Questions

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

identifier question
31108( 2) How would you act in order to take possession of the machinery pertaining to your industry? 31108 ( 3) How do you conceive the functions of the organized shops and factories in the future?
31108( 5) What will be your relations to your federation of trade or of industry after your reorganization? 31108 ( 6) On what principle would the distribution of products take place, and how would the productive groups procure the raw material for themselves?
31108At bottom, in what did the charm of Bakounin consist? 31108 At what price does one succeed in leading the people to the ballot boxes?"
31108Have we any objections to the enlarging of the State forests and thereby the employment of workers and officials? 31108 Otherwise, indeed, what would become of them and their newspapers?
31108What shall one think of Ravachol?
31108What, then, are the means of execution that democracy will have to employ in order to realize its ideas? 31108 Whether what I think and do is Christian,"he writes,"what do I care?
31108[ 27] With knowledge such as this, is it possible that a sane mind can encourage the despairing to undertake riots and insurrections? 31108 [ 29] Has this been the chief motive in helping to keep terrorism alive?
31108[ 2] What was this mire? 31108 [ 45] How, then, shall the State be destroyed?
31108[ 6] When such a tortured spirit is driven to homicide, how is it possible for society to demand and take that life? 31108 ''But can they hire men?'' 31108 ''From other private detective agencies?'' 31108 ( A deputy called out:''The German Monarchy?'') 31108 And in Germany at this time there were a number who argued that, as they were in fact outlaws, why should they not adopt the tactics of outlaws? 31108 And in so far as this is our sole attitude toward these rebels, wherein are we superior? 31108 And ought we not to consider it necessary to say that to the workers over and over again? 31108 And why? 31108 Are not our methods in truth the same, and can any man doubt that both are equally futile and senseless? 31108 Ask all political economists what is the greatest misfortune for a nation? 31108 But did Marx actually advocate State socialism? 31108 But do you not see, then, that, in spite of this difference in what we believe, our endeavors go hand in hand? 31108 But how often did the capitalist press express the idea that, were it not for Bismarck, we would not, to this day, have a united Germany? 31108 Can one hope to triumph with an anarchist organization? 31108 Can you, I do not say lend me, but give me 500 or 400, or 300 or 200, or even 100 francs, for my voyage? 31108 FOOTNOTES:[ W] His words are:What is the General Confederation of Labor, if not the continuation of the International?"
31108How are the workers to obtain possession of industry?
31108If Bismarck and his police forces have the power to outlaw us, have we not the right to exercise the tactics of outlaws?
31108If by direct legislation they can not even vote laws in their own interest, how, then, will it be possible for them ever to improve their condition?
31108Is it of good alloy?
31108Is it possible that the likelihood of the workers achieving an eight- hour day-- which was all that was wanted in Colorado-- could lead to civil war?
31108Is it then less necessary for you to occupy yourselves with methods of execution by which you may accomplish these reforms?
31108Must even this fail?
31108Ought I to regret what I have done?
31108Ought we to allow them to take a path that leads nowhere?...
31108Shall we admit that there is a duel between society and these souls deranged by the wrongs of society?
31108The anarchists, who are now carrying on their work in Austria, have no footing in Germany-- and why?
31108To whose advantage was it to have disreputable''deputies''do these things?
31108Was it the teachings of Bakounin, of Nechayeff, and of Most?
31108Was this demand not remarkable in the highest degree?
31108We can hang them, but can we forget them?
31108Well, what has happened to Germany since then?
31108What else than the teachings of anarchism and of socialism can explain this difference?
31108What end do the governments of Europe seek?
31108What had historical, geographical, political, or industrial conditions to do with the matter?
31108What indeed else was there to do?
31108What is it that leads the corrupt, vicious, and reactionary elements in the official world to turn thus to its use even anarchy and terrorism?
31108What is syndicalism?
31108What position should the International take?
31108What shall these hordes of the illiterate and miserable do?
31108What was it that drove these men to violence?
31108What were the weapons employed by the warriors of this period?
31108What, then, is to be done?
31108What, you will say, is this, then, a virtue?
31108Whence came it and why?
31108Whether it is human, liberal, humane, whether unhuman, illiberal, inhuman, what do I ask about that?
31108Why have the railroads not yet recovered damages from Cook County, Illinois, for failing to protect their property?...
31108Why is the Russian Cossack so backward in civilization?
31108Why should that which assumes to stand for law and order work to the destruction of law and order?
31108Why should the governments of Europe subsidize anarchy?
31108Why then does not the socialist movement produce terrorists?
31108Why were only freight cars, largely hospital wrecks, set on fire?
31108Why, therefore, ignore economic foundations and waste effort remodeling the parasitical superstructure?
31108Yet is there any escape to the conclusion that all this was utter waste of life and devotion?
36243''Simple Susan''would suit you better, my dear; but''what''s in a name?''
36243''Spirit, are they yours?'' 36243 Ah,"he said,"such scenes transfigure the dark places of life, do they not?"
36243And are ye sure ye have a clear comprehension of what_ are_ the_ rights_ of humanity?
36243And do n''t you think there are many people who need the same test, now?
36243And do you think we have no tragedies about us now?
36243And have you been to see Mrs. Travers lately?
36243And have you seen Mr. Chillingworth lately?
36243And how is Kitty?
36243And how is the little girl getting on?
36243And if I do promise, you''ll promise to say nothing about it, will you? 36243 And may we use the organ?"
36243And so Mrs. Pomeroy really does take an interest in the girls generally?
36243And so you have added to your kindness, that of taking in the poor woman''s child?
36243And suppose he were to have married again?
36243And what ails your mother, and why did she send you here?
36243And what if I do n''t?
36243And what is so rare as a day in June? 36243 And what of Harold Pomeroy?
36243And what would you have us poor blinded creatures do?
36243And why ca n''t you go and warn the police to look out?
36243And would you be caring to exchange with one of them?
36243Are you sure it''s safe for you?
36243Are_ you_ taking an interest in such matters, then?
36243But can not you find something better than that?
36243But how do you know about that last?
36243But how do you suppose the fire could have originated, if it was not an incendiary one?
36243But how, then?
36243But how? 36243 But now,"said Miss Spencer, after a short silence,"I suppose you do n''t know much about this poor young woman?"
36243But ought I really to wear them?
36243But what can have happened to her?
36243But what did you do? 36243 But what might it be if people were_ not_ doing something all the time?"
36243But what of Nelly?
36243But why have n''t you lights?
36243But you think she is really gaining, do n''t you?
36243But, anyhow, if we ca n''t wake up the rich, why may n''t we wake up the poor?
36243But, poor thing, what will she do when she is well?
36243By the way, Mr. Pomeroy,he remarked,"have you seen the new paper?"
36243D''ye ken?
36243Did they hail you as a brother, and promise to read and support the_ Brotherhood_?
36243Did you see Jim Mason helping at all?
36243Do n''t you think it would be a good deal worse?
36243Do you know who she was?
36243Do you think they would dare to say anything bad of you here? 36243 Does she speak as if he were dead?"
36243Does your mother sing to you sometimes?
36243For are not such Used to be tended, flower- like, every feature, As if one''s breath would fray the lily of a creature? 36243 Has she, really?"
36243How often do they meet?
36243I may come in for the rehearsal, too,_ nicht wahr_?
36243I suppose my black velvet will do, wo n''t it?
36243I suppose you''re both going to Mrs. Pomeroy''s dinner- party, on Saturday evening?
36243I thinkPrudent Elsie"a very nice name, is n''t it, father, dear?"
36243I?
36243If you''re going out, Harold,said Miss Pomeroy,"will you call a cab for me?"
36243Indeed, miss, how could I let Jim go to jail, and have mother fretting to break her heart? 36243 Infringing on your copyright, little mother?"
36243Is he all alone in the world, then?
36243Is it not sad,she said, taking a long breath,"how many such cases there must be around us that we never know?
36243Is n''t this lovely? 36243 Is that how it is?"
36243May I come to see you to- morrow, Miss Blanchard?
36243Meaning, I suppose, the wonders science is perpetually astonishing us with?
36243Mr. Chillingworth, how many visits do you think Nora and I paid this afternoon?
36243Mr. Graeme,said Nora, as they walked together to the place of meeting,"would you mind telling me just why you became a''Knight of Labor''?"
36243Mr. Pomeroy,exclaimed Nora, in a voice unsteady with indignation,"did you ever read the fable of the boys and the frogs?"
36243Mr. Waldberg is a friend of yours, is n''t he?
36243Now wait!--even I already seem to share In God''s love; what does New- year''s hymn declare? 36243 Oh, Lizzie, why did you do that?"
36243Oh, Nora, are you going to help in the oratorio, the''Messiah,''you know? 36243 Oh, do you think it will do any good?"
36243Oh, the one to whom you went to act the Good Samaritan? 36243 On what, then?"
36243Quiet? 36243 Saladin gets the credit of being a pretty fairish giant, does n''t he, Miss Blanchard?
36243So Nora, you did n''t even know who it was that you were bowing to? 36243 That was the girl you were talking to this evening when I passed you, was it not?"
36243Then if there_ is_''no other name,''what becomes of those who never heard of it, but who are doing all they can-- living up to the light they have? 36243 Then what is your theory of the Atonement?"
36243Then who could?
36243Was it Mr. Pomeroy, then, that you told me about before?
36243Weel, lad, hard at work? 36243 Well then-- honor bright-- I hereby promise to renounce Nelly and all her works; will that satisfy you?"
36243Well, how did you find your parsons?
36243Well, how do you like your work?
36243Well, you will try it for me,_ now_, at least?
36243Well,said Nora, after a short silence, in the same low tone,"you suspect something-- what is it?"
36243What about her, Kitty? 36243 What are you going to wear to- night, Nora?"
36243What are you two looking so serious about?
36243What did you expect, Sophy?
36243What new paper?
36243What was her real name?
36243What''s the matter, Nora?
36243What''s the matter?
36243What''s your name, my child, and where do you live?
36243Where are you going to- night, then?
36243Where did you meet him?
36243Whose place is it?
36243Why not tell him yourself, Kitty?
36243Why should there be anything surprising in it?
36243Why, Eddie, is that Daisy crying? 36243 Why, are_ you_ all going to strike too?"
36243Why, how on earth did you come to know that fellow?
36243Why, how?--who would do that?
36243Why, what do_ you_ know about it?
36243Why?
36243Will any one besides''Knights of Labor''be allowed to go?
36243Will you permit me to come some day to see the child?
36243Yes,said Nora, warmly,"but why, for that end, did you need to become a''Knight''of that description?"
36243You all call each other''Brother,''in the order, do you?
36243You believe in heredity then, sir, and in environment?
36243_ Did_ you hear, Nora, about my cousin, Janie Spencer?
36243_ They_--who?
36243_ What_ sort of look? 36243 A strike is such a dreadful sort of thing, is n''t it?
36243Ah, what was that?
36243And have we no sense of hearing but the outward one?
36243And how is my little friend,''Miss Travers,''and her mother?"
36243And how was he, thus left penniless for the present, to face Mr. Dunlop when the note should fall due?
36243And if you get a new dress made, does n''t that help somebody?"
36243And is the mother getting on well?"
36243And what had become of the"important work"that prevented his having a few minutes to bestow on_ him_, and on these grave questions?
36243And what has he been talking to you about, all this time, Nora, for Eddie told me he had been here a good while?"
36243And why, ah why, should all that sweetness have been swallowed up in a horror of great darkness?
36243And yet, as far as she knew, Lizzie Mason was not a"professing Christian;"and Roland Graeme-- did they not call him an"unbeliever"?
36243Archer?"
36243Are those_ his_ houses?"
36243But Mr. Waldberg has kindly offered to see me home, so you wo n''t have to come all that way round, and it''s snowing quite fast, is n''t it?"
36243But how was it?
36243But how, she thought, would it ever be possible for_ him_, of all men, to"acknowledge"a wife in such circumstances?
36243But if all these people get only a little more every week, it would make a big difference to father, do n''t you see?
36243But that required special training-- ages of training-- and what chance had they to acquire it?
36243But then, the question would have been, again, Who should_ begin_?
36243But what are these lines that follow?
36243But what does it all amount to?"
36243But what then was to be done with the little girl?
36243But, how much''self- surrender''does he get from his own''prominent man,''Mr. Pomeroy, for instance?
36243By the way, would n''t Chillingworth have made a first- class Crusader, a Crusader_ chaplain_, you know?"
36243Ca n''t we have a few airs from the_ Messiah_, now?
36243Ca n''t you guess what it is,--dear?"
36243Can they be o''the same stock with you, and no want to rise too?
36243Chillingworth?"
36243Chillingworth?"
36243Chillingworth?"
36243Clara, dear, wo n''t you bring Mr. Chillingworth a volume of Browning?"
36243Costs it more pain that this, ye call A''great event,''should come to pass, Than that?
36243Did no one try to live out the spirit of the Master they all professed to honor?
36243Did not the Heavenly Father in whom she had been taught to believe, care for the sparrows, and did He not much more care for helpless girls?
36243Did the thing go through?"
36243Did you grant their requests?"
36243Do n''t you find any difficulties there?"
36243Do n''t you know, we doctors are all under orders to risk life when it''s necessary?
36243Do n''t you think that would brighten up their lives a little?"
36243Do n''t you think they were the best?"
36243Do the factory operatives in most countries live extravagantly, or the seamstresses in London or New York?
36243Do the workingmen of America, for instance, receive for their labor a fair proportion of the wealth they produce?
36243Farrell?"
36243Graeme?"
36243Had they no concern for the valuable machines they had tended so long?
36243Has he found consolation yet?"
36243Has n''t he asked you?"
36243Have n''t I a right to feel tired after such a day''s work?
36243Have ye got yer firebrands all ready for the wee foxes''tails, that ye''re gaun to send in amang the Philistines''corn?
36243He could see, though dimly as yet, that the"battle with self"had never been fought at all-- and, if so, what of the others?
36243He met her with his usual frank and ready courtesy, addressing her as"Mrs. Blanchard, I presume?"
36243He saw no trace of any consciousness and went on, lightly:"And what will you do with yourself in Rockland?
36243He spoke again, more pleadingly,"Wo n''t you try, Miss Blanchard?
36243He spoke at last-- but it was only to ask, in a scarcely audible tone:"What was her name?"
36243How could this be remedied?
36243How did Abraham know that he was to go out from the land he knew, to one of which he knew nothing?
36243How do you think you''d like it?"
36243How was it that men, generally, had largely failed to enter into coöperative labor?
36243I do think you could make something of me, if you cared enough to try?"
36243I suppose you do n''t know any doctor near?"
36243If he did not say--"To what am I indebted for the honor of this visit?"
36243If he himself had so failed, how could he teach others?
36243If so, where was the place of self- sacrifice?
36243If the poor woman wants a minister, why should n''t I go with you?
36243Is he still alive?"
36243Is it any one in a hurry?"
36243Is_ she_ engaged, too?"
36243May I ask you to be kind enough to look at this prospectus?"
36243May I ask you to grant me the favor of a brief conference on an important subject?"
36243Might not the laborer, on his side, in such circumstances, say that his earnings are swallowed up by the extravagance of employers?"
36243Nora asked;"some healthier as well as pleasanter work?
36243Now-- is this little girl with you?"
36243Oh, do n''t you know, I''ve always thought his eyes had a sort of melancholy look, as if he had had some great sorrow in his life?
36243She would n''t have believed Willett would have permitted such a thing-- but how could she know anything about it?
36243Should the familiar machinery, which had so long been like a part of their daily life, be wrecked like that?
36243So now you''ll be better-- won''t you?"
36243So, he thought, had he shrunk back from the cross laid on him, and, what right had he to call himself a follower of the Master?
36243Ten?
36243That was the young man who escorted me to see the sick woman I went to help that evening, do n''t you remember?
36243That was what the Good Samaritan did-- you spoke of just now, was n''t it, when the priest and the Levite passed by on the other side?"
36243That"battle"he spoke of-- how had he fought it?
36243Then a ready misgiving crossed his mind, and, turning to the waiting maid, he asked,"Does he seem to be a book- canvasser?"
36243There always was and there always will be misery in the world, but what good does it do any one to make yourself miserable about it?
36243Travers?"
36243Waldberg?"
36243Was His care not for Lizzie as well as for her, in her pleasant, protected life?
