because Christianity is true and all other religions false? |
28980 | Briefly, the utilitarian asks, What is the sanction of morality? |
28980 | But if so, what becomes of the morality? |
28980 | But if the facts are insufficient to a lawyer''s eye, what is to happen? |
28980 | But is such morality satisfactory? |
28980 | But what then? |
28980 | But what was the message which could reach a hard- headed young''lawyer by nature''with a turn for Benthamism? |
28980 | But what was to be said for the Church of England since the Reformation? |
28980 | By what law? |
28980 | Can it, for example, give sufficient reasons for self- sacrifice-- that is, neglect of my own happiness? |
28980 | Can it, then, be indifferent in regard to religions? |
28980 | Consider men as a multitude of independent units, and the problem occurs, How can they be bound into wholes? |
28980 | Could he have been asked by Providence at any time, Where shall I place you? |
28980 | Could he then lean to Rome? |
28980 | Could the two sounds, separated by an interval, be one sound? |
28980 | Did human memory run to the year 1190, when Richard I. set out on the third crusade, or to 1194, when he returned? |
28980 | Do they not mean this or that, he would ask, which is quite different to what they had been made to mean? |
28980 | Do we, then, disbelieve in our own creed, or are we engaged in a solemn mockery? |
28980 | Does that imply that Scotland was then subject to force, and that now force has disappeared? |
28980 | Have I any right to talk of streets running with blood? |
28980 | He looked at the dark, grave man and wondered,''Is he now reading my character at a glance?'' |
28980 | He then reduced the sentence to nine months, saying,''Does that satisfy you?'' |
28980 | How are we to deal with that great inheritance bequeathed to us by the courage of heroes and the wisdom of statesmen? |
28980 | How are we to know what is right and wrong, and what are our motives for approving and disapproving the good and the bad? |
28980 | How does this apply to the case of sex? |
28980 | How many actions even, which would be gladly remembered, are constantly forgotten? |
28980 | How were they to be combined with his earlier prepossessions? |
28980 | How, again, is a European to appreciate the value of an oath made upon a cow''s tail or a tiger''s skin? |
28980 | How, then, was Newman to answer an inquirer? |
28980 | However reluctant they may be, they will have to answer the question, Is this religion true or not? |
28980 | I have often wondered over the problem, What constitutes the identity of a newspaper? |
28980 | If I may remove one stone from the building, am I not at liberty to remove any stone which proves to be superfluous? |
28980 | If you are not a man of taste, how can you ever hope to be of use in the world?'' |
28980 | If you do not write good longs and shorts, how can you ever be a man of taste? |
28980 | If you help the Brahmos alone, what will you say to the''radical league,''which repudiates all religious belief? |
28980 | Is he not undertaking too much? |
28980 | Is it not more likely that, at a pinch, I might myself run in quite a different direction? |
28980 | Is it possible_ ridentem dicere verum_? |
28980 | Is it, then, a treatise upon Greek or Latin grammar, or on the grammatical construction of classical authors? |
28980 | Is the end good, and are the means adequate and not excessively costly? |
28980 | Is the mob triumphant in Paris? |
28980 | Is there,''he asks,''anything illogical or inconsistent in this view?'' |
28980 | Lord Lytton, some time after this, wrote to him about his book, and he replies to the question,''What is a good man?'' |
28980 | Might not his ambition have to struggle with similar obstacles at the bar or in the pulpit? |
28980 | Now the oppressed had the scourge in their own hands; how would they apply it? |
28980 | One point may just be mentioned: If a man steals a cow, and sells it to an innocent purchaser, who is to suffer the loss when the theft is discovered? |
28980 | Or are we morally entitled to take into account the fact that they are semi- barbarous? |
28980 | Or to the Romanising party in the Church? |
28980 | Shall we endeavour to govern on native principles and by native agency? |
28980 | Sometimes they descended to mere commonplaces-- Is a little knowledge a dangerous thing? |
28980 | That, I understand, is like asking a lawyer, What is a_ Habeas Corpus_? |
28980 | The one question is what is to be the supreme authority? |
28980 | The only question is which? |
28980 | The question for the lawyer is, did the prisoner mean to kill?--not, what were his motives for killing? |
28980 | The''Quo Musa Tendis?'' |
28980 | Then the question occurs: Is this a logical argument, or an appeal from argument to feeling? |
28980 | To maintain the law? |
28980 | To parody a famous phrase of Hume''s, Cambridge virtually said to its pupils,''Is this a treatise upon geometry or algebra? |
28980 | Was there, he asked, any real hardship in that? |
28980 | We had enforced peace between rival sects; allowed conversion; set up schools teaching sciences inconsistent with Hindoo( and with Christian?) |
28980 | Were they all hypocritical? |
28980 | What are to be the relations between democracy and intellectual culture? |
28980 | What did you mean, it would be asked, by your former profession that you would enforce religious equality? |
28980 | What does it matter? |
28980 | What is the corresponding element in the moral law? |
28980 | What is the good of government in general? |
28980 | What must be the principle of cohesion? |
28980 | What must we do? |
28980 | What of the acts passed to secure the immunity of all converts from legal penalties? |
28980 | What, then, are the cases? |
28980 | What, then, is morality? |
28980 | What, then, is the value of an_ Ã priori_ argument that it must exist? |
28980 | When they ask to have their marriages legalised, will you reply,''You are a small body, and therefore we will do you an injustice''? |
28980 | Which of those was to be the school of the future, and which represented the true utilitarian tradition? |
28980 | Why could not the examiners? |
28980 | Why is not a similar liberty to be granted to others who have abandoned their religion? |
28980 | Why not in religious matters? |
28980 | Why not? |
28980 | Why should he not show a similar trust in Providence? |
28980 | Why should not a''moral text- book''for Indian schools be issued in the Queen''s name? |
28980 | Why should we neglect any source from which light may be obtained? |
28980 | Would they not be far more humiliating for English legislation? |
28980 | Would they not use the same machinery in order to crush the rich and the exalted, and take in the next place to crushing each other? |
28980 | [ 139] Has, then, a man who believes in God and a future life a moral right to deter others from attacking those doctrines by showing disapproval? |
28980 | but What is meant by the editorial''We''? |
40076 | Had he sealed the several patents for the then ensuing year? |
40076 | Some,he observed,"there are in the Tower who were put in it when very young: should they bring a_ habeas corpus_, would the court deliver them?" |
40076 | Yes,said he;"they no doubt come to do me a kindness; and what kindness have I if I refuse their money?" |
40076 | [ 134] A great controversy has arisen,who is chiefly to be blamed-- Jeffreys or James?" |
40076 | ''And what ailed the old blockhead then,''cried Jeffreys,''that he did not take it?'' |
40076 | ''Does your lordship think,''said Baxter,''that any jury will convict a man on such a trial as this?'' |
40076 | ''How those are to be punished who hindered the king from exercising those things which appertain to his royalty and prerogative?'' |
40076 | ''How those are to be punished who moved the king to consent to the making of the said statute?'' |
40076 | ''How those are to be punished who procured that statute and commission?'' |
40076 | ''What punishment they deserved who compelled, straightened, or necessitated the king to consent to the making of the said statute and commission?'' |
40076 | ''Whether the king, whenever he pleases, can dissolve the parl., and command the lords and commons to depart from thence, or not?'' |
40076 | ; by means of sending for and imposing which statute, the said late statute, ordinance, and commission, were devised and brought forth in parl.?'' |
40076 | After Mr. Van Dyke had concluded, Mr. Meredith inquired:''Is Mr. Williamson discharged?'' |
40076 | Again Baxter essayed to speak, and again Jeffreys bellowed,''Richard, Richard, dost thou think we will let thee poison the court? |
40076 | Am I to be allowed to discredit the King''s ministers because I can manage a proposition, in itself doubtful, with a better pen than another man? |
40076 | And if the sheriff receives no special directions, what is he to do? |
40076 | And is it no reflection on the king that, instead of distributing justice to his people, he prevents them from obtaining justice? |
40076 | And what crime is that? |
40076 | And what had the affair at Christiana to do with war against the United States? |
40076 | And what is treason? |
40076 | Are they all stark mad?" |
40076 | As to his ordinary dealing, he was as honest as the driven snow was white; and why not, having no regard for money or desire to be rich? |
40076 | Attorney?" |
40076 | But how can it be determined to be useless until the case is heard? |
40076 | But without a Parliament, how was this army to be kept in a proper state of discipline? |
40076 | C. Baron._--"This is all you have to say for yourself?" |
40076 | C. J._--''I can not help your doubts; was there not proved a discourse of the battle and the army at supper time?'' |
40076 | Can any thing be worse?" |
40076 | Chief Justice Hyde presiding, Keach was called to the bar, when the following dialogue ensued:--_ Hyde._--Did you write this book? |
40076 | Did it arise under the Constitution or the laws of the United States? |
40076 | Did she not inquire of Dunne whether Hickes had been in the army? |
40076 | Do you not think that the king may govern his people by law?" |
40076 | Do you think we come here to break the laws?" |
40076 | Do you, with all the mischief that hell hath in you, think to have it in a court of justice? |
40076 | Does any body doubt the jurisdiction of the district court to punish contempt? |
40076 | Finch?" |
40076 | How did the counsel get over the fact, that his client was in contempt? |
40076 | How far can a man in contempt come into court and purge that contempt? |
40076 | How is he to answer what has not been filed? |
40076 | If men are as villanous at their death as in their lives, may what they say be published as the words of dying men? |
40076 | If so, by whom was public justice interrupted? |
40076 | In treason, there being two witnesses, the one believed, the other disbelieved, may there be a conviction? |
40076 | Is he entitled to the writ he has asked for? |
40076 | Is he to be called upon to give an account of them?" |
40076 | Is it impossible, my lord?" |
40076 | Is sentence to be stayed till special directions are given by the king? |
40076 | James or Jeffreys? |
40076 | Or, in other words, is it a case arising under the constitution and laws of the United States? |
40076 | Or, when has Congress ever attempted to legislate upon this question? |
40076 | Ought he not, then, by the custom he imposes, to enable himself to perform these duties? |
40076 | Pray, by what law, or custom, or charter, is this privilege of censure exercised? |
40076 | Reus est mortis._( What more do we need? |
40076 | Scatter''em?" |
40076 | Shall not the subject have liberty to petition the king but in Parliament? |
40076 | Shall we make inquiries whether his commands are lawful? |
40076 | The chief justice, without expressing any dissent, merely said,"Gentlemen of the jury, have you a mind to drink before you go?" |
40076 | Thompson._--"My lord, is the fact true or false? |
40076 | Thus he concluded:--"What can we do but walk in the steps of our forefathers? |
40076 | Was he to desert his patron, or to sacrifice his place? |
40076 | Was it a lawful writ? |
40076 | What article or section of the constitution has any bearing upon the right of a master to pass through a free State with his slave or slaves? |
40076 | What do you say for yourself?" |
40076 | What have I done that may give them cause to think of me so poor a spirit as to be thus trifled with?" |
40076 | What is he detained for? |
40076 | What is that to giving a woman the sacrament several times?" |
40076 | What will they not do when your majesty gives them a discharge at once? |
40076 | When he came home at night, he broke out in exclamations--"What can be their meaning? |
40076 | When they entered the council chamber, Jeffreys said to them,"Do you own the petition?" |
40076 | Where a choice is given, by what means is the choice to be exercised? |
40076 | Wherever the defendant thinks it may go hard with him, are we to have a trial whether the sheriffs be sheriffs or no? |
40076 | Whether the king be not the sole judge both of the danger, and when and how it is to be prevented?" |
40076 | Who shall call in question the justice of the king''s actions? |
40076 | Who would you have the process go to?" |
40076 | Why did he not resign? |
40076 | Why did you not bring him to me? |
40076 | Why do you suffer him without a guardian? |
40076 | Why had they not been propounded in the form that the court might think proper to put them? |
40076 | Why may not he be the man?" |
40076 | Why should my Lord of Lincoln keep these letters by him, but to the end to publish them, and to have them at all times in readiness to be published? |
40076 | Why, how now? |
40076 | Would any judge in the commonwealth listen to such a reason for treating the sentence as void? |
40076 | _ Brampston, C. J._--"The denying of ship money may be, and I think is, very wrong; but is it against the king''s supremacy?" |
40076 | _ Chief Justice Jeffreys._--"Who is this woman? |
40076 | _ Clerk._--Is he guilty of all the rest of the indictment, that sentence excepted? |
40076 | _ Clerk._--Of what part? |
40076 | _ Clerk._--What is that? |
40076 | _ Crook._--"Is this canting, to speak the words of the Scripture?" |
40076 | _ Fairfax._--"By what authority do you sit here?" |
40076 | _ Foster, C. J._--"John Crook, when did you take the oath of allegiance?" |
40076 | _ Harrison._--"As a loyal subject, I did labor the defence of his majesty, and how can I be guilty of a crime? |
40076 | _ Hyde._--What have you to do to take other men''s trades out of their hands? |
40076 | _ Jeffreys._--"Did you publish it?" |
40076 | _ Jeffreys._--"Pray, what commission have you to be so impudent in court? |
40076 | _ Keach._--Is my religion so bad that I may not be allowed to speak? |
40076 | _ Lord Chancellor._--"_Quid adhuc desideramus, testimonium? |
40076 | _ Lord Keeper._--"Gentlemen, what do you mean? |
40076 | _ Lord Keeper._--"What is that?" |
40076 | _ Lord Russell._--"May I have somebody write to help my memory?" |
40076 | _ Lord Russell._--"My lord, may I not have the use of pen, ink, and paper?" |
40076 | _ Lord Russell._--"My lord, may I not make use of any papers I have?" |
40076 | against Mich. de la Pole, Earl of Suffolk, was erroneous and revocable, or not?'' |
40076 | and if no special directions are given, is the prisoner, being attainted, to escape all punishment? |
40076 | any of the said judges or officers for any of their offences?'' |
40076 | held at Westm., be not derogatory to the loyalty and prerogative of our said lord the king?'' |
40076 | what reason have men to rebel? |
40076 | where am I?--in Bristol? |
40076 | you expect we should prove you a priest by witnesses who saw you ordained? |
40389 | Are they, then, ripe for civil war, and ready to imbrue their hands in kindred blood? 40389 Can it possibly interest either their feelings or their judgment? |
40389 | Can our Countrymen be caught by so flimsy a pretext? 40389 Could any friend of his kind be neutral?" |
40389 | Did not the American Revolution produce the French Revolution? 40389 If Gen. MARSHALL thought them unconstitutional or dangerous to liberty, would he"be content merely to say they were unnecessary? |
40389 | If vast exertions were then made to acquire independence, will not the same exertions be now made to maintain it? |
40389 | In what manner would France have treated any foreign minister, who should have dared to so conduct himself toward this republic?... 40389 It was cruelly insinuated to G[eorge] W[ashington],"writes Marshall''s sister- in- law,"by an after great S[olo? |
40389 | Nay,exclaimed the sarcastic savant,"what will become of the people named King? |
40389 | Shall we never see you again in Richmond? 40389 Was he[ the President] to be a_ menial_ to the House in a business wherein himself was seriously charged? |
40389 | Was it wise, then, to do so while such a probability existed? |
40389 | We hear, incessantly, from the old foes of the Constitution''this is unconstitutional and that is,''and, indeed, what is not? 40389 Where,"asked Publicola,"is the power that should control them[ Congress]?" |
40389 | Would a man of General MARSHALL''S force of reasoning, simply denominate_ laws useless_,if he thought them unconstitutional? |
40389 | [ 1199] What had become of the French mission? 40389 [ 1326] Who should be Secretary of State for the remaining fateful four weeks? |
40389 | [ 318] And our envoy to carry out this shameful programme!--was it not that same Jay who once tried to barter away the Mississippi? 40389 [ 447] But how should the address be worded? |
40389 | [ 726] Who should answer Talleyrand? 40389 [ 985] How, now, could the Federalists repel Republican assaults on this direct tax? |
40389 | And all this for what? |
40389 | And could not the consequences have been avoided by a different line of conduct on our part? |
40389 | And did anybody play backgammon in that way? |
40389 | And did not the French Revolution produce all the Calamities and Desolations to the human Race and the whole Globe ever since?" |
40389 | And who but the National Government would dare make a treaty with British Monarchy, sacrificing American rights? |
40389 | And why did Marshall talk of ejecting him by force of arms? |
40389 | And why had Adams done this? |
40389 | And, in any event, why ask the President to send for the court proceedings? |
40389 | Are we already so degenerate as to acknowledge a superior in the United States?" |
40389 | But what did Jefferson mean by"heresies"? |
40389 | But where could anything be found in the Constitution"authorizing Congress to express terms or to assume the debts of the states?" |
40389 | But... shall the officers of our government prescribe rules of conduct to freemen? |
40389 | By whom? |
40389 | Could any but this question have been asked by Marshall? |
40389 | Did it extend to the banishment of the printers& to the slavery of the press? |
40389 | Did the treaty revive the debt thus extinguished? |
40389 | Does not your Government"know that nothing is to be obtained here without money?" |
40389 | Even majorities have no right to do as they please; if so, what security has the individual citizen? |
40389 | Had he not become the voice of the majority? |
40389 | Had not mobs been the precursors of our own Revolution? |
40389 | Had they the money ready? |
40389 | How long would the[ British] Government be content with unsuccessful remonstrance and unavailing memorials?" |
40389 | If he thinks he has done right, why should he be afraid of letting his measures be known?" |
40389 | If so, what were its doctrines? |
40389 | If the Legislature of Virginia had gone so far before the infant National establishment was under way, how far might not succeeding Legislatures go? |
40389 | If the party recover its pristine energy& splendor, shall I ascribe it to such cunning, paltry, indecisive, backdoor conduct? |
40389 | If"a French army should be crossing the Atlantic to invade our territory,"would anybody insist on disbanding our army? |
40389 | In fine, are you disposed to advocate any other, or a closer connection with that nation, than exists at the ratification of the treaty of 1794? |
40389 | In what manner would the American Government have treated him[ Genêt] had he been the representative of any other nation than France?" |
40389 | Might not Marshall become a candidate for Congress? |
40389 | On some occasion Madame de Villette approached him:--"Why will you not lend us money?" |
40389 | One of Talleyrand''s many secretaries asked Gerry"what it contained? |
40389 | Or, in the event of your election, will you use your influence to obtain a appeal of these laws? |
40389 | Should his friends submit to this? |
40389 | Suppose events did develop a formal declaration of war with France? |
40389 | Suppose, said Senator Ross, that"persons should claim to be Electors who had never been_ properly_ appointed[ elected], should their vote be received? |
40389 | Suppose, says Marshall, that America should do the things Great Britain was doing? |
40389 | The question was,"whether self- government and national liberty be worth the money which must be expended to preserve them? |
40389 | Then"what has led to our present conversation?" |
40389 | To whom? |
40389 | Was Paine''s pamphlet"the canonical book of scripture?" |
40389 | Was it not the prison where kings thrust their subjects to perish of starvation and torture? |
40389 | Was that"principle"sound? |
40389 | Was this criminal deed done in British jurisdiction? |
40389 | What American,"asks Marshall,"could hesitate in the option?" |
40389 | What answer could the Federalists make to these Republican charges now? |
40389 | What is your answer?" |
40389 | What must Marshall have thought? |
40389 | What should be done to avert this misfortune? |
40389 | What should be done"by the friends of order and true liberty to keep the[ presidential] chair from being occupied by an enemy[ Jefferson] of both?" |
40389 | What situation would the country be in if such a case was to happen? |
40389 | What was the result? |
40389 | What was to become of"law and order"when the Nation''s head thus sanctioned resistance to both? |
40389 | What were such"means?" |
40389 | What were these measures of the Directory? |
40389 | What would have happened if Great Britain had been victorious? |
40389 | When might they expect an answer? |
40389 | When we see men like General Marshall voting for such a principle in a Government of a portion of the American people is there no cause for alarm?" |
40389 | Where now were our free institutions? |
40389 | Where then would America be? |
40389 | Where, then? |
40389 | Who are the creditors? |
40389 | Who could discern in this kindly person, with"lax, lounging manners,"indolent, and fond of jokes, the heart that dared all things? |
40389 | Who is the superior of the people? |
40389 | Who knows the real conditions in Europe?--the"effect of the late decisive victories of France?... |
40389 | Who was the best lawyer in Richmond, asked he of his host? |
40389 | Why be precipitate? |
40389 | Why did the envoys treat the money proposition as coming from the Directory? |
40389 | Why did we not aid French Republicans against the hordes of"despotism"? |
40389 | Why not Patrick Henry? |
40389 | Why, he asks, have the Americans made no proposition to the Directory? |
40389 | Why, he asks, is Marshall so vague on the constitutionality of the Alien and Sedition Laws? |
40389 | Why, then, he asked,"should the confiscation of British property be deemed less just in the event of an American triumph?" |
40389 | Will it be believed that the word was retained by a very small majority? |
40389 | Will not this, or something like it, be the wretched fate of our country?... |
40389 | Will the Directory stop further outrages on American commerce, ask the envoys? |
40389 | Would the envoys now give it? |
40389 | [ 1152] Marshall wondered whether this simple way out of the tangle could"afford just cause of discontent to France? |
40389 | [ 228] And why was this tribute exacted? |
40389 | [ 230] Should such a despotic law be obeyed? |
40389 | [ 351] I take the earliest opportunity of asking if you will accept the appointment? |
40389 | [ 367] With whom, asked Thompson, was the treaty made? |
40389 | [ 421]"What am I to do for a Secretary of State?" |
40389 | [ 635] Why hesitate? |
40389 | [ 996] Who should prepare the answer of the House to the President''s speech? |
40389 | _ 3d._ Are you in favor of an alliance, offensive and defensive, with_ Great Britain_? |
40389 | _ 5th._ Are you an advocate for the Alien and Sedition Bills? |
40389 | he exclaimed,"what can a straggling pamphlet... do against a hundred thousand volumes of miscellaneous falsehood in folio?" |
38062 | ''Maybe you might give it to me?'' 38062 A duel?" |
38062 | And after that? |
38062 | And if it was themselves they left after them,retorted James, still in thunder,"what was that to him?" |
38062 | And what happened her, James? |
38062 | And what''s this I hear about Stephen Casey? |
38062 | Anything else you''d like to know? 38062 Anything else you''d like to know?" |
38062 | Are you sure it was here you left it? |
38062 | But apart from the climate and the architecture, was there any reason for suicide? |
38062 | Cornelius Casey? |
38062 | Could it have been into the pocket of his coat that I put the teapot----? |
38062 | D''ye dare me? |
38062 | D''ye mean Miss Cooney O''Rattigan and her mandoline? |
38062 | Did he believe you? |
38062 | Did they put it in their mouths-- where you have it, Father? |
38062 | Did they see the fellows? |
38062 | Did you observe that Lord Derryclare was wearing your new motor- gloves? |
38062 | Did your father ever tell you of the great hunt out of Killoge into the Fanaghy cliffs? |
38062 | Do they expect us to creep in in tennis shoes? |
38062 | Do you mean that? |
38062 | Do you mean to say this is n''t good enough? |
38062 | Do you think they''ll start in this weather? |
38062 | Drunk, I suppose? |
38062 | For goodneth''ake have none o''ye any matcheth, that ye could n''t come and help me? |
38062 | Has Mr. Chichester been on board the_ Sheila_? |
38062 | Have I? |
38062 | Have we all now? |
38062 | Have you a match there? |
38062 | Have you any more soup there, James? |
38062 | He found himself a success at Shreelane? |
38062 | How can I plead when I have n''t a blathted tooth in me head? |
38062 | How did the chestnut horse go with----? |
38062 | How did they lose the license at all? |
38062 | How does it go? 38062 How many does Knox usually have out?" |
38062 | How much do you owe Goggin? |
38062 | I believe he has done some yachting? |
38062 | I d''no would he bite me? |
38062 | I daresay getting that beast down the steps was rather a strain? |
38062 | I daresay you never heard of Major Apollo Riggs? 38062 I did n''t know you had one that would carry a lady?" |
38062 | I see something white beyond you, Mr. M''Cabe,''he said respectfully,"might that be them?" |
38062 | I should like to hear what you''ve been giving Mr. Chichester to eat? |
38062 | I suppose eighteen and sixpence would n''t be any use to you? |
38062 | I suppose it''s from Larkie McRory he got the English? |
38062 | I suppose the foreign gentleman told you his own name then? |
38062 | I suppose they were a fit for a patient of his? |
38062 | I suppose this is-- or was-- Killoge Wood? |
38062 | I suppose we may thank Miss Longmuir for the safe line? |
38062 | I suppose you ride about 11.6? |
38062 | I suppose you''ll have a job for me at Tory Lodge when I get the sack from the misthress? |
38062 | I thought the Coroner''s Jury found that he fell down the shaft? |
38062 | I wonder did he find them? |
38062 | I wonder which of them does most damage? |
38062 | I wonder will he be able to hold that horse in a snaffle? 38062 In compliment to the visitors, I suppose?" |
38062 | Is he any good? |
38062 | Is he come to buy horses for the German Army? |
38062 | Is it me? |
38062 | Is it possible that she''s keeping him for dinner? |
38062 | Is n''t that the room with the powdering- closet off it? |
38062 | Is that Sergeant Leonard? |
38062 | Is this an oxtion or is it a conversassiony? 38062 It''s up there somewhere he lives,"said Flurry, turning his cart across the road;"which''ll you do, hold the horse or go look for him?" |
38062 | Last night it was near one o''clock in the morning when they had high tea, and then they took to singing songs, and playing''Are you there, Mike?'' 38062 May I try?" |
38062 | Maybe you could give me the man''s name, James? |
38062 | Mr. Tebbutts is in the James the Second room, is n''t he? |
38062 | Mrs. Yeates, do you know I can make a topping rice- pudding? |
38062 | Must I? 38062 Now, then, shall we have the flag up?" |
38062 | Oh dear, why so? |
38062 | Oh, I ca n''t eat our own game, can I? |
38062 | Oh, you do, do you? |
38062 | Rebuild the chimneys, is it? 38062 Should you know the pony if you saw her?" |
38062 | Start? 38062 Ten shillings may I say? |
38062 | That''s the pretty one, is n''t it? |
38062 | The Bride? |
38062 | The pony? |
38062 | The word is Fare- well, I understand? |
38062 | Then we''re to meet you on Friday? |
38062 | Then why did n''t you come before? |
38062 | They went one better than we did,I said, but, as was intended, I felt cheered--"what day were they there?" |
38062 | Towards the cliffs? |
38062 | Was he a water- bailiff too? |
38062 | Was that why they flew? |
38062 | Was there a lady with him? |
38062 | Was this in the cellar the time of the flood? |
38062 | Well, Stephen,began Mrs. Knox irritably,"what about the cattle? |
38062 | Well, what do you want us to do? |
38062 | Were you so? |
38062 | What colour might vulcanite be, sir? |
38062 | What did he do, is it? 38062 What did you do then, James?" |
38062 | What did your anglers say to that? |
38062 | What happened Kenny? |
38062 | What have they done with those cubs? |
38062 | What have you done with Anthony? 38062 What horse is first?" |
38062 | What paper- chase? |
38062 | What sport had you, Major? |
38062 | What the blazes is holding it? 38062 What the dooth will I do to- morrow?" |
38062 | What thing? |
38062 | What way did it go? |
38062 | What way is he? |
38062 | What''ll we do now? |
38062 | What''s happened to the other Fanaghy cub? |
38062 | What''s that, sir? |
38062 | What''s this confounded thing? |
38062 | Where are the hounds? |
38062 | Where did Mr. Reardon get the mare, Jerry? |
38062 | Where is the auction? |
38062 | Where the devil----? |
38062 | Where''s Goggin? |
38062 | Where''s Mossoo? |
38062 | Which crack? |
38062 | Which is Lyney Garrett? |
38062 | Who are you? |
38062 | Who has the nerve to tell Mr. Chichester that there''s something to eat here? |
38062 | Who is that? |
38062 | Who''s second, coming up to the flag now? |
38062 | Who? 38062 Why did they do that, I wonder?" |
38062 | Why do n''t you get them out and blow up the place? |
38062 | Why so? |
38062 | Why the devil did n''t you say this at first? |
38062 | Why would n''t you say the canary was an eagle? |
38062 | Will this go on much longer? |
38062 | Will you kindly make my apologies to the Master? |
38062 | ''And what proof have you?'' |
38062 | ''And where do you live?'' |
38062 | ''How do you know it was a salmon at all?'' |
38062 | ''How would I know,''says I,''me that have no learning?'' |
38062 | ''Is it how would I know?'' |
38062 | ''Ow about rats? |
38062 | ''What ails ye?'' |
38062 | ''What have she in it?'' |
38062 | Ah, but after all,"went on Miss Bennett largely,"what can you expect from a cob but a kick? |
38062 | And did n''t his wife lose all her hens in one week? |
38062 | And how secret the McRorys kept it!--and did you see it was punch the old woman was giving them?" |
38062 | Any advance on five shillings?" |
38062 | Are the drains quite in order?" |
38062 | Armstrong?" |
38062 | Did n''t you, Mossoo? |
38062 | Did n''t you?" |
38062 | Did the Tebbutts ladies exact bathing for their young? |
38062 | Did the brothers demand trout fishing? |
38062 | Do n''t you remember that Lyney''s father said,''Let ye keep out from them lads in Poundlick''? |
38062 | Do you remember, M''ma, what happened to Mary and me that evening, the time we missed you in the dark?" |
38062 | Does n''t it, Chichester?" |
38062 | Have ye a match, sir? |
38062 | I was not without experience of the local mason and his fortnights; what could Andrew know of such? |
38062 | I wonder did they buy that at the Jumble Sale after the Fancy Fair in the Town Hall?" |
38062 | I wonder if you could get me a glass of water?" |
38062 | If Chichester had been the type she fancied, was I merely a Super- Chichester? |
38062 | Is that Minx?" |
38062 | Is there anything the matter with them?" |
38062 | It was certain that the tram- rails must lead to the shaft, but which way had Philippa gone? |
38062 | Might I ask what your name is?'' |
38062 | Miss McRory replied that she''d fall off in a minute if she were to let go the mane, and why would n''t I eat them myself? |
38062 | Now, M''ma, why would n''t I give him a civil answer?" |
38062 | The star, now a moon of acetylene ferocity, slackened speed, and a voice behind it said:"What''s up?" |
38062 | They tell me that''s all cut down now?" |
38062 | We all said unanimously, and with equal futility,"How-- on-- earth----?" |
38062 | Well, Casey,"she went on,"what is it you want with me?" |
38062 | What do you call that, I''d thank you to tell me?" |
38062 | What do you call that, Major Yeates?" |
38062 | What the deuce is this his name is? |
38062 | What way did she do it?" |
38062 | What''s the brute at now?" |
38062 | Who the dickens has she got hold of?" |
38062 | Will you take me to Killoge to- morrow morning?" |
38062 | said Flurry;"did it look at you?" |
38062 | said Miss M''Evoy,"was she killed?" |
38062 | said Mrs. Knox;"how were you fool enough to get into dealings with him?" |
38062 | says I,''ye old gommoch, that ye''d let the dog kill me chickens?'' |
38062 | she whispered,"what on earth children are those? |
38062 | the schoolboys rabbit shooting? |
42961 | And this is the baby, is it? |
42961 | And you know God gave him to the world? |
42961 | Are you sure, Judge, that you did n''t bring a fan with you? |
42961 | But how shall we get down into the closets? |
42961 | But what shall we do with the Judge and the baby? |
42961 | But where did you keep your legs all the time? |
42961 | Child, what did you say it was? |
42961 | Dear me, what is that queer noise? |
42961 | Did n''t you see the registers? |
42961 | Did you say these were all the children? |
42961 | Did you see the man in the moon as we came into church? |
42961 | Did you see the man in the moon? |
42961 | Do n''t you like the name? |
42961 | Do n''t you see it''s Mrs.''Judge''that''s come back to see you? |
42961 | Do n''t you think it''s time to call the children? |
42961 | Do n''t you think we might visit the closets now? |
42961 | Do what? |
42961 | Do you see those things under the stairs? 42961 Do you think the team will stand?" |
42961 | Do you think you could bring all of us a very great deal of sweetness of disposition? 42961 Have n''t we been singing''Rise, Shine?'' |
42961 | Have you a flock of birds inside of you? |
42961 | Have you got one of those fires in the cellar? |
42961 | Here you give that to me, will you? |
42961 | How did you get out? |
42961 | How do you do? 42961 How do you do?" |
42961 | How do you feel? |
42961 | How do you get along? |
42961 | How many are there? |
42961 | How many children did that man say he had? 42961 How would you like to have the dinner served, Ruth?" |
42961 | How''d''do, ma''am? |
42961 | I think Greece smells bad, do n''t you? |
42961 | I think the Judge ought to have something solemn on, do n''t you? |
42961 | I wonder if it''s a thought? |
42961 | I wonder what they did with the old box pew that belonged to me? 42961 Is n''t it fine?" |
42961 | Is n''t she pretty? |
42961 | It looks to me like a-- what is it you call it, when you look into a mirror? 42961 It makes you nervous to walk much, does n''t it? |
42961 | My dear, do you see the clock? |
42961 | My dear, have you my fan in your pocket? |
42961 | My dear,the Judge was now speaking to his wife,"do n''t you think you could get up a little party for the children to- night? |
42961 | Not your father and mother,--the minister and the minister''s wife? |
42961 | Now, what is this for Samuel? 42961 See?" |
42961 | That would be dreadful, would n''t it? |
42961 | The what? |
42961 | Well, do n''t you think it''s nice for us to give things to each other on that day? 42961 What can it be?" |
42961 | What color do you call this? |
42961 | What did your boys die of? |
42961 | What do you want? |
42961 | What does this mean? |
42961 | What have you got to put around him? |
42961 | What is this? |
42961 | What next? |
42961 | What''s become of the old portico? |
42961 | What''s in it? |
42961 | What? 42961 Where are we?" |
42961 | Where is she? |
42961 | Where is that letter that you read us at the last meeting? |
42961 | Where is the old meeting- house? |
42961 | Where''s the feed? |
42961 | Who''ll nurse him? 42961 Why do n''t you say something?" |
42961 | Why do n''t you take the quill and the paper that you hold in the portrait, and use them? |
42961 | Why, Judge, we are n''t here, are we? 42961 Why, how do you do?" |
42961 | Why, what has become of my bedroom? |
42961 | Why, you do n''t mean it, do you? |
42961 | Would n''t you like to go over the house? |
42961 | Would the house go down if the wine- cellar caved in? |
42961 | You do n''t keep an old- clothes exchange, do you, child? |
42961 | You do n''t mean that you really wear whole birds on a hat or a bonnet, do you? |
42961 | You do n''t mean to say that they gave you hot baked potatoes with butter in meeting, and that was the way you kept warm? |
42961 | You do n''t mean to say you have another meeting- house, do you? 42961 You had a baby boy once, did n''t you? |
42961 | You know a great deal about history and things, do n''t you? |
42961 | You know that Jesus was born on the twenty- fifth of December? |
42961 | You mean night, do n''t you, Judge? |
42961 | You used to give away a great deal, did n''t you? |
42961 | [ Illustration: I] THINK it would be real nice for us to take a little ride about the town, do n''t you? |
42961 | And what did you say you called him?" |
42961 | And what will the church committee say? |
42961 | And what''s my tongue for if it is n''t to use in talking?" |
42961 | And where are all the nice little closets under the stairs? |
42961 | And who does not like to be remembered with such loving words and beautiful praises? |
42961 | Are n''t they nice and fresh?" |
42961 | But I do n''t think that would be a very nice present, do you?" |
42961 | But if this is a mark of genius, what shall we say when it comes to keeping track of all the closets and their contents? |
42961 | But what kind of stuff is it?" |
42961 | But what was to be done? |
42961 | But what would you expect from a big boy who knows so much, and has such a host of children to live with? |
42961 | But you could n''t call that a present, could you? |
42961 | Can one help feeling kindly and grateful? |
42961 | Can you sit here by this hole in the clock?" |
42961 | Could it be possible that all these things belonged to them? |
42961 | Could you bring something of that sort to him?" |
42961 | Could you send it to him? |
42961 | Could you? |
42961 | Daughters of the American Revolution? |
42961 | Did he beam with the joy of the Christ- life? |
42961 | Did n''t you hear me say so? |
42961 | Did the good man lift his hands in benediction? |
42961 | Did you ever see anything like it? |
42961 | Did you ever see such a lot of nicked, broken, mismatched, cracked, blackened, ugly old ware as they keep on my shelves? |
42961 | Did you hang up your stocking when you were a little girl?" |
42961 | Did you write it Judge?" |
42961 | Did you write it down?" |
42961 | Do n''t they keep butter in you?" |
42961 | Do n''t you like it? |
42961 | Do n''t you see that there is hardly anything left of me? |
42961 | Do n''t you think it will be nice? |
42961 | Do n''t you think that is a nice way to remember the coming of Jesus and God''s gift to all of us?" |
42961 | Do n''t you think we''re smart?" |
42961 | Do n''t you think you''d better write the things down as I tell them to you? |
42961 | Do n''t you?" |
42961 | Do you think she will star it? |
42961 | Do you think there is any sin in it?" |
42961 | Do you think you are as good and wise and great as people say? |
42961 | Do you think you could fill her up for once?" |
42961 | Do you wonder that Ruth''s eyes were dazzled? |
42961 | Do you wonder that this important man and his family gazed with surprise and alarm at the sight? |
42961 | Does n''t he look cute?" |
42961 | Does n''t it look elegant? |
42961 | Had they not been buying presents for each other these ten days? |
42961 | Have I mentioned them all but Ruth? |
42961 | Have n''t I heard Samuel and Elizabeth and the older ones talk about high ideals?" |
42961 | Have n''t you any sense?" |
42961 | Have you come back to stay?" |
42961 | How did you do it?" |
42961 | How in the world can he ever get that inside of him where it belongs?" |
42961 | How many does that make? |
42961 | How rich we shall be?" |
42961 | How should I learn how old a girl or a lady is if I did n''t ask? |
42961 | How they flutter and sing, do n''t they?" |
42961 | I wonder if she''ll have all the clothes she wants in heaven?" |
42961 | I wonder if that will be enough?" |
42961 | I wonder what that is? |
42961 | Is he the Judge''s namesake or the Judge his namesake? |
42961 | Is n''t it a wonder she did n''t die?" |
42961 | Is n''t it cunning? |
42961 | Is n''t it grand? |
42961 | Is n''t it lovely? |
42961 | Is n''t it queer that we ca n''t have a baby with curls? |
42961 | Judge, did you know that our folks now keep Christmas in their churches and their homes? |
42961 | Judge, will Miriam be a star herself now? |
42961 | Let me see; there are twenty- seven rooms and sixty closets, are n''t there?" |
42961 | Now, how shall I carry them?" |
42961 | Now, that''s what you''ve sent to father, is n''t it? |
42961 | Ruth, of course, was right; for was n''t there a big room in the top of the clock? |
42961 | That would be a queer sight, would n''t it? |
42961 | Then, here''s a broad purple ribbon for a necktie; and I''ll put this ermine boa around his neck, for do n''t judges sometimes wear ermine? |
42961 | There, does n''t she look well?" |
42961 | There, now, do n''t I look just too nice for anything?" |
42961 | They are-- what is it you call them? |
42961 | They would have been awful old if they had lived till now, would n''t they? |
42961 | Two of''em, did n''t you?" |