36243Was it all mere talk, then?
36243Was it any wonder if such children died prematurely, worn out by unnatural labor?"
36243Was it any wonder that girls like Nelly were pert and discontented?
36243Was it not evident that moral as well as material progress was needed?
36243Was it then one of those mysterious providences which seemed so often to mar human lives, or had he, himself, been to blame?
36243Was such a state of things really the result of over- production?
36243Was that how their protected happy life looked to those who saw them_ de bas en haut_?
36243Was the world built up on_ selfishness_ after all?
36243Was there no one else at hand?"
36243Was there no one who aimed at being really Christ- like, at"loving his neighbor as himself"?
36243Was there_ no one_?
36243Was this, he thought, what his father had believed?
36243Were they going to sacrifice their very livelihood to a childish impulse of vindictive malice?
36243What can man do more?"
36243What further certainty could he need?
36243What harm is there in a little fun and nonsense with a pretty girl, even if she_ is_ silly?"
36243What if the men were growing nae poorer?
36243What is the matter?"
36243What other meaning do these verses bear?
36243What time?
36243When will ye get yer_ Brotherhood_ ideas into party politics?
36243Where''s the use of taking these girls out of their homes at night, when they''ve been out all day?"
36243Who is she?
36243Why did you that?
36243Why not wear that pretty_ écru_ and black lace costume?"
36243Why now, if we were to do as they ask, increase their pay and shorten their hours, how could we compete with firms that went in the old way?
36243Why should he let them smart again?
36243Why should they toil to save a place in which they might never do another day''s work?
36243Why should we have so much_ more_ than we need, and all these people so much less?"
36243Why''small''?
36243Will you decide what men shall live, what men shall die?
36243Will you take charge of it, Miss Spencer?"
36243Will you take my arm?"
36243Would it not be better to take to domestic service?
36243Would not most of his hearers, in similar circumstances, do the same?
36243Would they walk in?
36243You know you can-- papa?"
36243and do not the things which I say?"
36243exclaimed young Pomeroy, as he recognized her?
36243his adviser had said;"could n''t you borrow it?"
36243how could I do that, an''have Jim''run in''again the first thing?
36243how could you think of such a senseless, cowardly thing?"
36243inquired his host;"take all our men into partnership?
36243or half- past nine?"
36243that the mass of men must more and more learn the value and enter into the spirit of Brotherhood, of brotherly trust?
2908Well, then, why do you go on with it?
2908''Ave n''t''e got no shares in the Company?
2908A message?
2908A screen?
2908All this-- all this-- and-- and what for?
2908Am I a liar, a coward, a traitor?
2908Am I to understand then, gentlemen, that your Board is going to make no concessions?
2908An''what came of it?
2908An''what did ye say about Chapel?
2908And get turned out?
2908And the women?
2908And what about tin?
2908Annie Roberts,''ow old were you, dear?
2908Any one second that?
2908Anything to eat, sir?
2908Are n''t you coming, Dad?
2908Are n''t you going to read the minutes, Tench?
2908Are ye goin''to follow a man that ca n''t see better than that where he''s goin''?
2908Are you any better?
2908Are you ever violent, Frost?
2908Are you goin''to desert him now''e''s down?
2908Are you going to chuck him over, now''e''s lost''is wife?
2908Are you to stay there, or are you to climb out?
2908Barring the accident of money, are n''t they as good men as you?
2908But Roberts was paid a lot of money, was n''t he, for discovering that process?
2908But is it a fair fight, Father?
2908But they''ve got their clubs, have n''t they?
2908But why?
2908But would he resign?
2908But, man, what made ye come?
2908But-- what-- why?
2908Ca n''t we have done with this old- fashioned tug- of- war business?
2908Ca n''t ye see?
2908Ca n''t you persuade the men that their interests are the same as ours?
2908Ca n''t you see that I want to help you all?
2908Ca n''t you stop his going, Annie?
2908Can I come in, Annie?
2908Can I have a screen, Tench?
2908Can I speak to you, Mr. Roberts?
2908Can a man set an''see''is mother starve?
2908Can one get dinner on that 6.30 train up?
2908Can they get blacklegs?
2908Can we squeeze them a little more?"
2908Can''e now?
2908Come now, is there?
2908Coming to lunch, Scantlebury?
2908Coming, Scantlebury?
2908Contrary?
2908Cut and run?
2908D''ye hear me?
2908D''ye mean that?
2908D''you know, sir-- these terms, they''re the very same we drew up together, you and I, and put to both sides before the fight began?
2908Did n''t you say it was dreadful going on with the men in this state?
2908Did you try the whitebait last night?
2908Do n''t Bulgin give you anythin''?
2908Do n''t I know that?
2908Do n''t let him go up?
2908Do ye go lyin''down an''trustin''to the tender mercies of this merciful Nature?
2908Do you know that man Roberts, Frost?
2908Do you know what trying to bridge such a gulf as this is like?
2908Do you really mean to fight to a finish, Chairman?
2908Does Mr. Anthony think it brave to fight against women and children?
2908Does he know how ill you are?
2908Does he think it brave to set children crying with hunger, an''women shivering with cold?
2908Down?
2908Edgar-- anything?
2908Excuse me, sir, is it-- is it worth it, sir?
2908Expect it?
2908Father in his room?
2908Feeling better, are you?
2908Get back to London, the men have nothing for ye?
2908Hands together, and victory-- or-- the starvation you''ve got now?
2908Has anything been said?
2908Has he not?
2908Have you gone silly?
2908Have you heard this, sir?
2908Have you thought what''ll happen if you''re beaten--[ she points]--in there?
2908Have you tried?
2908He always liked you, do n''t you remember?
2908Home?
2908How are you, Mr. Harness?
2908How can he let all this suffering go on amongst you?
2908How can we meet the shareholders with things in the state they are?
2908How can you expect it, David?
2908How can you tell what I feel?
2908How goes it, my girl?
2908How many more women are you going to let to die?
2908How much has Thomas given up-- ten pounds or five, or what?
2908I quite agree, but----[ ANTHONY Shakes his head] You make it a question of bedrock principle?
2908I said to Mr. Anthony this morning:"Is it worth it, sir?"
2908I''ve come on purpose to speak to you; will you come outside a minute?
2908If the Union were going to withdraw their support from the men, as they''ve done, why did they ever allow them to strike at all?
2908In the close season?
2908Indeed?
2908Indeed?
2908Is Roberts out?
2908Is it below the belt, Mr. Underwood?
2908Is it my fault that they quarrelled with their Union too?
2908Is it short enough and to the point?
2908Is n''t that so?
2908Is that clear enough for ye?
2908Is that so, Thomas?
2908Is that your opinion too, sir-- and yours-- and yours?
2908Is there a man of you here that has less to gain by striking?
2908Is there a man of you that had more to lose?
2908Is there a man of you that has given up eight hundred pounds since this trouble here began?
2908Is there anything else you want, Father?
2908It was Roberts''s doing, was n''t it?
2908Justice from London?
2908Kick a man that''s down?
2908Know?
2908Look here, Annie, what can I do?
2908Look you, if a man toes not trust me, am I going to trust him?
2908Men of business are excused from decency, you think?
2908Mr. Anthony is a rich man, I believe; does he think it brave to fight against those who have n''t a penny?
2908Mrs. Roberts, you do n''t want no''arder winter, do you?
2908No, M''m?
2908No, Sir?
2908No, Sir?
2908No?
2908Not seriously?
2908Nothing I can get you, sir?
2908Now is n''t it, Annie?
2908Now then, what is it?
2908Of course you do n''t; if you could only have proper--- Will you see my doctor if I send him to you?
2908Oh, Ted?
2908On our hands?
2908Ought we to see the men before he comes?
2908Roberts in?
2908Seriously, Chairman, are you going to let the ship sink under you, for the sake of-- a principle?
2908Shall I bring them in, sir?
2908Shall I dispose of her, M''m?
2908Shall I make the tea?
2908Shall we get on with the business, or shall we go back to the other room?
2908Sit there next the Chairman, Harness, wo n''t you?
2908So-- they''ve done us both down, Mr. Anthony?
2908Stay an''have a cup of tea, Mrs. Rous?
2908Tea?
2908Tell me, for all their talk, is there one of them that will consent to another penny on the Income Tax to help the poor?
2908That''s what we been doin'', have n''t we?
2908That''s where we''ve been makin''our mistake this long time past; and who''s to blame fort?
2908There are some chairs there against the wall, Roberts; wo n''t you draw them up and sit down?
2908They can stand what we can stand, I suppose, ca n''t they?
2908They tell me I do n''t look like a dyin''woman?
2908They''re welcome to the worst that can happen to me, to the worst that can happen to us all, are n''t they-- are n''t they?
2908This is a beastly business, old girl?]
2908Thomas?
2908Ton''t you hear her, then?
2908We are five members of this Board; if we were four against it, why did we let it drift till it came to this?
2908We engineers have stood by you; ye''re ready now, are ye, to give us the go- by?
2908We''re all here, Chairman; what do you say?
2908Well, Thomas, how''s it to be?
2908Well, what''s the proposition?
2908Well, will you speak, or shall I speak for you?
2908Well?
2908Well?
2908Well?
2908What Miss Thomas-- d''you mean a----?
2908What about Harper''s?
2908What about lunch, Enid?
2908What about the Union?
2908What about the women?
2908What are things coming to?
2908What are ye laughing at?
2908What are you talking about, Henry Thomas?
2908What brought him down then, but''is own black obstinacy?
2908What d''you imagine stands between you and your class and these men that you''re so sorry for?
2908What did he mean by:"Done us both down?"
2908What did he say?
2908What did the Chairman tell me up in London?
2908What do the men want?
2908What do you know about necessity?
2908What do you propose to do?
2908What do you say to that, Chairman?
2908What does Harness want this interview for?
2908What does he want, for goodness''sake?
2908What does the manager use?
2908What does your father say?
2908What does your husband use, Mrs. Underwood?
2908What for?
2908What good''s it doing you?
2908What harm have I done you?
2908What have ye done with our subscriptions?
2908What have you come for, please?
2908What have you to say for the men?
2908What is it you want?
2908What is it, Dad?
2908What is it, Ted?
2908What is it?
2908What is it?
2908What loss have we made by this strike, Tench?
2908What sort of mercy do you suppose you''d get if no one stood between you and the continual demands of labour?
2908What sort of state are they really in, Frank?
2908What suffering?
2908What time''ll the men be here?
2908What would you do?
2908What''s behind it?
2908What''s made them strong?
2908What''s that?
2908What''s that?
2908What''s the Union''s game, Tench?
2908What''s the result of your meeting?
2908What''s to be said to them?
2908What''s to save them?
2908What''s turned him round?
2908What''s turned you to blacklegging?
2908What''s your proposition, man?
2908What-- what''s that?
2908What?
2908What?
2908Where could they get''em then?
2908Where is she?
2908Where''s he?
2908Which is it to be?
2908Which is it to be?
2908Which?
2908Who are ye callin''blacklegs, Rat?
2908Who said there was suffering?
2908Who talks of dying?
2908Who wants to surrender?
2908Who wants to?
2908Who was it?
2908Who''s talkin''o''blacklegs-- mind what you''re saying, will you?
2908Whom have I the pleasure of addressing, Ma''am?
2908Why are you so bitter against my father?
2908Why could n''t we have been told that before?
2908Why did you send back the jelly?
2908Why do n''t ye answer?
2908Why do n''t you make the men come in?
2908Why do you speak to me like that?
2908Why is n''t Harness here?
2908Why should they be humble?
2908Why, you have n''t even got coals?
2908Will that do, Mr. Wilder?
2908Will ye support us in double pay overtime Saturdays?
2908Will you come in, please?
2908Will you pay your men one penny more than they force you to pay them?
2908Will you want him?
2908Wo n''t I?
2908Wo n''t they have any tea, Frost?
2908Wo n''t you go and have some lunch, Mr. Tench?
2908Wo n''t you have a cup?
2908Wo n''t you stop and eat, David?
2908Wo n''t you?
2908Would n''t I expect what I would do meself?
2908Would n''t I starve an''rot rather than give in?
2908Would n''t seem natural to''ave a dinner, would it, Mrs. Bulgin?
2908Would you sign these for me, please sir?
2908Ye have gone back on me?
2908Ye have got it on its knees; are ye to give up at the last minute to save your miserable bodies pain?
2908Ye wonder why I tell ye that?
2908Ye''ve no wife?
2908Yes, M''m?
2908Yes, M''m?
2908Yes, M''m?
2908Yes, what does your father say?
2908Yes?
2908You accuse me of injustice-- of what amounts to inhumanity-- of cruelty?
2908You chaps that live over the hill, an''go home dead beat in the dark on a snowy night-- don''t ye fight your way every inch of it?
2908You do n''t suggest that we could have helped the poor thing?
2908You do n''t want to hear me, then?
2908You got that Friday''s laundry job?
2908You have n''t come to a decision, Mr. Wanklin?
2908You hear the consequences of your victory, Chairman?
2908You listened to him, and what had he to say?
2908You love their feet on your necks, do n''t you?
2908You remember my maid Annie, who married Roberts?
2908You say the furnace men''s paid enough?
2908You think so?
2908You want reason Mr. Harness?
2908You were about to say something, I believe?
2908You''ll listen to Sim Harness of the Union that''s treated you so fair; maybe you''ll listen to those men from London?
2908You''re aware, sir, of what the doctor said, sir?
2908You''re not well; need you go to the meeting at all?
2908You-- don''t-- believe-- in-- barriers-- between the classes?
2908the poor thing''s heart---- What makes you look at me like that?
2908why would n''t she let me help her?
3608Is this''ere hall you''ve done?
3608Oh,I ses, lookin''''i m straight in the bloody eye,"Oh, yer do, do yer?"
3608Wot the''ell do yer mean,I ses,"by comin''''ere at this time o''night with a order like that?"
3608Wotcher bin up to hall day?
3608''''Ave we?''
3608''''Ave you ever''eard the Professor preach before?''
3608''''E do n''t seem to be comin'', does''e?''
3608''''E does upset''isself about things, do n''t''e?''
3608''''Ow about Rushton?
3608''''Ow are we going''on about chargin''it on our time sheets?''
3608''''Ow are yer getting on up there?''
3608''''Ow are yer goin''to make out about the likes o''them?''
3608''''Ow do I help to perpetuate it?''
3608''''Ow do yer make it out?''
3608''''Ow do you make it out?''
3608''''Ow goes it?''
3608''''Ow much more did they buy from us last year, than we did from them?''
3608''''Ow much wages will Sir Featherstone get if''e is made Prime Minister?''
3608''''Ow''s yerself?''
3608''A couple of them in a week besides your week''s wages, eh?
3608''About St Thomas?''
3608''After you''ve got''em all enlightened-- if you do n''t believe in sharing out all the money equal, how ARE you goin''to alter it?''
3608''Ah, well, that''s so much the better, is n''t it?''
3608''Ai n''t it?''
3608''Ai n''t yer nearly finished?
3608''Ai n''t you never been?''
3608''And I think you''d better begin to dress me now, do n''t you?''
3608''And do n''t the people know he''s only pretending?''
3608''And do you remember how much he gave us for it?''
3608''And even if it''s not possible,''Harlow continued, winking at the others,''what''s a man to do during the years he''s savin''up?''
3608''And now you want a job, do n''t you?''
3608''And that''s all this''ere talk about hignorance: wot about all the money wots spent every year for edication?''
3608''And was n''t it never found out?''
3608''And what I should like to know is, who is supposed to be givin''this''ere lecture?''
3608''And what about the Idlers?''
3608''And what about the workers?
3608''And when we saw it in his shop window a little while afterwards, what price was marked on it?''
3608''And who the bloody''ell is it cuts''em?
3608''And whom do you think I''m working for?''
3608''And wot about drink?''
3608''And wot about the other members?''
3608''Any chance of a job, sir?''
3608''Any chance of a job, sir?''
3608''Any chance of a job, sir?''
3608''Any more complaints?''
3608''Any more questions?''
3608''Anyone else like to be flattened Out?''
3608''Anything else?''
3608''Anything else?''
3608''Anything else?''
3608''Anything fresh in, Bob?''
3608''Are n''t you coming?''
3608''Are there any more questions?''
3608''Are they?''
3608''Are you Married or single or a Widower or what?''