42961 | Was it an earthquake, or what? |
42961 | Was it possible ever to get the house and the family settled down to plain, every- day living again? |
42961 | Was it the skeleton? |
42961 | Well, now, is n''t that queer? |
42961 | Were the ten acres of lawn, garden, orchard, field, and pasture really for their use and pleasure? |
42961 | Were you trying to correct me, Judge? |
42961 | What did you say they were called? |
42961 | What makes you look so solemn? |
42961 | What''s become of the old one?" |
42961 | What''s the news?" |
42961 | When I said sense did I mean( what is it they call it), oh, singular, not plural? |
42961 | When did you come? |
42961 | Whenever the children stood before the pictures, they asked questions: Who was the Judge? |
42961 | Who ever heard of giving away closets? |
42961 | Why could n''t we have one over at the house to- night?" |
42961 | Why did n''t you think of it before? |
42961 | Why do n''t you ask the Judge and me to play church with you and the rest of the children some of the times when you come into the parlor?" |
42961 | Why, what a little thing it is? |
42961 | Will this make George soft- hearted and tender- hearted and good- hearted? |
42961 | Will you send it to the baby?" |
42961 | Will you, please, tie this bow of nile- green velvet about my neck? |
42961 | Would n''t you like to stop at the church and go inside? |
42961 | Would you put it on the top of his head? |
42961 | You did n''t send the curls, did you?" |
42961 | You have got used to it, have n''t you? |
42961 | You want him to season things with cheerfulness, do n''t you, and make himself and all the rest of us fragrant? |
42961 | You''d think we all belonged to her, would n''t you? |
42961 | and Samuel said, with a nudge of the arm,"Keep still, ca n''t you?" |
42961 | and did n''t the Judge and his wife know all about it? |
42961 | and do n''t you believe that Santa Claus comes down the chimney and brings us lots of presents?" |
42961 | and so to- night is the very night, is it? |
42961 | and was not every closet in the house made the hiding- place for some treasure? |
42961 | and we never should have lived in this house if they had lived, would we?" |
42961 | and would she see it? |
42961 | are n''t you hungry?" |
42961 | did he like children? |
42961 | exclaimed Samuel, who had drawn near the young inquisitor, and felt it was time to stop her;"are n''t you ashamed of yourself?" |
42961 | how much of a family did he have? |
42961 | how shall I get it back?" |
42961 | what became of his things? |
42961 | what did he do? |
42961 | what is this?" |
42961 | what will you and the Judge wear? |
42961 | what?" |
42961 | when did he die? |
42961 | where was he buried? |
42961 | who attended the funeral? |
42961 | wo n''t it be fun?" |
42961 | wo n''t this be nice on rainy days? |
40388 | ; comparison with the Judiciary establishment of Virginia; reply to Mason''s argument on the Fairfax title;what security have you for justice? |
40388 | Ask you what matter fills his various page? 40388 By the national government only"could these things be done;"shall we refuse to give it power to do them?" |
40388 | By what tribunals will they be determined? 40388 Can history produce an instance of rebellion so honourably conducted?" |
40388 | Can nothing be done in our Assembly for poor Paine? 40388 Do n''t let us go too fast.... Why all this racket?" |
40388 | Does not every gentleman know that the causes in our[ State] courts are more numerous than they can decide? |
40388 | Have you a jury trial when a judgment is obtained on a replevin bond or by default? |
40388 | How are our debts to be discharged unless taxes are increased? |
40388 | I ask you if your House of Representatives would be better than it is, if a hundredth part of the people were to elect a majority of them? 40388 If I be tried in the Federal Court for a crime which may effect my life, have I a right of challenging or excepting to the jury?" |
40388 | If he has this right[ to collect quitrents] and comes to Virginia, what laws will his claims be determined by? |
40388 | If,he argued,"a law be exercised tyrannically in Virginia, to whom can you trust? |
40388 | Is not a jury excluded absolutely? |
40388 | Must the parent and the child be forever at variance? 40388 Shall Americans give up that[ jury trial] which nothing could induce the English people to relinquish?" |
40388 | Were those who are now friends to this Constitution less active in the defense of liberty, on that trying occasion, than those who oppose it? |
40388 | What is it that makes us trust our[ State] judges? 40388 What will he gain by an unjust demand? |
40388 | When I call this the most mighty state in the Union, do I not speak the truth? 40388 Where,"exclaimed Henry,"are the purse and the sword of Virginia? |
40388 | Who but the people have a right to form government?... 40388 Who, sir, is to pay the debts of the yeomanry and others?" |
40388 | Why not leave it to Congress? 40388 Will any state depend on its own exertions?" |
40388 | Will he get more than justice there? 40388 Will our most virtuous and able citizens wantonly attempt to destroy the liberty of the people? |
40388 | Will you call him before the Senate? 40388 Will your mace- bearer be a match for a disciplined regiment?" |
40388 | [ 1309] But, under the Constitution, are not National judgeschosen with as much wisdom as the judges of the state governments? |
40388 | [ 337] Would Washington never strike? 40388 [ 404] What held the patriot forces together at this time? |
40388 | [ 422]Where is Jefferson?" |
40388 | [ 925] If there was not money enough, let the Government make more-- what was a government for if not for that? 40388 And can either of them be happy, independent of the other? |
40388 | And did not many of the ablest, purest, and most trusted public characters in the Old Dominion think the same? |
40388 | And even if a jury be possible in National Courts, still, under the Constitution, where is there any right to challenge jurors? |
40388 | And how do the people feel even in the States that had ratified it? |
40388 | And if government could not make good money, what was the good of government? |
40388 | And if his title be really unimpeachable, to what purpose are his predecessors criminated, and the patents they obtained attacked? |
40388 | And surely they would suffer even more, they felt, under this stronger power; but would they and their"liberties"survive its"oppression"? |
40388 | And was not this"sacred right"one of the foundation stones, quarried from Magna Charta, on which Virginia''s"liberties"had been built? |
40388 | And what men, asked Mason, would be in Congress from Virginia? |
40388 | And what was their complaint? |
40388 | And who, he asked, will punish them? |
40388 | And why not use the expression"We, the people"? |
40388 | And"will the officers of the government become improper to be on a jury? |
40388 | And, indeed, where was Thomas Jefferson? |
40388 | And, inquired he, how could these agents act for the people if they did not have power to do so? |
40388 | Are they not equally, if not more independent? |
40388 | Are you sure your federal judiciary will act thus? |
40388 | As to a Republican Government not being fitted for an extensive country, he asked,"How small must a country be to suit the genius of Republicanism?" |
40388 | As to the navigation of the Mississippi, he asked:"How shall we retain it? |
40388 | As to"the exclusion of trial by jury, in this case,"Marshall asked,"Does the word_ court_ only mean the judges? |
40388 | Assuming this to be true"what are the subjects of the jurisdiction"of National Courts? |
40388 | But if the Constitution was adopted, what would happen? |
40388 | But what did this Nationalist extradition bill do? |
40388 | But what kind of power, and how displayed? |
40388 | But whence came that power? |
40388 | But why not? |
40388 | But why thus decrepit, the organization called the American army? |
40388 | But will he submit to punishment? |
40388 | But, asked he,"Who can penetrate into futurity?" |
40388 | But,"what are the... maxims of democracy?... |
40388 | By retaining that weak government which has hitherto kept it from us?" |
40388 | Can he foretell future events? |
40388 | Can he go four or five hundred miles? |
40388 | Can he stand the expense attending it? |
40388 | Can not Virginia import arms...[ and] put them into the hands of her militia men?" |
40388 | Can"Congress"go beyond the delegated powers?" |
40388 | Could Virginians themselves boast that their own Government was based on justice? |
40388 | Could the people themselves make treaties, enact laws, or administer the Government? |
40388 | Did Virginia''s Constitution make such a guaranty? |
40388 | Did his critics think"the soldiers were made of stocks and stones?" |
40388 | Did the British Constitution do so by any express provision? |
40388 | Did they think an active winter campaign over three States with starving naked troops"so easy and practicable a business? |
40388 | Does a claim establish a right? |
40388 | Does he imagine that he who can raise the loudest laugh is the soundest reasoner?" |
40388 | Does not Virginia surpass every state?" |
40388 | Does not our naval weakness invite an attack on our commerce?" |
40388 | Does not the determination of the jury necessarily lead to the judgment of the court? |
40388 | For was not Jefferson the penman who had inscribed the Declaration of Independence, for which they were fighting, suffering, dying? |
40388 | For were not the British grenadiers invincible? |
40388 | For"has the government of the United States power to make laws on every subject?... |
40388 | From Congress? |
40388 | From the States? |
40388 | Had the Federal Convention exceeded its powers? |
40388 | Here the Federal Courts are to sit.... What sort of a jury shall we have within the ten miles square?" |
40388 | How are armies to be raised? |
40388 | How could war be conducted, how could battles be fought and won, through such freakish, uncertain power as that? |
40388 | How else can he at this time discover what the''spirit of America''is?... |
40388 | How far will this principle carry him? |
40388 | How will gentlemen like to pay an additional tax on lands in the Northern Neck?" |
40388 | If Washington would so write, is it not likely that the men would so talk? |
40388 | If so, is it not probable there may be collections for the same accursed purpose nearer home? |
40388 | If so,"will they not be equally fair and impartial? |
40388 | If this be a principle universally acknowledged, what can destroy its application to the case before the court?" |
40388 | If war should come"what government is able to protect you?" |
40388 | If we invite them by our weakness to attack us, will they not do it? |
40388 | If your senators were for life, would they be more agreeable to you? |
40388 | Is it not their business to appreciate this money? |
40388 | Is that judiciary as well constructed, and as independent of the other branches, as our state judiciary? |
40388 | Is there anything"in the Constitution"which gives the[ National] judges exclusive jurisdiction of matters of fact? |
40388 | Item I give and bequeath unto my well Beloved son Thomas Marshall one negro woman named hanno and one negroe child named Jacob? |
40388 | Little Steward( could you believe it?) |
40388 | Much as he liked and admired Mason, Lee asked him"if he has not pursued the very means to bring into action the horrors which he deprecates?" |
40388 | Must the merits of_ Common Sense_ continue to glide down the stream of time unrewarded by this country? |
40388 | Must we not have money for that purpose?" |
40388 | Or by the Bill of Rights? |
40388 | Ought they not, then, to meet an adequate return?" |
40388 | Shall it be a maxim that a man shall be deprived of his life without the benefit of the law?" |
40388 | Shall we object to this because the citizen of another state can obtain justice without applying to our state courts?" |
40388 | So why insert it in the American Constitution? |
40388 | The question was"whether rights not given up were reserved?" |
40388 | The question was, whether the taxing power was"necessary to perform the objects of the Constitution?... |
40388 | Therefore, writes Washington, in angry exasperation,"in the present situation of things, I can not help asking-- Where is Mason-- Wythe-- Jefferson? |
40388 | Thus he appealed for Kentucky votes:"Shall we appear to care less for their interests than for that of distant people[ the Spaniards]?" |
40388 | True, the people had suffered by the loose arrangement under which they now lived; but, after all, had not they and their"liberties"survived? |
40388 | Was it because of their tenure of office or the method of choosing them? |
40388 | Was it not the favored of the earth that government protected? |
40388 | Was jury challenge secured by Magna Charta? |
40388 | Was not Edward Braddock an experienced commander, whose bravery was the toast of his fellow officers? |
40388 | Was not government a fortress built around property? |
40388 | Was that accurate? |
40388 | Was the new Government not for them? |
40388 | Was this the intelligence of the masses? |
40388 | Was this the justice of liberty? |
40388 | Was this the manner of liberty? |
40388 | Was this the way a people fighting for their freedom confronted their enemy? |
40388 | Was"this power[ over the militia] not retained by the states, as they had not given it away?" |
40388 | Were not the Indians the natural foes of these white Lords of the earth? |
40388 | Were the grotesque charges against these men the laurels with which democracy crowned those who had drawn the sword for freedom? |
40388 | Were"powers not given retained by implication?" |
40388 | What are the objects of national government? |
40388 | What are the objects of the National Government? |
40388 | What chance will poor men get?... |
40388 | What did the poor and needy get from government except oppression and the privilege of dying for the boon? |
40388 | What good would it do for Congress merely to remonstrate with the States, as Henry had proposed, if we were at war with foreign enemies? |
40388 | What harm could it do? |
40388 | What has become of your country? |
40388 | What has happened since this to alter his opinion?" |
40388 | What has he to get? |
40388 | What have the state governments to do with it?" |
40388 | What have you for our Dinners, Boys? |
40388 | What have you got for Breakfast, Lads? |
40388 | What is it to the government whether this man or that man succeeds? |
40388 | What is the object of a jury trial? |
40388 | What is your Supper, Lads? |
40388 | What mischief results from some causes being tried there[ in the National Courts]?" |
40388 | What need, therefore, had the lowly for its embattled walls? |
40388 | What object is to be effected by it? |
40388 | What right, he asked, had the framers of the Constitution to say,"_ We, the people_, instead of_ We, the states_"? |
40388 | What security have you for justice? |
40388 | What shall restrain them? |
40388 | What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? |
40388 | What was the matter? |
40388 | What was there wrong with the expression"We, the people,"since upon the people"it is to operate, if adopted"? |
40388 | What would be the end of this contract and that? |
40388 | What would become of this, that, and the other? |
40388 | What, asked Henry, were the reasons for this change of government? |
40388 | What, then, would happen to the people"if their master had been at Philadelphia or New York?" |
40388 | Where are your landmarks in this government? |
40388 | Where, asked Henry, were the dangers the Constitutionalists conjured up? |
40388 | Who knows the dangers this new system may produce? |
40388 | Who were the Indians, anyway, except a kind of wild animal very much in the frontiersman''s way and to be exterminated like other savage beasts? |
40388 | Why are the words"We, the people,"improper? |
40388 | Why did the opposition make"the distinction of_ well- born_ from others?... |
40388 | Why had he allowed Howe to escape when that general marched out to meet him? |
40388 | Why had they done what they had no power to do? |
40388 | Why not abolish Virginia''s Legislature and be done with it? |
40388 | Why this avoidable sickness, this needless suffering, this frightful waste? |
40388 | Why this scanty supply of arms? |
40388 | Why this want of food even for such of the soldiers as were willing and eager to fight for their country? |
40388 | Why would he not oust the British from Philadelphia? |
40388 | Why, exclaimed the popular voice, should this expedient of war be recognized? |
40388 | Why, then, attempt"to terrify us into an adoption of this new form of government?... |
40388 | Will a man on the eastern shore be sent to be tried in Kentucky, or a man from Kentucky be brought to the eastern shore to have his trial? |
40388 | Will he take the chances that the injured man will not appear and defend the unjust suit? |
40388 | Will it not be so in the Federal court?" |
40388 | Will the most virtuous act the most wickedly?" |
40388 | Would anybody incur great expense to oppress another? |
40388 | You agree to bind yourselves hand and foot-- for the sake of what? |
40388 | You go into a dungeon-- for what? |
40388 | [ 1310] If some of these suits be carried to other courts, will it be wrong? |
40388 | [ 717]"If we are now to pay the debts due to the British merchants, what have we been fighting for all this while?" |
40388 | exclaimed Marshall,"Will no one stay there but the tools and officers of the government?... |
40388 | is it not a reasonable inference that the Virginia officers in the familiar talk of comrades, spoke of Jefferson in terms less mild? |
40388 | laws affecting the mode of transferring property, or contracts, or claims, between citizens of the same state? |
40388 | said he,"borrow money to discharge interest on what was borrowed?... |
40533 | But is Dartmouth College such an institution? 40533 But,"he continues,"is this a case of''confidence''? |
40533 | Did you hear what the Chief Justice said the other day? |
40533 | Do you believe, that the Legislature will pass a bill of attainder, or an_ ex post facto_ law? 40533 For what are the states talking about disunion, and for what are they going to war among themselves? |
40533 | Have you ever seen anything to equal the exhibition in Charleston and in the far South generally? |
40533 | If a judge can repeal a law of Congress, by declaring it unconstitutional, is not this the exercise of political power? 40533 If this power over vessels is not in Congress, where does it reside? |
40533 | In what does the office of a Judge consist? 40533 Is a suit, brought against an individual, for any cause whatever, a suit against a state, in the sense of the constitution? |
40533 | Is it from the act of incorporation? 40533 Is there one sentence in the constitution which gives countenance to this rule?" |
40533 | Is this[ conscription]... consistent with the character of a free Government?... 40533 On what safe and intelligible ground can this exception stand?" |
40533 | Reason and argument? 40533 The question constantly recurs-- do you mean that the Judges shall be removable at the will of the Legislature? |
40533 | This was inserted, for what? |
40533 | What has since occurred to strip it of its inviolability? 40533 What hinders Vermont... from resuming her grants,"upon the ground that she, equally with New Hampshire, is"the representative of the publick?" |
40533 | What is a bill of credit? |
40533 | What is this right of search? 40533 What is to become of us and of our constitution? |
40533 | What shall restrain independent nations from making such a compactas they please? |
40533 | What would then be the condition of the court, should the Legislature prosecute a man, with an earnest wish to convict him?... 40533 What... is our condition? |
40533 | Who ever appointed a legislature to administer his charity? 40533 Who has any private interest either in the objects or the property of this institution?" |
40533 | Who... can remember, without regret, his conduct in relation to the batture of New Orleans? |
40533 | [ 1078] If the Bank brings suits on a contract, the very first, thefoundation"question is,"has this legal entity a right to sue?... |
40533 | [ 1081] Just what will be the result if the National courts have not this power? 40533 [ 1138] In what respect did the steamboat monopoly violate any of these restrictions? |
40533 | [ 1179] And to what will all this lead? 40533 [ 1181] And why, at the present moment, insist on this"new construction of the Constitution?... |
40533 | [ 1308] If the Constitution means this, why is it not so expressed? 40533 [ 1478] What is the capital question in dispute? |
40533 | [ 1479] Can States decide? 40533 [ 419] What, then, is the"nature and extent of the appellate jurisdiction of the United States"? |
40533 | [ 589] Why the scarcity of money when that commodity was most needed? 40533 [ 603] What are the arguments that such law does not violate the Constitution? |
40533 | [ 692] Vermont has given lands to the College; was this a gift to New Hampshire? 40533 [ 741] This being so, is such a contract"protected"by the Constitution, and do the New Hampshire College Acts impair that contract? |