3608''Are you calling, Frankie?''
3608''Are you coming home now?
3608''Are you feeling any better, dear?''
3608''Are you feeling better?''
3608''Are you going to drink it or not?''
3608''Are you still out of work, Mr Barrington?''
3608''Be any use calling in a day or so, sir?''
3608''Besides, what if''e does come?''
3608''Blowed up?''
3608''But did Dad say that there never was such a man?''
3608''But do you mean to say it cost us three shillings a week for tea and sugar and butter?''
3608''But even if all the things were good enough to sell, the money we''d get for them would n''t last very long, and what should we do then?''
3608''But have n''t you one of your own?''
3608''But how do the people who never do any work manage to get lots of money then?''
3608''But is there no way to get rich without doing such things as that?''
3608''But they gets paid for it, do n''t they?
3608''But what about the necessaries of life?''
3608''But what sort of System do you propose, then?''
3608''But who could we get to''ave the fit?
3608''But who invented all the machinery?''
3608''But why does he pretend, and go about talking like that, Mum?
3608''But would you be able to afford it?''
3608''But''ow do you make it out?''
3608''Ca n''t I?
3608''Ca n''t you get it done before that?
3608''Ca n''t you see that it''s money that''s caused all these people to lose sight of the true purpose of labour-- the production of the things we need?
3608''Can we''ave it, mister?''
3608''Can you get them done tonight?''
3608''Come to think of it,''observed Rushton arrogantly,''why should we trouble ourselves about the opinion of the ratepayers at all?
3608''Could n''t we tie two or three of those short ropes together?''
3608''Could n''t you just copy it on the wall, free- hand?''
3608''Could you do anything like that in that room?''
3608''Did he send any other message?''
3608''Did n''t Misery tell you?
3608''Did n''t he used to be on the Town Council or something?''
3608''Did she tell you what I was to get?''
3608''Did you owe any rent when you left?''
3608''Did you see Rushton when you went for your money?''
3608''Did''e?
3608''Do n''t you know who he is?''
3608''Do n''t you remember we owed thirty- five shillings last spring?
3608''Do n''t you remember''e said as money was the principal cause of poverty?''
3608''Do n''t you think he''s getting thin?''
3608''Do n''t you think it will be any use, then, for me to tell them what to do to the Idlers?''
3608''Do n''t you think it would be possible to use gold paint?''
3608''Do n''t you think it''s useful and and also very hard work teaching all those boys every day?
3608''Do n''t you think we''d better have the window open now, Dad?''
3608''Do you believe in this sort of thing, then?''
3608''Do you believe they''re''is own designs?''
3608''Do you follow me?''
3608''Do you get any money from any Club or Society, or from any Charity, or from any other source?''
3608''Do you like cats?''
3608''Do you mean to say as the time will ever come when the gentry will mix up on equal terms with the likes of us?''
3608''Do you mean to say as you ai n''t brought one, then?''
3608''Do you mean to say that if I''m out of work and a master gives me a job, that''e''s doin''me a injury?''
3608''Do you think I''m drunk or wot?''
3608''Do you think it''s gorn?''
3608''Do you think it''s right for us to tamely make up our minds to live for the rest of our lives under such conditions as that?''
3608''Do you think it''s right that a scavenger should get as much as a painter?''
3608''Do you think you know anyone who would take it?''
3608''Do you think your wife would be willing?''
3608''Do you think''e''s goin''to get through with it?''
3608''Do you think, then, that the affairs of the world are something like the wind or the weather-- altogether beyond our control?
3608''Do you''ear what Harlow says, Bob?''
3608''Does n''t anyone know who she is?''
3608''Does your mother make cakes for you sometimes?''
3608''Does your wife earn anything?
3608''Exactly: well, when you told Dad about it what did he say?''
3608''First of all, what do you mean by Poverty?''
3608''Funny name to call a''ouse, ai n''t it?''
3608''Gee- gee?''
3608''Give it to us, will you, mister?''
3608''Give me?''
3608''Give the names of all the foremen you have worked under during the last five years?''
3608''Gorn where?''
3608''Got a bit of stopping to spare, Frank?''
3608''Hardly wot you''d call Japanese, though, is it?''
3608''Has anyone seen a Lib''ral Flag, Lib''ral Flag, Lib''ral Flag?''
3608''Has anyone seen old Jack Linden since''e got the push?''
3608''Has your grandfather got anything to do yet?''
3608''Have you any references?''
3608''Have you ever done any other kinds of work than those you have mentioned?
3608''Have you ever received Poor Relief?''
3608''Have you ever worked for a Distress Committee before?''
3608''Have you got enough colour?''
3608''He seems almost too pretty for a boy, does n''t he?''
3608''He''s a funny sort of chap, ai n''t he?''
3608''Hear, Hear,''shouted several voices, and angry cries of''Why do n''t you drink the poison?''
3608''How are we going on about this job?''
3608''How are you getting on in there?''
3608''How are you goin''to prevent the selfish and cunnin'', as you call''em, from gettin''on top THEN as they do now?''
3608''How big is it?''
3608''How can marriage be a cause of poverty?''
3608''How could the small number of people in number one and two consume as much as you''ve given''em in your drorin''?''
3608''How did you get on yesterday?''
3608''How do YOU reckon it could be altered?''
3608''How do you make that out?''
3608''How long have you been living there?''
3608''How long shall they reproach us, where crowd on crowd they dwell Poor ghosts of the wicked city, gold crushed, hungry hell?
3608''How long were you living at that place?''
3608''How many children have you?
3608''How many more times will Mother have to tell you about it before you take any notice?''
3608''How much do we still owe for the oilcloth and the furniture?''
3608''How much does it all come to now?''
3608''How much is your house assessed at?''
3608''How much money will you have tomorrow?''
3608''How much rent do you owe?''
3608''How much?''
3608''How old are you?
3608''How''s the enemy?''
3608''I feel as if I''ad a touch of the dry- rot meself, do n''t you?''
3608''I hope you''ll excuse me for asking, but were you not formerly a Socialist?''
3608''I might reasonably ask you,"What''s done with them or what you propose to do with them now?"
3608''I reckon we ought to''ave more than a bob for it, do n''t you?
3608''I say,''added the boy in a whisper to Owen,''if it comes orf-- I mean if you gets the job to do this room-- will you ask to''ave me along of you?''
3608''I set the table for you, did n''t I, Mum?''
3608''I should like to ask,''said Harlow,''wot''s to become of all the gold and silver and copper money?
3608''I should like to know who''s goin''to do all the dirty work?''
3608''I should think the workers will be jolly glad when they see me coming to tell them what to do, should n''t you, Mum?''
3608''I suppose I''d better finish the room I started on on Saturday?''
3608''I suppose Misery did n''t say nothin''about''i m this mornin''?''
3608''I suppose nobody wo n''t be comin''in?''
3608''I suppose you do n''t know of any other firm what''s got anything?''
3608''I suppose you think Jim Scalds is a bloody fool, the same as everybody else what do n''t see things YOUR way?''
3608''I suppose you think the landlords ought to let people live in their''ouses for nothing?''
3608''I suppose you think there ought n''t to be no employers at all?''
3608''I think this would be a very good time to take up the collection, do n''t you?''
3608''I think we could arrange it all right, do n''t you?''
3608''I thought you said you had settled everything all right with the old woman?''
3608''I told you''ow it would be, did n''t I?''
3608''I wished I was a pet dog, do n''t you?''
3608''I wonder how Dr Weakling will take it?''
3608''I wonder how much YOU''LL be able to do when you''re as old as he is?''
3608''I wonder if it''s true as the firm''s got another job to do for old Sweater?''
3608''I wonder if they''ve started anyone yet on the venetian blinds for this''ouse?''
3608''I wonder what the time is?''
3608''I wonder what they''re doin''about the venetian blinds?''
3608''I wonder what time it is?''
3608''I wonder what time it is?''
3608''I wonder who''ll have the job of paintin''''em?''
3608''I''ad one too, the other week, about six months ago, did n''t I, Elsie?''
3608''If Gord did n''t create the world,''ow did it come''ere?''
3608''If I let you spend a lot of time over the sketches and then Mr Sweater does not approve of your design, where do I come in?''
3608''If everybody''s got to do their share of work, where''s the minister and clergymen to come from?''
3608''If everyone is to be allowed to choose''is own trade, who''d be fool enough to choose to be a scavenger, a sweep, a dustman or a sewer man?
3608''If everything''s wrong,''ow''s it goin''to be altered?''
3608''If you''ad a''ouse and let it to someone, you''d want your rent, would n''t yer?''
3608''Is Mr Linden in?''
3608''Is Rushton there?''
3608''Is all that really necessary?''
3608''Is it time to dress me yet, Mum?''
3608''Is it true,''said Easton,''that Socialists intend to do away with the Army and Navy?''
3608''Is she up?''
3608''Is that what you were talking to him about?''
3608''Is the b-- r gorn?''
3608''Is the gent what''s bought this''ouse any relation to Sweater the draper?''
3608''Is the three shillings all they have to live on?''
3608''Is them the things wot''s''angin''up in the shop- winder?''
3608''Is there any more questions?''
3608''Is there any more questions?''
3608''Is there any more questions?''
3608''Is there any more questions?''
3608''Is there anyone doin''em yet?''
3608''Is there anything else?''
3608''Is there anything else?''
3608''Is this door wet?''
3608''Is''e doin''anything?''
3608''Is-- Hunter-- or Rushton here?''
3608''It ai n''t''arf all right, ai n''t it?''
3608''It makes things pretty bad in your line, I suppose?''
3608''It would be a bit of all right if''e was to make a bloody mess of it, would n''t it?''
3608''It''s a bit differint from the Royal Caff, where we got the sack, ai n''t it?''
3608''It''s a grand finish, is n''t it?''
3608''It''s been closed up lately, ai n''t it?''
3608''It''s not a bad little grate, you know, is it?''
3608''Let''s see,''said Payne, reflectively,''''e married old Grinder''s sister, did n''t''e?
3608''Might I go, Mum?''
3608''Mother told me I might ask you if you''ll come?''
3608''Mr Rushton is n''t here yet, I suppose?''
3608''Next?''
3608''Next?''
3608''Next?''
3608''Next?''
3608''Next?''
3608''Not a bad tanner''s- worth, eh?''
3608''Oh, by the way,''said Easton, glad of an opportunity to change the subject,''you do n''t happen to know of anyone as wants a room, do you?
3608''Oh, he does, does he?''
3608''Oh, he said that, did he?''
3608''Oh, why and for what are we waiting, while our brothers droop and die?
3608''Oh,''e did, did''e?''
3608''One''ere?
3608''Oo cares for''i m?''
3608''Or p''raps you think the masters ought to do all the bloody work theirselves, and give us the money?''
3608''Ow long do you think it''ll take you to make the drorins and the stencils?''
3608''Ow would that do?''
3608''Ow''s it goin''to be altered?
3608''Ow''s it goin''to be altered?''
3608''Ow''s''e to know that we buys beer with it?
3608''P''hap''s''e''s left a message for some of us with Crass?''
3608''Pretty dry job, ai n''t it?''
3608''Really and truly, or are you only having a game?''
3608''Reconstruct the company?
3608''Round?
3608''Round?''
3608''Seemed quite pleased with''isself, did n''t''e?''
3608''Seems to be gettin''colder, do n''t it?''
3608''Shall I try to open it?''
3608''She used to manage one of Grinder''s branch shops did n''t she?''
3608''So it IS right, ai n''t it?''
3608''That WOULD be a funny way of showing you how much I love you, would n''t it, Dad?
3608''That do make a bit of difference, do n''t it?''
3608''That''s a bit of all right, ai n''t it?''
3608''That''s a funny subject, ai n''t it?''
3608''The idear of sitting there like that when most likely the men are waiting for them things?''
3608''The next question is-- Are we short of labour?
3608''The only question before you is: Are you willing to wait for Five Hundred Years?''
3608''The people in number four produce everything, do n''t they?''
3608''Them''s some of your chaps, ai n''t they?''
3608''Then I should think the workers ought to be jolly ashamed of themselves, Mum, do n''t you?''
3608''Then shall they answer:"Lord, when saw we Thee an hungered or athirst or a stranger or naked, or sick, and did not minister unto Thee?"
3608''Then what are you talking about?
3608''These things being so, how comes this extraordinary result?
3608''They ai n''t got no other work in, have they?''
3608''They''re all right names for dogs, but I think they''re too big for a kitten, do n''t you, Dad?''
3608''Think of what?''
3608''Think of what?''
3608''This is a bit of all right, ai n''t it?''
3608''This is a bloody life, ai n''t it?''
3608''This is some bloody fine stuff to''ave to use, ai n''t it?''
3608''Those that the other two ladders was spliced with?''
3608''Three weeks ago; do n''t you remember?
3608''To Ruth?''
3608''True?
3608''Wait a minute, ca n''t you?''
3608''Was it gorn or not?''
3608''We ai n''t''ad no lectures at all lately,''ave we?''
3608''We do n''t have to put up with any bullying or chivying or chasing now, do we?''
3608''We''re the ratepayers, and why should we have to pay them more wages than we get ourselves?
3608''Well, and wot the bloody''ell are we to do now?''
3608''Well, ca n''t you call him after someone you know?''
3608''Well, if we''re all wrong,''said Crass, with a sneer,''praps you can tell us what the real cause is?''
3608''Well, keep horder, ca n''t you?''
3608''Well, that takes the biskit, do n''t it?''
3608''Well, that''s a good job, ai n''t it?''
3608''Well, that''s not fair doos, is it, Mum?''
3608''Well, that''s not what we''re talking about now, is it?''
3608''Well, this takes the bloody biskit, do n''t it?''
3608''Well, we''re all right''ere, ai n''t we?''
3608''Well, what do YOU think of it?''
3608''Well, what do you propose, then?''
3608''Well, what do you think of it?''
3608''Well, what is it dear?
3608''Well, what the bloody hell are we to do now?''
3608''Well, what the bloody''ell DO yer mean, then?''
3608''Well, why did she call St Thomas a bad example?''
3608''Well, why do n''t you try to keep quiet for a few minutes and let''i m get on with it?''
3608''Well, wot do you reckon is the cause of poverty, then?''
3608''Well, wot do you think of it?''
3608''Well, wot''s it to be?''
3608''Well, yer could n''t blame''i m if''e did say something, could yer?''
3608''Well,''he said,''What else?''
3608''Well?''
3608''What I ca n''t understand is, who did the table belong to?''
3608''What about all the money what''s in the Post Office Savings Bank, and Building and Friendly Societies?''
3608''What about it if they are?
3608''What about our schoolmaster then?
3608''What about religion?''
3608''What about the Navy?''
3608''What about the time you dropped the quarter of butter you was sent for in the mud?''
3608''What about the vicar?''
3608''What are the causes, then?''
3608''What are the cheers to be for?''
3608''What are you doing there and who are you working for?''
3608''What are you going to get it for?''
3608''What did HE want?''
3608''What did he say to you about the fire-- anything?''
3608''What did the b-- r say to that?''
3608''What did''e give yer?''
3608''What do YOU mean by poverty, then?''
3608''What do you mean by sich conduct?''
3608''What do you mean?''
3608''What do you think of him?''
3608''What do you think they ought to do, then?''
3608''What do you want?''
3608''What does it mean?''
3608''What does that mean?''
3608''What else is there that we must pay or buy tomorrow?''
3608''What for?''
3608''What have I done?''
3608''What have you been doing for the last five years?
3608''What have you got to say to that?''
3608''What if''e does?
3608''What is it?
3608''What is your Trade, Calling, Employment, or Occupation?''
3608''What kind of a house do you live in?
3608''What other things?''
3608''What shall we give''em?''
3608''What the bloody''ell kind of system do you think we ought to''ave?''
3608''What the''ell sort of a bloody system do you think we ought to''ave, then?''
3608''What the''ell''s an agnostic?''
3608''What the''ell''s the matter with the present system?''
3608''What time is it?''
3608''What was the parson''s name?''
3608''What was your previous address?''
3608''What would I have?
3608''What would you do with them what spends all their money in drink?''
3608''What''ll it be, the sack?''
3608''What''ll we do about the rates?''
3608''What''ouse do you usually use?''
3608''What''s Crass supposed to be doin''inside?''
3608''What''s become of Alf tonight?''