40533 | [ 745] Does the fact that the purpose of the College is the education of youth make it a public corporation? 40533 [ 750] For whose benefit was the property of Dartmouth College given to that institution? |
40533 | [ 755] Can such a contract be impaired by a State Legislature? 40533 [ 756] Can the courts now make such an exception? |
40533 | [ 760] Do the New Hampshire College Acts impair the obligations of Dartmouth''s charter? 40533 [ 788] Assuming the law which established the Bank to be Constitutional, could Maryland tax a branch of that Bank? |
40533 | [ 793] Could powers of Congress be inferred as a necessary means to the desired end? 40533 [ 844] Regardless of this fact, however, can States tax instrumentalities of the National Government? |
40533 | [ 871] Are the people preparedto give_ carte blanche_ to our federal rulers"? |
40533 | [ 968] Why was the Constitution established? 40533 (_ Ib._) CHAPTER VII THREATS OF WAR Can not the Union exist unless Congress and the Supreme Court shall make banks and lotteries? 40533 And had not Georgia ordered her Governor to resist the enforcement of that provision of that ancient act of Congress? 40533 And how does your system work? 40533 And must not commerce between Statesremote"from one another, pass through States lying between them? |
40533 | And why were"ample powers"given to that Government? |
40533 | Are all teachers public officers? |
40533 | Are the rights of the Trustees any the less sacred"because they have undertaken to administer it[ the trust] gratuitously?... |
40533 | Are there not already causes enough of jealousy and discord existing among us?... |
40533 | Are these all perished? |
40533 | As to the constitutionality of Section 25 of the Judiciary Act--"could it be new, especially to a Virginia lawyer"? |
40533 | But as our country fills up how shall we escape the evils which have followed a dense population? |
40533 | But can the operation of that clause be confined to paper money? |
40533 | But is this true? |
40533 | But who will it be?" |
40533 | But why not navigation? |
40533 | But"for what do you make a Constitution?" |
40533 | But, asked Marshall, were the words"office and Court synonymes"? |
40533 | By what reasoning is a protective tariff made Constitutional? |
40533 | Can States tax these branches, as Maryland has tried to do? |
40533 | Can States"annul the law of Congress"? |
40533 | Can it be supported by reason? |
40533 | Can the charter"be such a contract as the constitution intended to withdraw from the power of state legislation? |
40533 | Can the wise men of the East answer that question? |
40533 | Can these appearances prove fallacious? |
40533 | Did not such expressions import that Congress could"conform the constitution to their own designs"by the exercise of"unlimited and uncontrouled"power? |
40533 | Did the framers of the Constitution"when granting these powers for the public good"intend to impede"their exercise by withholding a choice of means?" |
40533 | Do you believe, that the Legislature will put forth their grasp upon private property, without compensation? |
40533 | Do you believe, that they will pass a law impairing the obligation of contracts? |
40533 | Do you see any great evil in such a provision? |
40533 | Does it give the State"any exclusive right to the property of the college, any exclusive interest in the labors of the professors?" |
40533 | Does it reside in the States? |
40533 | Does not every man feel that his own personal security and the security of his property depends on that fairness? |
40533 | Does public policy demand a construction which will exclude it? |
40533 | Does"the nature and reason of the case itself... sustain a construction of the constitution, not warranted by its words?" |
40533 | Finally one of the youthful combatants turned to him and said:"Well, my old gentleman, what think you of these things?" |
40533 | For the people at large, as counsel insist? |
40533 | Had not Ellsworth, when Chief Justice, so decided in the famous case of Isaac Williams? |
40533 | Have they altogether lost the memory of Washington''s farewell address?... |
40533 | Have they"come into collision with an act of Congress, and deprived a citizen of a right to which that act entitles him"? |
40533 | How are your Senators apportioned on the State? |
40533 | How is this to be prevented?" |
40533 | How should these invasions of the rights of the States be checked? |
40533 | How, asked Johnson, had the Bank fulfilled expectations and promises? |
40533 | How? |
40533 | I know he was not deemed a profound common lawyer; but was there ever a profound common lawyer known in one of the Eastern States? |
40533 | If a judge can repeal a law of Congress, by declaring it unconstitutional, is not this the exercise of political power? |
40533 | If any one of them were valid, would anybody"point out where the state right stopped? |
40533 | If not, why provide against it?... |
40533 | If they may be removed at pleasure, will any lawyer of distinction come upon your bench? |
40533 | In the four quarters of the globe, who reads an American book? |
40533 | In this situation can the title to the vessel be adjudicated by American courts? |
40533 | In what phraseology would you make such a provision?" |
40533 | Is education altogether in the hands of government?" |
40533 | Is it a meteor we have seen and mistaken for that splendid luminary which dispenses light and gladness throughout creation? |
40533 | Is it nothing to sow the seeds of incurable alienation? |
40533 | Is it to legislate under the sword of the Commander- in- Chief?... |
40533 | Is not their independence preserved under the present system? |
40533 | Is then the court to decide the_ degree_ of"interest"necessary to make a State a party? |
40533 | Is there any remedy for this state of things? |
40533 | Is this a time to increase those jealousies between different quarters of the country already sufficiently apparent?" |
40533 | Is this the case with the New York steamboat monopoly acts? |
40533 | Is this true? |
40533 | It is this:"Whose prerogative is it to decide on the constitutionality or unconstitutionality of the laws? |
40533 | It is true, they assembled in their several states-- and where else should they have assembled? |
40533 | Need I press the necessity of this? |
40533 | Of what avail the power given Congress by the Constitution if the States may thus"derange the measures of Congress to regulate commerce"? |
40533 | One of these questions was: What, in international law, is the status of a revolting province during civil war? |
40533 | Or who ever heard, before, that a gift to a_ college_, or_ hospital_, or an_ asylum_, was, in reality, nothing but a gift to the state? |
40533 | Ought Spanish property, for that reason, to be"condemned as prize of war"? |
40533 | Plainly it will work well for everybody:"If the Senate would protect the East, will it not protect the West also?" |
40533 | Responsibility to what? |
40533 | S.(? |
40533 | Shall their fate depend upon"the rise and fall of popular parties, and the fluctuations of political opinions"? |
40533 | Should that Territory come into the Union only on condition that slavery be prohibited within the new State, or should the slave system be retained? |
40533 | Should"a public officer... receive the public money any longer than he renders service to the public"? |
40533 | Since the new Justice must come from New England,"can any other bring equal qualifications?... |
40533 | So the only practical question is:"Can a state regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the states while Congress is regulating it? |
40533 | Some concession must be made on both sides.... What is the real situation of the parties?" |
40533 | Such declarations... will have no... effect upon me.... Is it... the intention of gentlemen to arouse... the South to rebellion? |
40533 | Suppose the courts at the mercy of the Legislature? |
40533 | The State banks would not resist-- were they not under the control of the people''s Legislature? |
40533 | To what point are we verging? |
40533 | To what purpose enumerate the particular modes of violation which should be forbidden, when it was intended to forbid all?... |
40533 | Walking straight up to a bowl of mint julep, he poured a tumbler full of the liquid, drank it off, said,"How are you, gentlemen?" |
40533 | Was a big new house desired? |
40533 | Was not the object of the Embargo, which"engaged the attention of every man in the United States,"avowedly"the protection of commerce?... |
40533 | Was this act of Congress Constitutional? |
40533 | Was war at hand? |
40533 | What can we hope for in such circumstances? |
40533 | What could be easier or more just than to enact legislation that would lift the burden of debt that was crushing the people? |
40533 | What does the world yet owe to American physicians or surgeons? |
40533 | What has the Legislature done to the College? |
40533 | What is meant by"a strict construction"? |
40533 | What is the injury which Ogden complains that Gibbons has done him? |
40533 | What is the one involved in this case? |
40533 | What is the prop[erty] qualification for your Senate? |
40533 | What is the real meaning of the anti- National crusade; what the certain outcome of it? |
40533 | What is this but despotism? |
40533 | What new constellations have been discovered by the telescopes of Americans?--what have they done in the mathematics...? |
40533 | What new substances have their chemists discovered? |
40533 | What now shall fill these widow''d arms? |
40533 | What shall be done? |
40533 | What then ought America to do?" |
40533 | What were the duties of a judge? |
40533 | What were the rights of citizens in war- time? |
40533 | What, asks Webster, is the meaning of the words,"no state shall pass any... law impairing the obligation of contracts"? |
40533 | What, then, could"arrest this calamity"? |
40533 | Whence comes the power of Congress to prescribe punishment for violations of National laws? |
40533 | Whence, then, comes"the idea that Dartmouth College has become a public institution?... |
40533 | Where does Marshall''s"artifice of verbalizing"lead? |
40533 | Who shall touch these blind eyes? |
40533 | Who would have dreamed of such an occurrence? |
40533 | Whose opinion shall prevail? |
40533 | Why has M^{r.} Barlow been unable to obtain a paper which might consult the honor& spare the feelings of his government? |
40533 | Why ought the powers"expressly granted"to the National Government to be"construed strictly,"as many insist that they should be? |
40533 | Why provide that"no bill of attainder, or an_ ex post facto_ law, shall be passed? |
40533 | Why refuse this adjustment? |
40533 | Why should a private charity, incorporated for the purpose of education, be excluded from the rules that apply to other corporations? |
40533 | Why should not the National Judiciary be made answerable to the people? |
40533 | Why then expunge the prohibition?... |
40533 | Why then is this obvious fabrication such as we find it? |
40533 | Why, then, did the Constitution_ expressly_ confer powers which, of necessity, must be implied? |
40533 | Will you draw down this curse upon Virginia? |
40533 | Would the people of any one state trust those of another with a power to control the most insignificant operations of their state government? |
40533 | You might as well reason and argue with the marble columns encircling them[ Congress and the Supreme Court].... Are we then_ to stand to our arms_?... |
40533 | [ 1024]"Can not the Union subsist unless Congress and the Supreme Court shall make banks and lotteries? |
40533 | [ 1144] But what were New York waters and what were New Jersey waters? |
40533 | [ 1192] What was the state of the country with respect to transportation? |
40533 | [ 1197] What commerce is to be regulated by Congress? |
40533 | [ 1208] What does the word"commerce"mean? |
40533 | [ 1212] What is this power to"regulate commerce"? |
40533 | [ 1480] The people... have declared that this Constitution shall be the supreme law....[1481] Who is to judge between the people and the Government? |
40533 | [ 277]"Is it possible,"asks Tyler,"that a man who can assert this, can have any true sense of sound veracity? |
40533 | [ 357] Was the Territorial act, under which the local court at Key West ordered the auction sale, valid? |
40533 | [ 600] What is the effect of that law? |
40533 | [ 601]"What is the obligation of a contract? |
40533 | [ 689] Does Dartmouth College stand alone in this respect? |
40533 | [ 973] What will be the result if Virginia''s attitude is confirmed? |
40533 | [ Illustration: JOHN TAYLOR] Whence this effort to endow the National Government with powers comparable to those of a monarchy? |
40533 | and what will impair it? |
40533 | can there be no responsibility, unless your Judges shall be removable at pleasure? |
40533 | exclaimed John Rowan, another member of the Legislature, shall Kentucky again petition"like a degraded province of Rome"? |
40533 | he wrote;"the death of George III? |
40533 | or goes to an American play? |
40533 | or looks at an American picture or statue? |
40533 | or what old ones have they analyzed? |
40533 | that of the legislators and President, or that of the Court? |
40533 | to the will of the Legislature? |
40533 | under which of the old tyrannical governments of Europe is every sixth man a Slave, whom his fellow- creatures may buy and sell and torture?" |
40533 | when his decision may offend a powerful and influential man? |
40533 | will nothing short of this satisfy gentlemen? |
40445 | Are you then willing to hear doctor Bollman indicted? |
40445 | Could it be necessary,he challenged the Federalists,"to_ increase_ courts when suits were_ decreasing_? |
40445 | Did he mean that the dispatches... were impostures? |
40445 | Did you ever hear Judge Chase apply any unusual epithets-- such as''_ young men_''or''_ young gentlemen_''--to counsel? |
40445 | For a moment, admit it,argues Weems:"Does it follow that the Country is a mere blank, a cypher not worth your notice? |
40445 | Have they ever sanctioned the principle that the judges should make laws for them instead of their Representatives? 40445 Have we not heard this doctrine supported in the memorable case of the mandamus, lately[186] before the Supreme Court? |
40445 | Have we not seen a State[ Georgia] sell its Western lands, and afterwards declare the law under which they were sold made null and void? 40445 However he may err, he commits no crime; how, then, can he be impeached? |
40445 | I again ask you, what said the Chief Justice?... 40445 I ask the judge where they[ the affidavits] should have been lodged? |
40445 | I asked him,testified Truxtun,"if the executive of the United States were privy to, or concerned in the project? |
40445 | If... they[ the judges] have offended against the Constitution or laws of the country, why are they not impeached? 40445 Is a grant a contract?" |
40445 | Is it not extraordinary,said he,"that if this high power was intended, it should nowhere appear?... |
40445 | Is not Congress as capable of forming a correct opinion as they are? 40445 Is the life of a man, lately in high public esteem... to be endangered for the sake of punctilio to the president?" |
40445 | Is this charity, hypocracy, or federalism? |
40445 | It was universally asked,he says,"what law had been offended, and under what statute was the indictment supported? |
40445 | Let the judge be impeached,said the_ Enquirer_; the Wickham dinner was recalled-- why had Marshall attended it? |
40445 | May we depend upon you? |
40445 | Must it be direct corruption, or would interest or undue influence of any kind be sufficient? 40445 Ought judgment to be rendered in such a case?" |
40445 | The effect of the present bill will be, to have no court for fourteen months.... Are gentlemen afraid of the judges? 40445 What has been the ruin of every Republic? |
40445 | What security is there to an individual,he asked, if the Legislature of the Union or any particular State, should pass an_ ex post facto_ law? |
40445 | What,said he,"must there be a departure from common sense to find out a construction favorable"to Callender? |
40445 | Where was the hero with his seven- fold shield-- not of bull''s hide, but of brass-- prepared to prevent or to punish this Trojan rape? 40445 Where was the_ Ajax Telamon_ of his party"at that hour of fate? |
40445 | Whether by the Yazoo act an estate did vest in the original grantees? 40445 Whether it was competent to any subsequent Legislature to set aside the act on the ground of fraud and corruption? |
40445 | Why are you not in favor of selling the western lands? |
40445 | Why... do the judges who passed this decision live and live unpunished?... 40445 Why... issue a subpoena to the President?" |
40445 | Would the wounded veteran be without remedy?... 40445 [ 1060] If Wilkinson is so important a witness,"why is he not here?" |
40445 | [ 1102] Luther Martin now took the lead: Was Jeffersona kind of sovereign?" |
40445 | [ 1109] Why await the arrival of Wilkinson? 40445 [ 1254] What was the meaning of the words,"''levying war''?... |
40445 | [ 1272] The testimony which the Government now proposed to offer was toprove-- what? |
40445 | [ 238] This was the spirit that was now triumphant; to what lengths was it to carry the Republicans? 40445 [ 381] But was this remedy the writ of mandamus for which Marbury had applied? |
40445 | [ 562] With what result? 40445 ... to multiply judges, when their duties were diminishing? |
40445 | APPENDIX E EXCERPT FROM SPEECH OF WILLIAM WIRT AT THE TRIAL OF AARON BURR[1517] Who is Blennerhassett? |
40445 | And what did he_ look_? |
40445 | And what should he do about Bollmann? |
40445 | And would the Federalists inform the House what phase of the common law they proposed to adopt for the United States? |
40445 | And, to whom so pointedly as yourself will the public look for the necessary measures?" |
40445 | Are all these evils originating either in fraud or error, remediless under the principles of your constitution? |
40445 | Are gentlemen disposed to risk the consequences?... |
40445 | Are not its members acting under a responsibility to public opinion which can and will check their aberrations from duty?" |
40445 | Are they afraid that they will pronounce the repealing law void? |
40445 | Are they not to obey their oath, and judge accordingly? |
40445 | Are your numerous associates ready? |
40445 | As the Chief Justice stated the question, could"an act, repugnant to the constitution... become the law of the land"? |
40445 | At Frankfort? |
40445 | Because there are 30,000 wealthy families in the City and but 20,000 in the Country, must nothing be tried to enlist 5000, at least of these 20,000??? |
40445 | Because there are 30,000 wealthy families in the City and but 20,000 in the Country, must nothing be tried to enlist 5000, at least of these 20,000??? |
40445 | Because there are 30,000 wealthy families in the City and but 20,000 in the Country, must nothing be tried to enlist 5000, at least of these 20,000??? |
40445 | Burr asked Marshall:"Do you recollect whether the conduct of the judge at this trial was tyrannical, overbearing and oppressive?" |
40445 | But could"a subpoena_ duces tecum_ be directed to the president of the United States?" |
40445 | But did this apply to the President of the United States? |
40445 | But how can it be such, unless the laws, while they exist, are sacredly and impartially, without regard to popularity, carried into execution?" |
40445 | But how had Marshall acted in the conduct of that trial? |
40445 | But what of the Federalists''solicitude for an early sitting of the court? |
40445 | But who can doubt that both are impeachable offenses, and ought to subject the offender to removal from office?" |
40445 | But"shall an imposter be suffered to preside on the bench of justice?... |
40445 | But"where are they to be found, if the property of an individual, fairly and honestly acquired, may be seized without compensation?" |
40445 | But, asked the Chief Justice, what had this to do with Bollmann and Swartwout? |
40445 | By the judges this bill will be declared null and void.... And we now ask the mighty victors, what is your triumph?... |
40445 | By what pathway could the chosen escape their doom? |
40445 | CHAPTER IX WHAT IS TREASON? |
40445 | Can it be pretended that any man is better versed in their theory and practice? |
40445 | Clayton was curious-- did Senator Thomas get the money for his share of the lands? |
40445 | Collateral points may, say the books, be proved according to the course of the common law; but is this a collateral point? |
40445 | Congress had ordered the Secretary of War to place the names of certain persons on the pension rolls; suppose that he should refuse to do so? |
40445 | Could a National judge be impeached merely for"error, mistake, or indiscretion"? |
40445 | Could any man deny the superiority of the latter? |
40445 | Could anything be more undemocratic, more reprehensible? |
40445 | Could it mean that his tenure should be limited by behaving well in an office, which did not exist? |
40445 | Could it mean, that he should hold this_ office_ after it was_ abolished_? |
40445 | Did Hay mean to"open the case more fully?" |
40445 | Did Jefferson want Burr convicted? |
40445 | Did Marshall''s prolixity know no limit? |
40445 | Did his office take from a judge"the liberty of speech which belongs to every citizen"? |