3608''What''s it come to?''
3608''What''s it going to cost?''
3608''What''s the good of talking?
3608''What''s the matter here?
3608''What''s the matter?''
3608''What''s the meaning of this?
3608''What''s the time?
3608''What''s the time?''
3608''What''s up?''
3608''What''s your hurry?''
3608''What''s your name?''
3608''When can you have them ready then?
3608''When do you think you''ll have the drawings ready?''
3608''When was it?''
3608''Where are you working?''
3608''Where did Cain get''is wife from?''
3608''Where did you live before you went there?''
3608''Where do you live?''
3608''Where they used to sell refreshments?''
3608''Where''s Harlow go to, then?''
3608''Where''s Will got to again?''
3608''Where''s his bike?''
3608''Where''s the rope?''
3608''Who is this last party what''s dead?''
3608''Who told you about it?''
3608''Who was your last employer?
3608''Who would be the richer man, you or Harlow?''
3608''Who''s going to buy the shares of a concern that''s practically bankrupt and never paid a dividend?''
3608''Who''s going to do it?''
3608''Who''s to buy?''
3608''Who?''
3608''Why are there so many shops and stores and emporiums?
3608''Why ca n''t it, Mum?''
3608''Why ca n''t we?''
3608''Why did you move?''
3608''Why do n''t some of you get up and make a speech?''
3608''Why do n''t you answer the bloody question?
3608''Why do n''t you cut it off, Mum?''
3608''Why do n''t you go and share your wages with the chaps what''s out of work?''
3608''Why do n''t you light a fire?
3608''Why not give him a sum of money?''
3608''Why not?''
3608''Why not?''
3608''Why should I''ave to''elp to keep the children of a man who''s too lazy to work, or spends all''is money on drink?''
3608''Why the bloody''ell do n''t you leave the boy alone?''
3608''Why the''ell do n''t yer talk plain English without draggin''in a lot of long words wot nobody ca n''t understand?''
3608''Why would you rather have the kitten?''
3608''Why, I''m not a baby now, am I?
3608''Why, Mum?''
3608''Why, ai n''t there one''ere?''
3608''Why, ca n''t you agree which of the two to buy?''
3608''Why, ca n''t you see?''
3608''Why, did n''t you know?
3608''Why, did n''t''Unter tell you?''
3608''Why, do n''t you remember, back in the summer, that carved hoak hall table as Rushton pinched out of that''ouse on Grand Parade?''
3608''Why, what''s the matter?''
3608''Why, what''s wrong?''
3608''Will Tariff Reform deal with that?
3608''Will you bring me a pint back with you, in a bottle?''
3608''Will you?''
3608''Will your train cross over the bridge?''
3608''Wonder wot the bloody''ell''e thinks''e is?
3608''Wot cheer, Bob?''
3608''Wot do yer mean by animals?''
3608''Wot do yer mean,"bring them with you"?''
3608''Wot good''as the Society ever done''ere?''
3608''Wot the bloody''ell are YOU laughin''at?''
3608''Wot the bloody''ell sort of a system do YOU think we ought to''ave?''
3608''Wot the''ell does PLO mean?''
3608''Wot the''ell''s the good of eddication to the likes of us?''
3608''Wot the''ell''s the use of the likes of us troublin''our''eads about politics?''
3608''Wot then?
3608''Wot workin''drorins?
3608''Wot''s become of the Professor?''
3608''Wot''s it all about?''
3608''Wot''s the bloody game?''
3608''Wot''s the game?''
3608''Wot''s the use of talkin''like that?''
3608''Wotcher mean, equivalent?''
3608''Wotcher think of it?
3608''Would any Liberal or Tory capitalist like to get up into the pulpit and oppose the speaker?''
3608''Yer do n''t blame me, do yer?''
3608''Yes, and it''s quite true that most of the people who never do any work get lots of everything, but where do they get it from?
3608''Yes, and what does their wages consist of?''
3608''Yes, it do seem a''ell of a long week, do n''t it?''
3608''Yes, it''s all right, ai n''t it?''
3608''Yes,''replied Elsie and added:''Do they give prizes at your Sunday School, Frankie?''
3608''Yes: and where''s the money to come from for all this?''
3608''Yes: do n''t you remember''ow good- tempered''e was last summer when there was such a lot of Scarlet Fever about?''
3608''Yes: you''re very good at finding fault,''sneered Slyme,''but why do n''t you tell us''ow it''s all going to be put right?''
3608''Yes; that was a bit of all right too, was n''t it?''
3608''You MEAN that?''
3608''You ai n''t fell out with your mate yet, I s''pose?''
3608''You both get sevenpence an hour, do n''t you?''
3608''You do n''t think they''d be sich bloody fools as to work for nothing, do you?''
3608''You might leave that for a few minutes, will you?''
3608''You say the people in one and two gets all the best of everything, but what about the tramps and beggars?
3608''You should rather say--"What about all the money that''s wasted every year on education?"
3608''You''re always sayin''that everything''s all wrong,''complained Harlow,''but why the''ell do n''t you tell us''ow they''re goin''to be put right?''
3608''You''re surely not going to make me wear my velvets, are you, Mum?
3608''You''ve got some title to call yourself a Christian, have n''t you?
3608A sort of schoolmaster?''
3608After a long pause Easton continued:''Would you mind asking Mrs Owen to suggest it to Ruth?''
3608Ai n''t I done enuff for yer?
3608And how do they get it?''
3608And that if they''re bad we can do nothing but just sit down and wait for them to get better?''
3608And that just reminds me: will you please give me my penny now?
3608And the boy-- what hope was there for him?
3608And then most likely not make a do of it after all?
3608And then?
3608And to whom would they sell?''
3608And what do they do with their money when they get it?
3608And why should they be paid for holidays any more than us?''
3608Are the good, kind capitalists going to abandon the use of wages- saving machinery if we tax all foreign- made goods?
3608Are you the foreman?''
3608As for buying and selling for profit-- from whom would they buy?
3608As for why I do n''t do it-- why should I?
3608As they often said:''Who and what are our children that they should n''t be made to work for their betters?
3608As they were carrying it in Philpot winked at Bert and whispered:''Did yer see Pontius Pilate anywheres outside?''
3608Ask the shareholders for more money?
3608At last Newman blurted out:''I suppose-- you do n''t happen-- either of you-- to have a tanner you could lend me?
3608At last he said loudly:''How much longer are you going to be messing about those doors?
3608At last he said:''What other ways?''
3608At last he said:''Why do n''t you get a baby, Mother?
3608At last she said, wistfully, trying to speak plainly for there seemed to be a lump in her throat:''And what about tomorrow?
3608At length he said aloud, addressing himself to Crass:''Wot do you think of this''ere fissical policy, Bob?''
3608At the conclusion of Sweater''s remarks the philanthropists gave three frantic cheers and then someone in the crowd shouted''What''s the colour?''
3608Besides, what need would there be for anyone to save?
3608Boy''s time?
3608Bundy said he was only asking a civil question, a point of information: all he wanted to know was, what was the terms of the resolution?
3608But do n''t you think you''d better take your jacket off?
3608But for my part I ca n''t see''ow it''s ever goin''to be altered, can you?''
3608But then, what about those at home?
3608But what about the workman?
3608But you believe in Christianity: why do n''t you do the things that He said?''
3608But you yourself could n''t tell us what''s the cause of poverty, could you?''
3608But you''re all"Christians"--why do n''t you do it?''
3608Ca n''t I go just as I am, in my old clothes?''
3608Can any of you tell me the name of someone who proposes to do so?''
3608Can you do it or not?''
3608Can you please send us something to keep the work going?
3608Can you tell us why anyone would need or wish to save?''
3608Chapter 9 Who is to Pay?
3608Competition in business--''''But''ow do you make it out?''
3608Could n''t you manage with some of that?''
3608Could n''t you stay at home till after breakfast, just for once?''
3608Could they eat it or drink it or wear it?
3608Did he wish to take the room only-- just to lodge?
3608Did n''t I tell you to make this do with one coat?
3608Did n''t you see that corfin plate what Owen was writing in the drorin''-room last Saturday morning?''
3608Did yer ever see sich a mess in yer life?
3608Did you like those cakes?''
3608Do n''t I suit yer, guv''ner?
3608Do n''t you remember I was sent away to do a ceilin''and a bit of painting over at Windley?''
3608Do n''t you think so?''
3608Do they believe it?
3608Do they eat it, or drink it, or wear it?''
3608Do they go to work?
3608Do you imagine they exist for the purpose of giving those who build them, or work in them, a chance to earn a living?
3608Do you remember what you told me the other day, when you came home from school, about the Scripture lesson?''
3608Do you think it will make any real difference-- for good or evil-- which of these two men is elected?''
3608Do you think it''ll pay to have you playing about there hour after hour with a bit of pumice stone?
3608Do you think you would be fit for any other kind?
3608Does what you call"Free Trade"help us here?
3608During breakfast, Philpot, addressing Crass and referring to Hunter, inquired anxiously:''''Ow''s''is temper this mornin'', Bob?''
3608Everybody to get the same wages?''
3608Fifty up?''
3608Had He the power but not the will to make His creatures happy?
3608Had their intelligence never developed beyond the childhood stage?
3608Have n''t you finished yet?
3608Have you brought the plans?''
3608Have you made up your mind what you''re going to have done to it?''
3608He advocates Co- operation instead of Competition: but how can he co- operate with people who insist on competing with him?
3608He called out to old Jack Linden, who was still working at the front doors:''Is it raining, Jack?''
3608He did not let this appear, of course, but hesitated for a few minutes when Newman repeated the usual formula:''Any chance of a job, sir?''
3608He lowered his voice to a blood- curdling stage whisper as he asked:''What is this Socialism that we hear so much about, but which so few understand?
3608He wondered what time it was?
3608He wondered what time it was?
3608How came these things to be?
3608How can I tell them?
3608How could they expect a man like that to exist on a paltry fifteen pounds a week?
3608How do you know that the same thing would not happen under a Socialist Administration?''
3608How is it that the benefits of civilization are not produced in sufficient quantity to satisfy the needs of all?
3608How long did you work there?
3608How many boys?
3608How many girls?
3608How many rooms are there?''
3608How many soldiers would prefer money to the honour of wearing the intrinsically valueless Victoria Cross?
3608How much did you say we owe?''
3608How much would it be?
3608How much?''
3608How should we get on then?''
3608How then can it be true that their interests are identical?
3608How then could it have had three coats?
3608How would that do?
3608How, he asked, was he to know at what hour Owen commenced or left off working, if the latter did them at home?
3608I do n''t like parting with the dress, although I never wear it; but we''ll be sure to be able to get it out again, wo n''t we?''
3608I think he seems a very decent sort of chap, do n''t you?''
3608I think you can manage to carry it all right, ca n''t you, Charley?''
3608I''ve been figuring out exactly what my money has averaged for the last twelve months and how much a week do you think it comes to?''
3608If it is true that no brains are required to do manual labour, why put idiots into imbecile asylums?
3608If the people wot''s got the money wo n''t spend it, the likes of me and you ca n''t make''em, can we?''
3608If you had been in Crass''s place, would you have resigned rather than do such dirty work?
3608If you had had Hunter''s berth, would you have given it up and voluntarily reduced yourself to the level of the hands?
3608If you, reader, had been one of the hands, would you have slogged?
3608In my opinion it''s ridiculous, because if it was true, wot''s to prevent the people droppin''orf?''
3608Is it alive?''
3608Is it possible that you or any other sane man can believe anything so silly as that?''
3608Is over- population the cause of poverty in France?
3608Is over- population the cause of poverty in Ireland?
3608Is that all?''
3608Is there anything I can bring up for you?''
3608Is there not a sufficient number of people able and willing to work?
3608It''s a sensible and creditable position, is n''t it?''
3608It''s lucky I happened to meet you, is n''t it?''
3608John Starr''What time is it now, Mum?''
3608Just as he was about to get up a harsh voice behind him said:''How much longer are you going to sit there?''
3608Just you put it down, will yer?"
3608Listen to me--''''Are you quite sure as we ca n''t be over''eard?''
3608Looking out into the unfathomable infinity of space, Owen wondered what manner of Being or Power it was that had originated and sustained all this?
3608No private contractor paid his men for Bank Holidays, and why should the Corporation do so?
3608Not only that, but if he did not get a job how were they to live?
3608Now, the minute hand was over the edge of the number, and he began to deliberate whether he might not rest for another five minutes?
3608Of course you know the figure?''
3608Of course''e got a pension as well-- two thousand a year for life, I think it is; but after all, what''s that-- for a man like''i m?''
3608Oh, I wish it was three o''clock now, do n''t you, Mother?''
3608Or do you think that abolishing the House of Lords, or disestablishing the Church, will enable the workers who are displaced to obtain employment?
3608Or is there not enough machinery?
3608Or was he mad himself?
3608Or would you have preferred to starve and see your family starve?
3608Others ridiculed this doctrine of State employment: It was all very fine, but where was the money to come from?
3608Pull down the works and build fresh, and buy some new machinery?
3608Rushton''s cuttin''it fine did n''t MAKE this job, did it?
3608See?
3608Since it IS true-- as you admit-- that machinery is the principal cause of unemployment, what are you going to do about it?
3608So it will be no wonder if those children are not able to think for themselves when they''re grown up, will it?''
3608Stop that, will yer?''
3608Suppose there was some kind of a God?
3608Tariff Reform wo n''t do away with the machinery, will it?''
3608That the lower you can do it for, eh?''
3608That was n''t too much, was it?''
3608That would n''t be fair, would it?''
3608That''ll be a good one, wo n''t it Dad?''
3608That''ll be a very good idea, wo n''t it, Dad?''
3608That''s a pretty big job, is n''t it?''
3608The leaflet which had given rise to all this fury read as follows: WHAT IS SOCIALISM?
3608The question is, what is the cause of the lifelong poverty of the majority of those who are not drunkards and who DO work?
3608The workin''class adn''t arst Dr Weakling to stick up for them, had they?
3608Their money?
3608Then as Newman still hesitated he added impatiently,''Are you coming or not?''
3608Then the Liberals in their turn paraded the streets singing''Has anyone seen a Tory Flag?''
3608Then the Tories went back to the Fountain carrying the captured torches, and singing to the tune of''Has anyone seen a German Band?''
3608Then there was Nora, how would she fare?
3608Then when the idlers come in and start touching our things, we''ll go up to''em and say,"''Ere, watcher doin''of?
3608There are but three words to speak"We will it,"and what is the foreman but the dream strong wakened and weak?
3608They are gone, there is none can undo it, nor save our souls from the curse, But many a million cometh, and shall they be better or worse?
3608They remained at the table in silence for some time: then,''How much rent do we owe now?''
3608They was not runnin''short of workers, was they?
3608They wo n''t be able to do the sashes, though, will they?''
3608They''re not Gentry''s children, are they?
3608WE ca n''t MAKE work, can we?''
3608Was God aware of their sufferings, but unable to help them?
3608Was God unaware of the miseries of His creatures?
3608Was he to be a slave and a drudge all his life also?
3608Was it not braver and more manly to endure in silence?
3608Was the meeting in favour of a Beano or not?
3608Was they in favour of the Beano or not?
3608We''ll give him dad, dad, dad, when he does come home, wo n''t we?''
3608We''re not a lot of bloody Chinamen, are we?''
3608Wednesday morning?''
3608Well, it takes the cake, do n''t it?''
3608Well, what about when a lark goes up in the sky and stays there about a quarter of an hour?
3608Well, wot''s to prevent artful dodgers like old Misery and Rushton saving it up and buying and selling things with it, and so livin''without work?''
3608Were they all hopelessly stupid?
3608What WILL become of us?''
3608What about the things what''s made by machinery?''
3608What are you crying for?''
3608What can be more brutal and senseless than trying to"educate"a poor little, hungry, ill- clad child?
3608What did the teacher say St Thomas was?''
3608What did they care for Hunter or Rushton either?
3608What difference does that make?''
3608What do they earn?''
3608What do you say?''
3608What does he do it for?''
3608What does he usually do?''
3608What else?''
3608What else?''
3608What have you got in that basket?''
3608What is it but false, misleading, nonsensical claptrap to say that their interests were identical with those of their employer?
3608What is it they gets for''em?''
3608What is it, and what does it mean?''
3608What kind of work did you do?
3608What kind of work, how many hours a day?
3608What right had he to call them half- starved, poverty- stricken, poor wretches?
3608What right have those sleek, pampered hunters and racers to their warm stables and high feed, their grooms and jockeys?
3608What the bloody''ell was they before they got there?
3608What the''ell did''e know about it?
3608What time is it now, Mother?''
3608What wages did you get?''
3608What was it you wanted?''
3608What was it?''
3608What was the foreman''s name?
3608What was to be done?
3608What were the terms?
3608What would they live on?
3608What would you have?''
3608What''ave you done with''i m?''
3608What''s Freddie crying for?''
3608What''s it going to cost for the lot?''
3608What''s it to be?
3608What''s the matter, Mother?''
3608What''s your name?''
3608What''s your remedy?''
3608Whatever could be the matter with it?
3608When order was restored, Philpot rose and addressed the meeting:''Is there any gentleman wot would like to ask the Speaker a question?''
3608When this hymn was finished, someone else, imitating the whine of a street- singer, started,''Oh, where is my wandering boy tonight?''
3608When was your last birthday?''
3608Where do you live?
3608Where should we be if it was n''t for all the money they spend and the work they''as done?
3608Which do you think is the best: a fardensworth of everlasting stickjaw torfee, or a prize packet?''
3608Who asked you to interfere?''
3608Who could it be?
3608Who is it?''
3608Who the bloody hell was he?
3608Who the bloody''ell are you?
3608Who was it started the one- man, one- room dodge, eh?
3608Who would be the next?
3608Who would be the next?
3608Why ca n''t you do''em''ere?''
3608Why did you leave?''
3608Why do n''t you get them under colour?
3608Why not let them do some of the hand work for which no brains are required?
3608Why should n''t Mugsborough go in for Socialism as well as other towns?''
3608Why should they get more money than anyone else?
3608Why should we trouble to fake the books, or declare a dividend or''ave the harticles in the papers or anything else?
3608Why the hell did n''t he go and make a hole in the water, or cut his bloody throat?
3608Why, did n''t you tell me only the other day that you''d paid up all we owed for groceries?''
3608Why, then, and for what we are waiting?
3608Why, what''s the matter, Mum?
3608Why?''
3608Wo n''t you?
3608Wot about it?
3608Wot the''ell more do you want?''
3608Wot the''ell''s it got do with you who I votes for?''
3608Wot''s the cause of poverty?''
3608Wot''s the cause of poverty?''
3608Wotcher mean?''
3608Would n''t it be of no use at all?''
3608Would n''t it be worth sevenpence a year to you to know that there were no starving children in the town?''
3608Would you like to spend the money yourself, or shall I manage as I''ve done before, or will you tell me what to do?''
3608Yer will, will yer?''
3608You ca n''t possibly think that all those shops are really necessary?
3608You did n''t used to think it was square, did yer?''
3608You do n''t happen to know where he lived, do you?''
3608You do n''t want to stop''ere all night, do you?''
3608You follow me?''
3608You know that all the beautiful things which the people who do nothing have are made by the people who work, do n''t you?''
3608You know that empty''ouse as they said Sweater''ad bought-- the one that Rushton and Nimrod was seen lookin''at?''
3608You know that sort of talk do n''t do, does it?''
3608You know that, do n''t you?''
3608You wo n''t mind, will you, Dad?''
3608You would n''t mind doin''it, would yer?''
3608You''re fond of drorin, ai n''t yer?''
3608You''ve got them, ai n''t yer?''
3608but What are the deeds of today, In the days of the years we dwell in, That wear our lives away?
3608covers both jobs, you say?''
3608inquired Ruth, or would he prefer to board as well?
3608or''cocoa tea?''
3608there''s another funeral on today?
8374A pleasant story, is n''t it? 8374 Abstract rights?
8374Affect ye? 8374 Again I ask, why do you assume the very point in question?
8374Ah, well-- this little taste of British justice will thicken his hide for him, eh?
8374Alton, you fool, why did you let out that you were a snip?
8374An artilleryman?
8374An''ai n''t that all over the same?
8374An''did n''t the blessed Jesus die for all?
8374An''hoo much o''thae gran''objectives an''subjectives did ye comprehen'', then, Johnnie, my man?
8374An''ran oot sarkless on the public, eh? 8374 An''so he has no objection to a wee playing at Papistry, gin a man finds it good to tickle up his soul?"
8374An''wha''s Meester Windrush, then?
8374An''what for then? 8374 An''you''re a going to lend us a hand?
8374Anan?
8374And are there any men,I said,"who believe this?
8374And have you been drinking arter all?
8374And have you tried to write? 8374 And he will, but not the one I want; and he could not buy me reputation, power, rank, do you see, Alton, my genius?
8374And if I did,I answered, more and more excited,"have I not slaved for you, stinted myself of clothes to pay your rent?
8374And if it is refused?
8374And is n''t everything fair in a good cause?
8374And it is for that that you will sell your soul-- to become a hanger- on of the upper classes, in sloth and luxury?
8374And she wo n''t see me? 8374 And that is really in the Bible?"
8374And this,I said,"is your idea of a vocation for the sacred ministry?
8374And what business have they to let themselves be ordered? 8374 And what else?"
8374And what gospel is there in a moral teaching? 8374 And what is The Cause?"
8374And what sort of a man was he?
8374And what sort of a preacher was his parson?
8374And who are you?
8374And who was the landlord of this parish?
8374And who''s made''em savages? 8374 And why ai n''t they?"
8374And why,asked I, more vexed and disappointed than I liked to confess--"why did you not tell me before?"
8374And will the country join us?
8374Are you a farmer?
8374Aristocrats? 8374 Aw yow knawn Billy Porter?
8374Aw? 8374 Ay, a live dean-- didn''t you see the cloven foot sticking out from under his shoe- buckle?
8374Ay, and more-- and how''s a man ever to pay that?
8374Ay, he did speak of that-- what did he call it? 8374 Ay, my lassies; but ha''ye gotten na fire the nicht?"
8374Big enough to make fighters?
8374But after all,I said one day,"the great practical objection still remains unanswered-- the clergy?
8374But are you so ill off?
8374But does n''t it ruin their health? 8374 But how can I, till I know what sort of a style it ought to be?"
8374But is not beauty,I said,"in itself a good and blessed thing, softening, refining, rejoicing the eyes of all who behold?"
8374But the law?
8374But the time?--so infinitely shorter than that which Nature usually occupies in the process?
8374But what is it?
8374But what sort of handwriting was it?
8374But what was the postmark of the letter?
8374But where did you get the money? 8374 But where is the cover?"
8374But who will teach me Latin?
8374But,I asked again, half- laughing, half- disgusted,"do you know what your duty is?"
8374But,I asked, as a jealous pang shot through my heart,"how did you contrive to get this same footing at all?
8374But,I asked,"have you read much for ordination, or seen much of what a clergyman''s work should be?"
8374But,I said,"Mr. Mackaye, do you think it right to sell books of the very opinions of which you disapprove so much?"
8374By what?
8374Can ye do that same, laddie?
8374Can you ask the question? 8374 Charles the First?"
8374Come on,he said, peevishly clutching me by the arm;"what do you want dawdling?
8374Conjuring-- to strike a perpendicular, noo, or say the Lord''s Prayer backwards?
8374Conspiracy? 8374 Could you find un, dee yow think, noo, into Lunnon?
8374Dee yow consider, now, that a mon mought be lost, like, into Lunnon?
8374Dee yow think, noo, yow could find out my boy out of un, by any ways o''conjuring like?
8374Destruction?
8374Did he teach you to disobey your mother?
8374Did n''t I see you take it out o''the old un''s pocket, you young villain?
8374Did you not know it? 8374 Do n''t his mother know he''s out?"
8374Do n''t you know what came of the strike a few years ago, when this piece- work and sweating first came in? 8374 Do n''t you see they''re leaving?
8374Do n''t you see, stupid?
8374Do you call a sweater''s man a free man?
8374Do you expect me to live on your charity, on condition of doing your dirty work? 8374 Do you know this man?"
8374Do you mean to call me a profligate?
8374Do you not believe me? 8374 Do you think that I monopolize the generosity of England?
8374Do you upbraid me with that?
8374Doctor? 8374 Does it want so very much wisdom to understand the rights and the wrongs of all that?
8374Does n''t the parish allow the old lady anything?
8374Ely?
8374Faix, an''ai n''t we all brothers?
8374Faix, thin, Misther Mackaye, darlint, an''whin did I desarve to pawn me own goose an''board, an''sit looking at the spidhers for the want o''them?
8374From the counthry?
8374Government-- government? 8374 Ha''ye looked into the monster- petition?"
8374Hallo, young''un, come to your senses? 8374 Have I hit him?"
8374Have n''t I been taking down every one of these lectures for the press?
8374How are you, my dear fellow? 8374 How came I here?
8374How did you learn all this?
8374How do ye ken what I may ha''thocht gude to read in my time? 8374 How lang ha''ye learnit that deil''s lee, Johnnie?
8374How long have I slept? 8374 How lost?"
8374How shall I answer him? 8374 How shall I help you?"
8374How so, if they break the laws of Nature?
8374How so?
8374How wad I ken that you had need o''t? 8374 How''s that?"
8374How?--how does a hound get a footing on a cold scent? 8374 Hullo, Alton, how are you?
8374Hullo, Poleax-- Costello-- What''s that? 8374 Hullo, young''un, and what do you want here?"
8374Hum, hum, widow, eh? 8374 Hymns for******?"
8374I am the dog, then?
8374I can quite understand your feeling deeply on one point,I said, as I took it,"after the sad story you told me; but why so bitter on all?
8374I dare say the vulgarity of that school has, ere now, shaken your faith in all that was holy?
8374If I must go, then, why so far? 8374 Is that any reason ye should write it?
8374Is that anything good to eat? 8374 Is this true?"
8374Is this,she said to Lord Lynedale,"the young person of whom you were speaking to me just now?
8374It seems so indeed-- but what do you mean?
8374Join them?
8374Leave the boy alone,growled Crossthwaite;"do n''t you see he''s crying?"
8374May I ask what is the subject of it?
8374May I go into your wood?
8374May I take the liberty of recommending my cousin here?
8374Michaelsh? 8374 Monster?
8374Need it be quenched there? 8374 Not enough?
8374Och, thin, and would n''t I just go mad if ever such ill luck happened to yees as to be taken to heaven in the prime of your days, asthore?
8374Och, were not abuses notorious? 8374 Of what?"
8374Oh, I am perfect in that character, I suppose? 8374 Oh, is it weed, or fish, or floating hair-- A tress o''golden hair, O''drowned maiden''s hair, Above the nets at sea?
8374Or a few efreets?
8374Ow, well, yow moi soy that- mak''th''em cruel thin then, it do; but what can bodies do i''th''ago? 8374 Parson?
8374Perhaps my learned brother would like a jury of rioters?
8374Perhaps the heathens are grown better than they used to be?
8374Poetic element? 8374 Porter or ale, sir?"
8374Power? 8374 Really, my good fellow, how can you wonder if our friends suspect you?
8374Set fire to the stones? 8374 Shall I pray, then?
8374Shure, thin, and ye''re a tailor, my young man?
8374Sloth and luxury? 8374 So ye gied the ministers a bit o''yer mind?
8374So you are one of these new Tractarians? 8374 So you keep a leader because he''s descended from ancient kings, do you?
8374Spy is he, thin? 8374 Tell me, then-- to try the Socratic method-- is disease, or health, the order and law of Nature?"
8374Them''s a sight o''larned beuks, Muster Mackaye?
8374Then why did you never say a kind word to me?
8374Then why, in Heaven''s name, did you introduce me to such a scoundrel?
8374Then you are implicated in this expected insurrection?
8374Then you believe in the Malthusian doctrines?
8374Then, do you believe in the old doctrines of Christianity?
8374Then, would one who healed diseases be a restorer, or a breaker of order?
8374They had all left town that morning,"Miss-- Miss Winnstay-- is she ill?
8374Vot''s that row?
8374Wad ye ha''them set up a dancing academy for working men, wi''''manners tocht here to the lower classes''? 8374 Wadna ye prefer a meeracle or twa?"
8374Was Paley,I asked,"a really good and pious man?"
8374Was he a cannibal, to drink out o''that pump hard- by, right under the kirkyard?
8374Was he a relation of yours?
8374Was it wrong in him to give himself such trouble about the education of a poor young fellow, who has no tie on him, who can never repay him?
8374Wellsaid I to myself, smiling in spirit,"what would my Chartist friends say if they saw me here?
8374Well, but,asked Crossthwaite,"was not that man, at least, splendid?"
8374Well, my young''un,recommenced my tormentor,"and how do you like your company?"
8374Well, young man, all right again? 8374 Well,"I said,"my dear cousin, and have you no high notions of a clergyman''s vocation?
8374Well,he said, as soon as we were out of the shop,"which way?
8374What are you a- grumbling here about, my man?--gotten the cholera?
8374What did he say to you about gentlemen being crammed by tutors and professors? 8374 What do you mean by grumbling at the whole thing in this way, Mr. Mackaye?
8374What do you mean?
8374What do you mean?
8374What do you mean?
8374What drives the Frenchman to suicide?
8374What for, then? 8374 What harm have they done you?"
8374What is that, sir?
8374What on earth do you mean? 8374 What on earth do you mean?"
8374What right have you,I asked, bristling up at a sudden suspicion that crossed me,"to use such words about me?"
8374What road?
8374What then remains? 8374 What war ye greeting about, then?
8374What was it that you adored? 8374 What would you like, sir?
8374What''s elevation?
8374What''s that about brotherhood and freedom, Lillian? 8374 What''s the matter, boys?"
8374What''s the matter?
8374What''s this?
8374What''s trade?
8374What, not become what Nature intended you to become? 8374 What, the little beauty somewhere near Cavendish Square?"
8374What,I said,"was it not proved upon my trial, that I exerted all my powers, endangered my very life, to prevent outrage in that case?"
8374What--(in the other place)--do you mean by giving me the trouble of re- writing it? 8374 What?
8374What? 8374 What?
8374What? 8374 What?"
8374What?
8374What?
8374When did he die?
8374Where else can we get any? 8374 Whereby you mean that you are on your way to her now?
8374Who dared to put such a thought into your head?
8374Who denies it? 8374 Who told you, my dear young friend, that to break the customs of Nature, is to break her laws?
8374Who was this lady?
8374Whose? 8374 Why are we weigh''d upon with heaviness, And utterly consumed with sharp distress, While all things else have rest from weariness?
8374Why for suld I speired? 8374 Why have I not as good a right to speak to her, to move in the same society in which she moves, as any of the fops of the day?
8374Why not go to my uncle?
8374Why wo n''t you let a cove die? 8374 Why, did n''t they tell us, before the Reform Bill, that extension of the suffrage was to cure everything?
8374Why, hav''n''t you a right to aspire to a college education as any do- nothing canon there at the abbey, lad?
8374Why, then, in the name of reason and mercy?
8374Why, then?
8374Why, was he not rich?
8374Why, yow told o''they sweaters-- dee yow think a mon might get in wi''one o''they, and they that mought be looking for un not to vind un?
8374Why?
8374Will ye, noo? 8374 Will you sign the protest, gentlemen, or not?"
8374With me?
8374Would a change in the franchise cure that?
8374Would that other dream have ever given you peace, even if it had ever become reality?
8374Would they be a blessing to me now? 8374 Wud I tell ye?
8374Ye''ll be wanting work, thin?
8374Yell be coming the- morrow? 8374 Yer do n''t?
8374Yes, it is Locke; and surely you''re my old friend Jemmy Downes? 8374 You a sweater''s man?"
8374You arn''t the king of the Cannibal Islands, as I know of, to cut a cove''s head off?
8374You do n''t mean it? 8374 You find the room quiet?"
8374You have never trusted me,I cried,"you have watched me--""Did you not deceive me once already?"
8374You know the opinion of the physicians?
8374You seem to be deeply interested in that picture?
8374You seem to be very intimate here,said I,"with all parties?"
8374You speak out boldly and well; but how can you judge what I may please to fancy? 8374 You wrote?
8374Your cousin?
8374Your love? 8374 Yow maun ha''got a deal o''scholarship among they, noo?"
8374''Cause why?
8374''Tak''a drap o''kindness yet, for auld langsyne?"