40445 | Did it appear to him that"the conduct of Judge Chase was mild and conciliatory"during the trial of Callender? |
40445 | Did not these illustrations and many others that might be given prove that the Constitution must govern courts as well as Congress? |
40445 | Did that give him"a right to resist the president''s orders to stop him?" |
40445 | Did the Government''s counsel wish that"the multitude around us should be prejudiced by garbled evidences?" |
40445 | Did the jury mean to"censure... the court for suppressing irrelevant testimony?" |
40445 | Did the testimony show probable grounds for believing that Burr had committed treason? |
40445 | Did the things proved to have happened on Blennerhassett''s island amount to the overt act of levying war? |
40445 | Did they include the downfall of the Judiciary in their plans of general destruction? |
40445 | Did they propose to make judges the mere creatures of Congress? |
40445 | Does the Wealth of Nations, therefore, form a part of the Constitution of the United States?" |
40445 | Even Judges of the Supreme Court should do something to earn their salaries; but under the Federalist Judiciary Act of 1801"what have they got to do? |
40445 | Even if such legislation could be set aside on the ground of fraud in the enactment of it, to what extent must the impurity go? |
40445 | For what did the Constitution authorize the House to impeach and the Senate to try an officer of the National Government? |
40445 | For what purpose seize on Baton Rouge? |
40445 | For,"to whom are they responsible?" |
40445 | Fox?" |
40445 | From whom is a corrupt decision most to be feared?... |
40445 | Had Chase transgressed any State or National statute? |
40445 | Had Martin shown that Chase was right in requiring questions to be reduced to writing? |
40445 | Had any other"high crimes and misdemeanors"been proved or even stated against him? |
40445 | Had he acted like a guilty man, he asked? |
40445 | Had he overruled all these opinions in the Bollmann- Swartwout case? |
40445 | Had he violated the common law? |
40445 | Had he, in addition, reversed the natural interpretation of the Constitution which reason dictated? |
40445 | Had not Marshall himself so ruled on that point in the matter of Attorney- General Lincoln at the hearing in Marbury_ vs._ Madison? |
40445 | Had the Legislature of Georgia overstepped those limits? |
40445 | Hay persisted:"Categorically then I ask you, Mr. Bollman, do you accept your pardon?" |
40445 | He wished to know"what gentlemen can intend, expect, or hope, from these perpetual philippics against the government? |
40445 | His"flight"? |
40445 | How could that be and no tidings of it except from Wilkinson? |
40445 | How had the Federalists contrived to gain their ends? |
40445 | How have I been brought hither?" |
40445 | How say you? |
40445 | How say you? |
40445 | How then could anybody pretend that a State could by legislation annul a contract? |
40445 | How, asked Marshall, could the court decide that question without inspecting the papers? |
40445 | I am more afraid of an army of judges,... than of an army of soldiers.... Have we not seen sedition laws?" |
40445 | I would ask where they got that power, and who checks the courts when they violate the Constitution?" |
40445 | If it could, ought it to be"in this case"? |
40445 | If not, why does the Constitution require judges"to take an oath to support it"? |
40445 | If so, where was the boasted beneficence of democracies? |
40445 | If the courts must look into the Constitution at all, as assuredly they must do in some cases,"what part of it are they forbidden to read or to obey?" |
40445 | If then the procurement be substituted in the place of presence, does it not also constitute an essential part of the overt act? |
40445 | If they will neither die nor resign they give Mr J the trouble of correcting the_ procedure_.... Tell me what the judges say-- are they frightened?" |
40445 | In the Federal Courts? |
40445 | In what terms of decency,"growls Jefferson,"can we speak of this? |
40445 | Is Samuel Chase guilty of the high crimes and misdemeanors as charged in the articles just read?" |
40445 | Is Samuel Chase, the respondent, guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors as charged in the article just read?" |
40445 | Is it humanity? |
40445 | Is it law? |
40445 | Is it to be contended that the heads of departments are not amenable to the laws of their country? |
40445 | Is such a character"fit to preside in a court of justice?... |
40445 | Is the fact, without which the accused does not participate in the guilt of the assemblage if it were guilty, a collateral point? |
40445 | Is the law paramount to this, which calls on him on behalf of a single one?" |
40445 | Is there a candid man in the U S who does not believe some one, if not all, of these overt acts to have taken place?" |
40445 | Is this reason? |
40445 | It was, said Marshall; but could such an order be directed to the Secretary of State? |
40445 | Jefferson''s mind dwells on Marshall''s work with increasing anxiety:"On the subject of the history of the American Revolution... who can write it?" |
40445 | Judges often made political speeches on the stump--"What law forbids[ them] to exercise these rights by a charge from the bench?" |
40445 | Just how should Marshall declare the Supreme Court to be the ultimate arbiter of conflicts between statutes and the Constitution? |
40445 | Let Marshall smoke his own tobacco: suppose the Sheriff of Henrico County should summon the Chief Justice to help"quell a riot"? |
40445 | Louis?... |
40445 | Must the courts decide such a case"without examining the instrument under which it arises?" |
40445 | Must the overt act be proved before hearing collateral testimony? |
40445 | Must the vitiating cause operate on a majority, or on what number of the members? |
40445 | New Orleans?... |
40445 | Of the antidotes of truth to the misrepresentations of Marshall? |
40445 | On this point"what said the Chief Justice of the United States,"on whose evidence Randolph said he specially relied? |
40445 | One of these has survived:"Why did you not tell Judge Marshall that the people of America demanded a conviction?" |
40445 | Or was it that of some intermediate period? |
40445 | Or"shall we move to commit L M as_ particeps criminis_ with Burr? |
40445 | Shall it be confided to men immediately responsible to the people, or to those who are irresponsible?... |
40445 | Should it rise again? |
40445 | Should like power be denied in America? |
40445 | Should that power, then, be exerted? |
40445 | Should this conclusion go unchallenged? |
40445 | Something must be done to"put down"the troublesome"bull- dog":"Shall L M be summoned as a witness against Burr?" |
40445 | Such being the case, ought the Supreme Court to act under this unconstitutional section? |
40445 | The first two volumes had already cost the publisher far more than the estimate-- would not Washington persuade Marshall to be more concise? |
40445 | Then turning to Bollmann, Hay dramatically asked:"Will you accept this pardon?" |
40445 | They must be removed; they are obnoxious unyielding men;& why should they remain to awe& embarrass the administration? |
40445 | To what motive should Marshall''s action be ascribed? |
40445 | To what purpose are powers limited... if these limits may, at any time, be passed by those intended to be restrained? |
40445 | To what were they to testify? |
40445 | Today, haughty, violent, imperious; tomorrow, humble, penitent and submissive.... Is this a character to dispense law and justice to this nation? |
40445 | Under the"general law"he is"a part of the_ posse_ of the State sheriff"; yet,"would the Judge abandon major duties to perform lesser ones?" |
40445 | WHAT IS TREASON? |
40445 | Warren Hastings had been acquitted;"but is there any who hears me, that believes he was innocent?" |
40445 | Was Burr afraid to trust the court? |
40445 | Was a June session of the Supreme Court"a source of alarm?" |
40445 | Was a judge to be impeached and removed from office because his deportment was not elegant? |
40445 | Was ever a man so pursued? |
40445 | Was it that"of Sir Walter Raleigh and Captain Smith, or that which was imported by Governor Oglethorpe?" |
40445 | Was it that"of the reign of Elizabeth and James the first; or... that of the time of George the Second?" |
40445 | Was not that true? |
40445 | Was not"an accused man... to obtain witnesses in his behalf?" |
40445 | Was that criminal? |
40445 | Were the Government and he"on equal terms?" |
40445 | Were they in America? |
40445 | What could be done to save the rights and the property of"the wise, the rich and the good"? |
40445 | What did history tell us of the justice or mercy of the people? |
40445 | What do the words"levying war"mean? |
40445 | What effect will this law have upon this case? |
40445 | What excuse was there for"conduct so grossly indecent"? |
40445 | What had happened in France? |
40445 | What is the triumph of the President? |
40445 | What is to become of our past revolutionary history? |
40445 | What more could be asked? |
40445 | What now should the dethroned political leader do? |
40445 | What shall I then do with him?" |
40445 | What then would become the condition of the country? |
40445 | What was expected of"that great accomplisher of all things?" |
40445 | What were the facts? |
40445 | What were the"orders,"military and naval, which had been described so thrillingly? |
40445 | What would be the effect of a different doctrine? |
40445 | What would this entail? |
40445 | Where the righteousness and wisdom of the people? |
40445 | Where was Morris, asked Mason, when his friends had committed that sacrilege? |
40445 | Where, asked Marshall, was the evidence that Burr had assembled an army to levy war on the United States? |
40445 | Where? |
40445 | Where? |
40445 | Which must the court obey-- the Constitution or the act altering that instrument? |
40445 | Who could tell the effect on Burr of such dread tidings? |
40445 | Who dared brave the wrath of that blind and merciless god, Public Prejudice? |
40445 | Who is the author of these pieces? |
40445 | Who will build upon the hills and cultivate the valleys which here surround us?" |
40445 | Who will buy your lands? |
40445 | Who will open your Western forests? |
40445 | Why are they not proved?'' |
40445 | Why do not those who are opposed to the project, express in the public papers or by petitions their disapprobation?... |
40445 | Why engage Spain against this enterprise, if it was designed against the United States? |
40445 | Why had he been refused the use of pen, ink, and paper-- denied even the privilege of writing to his daughter? |
40445 | Why had the Judiciary been made"as independent of the Legislature as of the Executive?" |
40445 | Why had the guards who brought him from Alabama to Richmond"avoided every magistrate on the way"? |
40445 | Why is it not proved?" |
40445 | Why"not have said, at once, that any... officer... convicted on indictment should(_ ipso facto_) be removed from office? |
40445 | Why, he asks, had not some one pointed out to him"some of those objections... to the plan of the work"before he wrote any part of it? |
40445 | Why, then, had the article on impeachment been placed in the Constitution at all? |
40445 | With an air of triumph Randolph asked:"Can anyone doubt Mr. Marshall''s thorough acquaintance with our laws? |
40445 | With what result? |
40445 | With what result? |
40445 | With what sensations should the common herd of cattle look upon it? |
40445 | Would Marshall adjourn court that this amicable arrangement might be brought about? |
40445 | Would any one pretend to say that a State might enact an_ ex post facto_ law or pass a bill of attainder? |
40445 | Would not Congress at last afford them relief? |
40445 | Would the act be null, whatever might be the wish of the nation, or would its obligation or nullity depend upon the public sentiment?" |
40445 | Would they abandon their posts as judges, and the interests of millions committed to them, to serve the purposes of a single individual?" |
40445 | Yet who could tell what he would do? |
40445 | Z. reference? |
40445 | [ 1232] What was the moving force back of the prosecution? |
40445 | [ 1483] Had the corruption of the Legislature destroyed the title of Peck, an innocent purchaser? |
40445 | [ 374] Did the applicants have a right to the commissions? |
40445 | [ 620] Are you sure they will feel a disposition to advance the work? |
40445 | [ Illustration:_ John Wickham_] Did that testimony, then, prove the overt act of levying war on the United States? |
40445 | _ Why are we here? |
40445 | at Cincinnati? |
40445 | at Nashville? |
40445 | exclaimed Senator James Jackson of Georgia,"is it possible that I have heard such a sentiment in this body? |
40445 | must it not also be proved? |
40445 | must it not be proved in the same manner that presence must be proved? |
40445 | that the prisoner was one of those who assembled at Blennerhassett''s island? |
40445 | the overt act laid in the indictment? |
10392 | ''Did you smoke pipes or cigars?'' 10392 ''Do n''t yer?'' |
10392 | ''Do you remember giving me a pipe o''baccy?'' 10392 ''I perceive,''said the Shah,''you are a genius,''""What did you think of his state of mind after that?" |
10392 | ''Now,''he adds,''how did you amuse yourselves, eh?'' 10392 ''That wun''t do?'' |
10392 | A flea? |
10392 | All right? |
10392 | And assist her while she signed the will? |
10392 | And became as good an expert as his father, I hope? |
10392 | And did you preach your own sermons? |
10392 | And during that time I dare say you have regularly performed the services of the Church? |
10392 | And how much evidence, Mr.----, would you consider sufficient to hang a dog? |
10392 | And the pen? |
10392 | And would not that in your judgment, instead of showing that he was insane, prove that he was_ a very sensible man_? |
10392 | And your son, who, as you say, is even better than yourself, is he as infallible as you? |
10392 | And,continued Maule,"that he was perfectly sane, although he murdered his wife?" |
10392 | Are you alluding to Sir Alan? 10392 But did you see him, Bogle?" |
10392 | By different persons, do you say? |
10392 | Can any one hum it? |
10392 | Come, now,_ is n''t_ she superb? |
10392 | Did he always put his hand inside his sleeve to rub? |
10392 | Did he guide her hand? |
10392 | Did he put the pen into her hand? |
10392 | Did he touch her hand at all? |
10392 | Did the wife attend your ministrations, too? |
10392 | Did yer''ear that, Jimmy? 10392 Did you have week- day services as well?" |
10392 | Did you make any calculation as to its value_ before_ you saw it? |
10392 | Did you not think it was an accident? |
10392 | Did you see it? |
10392 | Did you write your own sermons, may I ask? |
10392 | Do n''t you recollect, sir, you defended me at Kingston for a burglary charge, and got me off., Mr. Orkins, in flyin''colours? |
10392 | Do you know Joe Brown, the best fellow in the world? |
10392 | Do you know that it''s wicked to tell lies? |
10392 | Do you know,he asked, with another turn of his eyes,"_ why_ I call her_ Naples_?" |
10392 | Do you remember what price you had arrived at when you reached Peterborough, for instance? |
10392 | Do you remember, Sir Henry,asked Toole,"what the clever rogue Orton wrote in his pocket- book? |
10392 | Do you see,asked his lordship,"a tiny mark on the corner of the card at the back?" |
10392 | Do you want the witness to contradict what he has said in your favour, Mr.----? |
10392 | Do you want_ me_ to skate? |
10392 | Does he justify? |
10392 | Duty to her husband-- was that one? |
10392 | Eh, eh? 10392 Eleven for wilful murder, eh?" |
10392 | Had it been executed at this time? 10392 Had you ever seen any other will?" |
10392 | Have you a doctor''s certificate? |
10392 | Have you an affidavit, Mr. Brown, as to the reason? |
10392 | How came you to see his naked arms? |
10392 | How can I be deceived in my own handwriting? |
10392 | How could Mrs. Stubbs disbelieve her own senses? |
10392 | How did he assist her? |
10392 | How did you manage it, my good friend-- how did you manage? 10392 How did you obtain possession of the keys?" |
10392 | How do you know Roger had no tattoo marks? |
10392 | How many ran? |
10392 | How much do you_ really_ want to quite clear you? |
10392 | How much have you put on? |
10392 | How near? |
10392 | How? |
10392 | I do n''t know, Mr. Hawkins,said he on Sunday morning,"whether you would like to see our little church?" |
10392 | I do, Mr. Nethercliffe; and if you are ready for the hole, tell me-- were those six pieces of paper written by one hand at about the same time? |
10392 | I put it to yourself, sir, as a gentleman: how would you have liked it if another man had come to your house and drunk your beer? |
10392 | I suppose there were eleven to one against you? |
10392 | I suppose you have nothing to ask him? |
10392 | I think you profess to be infallible, do you not? |
10392 | I''ll give them as much burning eloquence as I can manage,said I, in my youthful ardour;"but what''s the use of words against facts? |
10392 | In the way of_ providing_ for him? |
10392 | Is it not strange,I asked,"even in_ your_ view of things, that the original will should be burnt and the copy preserved?" |
10392 | Is it possible,I asked myself,"that there can have been a mistake?" |
10392 | Is that really your signature, sir? |
10392 | Is that so? |
10392 | Is that the charge against him? |
10392 | Just tell me,said he,"do you ever drink any water?" |
10392 | Let me give you an instance: In Lady D----''s case, which has recently been tried, did not your son swear one way and you another? |
10392 | Look,he said, in his most coaxing manner,"do n''t you see that mare yonder-- down there by the spinny?" |
10392 | May the witnesses go in the third case after this, my lord? |
10392 | More like your scarf? |
10392 | Muster Orkins, sir,said he,"beggin''your pardon, sir, but might I have a word with you, Muster Orkins, if it ai n''t a great intrusion, sir?" |
10392 | My lord, could you kindly tell us which horse has won the Cup? |
10392 | Never missed the sermon, discourse, or homily of the Church, Sunday or week- day? |
10392 | Not when you were travelling? 10392 Now do you know_ why_ I call her_ Morning Star_?" |
10392 | Original? |
10392 | Quite sure, sir? |
10392 | Same flea? |
10392 | Same time-- ten minutes past eleven? |
10392 | Same time? |
10392 | Sir,said he,"you know those Emmets that you have done so much for?" |
10392 | So that he could hand the ink if necessary? |
10392 | Spiritual adviser, of course? |
10392 | That follows-- I mean up to the time of this Sabbath- breaking you spoke of he regularly attended your ministrations, and then killed his wife? |
10392 | The real difficulty, my lord--And as he hesitated the Judge said,--"You want to be elsewhere?" |
10392 | The sleeves, how were they? |
10392 | The will was not completed, I think, when you first saw the dying woman-- on the day, I mean, of her death? |
10392 | Then are you the man who inflicted the injury on the keeper? |
10392 | There was no one else to do so except you? |
10392 | Was any one near? |
10392 | Was it by standing on his head? |
10392 | Was it kept in a little bag by the pillow of the testatrix? 10392 Was it wrong in repentance of Man to believe? |
10392 | Was there? |
10392 | Well, sir, I tries to act upright and downstraight; and, as I ses, if a man only does that he ai n''t got nothin''to fear,''as he, Muster Orkins? |
10392 | Well,he said,"and how are we getting on to- day? |
10392 | Were fish remnants,asked Platt,"sometimes thrown into this reservoir of filth, such as old cods''heads with goggle eyes?" |
10392 | Were you following the prosecutor on the occasion when he was robbed on Ludgate Hill? 10392 What did he rub for?" |
10392 | What do you mean? |
10392 | What is its object? |
10392 | What is that, sir? |
10392 | What is the prisoner''s name? |
10392 | What is the question? |
10392 | What is there to prevent it? |
10392 | What is your case, Mr.----? |
10392 | What is your explanation? |
10392 | What then, James, what then? 10392 What time was this?" |
10392 | What was it? |
10392 | What was that? |
10392 | What''s the matter, Charley? |
10392 | What''s the matter, Jenkins? |
10392 | What, then? |
10392 | What,I said,"on the left?" |
10392 | What,_ Saltfish_, let me see if I''ve a bit of sugar, eh,_ Saltfish_?--sugar-- is it? |
10392 | When and where, and under what circumstances? |
10392 | When can I have him, Sam? |
10392 | When did you view this property, Mr. Bunce? 10392 When he did touch her hand_ was she dead_?" |
10392 | Where is it? |
10392 | Where the h-- l are you coming to like this? |
10392 | Where was he on that Friday? 10392 Where was it?" |
10392 | Where? |
10392 | Where? |
10392 | Who is this? |
10392 | Who the devil,said the madman,"do you think you are making those idiotic signs to? |
10392 | Why do you cross- examine, then? |
10392 | Why on earth, Mr. Goodman,I answered,"did you not say that before? |
10392 | Why should the defendant,asked Mr. Hawkins at the close of one of the day''s speeches,"if he were Sir Roger, avoid Arthur Orton''s sisters? |
10392 | Why wo n''t I, muster? |
10392 | Why, how many,he rejoined,"are making as much as you? |
10392 | Why, what did you want to kill a woman for? 10392 Why,"I asked,"do you think they meant the visit for me?" |