8374''Verra weel, father,''says the puir skellum;''and wha''s wife shall I tak?''
8374***** But what became of our protest?
8374***** But who was my benefactor?
8374***** But, the reader may ask, where was your Bible all this time?
8374*****"Did ye ever gang listering saumons by nicht?
8374--Do ye think, noo, we sall ha''knowledge in the next warld o''them we loved on earth?
8374--he burst out suddenly in his old ranting style--"what is there left on earth to live for?
83749d.?
8374A conversation which passed between us years ago at D**** on the antithesis of natural and revealed religion-- perhaps you recollect it?"
8374A demp unpleasant body?"
8374A murdered man?
8374Abstract rights?
8374After a short pause he said, quite abruptly,"Tom, do you want to live to be old?"
8374Again I ask, who knows what really are the laws of Nature?
8374Again I ask-- who will go forth and preach that Gospel, and save his native land?
8374Ai nt that logic and science, Orator?"
8374All things have rest: why should we toil alone?
8374Altogether, a joyous, genial bit of-- Nature?
8374An''gin they didna sae intend, wad it be coorteous o''me to gang speiring an''peering ower covers an''seals?"
8374An''what''s the use o''intellect?
8374And as I went out of the village, I accosted a labourer, who was trudging my way, fork on shoulder, and asked him if that was the parson and his wife?
8374And can you expect to eat your cake and keep it too?
8374And did n''t she know it?
8374And did n''t she know that you knew it too?"
8374And had he not a right to dispose of my person, having bought it by an allowance to my mother of five- and- twenty pounds a year?
8374And how came I to lie down without undressing?"
8374And how can you have too much of a good thing?
8374And how did you intend to spend it?"
8374And how ought it to be done?
8374And if I did, who''d fetch''em home?
8374And if I die, what better thing on earth can happen to me?"
8374And if the workmen chose to take lower wages, he was not bound actually to make them a present of more than they asked for?
8374And if there, why not elsewhere?
8374And if those who have, like you, still covet more, what wonder if those who have nothing covet something?
8374And is she after all, like Pantagruel''s ship, to be loaded with hemp?
8374And is that word a dream, a lie, the watchword only of rebellious fiends, as bigots say even now?
8374And is this not the truth?
8374And my cousin?
8374And need I say, too, that I was as utterly disgusted at my attempt to express her in words, as I had been at my trial with the pencil?
8374And now comes the question-- What is to be done with these poor tailors, to the number of between fifteen and twenty thousand?
8374And now for your''but''--""The raising of the dead to life?
8374And now, what shall I say to you, my friends, about the future?
8374And so I let them go on their own way, conscious of but one thought-- was Lillian in the court?
8374And so on through weary weeks of moping melancholy--"a double- minded man, unstable in all his ways?"
8374And the strong and the cunning said,"What can we do with all this might of ours?"
8374And then more villas and palings; and then a village;--when would they stop, those endless houses?
8374And then will you show us a few tardy improvements here and there, and ask us, indignantly, why we distrust you?
8374And then, if a boy does show talent in school, do they help him up in life?
8374And were we to free ourselves from it by any frantic means that came to hand?
8374And what comes of it?
8374And what else, in Heaven''s name, ye fine gentlemen-- what else can a working man do with his imagination, but dream?
8374And what have you read on these subjects?"
8374And what the dickens do you want to be educating yourself for, pray?"
8374And what''n, think yow, be gone wi''un?"
8374And what-- what-- have I seen equal to her since?
8374And which?
8374And who are they?
8374And whose fault is it that THEY are not members of the Church of England?
8374And ye want to read books?"
8374And yet, were there no excuses for us?
8374And yet, what if she was with him-- what to me?
8374And you, too, I hear, are taking your share in this projected madness and iniquity?"
8374Are the people represented?
8374Are there no differences of rank-- God''s rank, not man''s-- among us?
8374Are they not doing you good at this moment?
8374Are we to throw ourselves into their hands after all?
8374Are ye a Cockney or a Cannibal Islander?
8374Are you a nursery- maid, that you must stare at those red- coated butchers?"
8374Are you convinced, once for all?"
8374Are you represented?
8374Are you, too, going to shrink back from The Cause, now that liberty is at the very doors?"
8374Arn''t it yourn?
8374Ask my mother when I ever disobeyed her before?
8374Ay, how indeed?
8374Ay-- the few wilful, triumphant wicked; but the millions of suffering, starving wicked, the victims of society and circumstance-- what hope for them?
8374Barn''t accoostomed to tramp, then?"
8374Be''est thee honest man?"
8374Because why?
8374Bloodshed?
8374But come, find me some starving genius-- some græculus esuriens--""Who will ascend to the heaven of your lordship''s eloquence for the bidding?"
8374But gin ye daur, why dinna ye pack up your duds, and yer poems wi''them, and gang till your cousin i''the university?
8374But has He not taught me all these very things_ by my_ parish priest life?
8374But have I not paid the penalty?
8374But have they given life to a single bone or muscle of his limbs?
8374But have you no guess as to where he is?"
8374But how came you here to visit him?
8374But how is the wound in your back the day?"
8374But if he had work, ca n''t he get victuals?"
8374But if they have succeeded so well, may there not be hundreds more in England who would succeed equally?
8374But she answered only with a quiet smile:"So you are a Chartist still?"
8374But she who lived beneath them?
8374But still, who could be prouder, more imperious, more abrupt in manner, harsh, even to the very verge of good- breeding?
8374But the king said,"Wherefore?
8374But to be shamed, and know that I deserved it; to be deserted by my own honour, self- respect, strength of will-- who can bear that?
8374But was the sum of knowledge, human and divine, perfected at the Reformation?
8374But were there no excuses for the mass?
8374But what was to become of Susan?
8374But when did they unite in any name but that?
8374But where to get the books?
8374But why is the badness of the clergy any reason for pulling down the Church?
8374But why was the law broken in order to restore it?
8374But would I, that am an honest woman, go to live with they offscourings-- they"--(she used a strong word)--"would I be parted from my children?
8374But yet, why do we need the help of the clergy?"
8374But, Johnnie, lad-- guide us and save us!--whaur got ye a''these gran''outlandish words the nicht?"
8374But, after all, what else could it be?
8374But, if it were I, would not that be only another reason for submitting?
8374But--"Martyrdom?"
8374By what strange ascetic perversion has_ that_ got to mean"keeping holy the sabbath- day"?
8374By- the- by, that coat ours?
8374By- the- by, would you like me to tell our friends at D**** that I met you?
8374Can not God find champions for them when you are gone?
8374Can ye sing?"
8374Can ye tak long nose, an''short nose, an''snub nose, an''seventeen Deuks o''Wellington out o''my puddins?
8374Can you deny that you''ve been off and on lately between flunkeydom and The Cause, like a donkey between two bundles of hay?
8374Canna ye see it there?
8374Canst thou administer to a mind diseased?
8374Clergymen of England!--look at the history of your Establishment for the last fifty years, and say, what wonder is it if the artisan mistrust you?
8374Coral Islands?
8374Could I die while they were unfulfilled?
8374Could her prayers alter that?
8374Crossthwaite, are not children a blessing?"
8374Crossthwaite?"
8374Crossthwaite?"
8374Curse the old villain!--who''ll help to disappoint him''o that?
8374D''ye ken a medicamentum that''ll put brains into workmen--?
8374Dare I write my history between those two points of time?
8374Did He not love us, too, even as we loved each other?
8374Did He, too, let me become a strong, daring, sporting, wild man of the woods for nothing?
8374Did I envy him?
8374Did I rejoice?
8374Did not the priesthood, in the first ages, glory not in the name, but, what is better, in the office, of democrats?
8374Did not you, too, neglect the work which the All- Father had given you, and run every man after his own comfort?
8374Did she look as calm, as grand in death as he who lay there?
8374Did she remember my features, as I did hers?
8374Did she turn away in indignation?
8374Did you find that your method of thought received any benefit from it?"
8374Did you hear anything that astonished your weak mind so very exceedingly, after all?"
8374Did you not hear me just now praising the monasteries, because they were socialist and democratic?
8374Didst ever know one called Porter, to yowr trade?"
8374Dinna ye see what be the upshot o''siccan doctrin''?
8374Do n''t a girl know when she''s pretty, without asking her neighbours?"
8374Do n''t they squires tax the land twenty or thirty shillings an acre; and what do they do for that?
8374Do ye gie us a turn, please?"
8374Do you believe?"
8374Do you call me a profligate because I wish to educate myself and rise in life?"
8374Do you comprehend noo?"
8374Do you delight in God?
8374Do you fancy that you can alter a fallen world?
8374Do you feel like a man that''s got any one to fight your battle in parliament, my young friend, eh?"
8374Do you know where you are?".
8374Do you love Jesus Christ?
8374Do you mean to condemn, just now, the Church as it was, or the Church as it is, or the Church as it ought to be?
8374Do you think I should be so open with it, if I meant anything very diabolic?
8374Do you think I will have my daughter polluted by the company of an infidel and a blasphemer?"
8374Do you think the working men forget them?
8374Do you think warm hearts beat only in the breasts of working men?
8374Do you want un yourself, eh?
8374Does not nine- tenths of the blame of that lie at your door?
8374Does not that argue ill for the facts themselves?
8374Does that look like the invention of tyrants, and prelates?
8374Does the supply of mercy meet the demand of misery?
8374Drink?
8374Eavesdropping?"
8374Eh?
8374Else, why in Heaven''s name do you pay him poor''s rates?
8374Even if the wages did depend entirely on the amount of competition, on whom does the amount of competition depend?
8374Fear, of course, was the only motive she employed; for how could our still carnal understandings be affected with love to God?
8374First floor''s Ashmy Ward-- don''t you hear''um now through the cracks in the boards, a puffing away like a nest of young locomotives?
8374For instance, am I to consider it the exception or the rule, when I am told that you, a journeyman tailor, are able to correct these proofs for me?"
8374For the last time, who will go up with me to the mountain?"
8374For what could he make me but a tailor-- or a shoemaker?
8374For what?
8374Forgot the latch- key, you sucking Don Juan, that''s it, is it?
8374Gave a barrister as good as he brought, eh, Mr. Mackaye?
8374God or the devil?
8374Got a holiday?
8374Grand triumphs those, eh?"
8374Gude guide us!--What was yon, Alton, laddie?"
8374Ha''ye been to Exeter Hall the while?
8374Had I not hopes, plans, desires, infinite?
8374Had he actually heard of the omissions in my poems?--and if he once touched on that subject, what could I answer?
8374Had he been in the room when my visit to D**** was determined on?
8374Had he come there as a spy on me?
8374Had invasion threatened us at any period between 1815 and 1830, or even later, would any ministry have dared to allow volunteer regiments?
8374Had it not been decided from all eternity?
8374Had not freedom, progressive, expanding, descending, been the glory and the strength of England?
8374Had not the Queen''s counsel been trying all day to murder me, as was their duty, seeing that they got their living thereby?
8374Had she ever even thought of me, from that day to this?
8374Has he not found them already?
8374Has not priestly pandering to tyrants made the Church, in every age, a scoff and a byword among free men?"
8374Has she really cast me off?"
8374Has the mind power of creating sensations for itself?
8374Has their conduct to the masses for the last century deserved that we should do so?
8374Have I not confessed my own weakness?
8374Have I not run to and fro for you like a slave, while I knew all the time you did not respect me or trust me?
8374Have I not surely had practice enough already?"
8374Have not you as good a right to them as any gentleman?"
8374Have they done so?
8374Have they not all seemed to consider it a sacred duty to keep themselves, as far as they could, out of party strife?"
8374Have you done with him, governor?"
8374Have you forgotten that, after all, you are my-- guest, to call it by the mildest term?"
8374Have you larger stomachs, as well as stronger arms?
8374Have you not done mischief enough already?"
8374Have you not neglected our meetings?
8374Have you not picked all the spice out of your poems?
8374Have you perused therein the priceless Chapter"On the Probable Futurity of the Labouring Classes"?
8374Have you read any Latin?"
8374Have you read any logic?"
8374Have you read the story of Abou Zennab, his horse, in Stanley''s''Sinai,''p. 67?
8374He could say, with the old Moslem,"God is great-- who hath resisted his will?"
8374He did not shake hands with me, it is true;--was I not a poor relation?
8374He says, if the Oxford Tracts did wonders, why should not we?
8374He went through Cavendish Square, up Harley Street-- was it possible?
8374He writes--?
8374Headache, eh?
8374Hech?
8374Henry was not arbitrary; arbitrary men are the most obstinate of men?
8374Here the manager broke in,"Why did n''t our Government step in then, and buy largely, and store in public granaries?"
8374Homer''s heroes did so, Why not such as we?
8374How came you here?
8374How can yow do that then?
8374How could He be my Father till I was converted?
8374How did I know that she had not felt for me?
8374How did she come here?"
8374How did the court know that there was not one?
8374How do ye expect ever to be happy, or strong, or a man at a'', as long as ye go on looking to enjoy yersel-- yersel?
8374How do ye ken that the auld Scot eats a''he makes?
8374How do you know that my idea of carrying out Eleanor''s sermons in practice were just what I could not-- and if I could, dared not, give?
8374How lang, O Lord, before thou bring these puir daft bodies to their richt mind again?"
8374I always thought him a gracious youth, madam, did n''t you?
8374I answered, passionately,"will you rob us poor creatures of our only faith, our only hope on earth?
8374I axes you,"he cried fiercely, raising his voice to a womanish scream--"where are they?"
8374I believed, I loved to believe, that every face I passed bore the traces of discontent as deep as was my own-- and was I so far wrong?
8374I blushed scarlet, between pleasure and a new feeling; was it ambition?
8374I die?
8374I do not think we are quite big enough to make fighters; and if we were, what have we got to fight about?"
8374I had raised the spirit; could I command him, now he was abroad?
8374I said,"give up the very ideas for which we have struggled, and sinned, and all but died?
8374I saw them.--How can I write it?
8374I seized her hand, covered it with adoring kisses-- Slowly she withdrew it, and glided from the room-- What need of more words?
8374I tried to call to him to move; but how could a poor edentate like myself articulate a word?
8374I wonder whether Isaiah began to write before his beard was grown, or Dawvid either?
8374I would educate myself; I would read-- what would I not read?
8374I would have plunged across-- but there were three objections-- first, that I could not swim; next, what could I do when I had crossed?
8374I zay, could yow do''t?"
8374I''ve got no bread-- where should I?
8374I''ve got no fire-- how can I give one shilling and sixpence a hundred for coals?
8374I, the only Chartist there?
8374If I can get it, why ca n''t you?"
8374If any man is scoundrel enough to carry tales, I''ll--""Do what?"
8374If it be asked, how can they be so confined?
8374If not from Him, good readers, from whom?
8374If not in their fathers''cause, yet still in theirs, were it so great a sin to die upon a barricade?"
8374If she had cared for me-- if she had a woman''s heart in her at all, any pity, any justice, would she not have spoken?
8374If the party of order cares so much for the millions, why had they left them what they are?
8374If the plan does not pay, what then?
8374If they had wished to be kind, why had I grudged them the opportunity of a good deed?
8374If thou hadst a self, thou wouldst but lie in denying it-- and would The Being thank thee for denying what he had given thee?
8374In showing the individuality of the man swamped and warped by the routine of misery and discontent?
8374In thunder, and storm, and garments rolled in blood?
8374Interfere with the food and labour of the millions?
8374Is it because these aristocrats are more intellectual than I?
8374Is it because they are more refined than I?
8374Is it flesh or spirit?
8374Is it not even now farther off than ever?"
8374Is it not noteworthy, also, that it is in this vein that the London poets have always been greatest?
8374Is it not written, that the days shall come when the forest shall break forth into singing, and the wilderness shall blossom like the rose?
8374Is it not"speaking evil of dignities"?
8374Is it so indeed?
8374Is it their fault if God has placed them where they are?
8374Is it their fault, if they refuse to part with their wealth, before they are sure that such a sacrifice would really be a mercy to you?
8374Is it too strong to be resisted now?
8374Is n''t he the man to pitch into the Mammonites?
8374Is no the verra idea of the classic tragedy defined to be, man conquered by circumstance?
8374Is not the Church of England the very purest form of Apostolic Christianity?"
8374Is that fault of others to be visited on me?
8374Is the knife or the bludgeon, then, the only foul play, and not the cesspool and the curse of Rabshakeh?
8374Is there anything about one idle day in seven to be found among the traditions of Mammon?
8374Is there no the heeven above them there, and the hell beneath them?
8374Is this a time to listen to the voices of singing men and singing women?
8374Is this true?"
8374It is God''s cause, fear not He will be with us, and if He is with us, who shall be against us?"
8374It is for this, that you, brought up a dissenter, have gone over to the Church of England?"
8374It must be the same unknown friend who had paid my debt to my cousin-- Lillian?
8374It must be true!--Was not the power of it around her like a glory?
8374It was but a corner of a gable, a scrap of garden, that I could see beyond intervening roofs and trees-- but could I mistake them?
8374It was too far to distinguish features; the dress was altogether different-- but was it not she?
8374Johnnie, my Chartist?"
8374Late home from the Victory?"
8374Let me see-- what can I recollect?
8374Liberty, equality, and brotherhood?
8374Liberty?
8374Look at any place of worship you like, orthodox and heretical.--Who fill the pews?--the outcast and the reprobate?
8374Lord Lynedale?
8374Mackaye''s?"
8374Mackaye?"
8374Mackaye?"
8374Mackaye?"
8374Mackaye?"
8374Mackaye?"
8374Mackaye?"
8374Mackaye?"
8374Mackaye?"
8374Mackaye?--eh?"
8374Man the master of the brutes?
8374Men?
8374Merely negative?"
8374Merely on the gross numbers of the workmen?
8374Might there not have been dozens of them?--emissaries from London, dressed up as starving labourers, and rheumatic old women?
8374Might we not, after all, be happy together, in some little hole in Chelsea, like Elia and his Bridget?
8374Mr. Elliot, where are you?
8374Mr. Power has an_ alibi_, then?
8374My heart beat fast and fierce, but he ran on--"Do you think I''d have eaten all this dirt if it had n''t lain in my way to her?
8374My mother often said that the room was"too small for a Christian to sleep in, but where could she get a better?"
8374No one asserts that nothing is done; the question is, is enough done?
8374No?
8374Not to know that they first set the example, by getting the army and navy clothes made by contractors, and taking the lowest tenders?
8374Nothing else?
8374Now, who''s to suffer for that?--the farmer as works, or the labourer as works, or the landlord as does nothing?
8374Now, you fat gentleman up there, have you done a qualifying of yourself for Newgate?"
8374Often, turning round suddenly in the workroom, I caught him watching me with an expression which seemed to say,"Poor boy, and art thou too one of us?
8374One real lady, who should dare to stoop, what might she not do with us-- with our sisters?
8374Only, as I am asking questions, who will write us a"People''s Commentary on Shakspeare"?
8374Or for its realization?
8374Or like the dew on the mown grass, and the clear shining of the sunlight after April rain?
8374Or was it that black- edged letter which lay waiting for me on the table?
8374Or was she neither, and yet all-- some ideal of the great Arian tribe, containing in herself all future types of European women?
8374Or, if you must be a poet, why not sing of nature, and leave those to sing political squabbles, who have no eye for the beauty of her repose?
8374Ox- tail soup, sir, or gravy- soup, sir?
8374Pacific?
8374Perhaps I had helped Jourdan Coupe- tête at Lyons, and been king of the Munster Anabaptists-- why not?
8374Perhaps an_ alias_ too?"
8374Perhaps there is competition among the angels, and Gabriel and Raphael have won their rank by doing the maximum of worship on the minimum of grace?
8374Profligate too?
8374Pulse?
8374Put any conceivable sense you will on the word, and then say-- are they free?
8374Religion?
8374Romantic?
8374Science had revealed the irrevocability of the laws of nature-- was man alone to be exempt from them?
8374Shall I curse the profligate?
8374Shall I punish the robber?
8374Shall I, after all, lay my bones among my own people, and hear the voices of freemen whisper in my dying ears?
8374Shall no the Judge of all the earth do right-- right-- right?"
8374Shall we try?
8374She glanced at the book, clutched it with one hand and my arm with the other, and sternly asked,"Where did you get this heathen stuff?"
8374She-- so frail, tender, retiring-- how could she speak?
8374Slightly comato- crapulose?
8374So I made my first attempt at poetry-- need I say that my subject was the beautiful Lillian?
8374So you expect to have time to read?
8374So you would have the monopoly of talent, too, exclusive worldlings?
8374So you''re going down to D****, to see after those poor starving labourers?
8374So, representative institutions are the talismanic palladium of the nation, are they?
8374Somehow I blushed, and could not altogether meet his eye, while he went on,"--An''gin ye could, whaur would ye do''t?
8374Special prawvidences!--wha can doot them?
8374Stilton cheese, sir, or Cheshire, sir?
8374Study after sixteen hours a day stitching?
8374Study, when you can not earn money enough to keep you from wasting and shrinking away day by day?
8374Study, with the black cloud of despair and penury in front of you?
8374Study, with your heart full of shame and indignation, fresh from daily insult and injustice?
8374Stuff!--are these tailors free?
8374Sublime and strong?
8374Such a fund of information-- such excellent English-- where did they get it all?"
8374Summat heavy, then?
8374Surely not for the mere charm of novelty?
8374Tailor a- tramp?
8374Tak a drappie, Billy Porter, lad?"
8374Take a caulker?
8374That auld body owre the fire, wi''her''an officer''s dochter,''is there na poetry there?
8374That puir lassie, dying on the bare boards, and seeing her Saviour in her dreams, is there na poetry there, callant?
8374The People''s Friend?
8374The face was Lillian''s?
8374The footman came out smiling,"What did I want?"
8374The inward reality or the outward symbol, which is only valuable as a sacrament of the loveliness within?"
8374The meeting was sufficiently public to allow of his presence, but how had he found out its existence?
8374The most complete perhaps of his fugitive pieces of this kind is the pamphlet,"Who are the friends of Order?"
8374The night is past-- behold the sun!-- The cup is full, the web is spun, The Judge is set, the doom begun; Who shall stay it?''"
8374The omnibus- horses were racers, and the drivers-- were they not my brothers of the people?
8374The strong and the weak have been matched for the same prize: and what wonder, if the strong man conquers?
8374Their worldliness, their being like the world, like the laity round them-- like you, in short?
8374Then I arose and said,"How is this?"
8374Then I ran out, and cried to them,"Fools I will you do as these rich did, and neglect the work of God?
8374Then came the question,"What had brought me to Cambridge?"
8374Then one said,"Are we not better off as we are?
8374Then the doors were put up-- were they going to finish that handsome tower?
8374Then why do they leave the men who make their clothes to starve in such hells on earth as our workroom?
8374Then you call yourself one?"
8374There''s a time to speak the truth, and a time not, is n''t there?
8374There''s draining and digging enough to be done as''ud keep ye all in work, arn''t there?"
8374There''s lots o''victuals in their larders now; have n''t you as good a right to it as their jackanapes o''footmen?
8374They are always crying''Ireland for the Irish''; why ca n''t they leave England for the English?"
8374They are customs, but who has proved them to be laws of Nature?
8374They believe the gospel?
8374They may misjudge the clergy; but whose fault is it if they do?
8374They, too, who did not appreciate, adore that beauty as I did-- for who could worship her like me?
8374Those starving millions of Kennington Common-- where are they?
8374To sit down was impossible; my only thought was-- where was Lillian?
8374To what thinking man is it not a life- long battle?
8374To which I answered,"Very well"--and turned stupidly back upon that nightmare thought-- was Lillian in the court?
8374To which St. John answers pertinently''He who loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love God whom he hath not seen?''
8374True, she had cast me off; but had I not rejoiced in that rejection which should have been my shame?
8374Warn''t he as turned five on yer off last week?
8374Was I delighted?
8374Was I mad, sinful?
8374Was I not a Chartist and an Infidel?
8374Was I not bound to preach the cause of my class wherever I went?
8374Was I so far wrong either in the gloomy tone of my own poetry?
8374Was I so very wrong?
8374Was I to lose her, too?
8374Was Shakespeare a politician?
8374Was he a Popish saint?"
8374Was it consistent with justice for the government to pay for making a pair of trousers( four or five hours''work) only 2- 1/2d?
8374Was it disappointment at not finding Mackaye at home?
8374Was it not enough?
8374Was it not prosing?
8374Was it not the book of the aristocrats-- of kings and priests, passive obedience, and the slavery of the intellect?
8374Was it not?
8374Was it quenched in Drake, in Hawkins, in the conquerors of Hindostan?
8374Was it she at last?
8374Was it she, or was it he, who lay there?
8374Was it the dean?
8374Was it the meanness of the place after the comfort and elegance of my late abode?
8374Was n''t there enough in that talk with Mackaye, that you told me of just now, to show anybody that, who can tell a hawk from a hand- saw?"
8374Was she my mother, or Eleanor, or Lillian?
8374Was she thinking of me?
8374Was there no excuse in the spirit with which the English upper classes regarded the continental revolutions?
8374We may strike and starve ourselves, but what''s the use of a dozen striking out of 20,000?"
8374We should have known that before the tenth of April?
8374Were my poems in her room still?
8374Were not these men more experienced, more learned, older than myself?
8374Were the rich only in fault?
8374Were their masters, then, to have a monopoly in sedition, as in everything else?
8374Were there not cheap houses even at the West- end, which had saved several thousands a year merely by reducing their workmen''s wages?
8374Were you the lady who, as he said, came to him a few days since?"
8374Westward ever-- who could stand against us?
8374Wha ca''d for doctors?
8374Wha''d be fashed wi''sic blethers?
8374Wha''s style shall I tak?
8374What are sheets and servants?
8374What are the policemen to us?"
8374What be I to do?
8374What be you going to do?
8374What brought her here, to nurse me as if she had been a sister?
8374What can be done?
8374What can the little sharks do but follow the big ones?"
8374What could be the matter?
8374What could be the matter?
8374What could prison do for me, but embitter and confirm all my prejudices?
8374What could such a man do, with that fervid tongue, and heart, and brain of his, in such a station as his, such a time as this?
8374What devil prompted me to turn eavesdropper?
8374What did he want wi''proofs o''the being o''God, an''o''the doctrine o''original sin?
8374What do ye ken about Pacifics?
8374What do ye ken anent the Pacific?
8374What do you do, George?"
8374What do you mean by crying shame on a man for being a bad clergyman, if a good clergyman is not a good thing?
8374What do you stupid fellows go grumbling at the farmers for?
8374What do you want with gin?
8374What drives the German?
8374What gospel have they, or Strauss, or Emerson, for the poor, the suffering, the oppressed?
8374What ha''ye to do wi''martyrs?--a meeserable wretch that sells his soul for a mess o''pottage-- four slices per diem o''thin bread- and- butter?
8374What had I to say to them?
8374What had been fair in order to compel the Reform Bill, must surely be fairer still to compel the fulfilment of Reform Bill pledges?
8374What has been done, again, toward remedying the evils of the slop system, which this book especially exposed?
8374What has she given you brains for, but to be educated and used?
8374What has that to do with the Charter?
8374What have you got?"
8374What is it now to her, thank God?
8374What is the meaning of it all?"
8374What is the worth o''them to me?
8374What is there left for me to do?
8374What is there left?"
8374What is there so very wrong about things, that we must begin fighting about it?"
8374What is wrong?--what is not wrong?
8374What matter what happened to all the world beside?
8374What matter?
8374What might he not be doing in the meantime?
8374What need of many words?
8374What now, Society?
8374What profit hath a man of all his labour which he taketh under the sun?
8374What right had any other human being, above all, he, to dare to mention her?
8374What right had their eyes to a feast denied to mine?
8374What right have you to be astonished if I should do my father''s works?"
8374What shall I say?"
8374What should I call it?
8374What spirit is there but the devil''s spirit in bloodthirsty threats of revenge?"
8374What the devil does that matter?
8374What was a like?
8374What was it to me what they said?
8374What was that beauty but a hollow mask?"
8374What was the book?"
8374What was there in the idea of religion which was represented to me at home to captivate me?
8374What was there not there?
8374What was to be done?
8374What will the ghosts of your grandfathers to the seventh generation say to this, Alton?
8374What wonder if our bones lay bleaching among rocks and quagmires, and wolves devoured the heritage of God?
8374What would be done before the sun had set?
8374What would be done?
8374What would you more than that?
8374What''s sauce for the gander is sauce for the goose, is n''t it?
8374What''s that, if corn falls two pound a load, and more?
8374What''s this anent agricultural distress ye had to tell me the noo?"
8374What, are we covetous too?
8374What, if miracles should be the orderly result of some such deep, most orderly, and yet most spiritual law?"
8374What?
8374Whaur do ye live?"
8374When shall we see a nation ruled, not by the law, by the Gospel; not in the letter which kills, but in the spirit which is love, forgiveness, life?
8374When should I see her again?
8374When the cause of the poor is the cause of Almighty God, will you take it out of His hands to entrust it to the devil?
8374When will that come, and how?
8374When will the clergy learn that their strength is in action, and not in argument?
8374When will their eyes be opened?
8374When you can be free by fair means will you try foul?
8374When you might keep the name of Liberty as spotless as the Heaven from which she comes, will you defile her with blasphemy, beastliness, and blood?
8374When?
8374When_ will_ you give me that canticle?
8374Where could I find that face again?
8374Where could we replace him?
8374Where is the place?"
8374Where is your wonderful minnow?
8374Where will you find him, but in Jesus of Nazareth?"
8374Where''ll I buy a bit?
8374Where''s the mighty credit In admiring Alps?
8374Where''s your portmanteau?
8374Where?
8374Whether she were right or wrong, what is it to me?
8374Which view is likely to be the more practical one?
8374While such thy deeds, what matter thine opinions?
8374While we find God''s signet Fresh on English ground, Why go gallivanting With the nations round?
8374Who am I, the slave of impulse, useless, worn out in mind and body, that you should waste such generosity upon me?
8374Who can unravel the confusion of mingled selfishness and devotion that exists even in his own heart, much less in that of another?
8374Who could have helped loving her?
8374Who could resist such pleading from those lips?
8374Who delivered England from the Pope?
8374Who else?"
8374Who has left them savages?
8374Who is so presumptuous as to limit the future triumphs of science?
8374Who knows him?"
8374Who made it?
8374Who tells you that tailors''associations are to be the only ones?
8374Who will answer Strauss?
8374Who will answer him?
8374Who''ll come down and pull the farm about the folks''ears?
8374Who, at the martyr''s stake in Oxford,''lighted the candle in England that shall never be put out?''
8374Who, during the invasion of the barbarians, protected the poor against their conquerors?
8374Who, in the middle age, stood between the baron and his serfs?
8374Whose fault is it, I ask?
8374Whose fault was it?
8374Why are those sins to be visited on us?
8374Why arn''t some of you a- getting they weeds up?
8374Why ca n''t you do like me?
8374Why did I drop my eyes and draw back at the first glance like a guilty coward?
8374Why did n''t the Germans come to life too?
8374Why did she rise and call Crossthwaite from the next room where he was writing?
8374Why do you not break up more waste ground?
8374Why do you not try to grow more corn in your fields?"
8374Why does not some enthusiastic political economist write an epic on"The Consecration of Cannibalism"?
8374Why have I not those opportunities?
8374Why is it that the latest poet has generally the greatest influence over the minds of the young?
8374Why maun ilk a one the noo steal his neebor''s barnacles, before he glints out o''windows?
8374Why not of Heaven, too?
8374Why not?
8374Why not?
8374Why put you to so great expense?
8374Why should I attempt to describe my feelings?
8374Why should I?
8374Why should I?
8374Why should he go starving because his master do n''t care to do the best by the land?
8374Why should he know that I was not a gownsman?
8374Why should he not get rich as fast as he could?
8374Why should he pay his men two shillings where the government paid them one?
8374Why should he remain in the minority?
8374Why should he see that I was not a gownsman?
8374Why should he stick to the old, slow- going, honourable trade?
8374Why should he?
8374Why should it?"
8374Why should not this succeed, if the owners of the house and the workers who rent it are only true to one another?
8374Why should she not laugh?
8374Why should they be so long about it?
8374Why should they?
8374Why should we only toil, the roof and crown of things?"
8374Why should we wish to be other than the All- wise has made us?"