10392 | Why,asked the stone- breaker,"what have you been a- doin''of?" |
10392 | Why? 10392 Wish to leave, James? |
10392 | Would your lordship allow me to make an application? |
10392 | Yes, I know; but without her knowledge? |
10392 | Yes,said he,"that''s more like--""Zummut like your scarf?" |
10392 | Yes; but which of them? |
10392 | Yes? |
10392 | You advised the deceased lady, probably, as to her duties as a dying woman? |
10392 | You are Sam Linton? |
10392 | You know this public- house, sir? |
10392 | You were careful, of course, as you told your learned counsel, to avoid any undue influence? |
10392 | You--he paused--"you did not, I think"--another pause--"contribute to our little gathering?" |
10392 | You''ve seen him, then? |
10392 | Your own amusement? |
10392 | Your own sermon or discourse, with an occasional homily? 10392 _ And the ink_?" |
10392 | _ Did he hand the pen_? |
10392 | _ Our_ object, my lord? |
10392 | _ Rari nantes in gurgite vasto_? |
10392 | ''Ah, Mrs. Stubbs,''says he, looking at another picture,''that is not the_ old_ picture, is it?'' |
10392 | ''Bogle,''cries the defendant, after all those years of estrangement,''is that_ you_?'' |
10392 | ''Well, sir,''I says,''''ow do n''t I know it? |
10392 | ''What sort of pipes?'' |
10392 | ''Why not before?'' |
10392 | ''Wool that do?'' |
10392 | ''Yes, Sir Roger,''answered Bogle; how do you do?'' |
10392 | ----?" |
10392 | ----?" |
10392 | ; but might he trouble me for another motto, or something that might go as a kind of companion to the others in his pocket- book? |
10392 | AN EXPERT IN HANDWRITING--"DO YOU KNOW JOE BROWN?" |
10392 | AN EXPERT IN HANDWRITING--"DO YOU KNOW JOE BROWN?" |
10392 | After a while he said( for he could contain his joke no longer),--"Judge, do you know why I call her_ Saltfish_?" |
10392 | After this his lordship never saw my lord without asking the question,"How''s dear Jack?" |
10392 | Ai n''t you bin an''offered_ fourteen pun_ for that there leetle dorg? |
10392 | Amidst this costly international wrangle the Judge kept his temper, occasionally cheering the combatants by saying in an interrogative tone,"Yes?" |
10392 | And are there not commercial circles also which could not exist without their equally innocent supporters? |
10392 | And was this poor man a regular attendant at all your services during the whole time you have been Vicar?" |
10392 | And what could the most brilliant do beyond that? |
10392 | And what is the date--1694?" |
10392 | Before concluding the evening, Toole said,--"You remember your joke, Sir Henry, about Miss Brain and her black kids?" |
10392 | But first of all,''says Perkins,''what did you know of Roger? |
10392 | But how_ can_ Fortune herself give two to one on all comers? |
10392 | But what do you say to_ yellow_? |
10392 | But what would I have given to be able to do so? |
10392 | But where is the original?" |
10392 | But, let me ask you,_ why_ did you destroy the original will?" |
10392 | Did anybody ever hear such wile words against a clergyman, let alone a magistrate, sir? |
10392 | Did he or not, in your opinion, steal them?" |
10392 | Did it ever occur to you, gentlemen, to find a similar sack of peas in the dead of the night on any road on which you chanced to be travelling? |
10392 | Did it not pass through your mind when you were in the train, for instance--''I wonder, now, what that property is worth?''" |
10392 | Did she retain the keys of the bag herself?" |
10392 | Did you make notes?" |
10392 | Do you mean as to value?" |
10392 | Do you mean to say, boy, that you would go to hell fire for telling_ any_ lie?" |
10392 | Do you understand what that gentleman has been saying?" |
10392 | Does your keeper let you go without being attached to a string?" |
10392 | Does your lordship think it is fair to suggest a classical quotation to a respectable but illiterate labourer?" |
10392 | For why? |
10392 | Gentlemen, what do you say-- is the sheep or the prisoner guilty?" |
10392 | Had it a yellow smell, think you?" |
10392 | Had this smell any_ particular colour_, think you?" |
10392 | Have n''t you got a good situation?" |
10392 | Hawkins?" |
10392 | He did not deny it, whereupon I added:"It seems strange that two infallibles should contradict one another?" |
10392 | He put this question and many others of a similar kind,--"Do you swear, sir, that you were on board the_ Bella_?" |
10392 | He said I had done a fine thing to encourage sin and immorality, and what could come of humanity if Judges would not punish? |
10392 | He says he found them; do you believe him? |
10392 | His ingenuity was exhausted, and so I gave him the finishing stroke with this question,--"Will you swear, sir, that an original will ever existed?" |
10392 | How are we getting on, eh?" |
10392 | How can they comprehend the meaning of the phrases employed? |
10392 | How could one believe that any owner would think of entering him for a race? |
10392 | How is it possible, then, to bring home the charge to the culprit unless you rely on circumstantial evidence? |
10392 | How_ do_ you manage to get through it?" |
10392 | Hull? |
10392 | I immediately asked the prosecutor,"Is that true?" |
10392 | I merely said,--"Gentlemen, do you believe in the defence?" |
10392 | I think you said not?" |
10392 | If the Tower guns were announcing the birth of an heir to the Throne, he would not look up to ask,"What is that?" |
10392 | If the prisoner had no motive, who else had? |
10392 | Is n''t she lovely?" |
10392 | Is that all, James? |
10392 | Is that it?" |
10392 | Is there a human being on earth who had ill- will towards her, or anything to gain by her death? |
10392 | Is there any chance of your being in these parts? |
10392 | Is your client_ unable_ to appear to- morrow?" |
10392 | Jones?" |
10392 | Judge to prisoner:"Nothing to say, I suppose?" |
10392 | Knox?'' |
10392 | Linton?" |
10392 | Lookee there,''is dawg''s a- leadin''''i m; wot d''ye think o''that?" |
10392 | MY DEAR SIR HENRY,--How can I thank you enough for your magnificent present? |
10392 | Mary''s?" |
10392 | May I rise?'' |
10392 | My application is that, as that case will last over Friday--""Friday? |
10392 | Naples? |
10392 | Nethercliffe?" |
10392 | Nice bernevolent old cove to look at, ai n''t''e? |
10392 | Not going to get married, eh-- not surely going to get married? |
10392 | Now let us suppose that you were disobedient to your parents, or to one of them; what would happen in that case?" |
10392 | Now, sir, what next? |
10392 | Now, what colour do you say this smell belonged to?" |
10392 | Now,''ow d''ye''count for that, sir?" |
10392 | Orkins?" |
10392 | Orkins?" |
10392 | Paul_?'' |
10392 | See what he''s got?" |
10392 | See''i m? |
10392 | See''i m? |
10392 | Shall we have a view a little farther off?" |
10392 | She warn''t your wife, was she?" |
10392 | She was asked,--"Where was the will signed?" |
10392 | Should he adjourn and join the mess? |
10392 | Simply to find his recklessness had blasted his life, and then--? |
10392 | Suppose we ses next Tooesday week?" |
10392 | Suppose, now, you were accused of stealing an apple; how would that be in the next world, think you?" |
10392 | THE TILNEY STREET OUTRAGE--"ARE YOU NOT GOING TO PUT ON THE BLACK CAP, MY LORD?" |
10392 | THE TILNEY STREET OUTRAGE--"ARE YOU NOT GOING TO PUT ON THE BLACK CAP, MY LORD?" |
10392 | The marshal asked the Sheriff,"Is n''t that Toole?" |
10392 | The slander consisted in the defendant pointing his thumb over his shoulder and asking another man,"Do you know him? |
10392 | Then I put this question;"Have you and your son been sometimes employed on opposite sides in a case?" |
10392 | Then Platt resumed,--"You think it was more of a blue smell like? |
10392 | Then he breathed,"Yer''onner, wot I means to say is this--""What do you want, Linton? |
10392 | Then to the jury:"Gentlemen, I suppose you have no doubt? |
10392 | There''e is; see''i m? |
10392 | They may leave this man''s account unquestioned if they like, but if it is a true account, what do you say to the recognition?" |
10392 | This is how the advocate dealt with this little party in his address to the jury:--"Gentlemen, ca n''t you imagine the scene? |
10392 | Wallsend?" |
10392 | Was he a diligent student?" |
10392 | Was there ever a better specimen of feigned simplicity than he? |
10392 | Well, at last I agrees to do my best for the gent, and he says, just as you might say, Mr. Orkins, just now,''When can she have him?'' |
10392 | Well, then, what is it? |
10392 | Well, they says; leastways, I ses, ses I,--"''Lawyer Orkins, you lost a dawg,''ave yer?'' |
10392 | Well, you''ll say,''How do you know that''ere, Sam?'' |
10392 | What became of the pieces?" |
10392 | What could be stronger evidence than that of its usefulness and respectability? |
10392 | What d''ye say to that?" |
10392 | What did it matter to Sam Lewis what my income was? |
10392 | What do you mean, sir?" |
10392 | What do you mean? |
10392 | What do you think of him? |
10392 | What has been done with the rest of the powder? |
10392 | What have you been doing, Jenkins?" |
10392 | What is the nature of your case?" |
10392 | What number?" |
10392 | What price does he seem inclined to offer?" |
10392 | What put that into your silly brains? |
10392 | What then? |
10392 | What will become of_ you_, my little boy, when you die, if you are so wicked as to tell a lie?" |
10392 | What would Campbell or Jervis say to_ Young Knowell_? |
10392 | What''s your difficulty about being here?" |
10392 | What, has Jack made you his prisoner? |
10392 | What_ could_ he do? |
10392 | When asked,"Was this young man with you that night?" |
10392 | When that shrewd and cunning impostor was asked,"Would you be surprised to hear this or that?" |
10392 | When will such a company meet again? |
10392 | Where is he?" |
10392 | Where was he? |
10392 | Where was the spot where the accident occurred? |
10392 | Who but Paul would have thought of so grotesque a simile? |
10392 | Who would not admire a Judge''s companion? |
10392 | Whom are you talking to? |
10392 | Whom do you take me for?" |
10392 | Why Friday?" |
10392 | Why do you wish to leave? |
10392 | Why not?" |
10392 | Why was not this case tried in the County Court?" |
10392 | Why, what do you wish to leave for? |
10392 | Williams?" |
10392 | Woollet?" |
10392 | Would it not be reasonable to suppose that the man might think he had had enough of it?" |
10392 | You understand that, do you not?" |
10392 | _ Could_ anybody believe it? |
10392 | and did you see the prisoner put his hand into the prosecutor''s pocket and take this handkerchief out of it?" |
10392 | and was aim actually taken? |
10392 | and"Are you prepared to swear that?" |
10392 | asks the Claimant;''death''s- head pipes?'' |
10392 | how deceived I was, when, in a sudden rage, he turned upon me, and asked_ who the devil I thought I was talking to_?" |
10392 | says one;''I say, Jim, here''s a nice public; what d''ye say to goin''in and havin''a glass o''bitter? |
10392 | says the tother feller;''then what the h---- are yer looken arter him for?'' |
10392 | see''i m? |
36854 | ''How is it possible?'' 36854 A fanatic,"he thought,"what shall I do with him?" |
36854 | After the first evening? |
36854 | Ah then, it came to that? |
36854 | All, Victorine? |
36854 | Allow me to tell you how every thing came about? |
36854 | And Herr van der Weyden? |
36854 | And did I really love her? 36854 And did that never occur to you?" |
36854 | And did you never think what would come of this? |
36854 | And do you really think of departing at the New Year? |
36854 | And does that comfort me? |
36854 | And how is it to be explained? 36854 And how shall this broken- down, sick man, weary with his tortures, find it? |
36854 | And is Herr van der Weyden going back to Java again? |
36854 | And is the wound serious? |
36854 | And since when have we declined to admit Herr Berger? |
36854 | And then? |
36854 | And what did he say? |
36854 | And what was this one thing? |
36854 | And why should I? |
36854 | And will you perhaps also attempt to justify the fact that he never concerned himself about his child? |
36854 | And will you tell other people so? |
36854 | And you adhered to that,he began again,"whatever Father Rohn might say? |
36854 | And you answered? |
36854 | Are you cruel enough to remind me of that? |
36854 | Are you going already? 36854 Are you really ill?" |
36854 | Begun? 36854 Berger?" |
36854 | Better, I hope? |
36854 | Business? 36854 But can we ascribe all the blame to him?" |
36854 | But do you go? |
36854 | But do you know him? |
36854 | But ought this remote possibility to mislead you? 36854 But under what pretext? |
36854 | But what else could one expect? |
36854 | But what is this solution? |
36854 | But why not? 36854 But why?" |
36854 | But wo n''t you go up to the house after all? |
36854 | But you are going home? |
36854 | But you surely did not inquire about that? |
36854 | Can I believe you rather than my mother? 36854 Can I suffer this? |
36854 | Dead? |
36854 | Did he send you to me on this mission? |
36854 | Did the accused choose her Counsel? |
36854 | Did you come on that account? |
36854 | Did you tell the Chief Justice this? |
36854 | Do n''t be afraid-- I only want----"You have come to warn us? |
36854 | Do you know anything about the matter? |
36854 | Do you know what the man- servant is called? |
36854 | Does that poor creature in here strike you as being dangerous? |
36854 | Does your Lordship wish to make an inspection? |
36854 | Escaped? |
36854 | Has he been here already? |
36854 | Has he been here? |
36854 | Has she been suddenly taken ill? |
36854 | Have you read this, Sir? |
36854 | He asked me if there was no one I was attached to, who loved me, to whom my life or death mattered? 36854 He does not suspect it?" |
36854 | He is going to stay in Austria? |
36854 | He surely did n''t torture you with bigoted speeches? |
36854 | Her fate moves you? |
36854 | How am I to understand this? |
36854 | How are you? |
36854 | How can you know that? |
36854 | How could you tell this untruth? 36854 How did it come about that I broke my oath? |
36854 | How do you know that? |
36854 | How do you think of living now? |
36854 | How is Victorine Lippert? |
36854 | How long will this sleep last? |
36854 | How shall I thank you? |
36854 | How-- how does the case stand? |
36854 | I need not tremble any more? 36854 If it should be they?" |
36854 | If the worst were to happen? |
36854 | In Gratz? |
36854 | In any case? |
36854 | In the dark? |
36854 | In the first place: how would the fellow get out of the sick- room or out of his cell into the corridor of the female patients? 36854 In the prison?" |
36854 | Indeed? 36854 Indeed?" |
36854 | Indeed?--and what is the truth? |
36854 | Is this the way to go on after a bad attack of the heart on the evening before? 36854 It is all discovered, is it not?" |
36854 | It will not strike others, but will she not herself guess the truth? |
36854 | It-- it came upon you as a surprise? |
36854 | May I not? |
36854 | May he not pay a visit to a friend and stay to supper there? 36854 Monstrous, is n''t it? |
36854 | No,he then murmured,"how should I know him?" |
36854 | None the less resolved? |
36854 | Nor you either, Franz? |
36854 | Nothing, what should he say? 36854 Oh-- in what way?" |
36854 | Should I otherwise be so calm? 36854 So Fräulein von Tessenau is the happy bride?" |
36854 | So he has none the less resolved to go on with that? |
36854 | So many people believe in it, good earnest men who have seen and suffered much misfortune, how should a simple girl dare to doubt it? 36854 So many?" |
36854 | So people suspect nothing? 36854 Something, my Lord? |
36854 | Tessenau? |
36854 | Thank me?--What for? |
36854 | Thank you,said the raftsman after the door was shut"Well, how I know of your trouble? |
36854 | That was in the beginning of your career? |
36854 | The decision? 36854 The doctor told you? |
36854 | The door through which one can get from here into the prison? |
36854 | The law? 36854 The minister''s telegram?" |
36854 | The worse has past, has n''t it? |
36854 | Then I suppose you have come to buy the house? |
36854 | Then why do you dissent from me with such conviction? 36854 Then you refuse me justice?" |
36854 | Then you still insist that I shall proceed with it? |
36854 | There is such a veritable hurly- burly at the residence, that even Franz hardly knows his way about-- where do you mean to stay? |
36854 | This glimpse into a child''s soul makes you tremble? 36854 Was not the assassin an Italian?" |
36854 | Well, how goes it now? |
36854 | Well, what do you say to that? 36854 Well,"asked Berger,"is the witness here already? |
36854 | Well? |
36854 | What are you doing there? |
36854 | What are you studying so diligently? |
36854 | What are you thinking of? |
36854 | What do you say to this? |
36854 | What do you think of doing? |
36854 | What does that matter to me? 36854 What has happened?" |
36854 | What has happened? |
36854 | What have I done to you? |
36854 | What is the matter with you? 36854 What is there to prevent me? |
36854 | What is this? |
36854 | What need of asking? |
36854 | What shall I say? |
36854 | What to do? |
36854 | What will you do? |
36854 | What? 36854 What? |
36854 | What? |
36854 | When are you to take over the conduct of the Courts? |
36854 | When do you leave Bolosch? 36854 Where did you see him? |
36854 | Where is Fräulein Brigitta? |
36854 | Which are they, my lord? |
36854 | Who granted you the postponement? |
36854 | Who has been playing this joke upon you? 36854 Who is the bridegroom?" |
36854 | Whom does our present transaction relate to? |
36854 | Why did you not discover yourself to me, or why did you not appeal to the Emperor for pardon? |
36854 | Why do n''t you go to confession? |
36854 | Why do you say such a horrible thing? 36854 Why do you suppose that?" |
36854 | Why have you again put off going? |
36854 | Why not? |
36854 | Why should I? 36854 Why should you wish her to live? |
36854 | Why wo n''t you go to Vienna? 36854 Why, what is there to discover?" |
36854 | Why? |
36854 | Why? |
36854 | Will you allow me a question? |
36854 | Wo n''t you be too lonely there? |
36854 | Would it not be possible to take out a summons for perjury? |
36854 | Would this be justice? |
36854 | Yes, you must certainly be a countryman of his? |
36854 | You are angry with me? |
36854 | You are going to her? |
36854 | You are going to the trial? |
36854 | You are not going up to the house? |
36854 | You are taking up the studies of your youth again, Fräulein Brigitta? |
36854 | You asked him about her? |
36854 | You divine the rest? |
36854 | You have finished drawing up the appeal? 36854 You have now taken old Franz into your confidence?" |
36854 | You know nothing of him? |
36854 | You know there were not? |
36854 | You shudder, George? |
36854 | You took the girl abroad? |
36854 | You want to refer to something again? |
36854 | You_ will_ not? |
36854 | Your Lordship does not know? |
36854 | Your Lordship is going to receive the procession on my balcony? |
36854 | Your arms? |
36854 | Your lot? |
36854 | ''Are you still here?'' |
36854 | ''Do you recognize that coat of arms?'' |
36854 | ''Have you ever,''he now himself asked,''heard of any keys that my predecessor is said to have handed over?'' |
36854 | ''Have you received my citation?'' |
36854 | ''What are you looking for, my Lord?'' |
36854 | ''What do you want playing the spy here?'' |
36854 | ''What does this mean?'' |
36854 | ''What door?'' |
36854 | ''Why did you go away?'' |
36854 | ''Why did you not do your duty to your child? |
36854 | ''You are a German, are you not Baron Sendlingen? |
36854 | ''You wish to convince me that you were not in criminal collusion with Mirescul? |
36854 | ..."Do I know it?" |
36854 | After twenty- four hours nothing will be found, as we set about searching the house just to show our good intentions-- eh?'' |
36854 | Again he does not know whether he will see her or what he ought to do.... And do I know, would any one know in the presence of such a fate?" |
36854 | All the functionaries of the Courts fell into the greatest state of excitement: who was safe if Sendlingen fell? |
36854 | An energetic Judge could without doubt do so, but will old Hoche, now over seventy, succeed? |
36854 | And at the same time it frightened him: for how could he look him in the face? |
36854 | And could anything else be expected? |
36854 | And could you save her by such a step? |
36854 | And had not this change really set in even more visibly than her physical improvement? |
36854 | And has he, too, to expiate it with honour and life?" |
36854 | And how tragically it affects you? |
36854 | And if I did, how could that trouble me? |
36854 | And if Thou wouldst not do this, why didst Thou suffer us two to be born? |
36854 | And if he then approved of his friend''s resolution not to preside, could he now urge him to undertake a similar task? |
36854 | And if that were so, would it be cause for complaint? |
36854 | And is my guilt greater than his? |
36854 | And is such a person worth so much money? |
36854 | And just as before, it seemed to annoy him to be surprised in the act.--Isn''t that strange?" |
36854 | And therefore once again-- what will you do, Victor?" |
36854 | And while I drove home through the snow- lit winter''s night, I kept repeating these words, for how was I henceforth to live without seeing her?" |
36854 | And why was there no end to this suffering, a great, a liberating, a redeeming end? |
36854 | And why? |
36854 | Are there any pressing matters to be rid of?" |
36854 | At length Berger asked:"You did not know that she bore your child in her bosom?" |
36854 | Awful, thrilling was the cry-- a cry for help?--or a cry of baffled rage? |
36854 | Berger stood still irresolutely; the place was so desolate, so uncanny; should he stay any longer? |
36854 | Berger stopped irresolutely; should he wake him up and question him? |
36854 | Berger was silent-- should he, dared he, tell the truth? |
36854 | Berger?" |
36854 | Berger?" |
36854 | Berger?" |
36854 | Berger?" |
36854 | Berger?" |
36854 | Berger?" |
36854 | Besides you would not have starved here?'' |
36854 | But I, what can I appeal to? |
36854 | But can small expedients be of any use? |
36854 | But there we are confronted with the second riddle: how did she come by the file? |
36854 | But was it really all- just? |
36854 | But we took courage and told the man everything; our real name, and that we were only called von Tessenau here----""How did he come by this name?" |
36854 | But what can it matter to me in my position? |
36854 | But what is to be done to prevent it? |
36854 | But what result was to be expected? |
36854 | But what would be the good? |
36854 | But you are still young, why will you cease to hope? |
36854 | Ca n''t you understand that this life would be unendurable if a high- minded deed, a noble victory over self, did not at times rend the web? |
36854 | Can my honour be more sacred than her life?" |
36854 | Can this be against Thy will, Thou who art a God of love and mercy? |
36854 | Can this lessen the burden of the fate?--for her, for him?" |
36854 | Can you expect that of me?" |
36854 | Can you expect this of me, you, who are yourself a Judge, bound by oath to judge both high and low with the same measure?" |
36854 | Certainly my fears were foolish; how should it be found out? |
36854 | Certainly the conflict was now more acute, more painfully accentuated, but was Sendlingen''s duty as a Judge any the less on that account? |
36854 | Could he be guilty of perjury to save them both? |
36854 | Could he then say:''I have no suspicion who could have helped her?'' |
36854 | Dear Heaven, how wretched he looks, and I am not accustomed to be spoken to by him in that way; but what does that matter? |
36854 | Do n''t you see that a man in my situation can not think of himself or any such secondary consideration?" |
36854 | Do n''t you think so, my Lord?" |
36854 | Do you hear? |
36854 | Do you know him?" |
36854 | Do you know no remedy for it?" |
36854 | Do you know so certainly that you will still be here then, that you will still have time then to hurry to Vienna? |
36854 | Do you know this girl?" |
36854 | Do you know whom this concerns?" |
36854 | Do you see now that we liberals and our newspapers are some good? |
36854 | Do you still intend to appeal? |
36854 | Do you suppose that I never mean to enter that cell?" |
36854 | Does he not understand that this very explanation tells most of all against the Minister? |
36854 | Does n''t that appear probable to you too?" |
36854 | Does that strike you as being better? |
36854 | Does your Lordship desire that I should ask him for them?" |
36854 | For look here-- how does the case stand? |
36854 | From caution? |
36854 | From mistrust? |
36854 | Had he deserved this fate? |
36854 | Had not the doctor himself said that she could only be saved by a change in her frame of mind? |
36854 | Had the gentry no relations in Germany then? |
36854 | Has he had news from Vienna?" |
36854 | Has not justice suffered at your hands by your respect for the law, that justice, I mean, which speaks aloud in the heart of every man?" |
36854 | Has the decision arrived? |
36854 | Has your indisposition perhaps returned?" |
36854 | Have you anything else to do here? |
36854 | Have you begun the examination?" |
36854 | Have you ever visited and repeatedly visited other condemned criminals?" |
36854 | He has surely not been deceived? |
36854 | His Majesty is severely wounded, if it had not been for the presence of mind of the butcher, Ettenreich----"He stopped abruptly,"What is the matter?" |
36854 | How could he do this? |
36854 | How could you have the heart to renounce a career that smiles upon you as yours does?" |
36854 | How do you know that? |
36854 | How has Baron Sendlingen been since?" |
36854 | How should this poor, pale, timorous child defend herself alone against such a man? |
36854 | How_ could_ you?" |
36854 | I am no murderer, am I?" |
36854 | I bade her be of good cheer, and then I told her much about his Lordship-- who knows better how, who knows him better? |
36854 | I could only offer her my hand and ask:''Did that brute insult you?'' |
36854 | I had to have Mirescul arrested: were there not the bales of tobacco which the superintendent had seized? |
36854 | I might say to Him:''Was n''t I obliged to try and keep her from sin by using the strongest words? |
36854 | I warned you by your own life, and by causing your conscience and presentiments to speak to you-- why did you not obey Me? |
36854 | Is he so much under your thumb that he must give you previous notice of his intention? |
36854 | Is her guilt any the less for this, will this bring her child to life again? |
36854 | Is n''t it odious?" |
36854 | Is n''t that so? |
36854 | Is n''t that unjustifiable?" |
36854 | Is there a man in the wide world, who would have the heart to blame him for this? |
36854 | Is there anything else to be done?" |
36854 | It is inconceivable that the person has got out of the country; where would she get the money from? |
36854 | Just this one thing: does it follow that this man must be a wretch? |
36854 | May I accompany you back to your residence? |
36854 | May I read it? |
36854 | Most of them looked after him in utter astonishment; what could have brought the Chief Justice so early out of doors? |
36854 | My father''s fate-- my future ruined-- may a man fight against himself in this way? |
36854 | My heart is so full.... You are going to her-- are you not? |
36854 | No? |
36854 | Once more, and for the last time, I ask your Excellency, to what Court am I to surrender myself?" |
36854 | One thing more, where did Franz leave him?" |
36854 | Or have you ever perhaps known of a case among educated people?" |
36854 | Or was he silent because he could speak no more? |
36854 | Or was it perhaps the silent misery of his face, the beseeching look of his eyes? |
36854 | Ought fidelity to the Law be stronger than fidelity to Justice? |
36854 | Perhaps it is owing to overwork at the Inquiry in Vienna?" |
36854 | Perhaps-- for who knows himself and his own heart? |
36854 | Shall I pardon her now because she is the daughter of an influential man of rank, because she is your daughter? |
36854 | She had a claim upon me-- could I make her my wife? |
36854 | Should this consideration be more authoritative than every other? |
36854 | Since when?" |
36854 | Supposing he should now be examined on oath? |
36854 | Tell me yourself, my Lord, does she look as if she were ill?" |
36854 | That he is really guilty and can be convicted in spite of your neglect of duty? |
36854 | That you should pay her a visit? |
36854 | The barrister had a severe struggle with himself; should he tell the doctor the whole truth? |
36854 | The old gentleman, you say, comes from Bavaria?" |
36854 | The voice of nature speaks thus in the breast of every man, even the roughest, and should it be silent in me?" |
36854 | They were kind, good people at Oosterdaal, the driver had told her that the gentleman was going to have driven there, why had he given up the idea? |
36854 | This arrangement was evident enough, but how could I show surprise at what made me so blessed? |
36854 | Thou wilt make reparation, sayst Thou, in Thy Heaven? |
36854 | To our poor young lady, to Victorine?" |
36854 | Was it because his face seemed familiar to her, mysteriously familiar, as if she had seen it ever since she could think?... |
36854 | Was it not indelicate and selfish to gratify his own longing at the price of deeply and painfully stirring up his friend''s heart? |
36854 | Was not the position the same as on the day of the trial? |
36854 | Was the train too slow for him? |
36854 | We were at our wits''end? |
36854 | Were there not perhaps fatal circumstances that bound him against his will and prevented him doing his duty to your poor mother?" |
36854 | What business?" |
36854 | What do the doctors say?" |
36854 | What do you advise, my Lord?" |
36854 | What do you hope to attain? |
36854 | What do you think of that?" |
36854 | What does it matter to me what his name is, or his station? |
36854 | What does your Lordship say to this calamity? |
36854 | What else is Franz in the world for?" |
36854 | What is his object?" |
36854 | What is the reason of it?" |
36854 | What is the result?" |
36854 | What serious effect could this have upon the fate of your child? |
36854 | What shall I do; merciful Heaven, what shall I do?" |
36854 | What should he do? |
36854 | What would have been the result, your Excellency? |
36854 | When did he go out?" |
36854 | When do you go to Vienna?" |
36854 | When?" |
36854 | Whether he is living or dead? |
36854 | Who will vouch that it may not then be too late? |
36854 | Whom else have I to thank but you?" |
36854 | Why did Sendlingen hesitate to choose this course? |
36854 | Why do you upset me? |
36854 | Why expose yourself, for the sake of such an abandoned creature, to an action for libel on the part of the Countess and her servant? |
36854 | Why should the news distress you? |
36854 | Why should you have done this?" |
36854 | Why vainly sound the lowest depths? |
36854 | Why, therefore, did he wish that the attempt should be made? |
36854 | Why, what is the matter?" |
36854 | Why? |
36854 | Why? |
36854 | Will it be a solution if I succeed with my appeal, if the sentence of death is commuted to penal servitude for life or for twenty years? |
36854 | Will you believe me?" |
36854 | Would it not be possible to hand over the inquiry to some one else?" |
36854 | Would not Death have been a deliverer here? |
36854 | Would this flood ever subside again and the soil bring forth flowers and fruit? |
36854 | Would you perhaps like to preside at it?" |
36854 | You are surprised? |
36854 | You naturally want to conceal where your daughter is now living?" |
36854 | You say it is against your feelings to preside at to- morrow''s trial?" |
36854 | You want me to lodge a petition for pardon? |
36854 | You were very intimate with him, do you know?" |
36854 | You will take back your words, wo n''t you? |
36854 | asked Bergen"How am I to understand that?" |
36854 | goodness me, what is the matter with you? |
36854 | he has surely gone mad? |
36854 | said I,''what does he want there?'' |
36854 | the Lord Chief Justice and now----""Have you seen him?" |
36854 | there was no word of release or deliverance: how could I have broached it, how have claimed it from her? |
36854 | you have not received other news? |
31037 | ''Ad you any deaths? |
31037 | ''Asn''t he''ad a meal? 31037 ''Ave you anythink else to put up? |
31037 | ''E''s on the_ Trinity''All_, ai n''t he? |
31037 | ''Ere, wot''s wrong with you, Dyvis? 31037 ''Ope she was insured?" |
31037 | ''Ow much does it stand you in, if it''s a fair question? |
31037 | ''Ow to get him there? |
31037 | ''Ow''s this? 31037 A ship?" |
31037 | About done? |
31037 | About how long ago since you wrote up this truck? |
31037 | Ah, where not? |
31037 | All clear forward? |
31037 | All understood, then? |
31037 | All what? |
31037 | All- e- same_ what_? |
31037 | All? 31037 And Attwater?" |
31037 | And I suppose it''s all your fancy pynted it,said Huish,"w''en you take a pistol and a bit o''lead, and copse a man''s brains all over him? |
31037 | And I suppose ye knew who haangit him? |
31037 | And O, Erchie, arena these like the hills of Naphtali? |
31037 | And a very nice man? |
31037 | And by the by, here is a question I should have asked you when I came on board: have you had small- pox? |
31037 | And how did you handle that, sir? |
31037 | And now, Hay, you poor lost puppy, what do you do with the two wolves? |
31037 | And so is Mr. Whish, no doubt? |
31037 | And so this is your son, Hermiston? |
31037 | And so you disapprove of caapital punishment? |
31037 | And suppose I do, what next? |
31037 | And that strikes you as a safeguard? |
31037 | And the crew? |
31037 | And then? |
31037 | And this French? |
31037 | And w''y did n''t you take the carpet there instead of trundling in a growler? |
31037 | And whae were they? |
31037 | And what do I care for my Auntie Kirstie? |
31037 | And what kind o''love do ye ca''that, that''s ready to gang round like a whirligig at folk talking? 31037 And what was she? |
31037 | And who''s to believe you, my son? |
31037 | And why not Grace? 31037 And why should I come to see you?" |
31037 | And why? 31037 And yet who can tell? |
31037 | And you found this island by an accident? |
31037 | And you, Huish? |
31037 | And, in short, take them for all in all, as good a ship''s company as one would ask? |
31037 | And, of course, I would n''t blow the gaff? 31037 Anybody else for shore?" |
31037 | Are ye stepping west, Hermiston? |
31037 | Are you armed? |
31037 | Are you going to berth here? |
31037 | Are you going to let the men know? |
31037 | Are you particular about having him dead or alive? |
31037 | Armed? 31037 Ashore?" |
31037 | Ass? 31037 At half- past six? |
31037 | Auntie Kirstie? |
31037 | Ay, lass? 31037 Ay, man?" |
31037 | Beer? |
31037 | Beg your pardon, Herrick,he added with undisguised humility,"but did you keep the run of the stores?" |
31037 | But what is your niece like? |
31037 | But, Dand, you would never lee to me? |
31037 | Ca n''t you see I''m all broken up the way it is? 31037 Call that land?" |
31037 | Can we be just to them? 31037 Can you do anything with me?" |
31037 | Can you? 31037 Captain,"said Herrick faintly,"is there nothing else?" |
31037 | Davis, is this all right? |
31037 | Davis, what are you doing, man? 31037 Dead?" |
31037 | Deaths? |
31037 | Did ye, though? |
31037 | Did you hear what the skipper said on board that schooner? |
31037 | Did you-- did you ever have crime here? |
31037 | Do none of them ever come here to see you? |
31037 | Do not you? |
31037 | Do we not all despise ourselves? |
31037 | Do ye mean to tell me ye was the panel''s mistress? |
31037 | Do ye no hear me, tawpie? 31037 Do you call that manners?" |
31037 | Do you hear me speak? |
31037 | Do you know I saved your life? |
31037 | Do you know that to- day, when I came on board, I trembled? |
31037 | Do you know you struck me? |
31037 | Do you mean there shall be no more drinking? |
31037 | Do you think he would have been so easy at table, unless he was prepared? |
31037 | Do you''ear me speak? |
31037 | Does it? |
31037 | Does that satisfy you? |
31037 | Double- eagles, was n''t it? |
31037 | Dr. Symonds is your partner, I guess? |
31037 | Dr. Symonds, I mean? 31037 Eight dozen what?" |
31037 | Fair or foul, what matters if I win her? |
31037 | Give a fellow time;''ow''s this, umpire? |
31037 | Go deeper, ca n''t you? |
31037 | Godsake, what''s the maitter wi''ye, mem? |
31037 | Got such a thing as a concertina forward? |
31037 | Got that? |
31037 | Has he spoken to you, then? |
31037 | Has the French landit? |
31037 | Have they indeed? |
31037 | Have you mind of Dand''s song? |
31037 | He showed them to you? 31037 He''s turned a bloomin''swot, ai n''t he?" |
31037 | Her? 31037 Here, what''s wrong with you?" |
31037 | Hey? 31037 Hiced punch? |
31037 | Him no eat? |
31037 | Him? 31037 Honour bright?" |
31037 | How can I keep this pitch? |
31037 | How can you know that? |
31037 | How comes it that I never see her in church? |
31037 | How do you know his name is William John? |
31037 | How do you mean? |
31037 | How has she been heading? |
31037 | How is she doing now? |
31037 | How''s all with your Recluse to- day? |
31037 | How''s this? |
31037 | How? |
31037 | How? |
31037 | Hullo, Hay, that you? |
31037 | I am loyal; I will not boast; but any interest I may have ever felt in the French--"Have ye been so loyal to me? |
31037 | I do n''t know,said Herrick; and then, with a cry:"Can you do anything with me?" |
31037 | I have no pride, I have no heart, no manhood,he thought,"or why should I prolong a life more shameful than the gallows? |
31037 | I suppose she has a native crew? |
31037 | I think you and Mrs. Robert are not very good friends,says he slily,"when you have your India shawls on?" |
31037 | I wonder, will I have met my fate? |
31037 | I? |
31037 | If you really mean it? |
31037 | Is it not? |
31037 | Is onybody deid? |
31037 | Is that you, Kirstie? |
31037 | Is the doctor on board? |
31037 | Is there not a girl too? |
31037 | Is this the gait to guide yersel''on the way hame frae kirk? 31037 It''s no Erchie?" |
31037 | It''s the happlication of science, I suppose? |
31037 | Keep me, what''s this? |
31037 | Kirstie, what''s this? 31037 Kirstie,"said Archie one day,"what is this you have against your family?" |
31037 | Looks like signs of an end, do n''t it? |
31037 | Man, man,she said,"is that a''ye can think of? |
31037 | Me mate? 31037 Mr. Erchie,"she began,"what''s this that''s come to ye?" |
31037 | My man,said Herrick, with a sudden gleam of animosity,"it is still your watch on deck, and surely your wheel also?" |
31037 | No trouble about the log, eh? |
31037 | Not much of a soft job, I suppose? |
31037 | Not take the sun? |
31037 | Not? |
31037 | Now, see''ere, ducky,said Huish,"this is my bean- feast, I believe? |
31037 | Now,said he,"are you man enough to take charge of''Errick and the niggers? |
31037 | O, Dand, are ye a leear? |
31037 | O, so that''s why everything''s deserted? |
31037 | O, so you tyke his part, do you? 31037 O, the girl you''re looking at-- aren''t you? |
31037 | O, what does it matter? |
31037 | O, you let me alone, will you? |
31037 | O, you lost her, did you? |
31037 | O, you went there? |
31037 | On the Lord''s Day? 31037 Pretty business, ai n''t it?" |
31037 | Rather bad form, is it not? |
31037 | Repeat it to me, can you? |
31037 | Samoa? |
31037 | Save him? |
31037 | Say, how long? |
31037 | See any green in my eye? 31037 Shall I have sold my honour for nothing?" |
31037 | She comes and goes, eh? 31037 Shell, I suppose?" |
31037 | So then we approach the other point of why you despise yourself? |
31037 | So you mean to tell me now, that you sit here evenings and ring up... well, ring on the angels... by yourself? |
31037 | So? |
31037 | Stop here, do you? |
31037 | Suppose it was? |
31037 | Suppose that was all so, and he had these pearls-- a ten years''collection of them?--Suppose he had? 31037 Sure you want to know?" |
31037 | That is right, then; and quite understood, is it not? |
31037 | That schooner with the hospital flag? |
31037 | That so? |
31037 | That you could n''t beg? 31037 That''s Tapena Tom, is it?" |
31037 | That''s all your prayer? |
31037 | That''s what you did with the paper that I went and begged for you? |
31037 | The Spec.? |
31037 | The baby? |
31037 | The end of what? |
31037 | The old folks? |
31037 | The pearls? |
31037 | There was nothing about your gorge rising, then? |
31037 | There was something wrong, was there not? 31037 There were pearls, too?" |
31037 | Treachery? |
31037 | Turned teetotal,''ave you? |
31037 | Twenty- nine deaths and thirty- one cases, out of thirty- three souls upon the island.--That''s a strange way to calculate, Mr. Hay, is it not? 31037 University man?" |
31037 | W''en your back''s at the wall, you do the best you can, do n''t you? |
31037 | W''ere is''e? |
31037 | W''y, wot''s this? |
31037 | Was I? |
31037 | Was there a-- was the fishing-- would you call the fishing anyways_ good_? |
31037 | We get the sun all right, do n''t we? |
31037 | Well, and if I ca n''t? |
31037 | Well, and what did you do next? |
31037 | Well, and''oo wants Him to? |
31037 | Well, have ye no other proposeetion? |
31037 | Well, now, what''s your idea? |
31037 | Well, shall we go back to the house? |
31037 | Well, sir, and what have you donn with your book to- day? |
31037 | Well, so you''ll come to dinner, then? 31037 Well, who am I? |
31037 | Well, why do n''t you fire? |
31037 | Well,drawled Huish,"you''re a plummy captain, ai n''t you? |
31037 | Were they not surprised when they made the island? |
31037 | Wha says sae? |
31037 | Wha tell''t ye that, mannie? |
31037 | Wha''s she? |
31037 | Wha''s that? |
31037 | What I am? 31037 What are the Courts to friendship and a little fishing?" |
31037 | What breeze had you that time you made Anaa, Uncle Ned? |
31037 | What brings you here? |
31037 | What brought you here to the South Seas? |
31037 | What did you say anyway? 31037 What did you say this morning?" |
31037 | What did you want? 31037 What do I do? |
31037 | What do we want of dead reckoning? |
31037 | What do ye Kirstie me for? |
31037 | What do you bring in me for? |
31037 | What do you know about me? 31037 What do you mean by that?" |
31037 | What do you mean? 31037 What do you mean? |
31037 | What do you think of it? |
31037 | What do you want? |
31037 | What does it matter? |
31037 | What does that mean? |
31037 | What door? |
31037 | What else is there? |
31037 | What for do ye say that? |
31037 | What for? |
31037 | What have ye to do wi''me? 31037 What in thunder do you want?" |
31037 | What is it? |
31037 | What is it? |
31037 | What is this business? |
31037 | What is up? |
31037 | What like did he say? |
31037 | What may that mean? |
31037 | What nex'', I would like to ken? |
31037 | What ship? |
31037 | What was there to give away? 31037 What way?" |
31037 | What were yer words, then? |
31037 | What''ll the hands think of it? |
31037 | What''s our point? 31037 What''s that you say? |
31037 | What''s that you say? |
31037 | What''s that? 31037 What''s that?" |
31037 | What''s that? |
31037 | What''s that? |
31037 | What''s this I hear of ye? |
31037 | What''s this? 31037 What''s this? |
31037 | What''s this? |
31037 | What''s your idea, anyway? |
31037 | What''s your name? |
31037 | What''s yours? |
31037 | What? 31037 What?" |
31037 | What? |
31037 | Whaur were ye? |
31037 | When did ye begin to dander in pink hosen, Mistress Elliott? |
31037 | When, if things had only gone right, the whole place was as good as your own? |
31037 | Where are you going, Herrick? |
31037 | Where did you hear it? |
31037 | Where do you get your labour from anyway? |
31037 | Where to, my son? |
31037 | Where would you have been if that boom had swung out and you bundled in the slack? 31037 Who sang out land?" |
31037 | Who told my father? 31037 Who was the other one?" |
31037 | Who''s this? |
31037 | Who? |
31037 | Why could I not do that last night? |
31037 | Why did he tell you all this? 31037 Why not the grace of your Maker and Redeemer, He who died for you, He who upholds you, He whom you daily crucify afresh? |
31037 | Why ring a bell, when there flows out from oneself and everything about one a far more momentous silence? 31037 Why should that be a good job?" |
31037 | Why, when it came to burying-- or did you bother burying? |
31037 | Why? |
31037 | Will I have gotten my jo now? |
31037 | Will ye no gie''s a kiss, Dand? |
31037 | Wiseman and Wishart? |
31037 | Wolves? |
31037 | Worth what? |
31037 | Wot are Wiseman and t''other buffer to us? |
31037 | Wot ca n''t he stand now? |
31037 | Wot did I tell you? |
31037 | Wot did you do? 31037 Wot is this bloomin''drivel?" |
31037 | Wot kind of man do_ you_ call yourself? 31037 Wot''s wot?" |
31037 | Wot- ju mean? |
31037 | Would you? |
31037 | Ye havena told me yet,she said,"who was it spoke?" |
31037 | You and my father are great friends, are you not? |
31037 | You come the''eavy swell, do n''t you, ducky? |
31037 | You could do that? |
31037 | You do n''t fancy I''m going to skip and leave you rotting on the beach, perhaps? 31037 You do?" |
31037 | You go always armed? |
31037 | You go in her ever? |
31037 | You know what brings me? |
31037 | You know what you said about my children? |
31037 | You loved these people? |
31037 | You mean to run them? |
31037 | You never miss, then? |
31037 | You shoot? |
31037 | You think I have punished him? |
31037 | You wo n''t forget the Spec.? |
31037 | You would n''t have me say I was ashamed of myself? 31037 You''re a friend of Archie Weir''s?" |
31037 | You''re pleasant, ai n''t you? |
31037 | You, I presume, are the captain? |
31037 | Your confidence? 31037 Your own schooner is overdue, I understand?" |
31037 | ''All right,''I said;''and do you mean to tell me I can get on that carpet and go straight to London, England?'' |
31037 | ''Brown, will you ship captain and take her to Sydney?'' |
31037 | ''Look here,''I said,''I''ve got some first- rate stuff in a bottle; it''ll fix your cough, savvy? |
31037 | ''Ow often''ave I''eard you send the''ole bloomin''dinner off and tell the man to chuck it in the swill- tub? |
31037 | ''You do n''t mean to say this is the Travelling Carpet?'' |
31037 | ( Singing)''_ This is the way the tyler does, the tyler does._''( Spoken) Bloomin''''umbug.--''Ow are you off now, for the notion of a future styte? |
31037 | A life spoiled, a fine young fellow as good as buried here in the wilderness with rustics; and all for what? |
31037 | About time, eh? |
31037 | Admitted she''s an angel-- but, my good fellow, is she a lady?" |
31037 | And I want to ask of you as a friend whether you like the prospect? |
31037 | And I''m still living? |
31037 | And O, Erchie, here arena_ you_ setting up to_ judge_? |
31037 | And ai n''t his sherry in it, rather? |
31037 | And at any rate, how about the mob that had once seethed about the carriage? |
31037 | And breakfast? |
31037 | And can even He? |
31037 | And can yon puir lassie?" |
31037 | And could_ she_ have done waur? |
31037 | And does Mr. Hay find a parable?" |
31037 | And have ye no forgot God''s plain command-- the First with Promise, dear? |
31037 | And how are ye? |
31037 | And how do you think I love my father?" |
31037 | And how''s your father? |
31037 | And if he had looked at her, what was more natural than that a young gentleman should look at the best- dressed girl in church? |
31037 | And look''ere, you''ve put this job up''ansomely for me,''aven''t you? |
31037 | And may not each have relevant excuses?" |
31037 | And then turning again to Herrick,"Do you bear out Mr. Whish''s description of your vintage? |
31037 | And what are we to do next? |
31037 | And what next?" |
31037 | And what was to be next? |
31037 | And what''s all this we hear of you? |
31037 | And where do I come in?" |
31037 | And you call that solitude?" |
31037 | And, do you know, I wonder if he might not have as good an answer against you and me? |
31037 | Any number of persons can use it( like Lyon''s tooth- tablet) with perfect propriety and neatness.--Who''s to officiate?" |
31037 | Any other topic you would like to sudgest, the ryne- gyge, the lightnin''-rod, Shykespeare, or the musical glasses? |
31037 | Archie had promised to spare the girl, and he would keep it; but who had promised to spare Archie? |
31037 | Are you like me, Miss Christina? |
31037 | Are you open to a charter?" |
31037 | Brings us through this slush of little islands in the cleanest place: see?" |
31037 | But I must just do the best I can wi''him, and what am I to do? |
31037 | But as regards him, whom I have publicly insulted? |
31037 | But do I?" |
31037 | But does it-- I ask myself-- does it not apply all through? |
31037 | But for the other? |
31037 | But if I ca n''t?" |
31037 | But she had builded too well-- Archie had his answers pat: Were not babes and innocents the type of the kingdom of heaven? |
31037 | But what else is there? |
31037 | But what have I done? |
31037 | But what''s that to do with Captain Davis or Mr. Herrick, you galoot?" |
31037 | But what''s the good of my carrying on talking, when it''s all in your inside as plain as print? |
31037 | But where to?" |
31037 | But who are we to know all the springs of God''s unfortunate creatures? |
31037 | But you surely have not come to stay, with the Courts still sitting; is that not most unwise?" |
31037 | But''ow about a flag of truce? |
31037 | But, Mr. Erchie, do ye no think that I have mind o''it a''still? |
31037 | By the way, did you get my answer? |
31037 | Ca n''t you see?" |
31037 | Can the thing be done? |
31037 | Captain, tell me one thing: why are n''t all the poor folk foot- pads?" |
31037 | Confession? |
31037 | Coppers''ot? |
31037 | Could he? |
31037 | Could it be again at the circuit town?" |
31037 | Could it have been you?" |
31037 | Could the thing continue? |
31037 | Dand would say;"and do you think, if I took Hob''s siller, that I wouldna drink it or wear it on the lassies? |
31037 | Demmy brokens, d''ye say? |
31037 | Did ye ca''the grieve into the consultation? |
31037 | Do n''t you hear Mr. Hay has picked you? |
31037 | Do we not ask too much? |
31037 | Do ye no hear what I''m tellin''ye? |
31037 | Do ye no think that I mind how the hilly sweetness ran about my hairt? |
31037 | Do ye think they havena talked to me?" |
31037 | Do you cotton to the tea- fight views, or the old red-''ot bogey business?" |
31037 | Do you mean to say you did it single- handed?" |
31037 | Do you see yourself explaining to the Four Black Brothers? |
31037 | Do you see?" |
31037 | Do you? |
31037 | Elliott?" |
31037 | Enjoy it? |
31037 | Fetch it aft, will you?" |
31037 | Five hours, I think?" |
31037 | Follow?" |
31037 | Fond of parables?" |
31037 | For who Burnished the sword, blew on the drowsy coal, Held still the target higher, chary of praise And prodigal of counsel-- who but thou? |
31037 | From across the table? |
31037 | From behind? |
31037 | God damn ye, did God make ye?_''No, that could n''t be nothing but genuine; a man''s got to be born to that; and notice! |
31037 | Godsake, what ails the wife?" |
31037 | Grant he was vile, why should you hunt him with a vileness equal to his own? |
31037 | Had he no rights?--only the obligation to go on, without discharge or furlough, bearing the unbearable? |
31037 | Had she ceased to please? |
31037 | Had she then come to the lees? |
31037 | Has the reader perceived the reason? |
31037 | Have ye got nothing of your own?" |
31037 | Hay- Herrick?" |
31037 | He had to propose, as an amendment to the next subject in the case- book,"Whether capital punishment be consistent with God''s will or man''s policy?" |
31037 | He has them?" |
31037 | He thought of flight, and where was he to flee to? |
31037 | He was not going to use vitriol himself; was he Huish''s keeper? |
31037 | How did I know it? |
31037 | How do you pay attentions to a-- an Alp like that?" |
31037 | How if God...? |
31037 | How long did he say it was before they raised Anaa? |
31037 | How much, who can tell, with such a being? |
31037 | How was I to love him? |
31037 | How was this? |
31037 | I am very indifferent to all these....""Gewgaws?" |
31037 | I daresay you know two types of natives, which may be called the obsequious and the sullen? |
31037 | I guess it''s no business of mine to go and stick my head over the ship''s rump? |
31037 | I guess you know it''s_ right_ out? |
31037 | I guess you know,"he said, with imperious solemnity,"I guess you know the bottom is out of this_ Farallone_ speculation? |
31037 | I have always unceasingly loved, but what was my love worth? |
31037 | I have seen ye, and what''s to prevent ithers? |
31037 | I hope we shall see much of you at Hermiston?" |
31037 | I mean.... For God''s sake, ca n''t you see I''m on the rack?" |
31037 | I must stagger on to the end with the pack of my responsibility; I can not shift it; do you suppose I would not if I thought I could? |
31037 | I was glad to get Jopp haangit, and what for would I pretend I wasna? |
31037 | I wonder what they said last?" |
31037 | I''d rather''ave it on a cowld and frosty morning, would n''t you? |
31037 | If Clem was to be speiring for me, try and quaiet him, will ye no?" |
31037 | If judging were sinful and forbidden, how came papa to be a judge? |
31037 | If there_ should_ happen to be anything in folk- lore, Mr. Hay? |
31037 | If this were so, he asked himself, would he begin again? |
31037 | If you''re trying to do your duty, why do n''t you go and do it? |
31037 | In case you wish me to say it to you again?" |
31037 | Is he a Christian even? |
31037 | Is it any less difficult to judge of a good man or of a half- good man, than of the worst criminal at the bar? |
31037 | Is n''t there no other way?" |
31037 | Is that so, Huish? |
31037 | Is that understood?" |
31037 | Is that well?" |
31037 | Is that what you mean? |
31037 | Is there any book which would guide me to the following facts? |
31037 | Is there any other chanst to try?" |
31037 | Is there nothing else he would be bound to keep here? |
31037 | Is there nothing else he would be likely to keep here? |
31037 | Is this the way you treat a guest and an old friend?" |
31037 | Is your peace made with Heaven? |
31037 | It was fine- weather sailing, he said; and asked, with a laugh,"Who ever heard of the old man standing watch himself?" |
31037 | It was possible, it was even likely, he would be presented to her after service in the kirkyard, and then how was he to look? |
31037 | It''s a chance we''ve got.--What''s that?" |
31037 | Man, do ye no comprehend that it''s God''s wull we should be blendit and glamoured, and have nae command over our ain members at a time like that? |
31037 | Meeting him one day in the Potterrow, my lord had stopped in front of him:"Gib, ye eediot,"he had said,"what''s this I hear of you? |
31037 | Might not this be the hangman? |
31037 | No? |
31037 | Nor yet of the_ Trinity Hall_? |
31037 | Now, here''s this Attwater: what do you think of him?" |
31037 | Now, which of you two is the cook? |
31037 | O my God, my God, why was I born?" |
31037 | O, it''gets you,''do it? |
31037 | O, what have I done?" |
31037 | O, you''do n''t know,''do n''t you? |
31037 | Or why should I have fallen to it? |
31037 | Prayer, what for? |
31037 | Presently, after she was tremblingly embarked on her story,"And what made ye do this, ye auld runt?" |
31037 | Rage, shame, and the love of life, all pointed the one way; and only invention halted: how to reach him? |
31037 | Savvy?" |
31037 | Savvy?" |
31037 | Say, Herrick, you did n''t give me away?" |
31037 | Secrets? |
31037 | See?" |
31037 | Shall I give you his name?" |
31037 | Shall I tell it you? |
31037 | Shall we say half- past six? |
31037 | She minds me----"; and then, after a pause( which some have been daring enough to set down to sentimental recollections),"Is she releegious?" |
31037 | Stephens stole a schooner the other day, did n''t he? |
31037 | Struck you, did I? |
31037 | Talking of which, by the by, who painted out the schooner''s name?" |
31037 | Tell me if this is not a friend''s part that I am playing?" |
31037 | That man there with the cat knows all; ca n''t you take it in?" |
31037 | That would ruin all; do ye no see that?" |
31037 | That''s what the A''m''ralty chart says; I guess you do n''t expect to get on ahead of your own Britishers?" |
31037 | The Bench, the Bar, and the most experienced and reluctant witness, bowed to his authority-- and why not Jeannie Rutherford? |
31037 | The devil? |
31037 | The expression was admirable throughout, for had she not learned it from the lips and under the criticism of the author? |
31037 | The pulpit? |
31037 | The ship rotting at anchor, the crew stumbling and dying in the scuppers? |
31037 | The terms of his inquiry imply clearly that he intended other persons before Archie to have fallen under suspicion of the murder( what other persons? |
31037 | Then again, if we lose her, and land in Peru, where are we? |
31037 | Then comes the next of it-- what am I to do with ye next? |
31037 | Then suddenly:"Where''s Erchie?" |
31037 | There would be one life saved; but what of the two others? |
31037 | They? |
31037 | W''ere''s that cry- byby''Errick?" |
31037 | W''y, were n''t you''owling for fresh tins every blessed day? |
31037 | Was ever anything so indelicate, so forward, done by a girl before? |
31037 | Was he keeping tryst with somebody, and was it a woman? |
31037 | Was this at prayers like? |
31037 | Wat for he call that Hawaii? |
31037 | We ca n''t declare the loss, or how did we get to Peru? |
31037 | We can get on very nicely as we are, and if you were to turn round, do you know? |
31037 | Well, and what have I done? |
31037 | Well, his trouble is over now, he has lain down with kings and councillors; the rest of his acts, are they not written in the book of the chronicles? |
31037 | Well, shall we step on the verandah? |
31037 | Well, what''s he here upon this beastly island for? |
31037 | Well, wot can I do,''Errick? |
31037 | Were not honour and greatness the badges of the world? |
31037 | What am I to do to him? |
31037 | What am I to do? |
31037 | What are we to write?" |
31037 | What bound him now? |
31037 | What do I want with a Christian faim''ly? |
31037 | What do ye ca''thir things? |
31037 | What do ye fancy ye''ll be fit for? |
31037 | What do you ken of good taste that has never been to the ceety?" |
31037 | What do you mean?" |
31037 | What do you think the name was?" |
31037 | What do you want?--an oath? |
31037 | What else is there? |
31037 | What had he been doing? |
31037 | What have I done that ye should lightly me? |
31037 | What have I done? |
31037 | What have I done? |
31037 | What is the difference between Papeete and London, captain?" |
31037 | What is to be the end of it?" |
31037 | What makes you think that Hermis-- my father would have missed me?" |
31037 | What more do you expect anyway?" |
31037 | What must I do? |
31037 | What should it contain? |
31037 | What was Archie''s little game? |
31037 | What was he keeping secret? |
31037 | What was there to make a work about? |
31037 | What was this? |
31037 | What was to be the end of it? |
31037 | What were W. and W. to get? |
31037 | What would ye make of hell? |
31037 | What''s_ your_ name?" |
31037 | Whaur''s the sense of a jaiket that''ll no button upon you, if it should come to be weet? |
31037 | When you first came to my father''s house-- do you remember those days? |
31037 | Where did that come from?" |
31037 | Where were they gone, the cowards? |
31037 | Where would this trial have to be? |
31037 | Which was it to be? |
31037 | Whish, I trust you understand the invitation?" |
31037 | Who are we to trust ourselves where it seems that God Himself must think twice before He treads, and to do it with delight? |
31037 | Who dared to tell him? |
31037 | Who had called him to judge his father in these precarious and high questions? |
31037 | Who has dare----?" |
31037 | Who were they? |
31037 | Why did he shun Frank''s company? |
31037 | Why do I come to you? |
31037 | Why not God''s Grace, Hay?" |
31037 | Why should he be creeping nearer? |
31037 | Why should he delay? |
31037 | Why should not young Hermiston escape clear out of the country? |
31037 | Why should they not then? |
31037 | Why was she rejected? |
31037 | Will I have to shoo ye into him? |
31037 | Will I sooth it to ye, then?" |
31037 | Wo n''t sit down with us, wo n''t he? |
31037 | Wot performance?" |
31037 | Wot''s the first point? |
31037 | Would that do the trick, d''ye think? |
31037 | Would you like to see them?" |
31037 | Wouldna your gorge rise at that? |
31037 | Ye would never surely even yourself down to be saying the same thing as French Atheists? |
31037 | You can splairge here on Edinburgh street, and where''s the hairm? |
31037 | You do n''t catch on? |
31037 | You know the way he talks? |
31037 | You know what you said about my children? |
31037 | You never heard of him? |
31037 | You savvy,''_ smartly_''? |
31037 | You see this pocket? |
31037 | You think with me? |
31037 | You understand that, Hay? |
31037 | You would say, What matter laws, and God, and that? |
31037 | You''re not going back on a friend? |
31037 | You''re the only man aboard whose carcase is worth losing; do you think I do n''t know that? |
31037 | You? |
31037 | Your confidence, indeed? |
31037 | _ Tantaene irae_? |
31037 | _ What is the puppy doing with the two wolves?_ he asked. |
31037 | a fatalist?" |
31037 | a pirate or a slyver?" |
31037 | and I know that? |
31037 | and if this old island had n''t been turned up right when it did, I guess you know where you and I and Huish would have been?" |
31037 | and presently after, with a sickening decline of confidence, if he had done loyally to strike his father? |
31037 | and what was I worth? |
31037 | asked Herrick,"neither by you nor Huish? |
31037 | asked Huish,"''ere on the island?" |
31037 | cries Frank,"you do n''t want my company, do n''t you?" |
31037 | do n''t know ye, do I? |
31037 | do you think I ever went back on you? |
31037 | does that suit you?" |
31037 | had he strength enough? |
31037 | he continued;"Dyvis on the lush? |
31037 | he said, with mocking softness,"because, do you know? |
31037 | he wondered, or was more behind? |
31037 | is n''t there no mercy? |
31037 | is this possibly you, Don Quickshot? |
31037 | is''e goin''to shoot?" |
31037 | of other lives, but was there any life worth living in this den of savage and jeering animals? |
31037 | or do you see yourself presenting the milkmaid to papa as the future lady of Hermiston? |
31037 | or was it only the unaffected poetry of his own nature bubbling up?" |
31037 | or would Attwater simply blyze aw''y at us in the bloomin''boat like dawgs?" |
31037 | plies between here and...?" |
31037 | said Attwater, resting the butt of his rifle on the ground,"is that done? |
31037 | said he,"there is some small mistake, no doubt, and I must ask you to what I am indebted for this pleasure?" |
31037 | says he;"ye hae your teeth, hae ye?" |
31037 | she, so great, so beautiful, with a heart as fresh as a girl''s and strong as womanhood? |
31037 | that you wo n''t go on stealing my profits and drinking my champagne that I gave my honour for? |
31037 | to bear the name of it for a distinction? |
31037 | to have that sin for a trade? |
31037 | to what hole had they retreated beyond reach? |
31037 | was there any help in that misbegotten packet of bones against the house? |
31037 | what did you mean by saying that? |
31037 | what does it matter?" |
31037 | what must I do to be saved?" |
31037 | what this?''" |
31037 | what''s yon?" |
31037 | why not be one of us? |
31037 | why not come to Jesus right away, and let''s meet in yon beautiful land? |
31037 | with this bloomin''schooner, too?" |
31037 | wo n''t say a civil word? |
31037 | yes?" |
31037 | you think I would go drown myself, and I got children starving? |