8374Why should you not become such a man as they?
8374Why should you?"
8374Why was he to be robbing his family of comforts to pay for their extravagance?
8374Why wo n''t you let a cove die?
8374Why, what do you impute to them?
8374Why, whor is my pooss?"
8374Why, you silly fellow, what harm have the aristocrats, as you call them, ever done you?
8374Why?
8374Will he dare to say that to- morrow to the ladies at the West- end?"
8374Will it be so with my thoughts?
8374Will this do, Alton?"
8374Will ye be a man or a lintic?
8374Will you ask us to obey the men whom we despise?"
8374Will you disgust and cripple your friends?
8374Will you go out of your way to do wrong?
8374Will you strengthen and justify your enemies?
8374Will you, freshly bedizened, you and your footmen, from Nebuchadnezzar and Co.''s"Emporium of Fashion,"hear a little about how your finery is made?
8374Will your castor oil, an''your calomel, an''your croton, do that?
8374Will your working brothers co- operate with these men?
8374Woe to a society whose only apology to God and man is,"Am I my brother''s keeper?"
8374Work for us?
8374Working men think so; but what matter what"the swinish multitude"think?
8374Would I go into the house?
8374Would she know me again?
8374Would she not have called on others to speak, and clear me of the calumny?
8374Would they have been justified in doing so, even if they had dared?
8374Would those dreams be ever realized?
8374Would you live by them, die for them, as a patriot would for his country, now?"
8374Ye''ll be fond o''bairns, I''m guessing?"
8374Ye''ll ken John Crossthwaite, then?
8374Yes; and have you not given your sheep and horses their daily wages, and have they not lived on them?
8374Yon lassie, rejoicing in her disfigurement and not her beauty-- like the nuns of Peterborough in auld time-- is there na poetry there?
8374You a patriot?
8374You a patriot?
8374You a tailor, and not know that government are the very authors of this system?
8374You do n''t mean to say that I have the honour of finding a rival in my talented cousin?"
8374You have heard Bacon''s golden rule--''Nature is conquered by obeying her?''"
8374You have not surely been spending your own savings on me?"
8374You recollect that day at the Dulwich Gallery?
8374You remember, friend M.?
8374You the people''s friend?
8374You understand me, my lord?
8374You understand me?"
8374You understand the German language at all?"
8374You understand?
8374Young men''s classes?
8374Yours?"
8374_ August, 1850_.--"How do you know, dearest man, that I was not right in making the Alton of the second volume different from the first?
8374a soul or a face?
8374and God frowning, and the deevil grinning?
8374and Lady Ellerton?
8374and a yard across?--but a was starved, a was a''thin, though, maybe, when yow sawn un?--and beautiful fine hair, had n''t a, like a lass''s?"
8374and how did I know either?
8374and what''s that like?"
8374and will struggle, and, if need be, die for still, or confess ourselves traitors to the common weal?"
8374and worshipped-- what?
8374and, what is more, have courage to act upon it, now in the very hour of Mammon''s triumph?"
8374answered the other, and then burst out into that peculiar, wild, ringing, fiendish laugh-- has my reader never heard it?
8374are not your times in the hand of One who loved you to the death, who conquered, as you must do, not by wrath, but by martyrdom?
8374are there not real sins enough in the world already, without your defiling it, over and above, by inventing new ones?
8374are you mad, thin?
8374ay?
8374but that was n''t your voice, Locke?"
8374but the man would starve-- common humanity forbids?
8374ca n''t you do like me, and get out of the carts''way when they come by?
8374ca n''t you see which side your bread is buttered?
8374could I have won her if I had been free?
8374do n''t you know better than to do that?"
8374do n''t you know?"
8374do n''t you see''em coming out of the gullyholes, atween the area railings-- dozens and dozens?"
8374etc., than ever you were before?"
8374extravagant?
8374few?
8374for by every''honourable''tradesman?
8374for heretics, Micky?"
8374for which, according to the latest improvements, is now substituted a bureaucracy of despotic commissions?
8374from going to glory?"
8374groaned the dark man;"will poetry, will Latin save an immortal soul?"
8374guardians sent by that Father, whom I had been taught_ not_ to believe in, to shield my senses from pollution?
8374has it not been in every age the watchword, not of an all- embracing charity, but of self- conceit and bigotry, excommunication and persecution?"
8374hast thou not had warnings enough, either to make thy machines like men, or stop thy bungling, and let God make them for Himself?
8374have n''t you found that out yet?
8374have you heard from my mother?"
8374he answered, in a tone of astonishment,"why not?
8374he had, had he?
8374he went on, wildly,"when will I get out to the fresh air?
8374how did you come to allow these people to get into the establishment?"
8374hum, hum; an''ye''re desirous o''reading books?
8374is my folly to be the cause of robbing them of their slender earnings?
8374is n''t it?"
8374is there aught in his ledger about poetry, and the incommensurable value o''the products o''genius?
8374is there no harlotry and idolatry here in England, that ye maun gang speering after it in the Cannibal Islands?
8374know well enough; but which is flesh and which is spirit, what philosophers in these days can tell us?
8374not when she had it all her own way, during the whole eighteenth century?"
8374or any one of the great poets who have arisen during the last thirty years?
8374or had he ever interfered himself?
8374or wanted something else, which the rest had about them, and I had not?
8374or was it-- could it be-- Lillian herself?
8374perhaps you would n''t wish it mentioned?
8374perhaps you''d like to begin?
8374said Sandy,"wha wants mongrels atween Burns and Tennyson?
8374sax feet, and more?
8374shriek the insulted respectabilities,"have we not paid him his wages weekly, and has he not lived upon them?"
8374that my head were a fountain of tears, that I might weep for the sins of my people"?
8374that ye may eat and drink more than your brethren?
8374the prisoner?"
8374thought I,"and was that loveliness within?
8374to run headlong into temptation?
8374tongue?
8374verses 16 to 21:"The spirit of the Lord is upon me because He hath anointed me to preach the gospel to the poor,"& c. What then was that gospel?
8374was he the same old man whom I had seen at the gallery; and if so, was Lillian with him?
8374was it not?
8374was sure that they did not know?
8374what do you want there, my good fellow?"
8374what is it to them to know that"God is great,"unless you can prove to them God is also merciful?
8374what was a like unto?"
8374what?
8374where was the treason and murder?
8374where''s my pooss?"
8374who''ll teach a man anything except himsel''?
8374whor be yow?
8374whor be yow?"
8374why, what wind on earth has blown you here?"
8374will I ca''a man my superior, because he''s cleverer than mysel?--will I boo down to a bit o''brains, ony mair than to a stock or a stane?
8374will nobody have pity on poor sowls in purgatory-- here in prison like negur slaves?
8374will ye?
8374work at Smith''s shop, eh?
8374ye talk o''praying to saints an''martyrs, that died in torments because they wad na do what they should na do?
8374your blood''s getting up, is it?
8374your lardship ca n''t wait.--Now, my good woman, is this the young man?"
14532A message?
14532A mistake?
14532About the governorship?
14532After the dancing lesson, you mean, do n''t you?
14532After the primary?
14532Ai n''t it?
14532All this fearful anarchist talk and discontent? 14532 Am I really?"
14532An''is that it?
14532An''what do the likes av yez want at this time av night?
14532An''what do yez say to the whisky frauds, an''black Friday, an''credit mobilier?
14532An''what''s he been doin''?
14532And are the paintings his, too, Peter?
14532And both times you helped me hunt for them?
14532And did they do as you asked?
14532And disgrace one of your best friends?
14532And do you think I love you?
14532And had you done these things?
14532And how long shall you be here?
14532And if I do n''t tell my dearest friend?
14532And if so, how about his honor?
14532And if the Health Board helps you, and the bill is made a law?
14532And if we can give you some tenement- house legislation?
14532And if we do n''t do either?
14532And if you see things said of me that trouble you, will you ask me about them?
14532And is that the handkerchief which disappeared in your rooms, at your second dinner?
14532And let me have just whom I want?
14532And now the sixth?
14532And now?
14532And she followed you?
14532And she thrives on it, does n''t she, Peter?
14532And that display ten minutes ago was all mockery?
14532And that frightened you?
14532And that is what you are?
14532And that is why you were grieved?
14532And that is?
14532And the candies and ices from Maillard?
14532And then what can I say to him?
14532And to- night?
14532And to- night?
14532And were you not hurt?
14532And were you to have made a week of speeches through the State?
14532And what can I do?
14532And what did you do?
14532And when he does?
14532And why should n''t he joke as well as I?
14532And will you give me some waltzes at the dances?
14532And would you advise me to spend time to get it?
14532And you do n''t think the worse of me, because I loved your mother, and because I ca n''t tell you?
14532And you do n''t want him?
14532And you love her still?
14532And you stood the Burgundy in the sun?
14532And you will return to France?
14532And you''ll not laugh at me if I ask foolish questions?
14532And you''ve_ frappé_ the champagne?
14532And you?
14532And your children?
14532And your name is?
14532And, Peter,said Dorothy, dolefully,"will you take me in to supper?
14532Any harm done?
14532Anything else I can do for you?
14532Are n''t you going to obey him?
14532Are n''t you going to ride with me?
14532Are there any more to be enrolled?
14532Are they all dead?
14532Are they mad?
14532Are you a Harvard man?
14532Are you coming?
14532Are you crazy, my darling?
14532Are you going to New York at once?
14532Are you going to call?
14532Are you going to fight for the capitalist?
14532Are you going to let me see them?
14532Are you going to tell me what you did to get them?
14532Are you going to tell me why you are going?
14532Are you going to tell me?
14532Are you hit?
14532Are you objecting to orders?
14532Are you ready to part with yours for that purpose?
14532Are you ready, Leonore?
14532Are you really so anxious to know?
14532Are you serious?
14532Are you sure she did n''t give you a chance to have more of her society?
14532Are you sure?
14532Are you sure?
14532Are you sure?
14532Are you very lonely?
14532Are you willing to be good friends-- not make believe, or half friends, but-- real friends?
14532Are-- are politics so corrupt and immoral?
14532Arn''t you marrying him so as to get rid of his calls and his escortage?
14532Arrah, what can Oi say to yez?
14532Back already? 14532 Bad news from New York, is n''t it?"
14532Beg pardon, mum?
14532Begobs,said Dennis,"do yez think Oi could stand here wid a dry eye if he was dead?"
14532But I thought the anarchists and socialists were always taking a whack at us?
14532But ca n''t you prevent them?
14532But could n''t you give some of the money, so that it would n''t come back?
14532But do n''t they speak of a boss as something not nice?
14532But do n''t you think the reformer is right in principle?
14532But do n''t you think,said Mrs. D''Alloi,"that the people of our class are better and finer?"
14532But do you think of me as nothing but a society girl?
14532But how did the holes come in them?
14532But if the voters took their opinions from the other bosses how did you do anything?
14532But if you lied to her, why not to me?
14532But is it not very humiliating to you to have to be friends with such men?
14532But is n''t Mr. Moriarty one?
14532But my ward?
14532But now?
14532But now?
14532But there was no shock now, was there?
14532But they have been hurt?
14532But they have n''t defeated you?
14532But were n''t you dreadfully burnt?
14532But what did you do to get the sword?
14532But what has that to do with my lunching with you?
14532But what shall Oi do wid it?
14532But where is your revenge? 14532 But who fired that shot?"
14532But who is to say what the majority wants?
14532But why did the papers treat you so badly?
14532But why do n''t you deny it, Peter?
14532But why is only he arrested, when every saloon keeper in the neighborhood does the same thing?
14532But why risk it, when, with Maguire, it''s certain?
14532But why should he give it away to us?
14532But you are not a bad boss, are you?
14532But you do n''t suppose, after we are back in New- York, that I''ll stay down there, with you uptown?
14532But you''ve found out about her since?
14532But you--?
14532But your opinions?
14532But, Peter, if the American people are as sensible as you think, how do you account for the kind of men who exercise control?
14532But, Peter, sha n''t we call the police?
14532But, Peter,queried the woman,"if you are the leader, why do you let them get so?"
14532But, Peter,said Le Grand,"would you not like to see such a type of man as George William Curtis in office?"
14532But, at least you must let me pay you a fee for your work?
14532But?
14532Ca n''t I do anything?
14532Ca n''t we put you down?
14532Ca n''t you get us something?
14532Ca n''t you live in New York?
14532Ca n''t you order the convention not to do it?
14532Can I see him?
14532Can I see him?
14532Can they be saved?
14532Can they get Schlurger or Kennedy?
14532Can you find out for us?
14532Can you receive a letter?
14532Can you see him now? 14532 Can you spare the time to lunch with me?
14532Can you tell me where the cheaper boarding- houses are?
14532Come,said the policeman shaking him,"where do you belong?
14532Convictions, is it?
14532Could he forget them?
14532Could he have left it with some one else to attend to?
14532Could n''t you teach me that, also?
14532Could they be moved?
14532Cousin Anneke, wo n''t you take us? 14532 Dear one,"he said,"do you love me?"
14532Dennis Moriarty, is n''t it?
14532Dennis, will you see Blunkers and Driscoll this evening, or some time to- morrow, and ask if they think so too? 14532 Did n''t he, Watts?"
14532Did n''t you know that the Convention will pass a resolution, naming you for next senator?
14532Did yez see him, b''ys? 14532 Did you expect me, Miss D''Alloi?"
14532Did you find country milk different from what you have here?
14532Did you intend that the convention should laugh?
14532Did you know that bribery is unlawful?
14532Did you roar, and did the tiger put its tail between its legs?
14532Did you understand what it all meant, Cousin Anneke?
14532Do I? 14532 Do any of you?"
14532Do n''t you believe me?
14532Do n''t you find ward politics very hard?
14532Do n''t you think friends should tell each other everything?
14532Do n''t you think it can be bettered?
14532Do n''t you think it''s about time?
14532Do n''t you think so?
14532Do n''t you think you could do as well here?
14532Do n''t you understand?
14532Do n''t you want me to give you something?
14532Do n''t you want me? 14532 Do n''t you want to say it again?"
14532Do n''t you?
14532Do tell me what you had done?
14532Do tell me, Mr. Stirling, how you and Watts D''Alloi came to room together?
14532Do you ever have a dance over?
14532Do you ever tell the ward how they are to vote?
14532Do you feel that you are bound to do it?
14532Do you hate women?
14532Do you have mice in your room?
14532Do you hear that, Peter? 14532 Do you intend to answer my question?"
14532Do you know Costell? 14532 Do you know Justice Gallagher?"
14532Do you know Watts D''Alloi?
14532Do you know any New York people,he asked,"who will be likely to give you cases?"
14532Do you know,said Leonore,"that this is almost our last ride together?"
14532Do you know,said Leonore,"that you are beginning very badly?"
14532Do you like--?
14532Do you mean to charge such a bargain?
14532Do you really think people are so bad, Peter?
14532Do you really think that''s it?
14532Do you remember what Friar Bacon''s brass head said?
14532Do you take care of your window flowers?
14532Do you take pleasure in knowing him?
14532Do you think I could work at law with you in the next room?
14532Do you think I would weigh votes at such a time? 14532 Do you think cousins ought to marry?"
14532Do you think he means it?
14532Do you think so lowly of me, that you can imagine I would destroy your sacrifice? 14532 Do you think they''ll do as we tell them?"
14532Do you think you had better?
14532Do you think,he asked,"that it could ever be different?"
14532Do you think--?
14532Do you too, deny it?
14532Do you understand? 14532 Do you want mine?"
14532Do you want to know what I think of you?
14532Do you want to try it again?
14532Do? 14532 Does Stirling know it?
14532Does he know?
14532Does it taste differently?
14532Does she feed yer still on milk, sonny?
14532Does that little whiffet of a roan mare think she''s going to show me her heels? 14532 Does your father know?"
14532Dorothy,begged Leonore,"what is it?"
14532Eh?
14532Eh?
14532Even if-- if-- it is one dear to us both?
14532For what?
14532For what?
14532For what?
14532For what?
14532For what?
14532From whom?
14532Had n''t I better put some rum into it to- day?
14532Had one faction made a deal with the Republicans?
14532Hard feelin,''is it?
14532Has he a great scar on his cheek?
14532Has she any proofs of paternity besides--?
14532Has they offered you some stock cheap?
14532Have n''t you ever played tennis?
14532Have n''t you ever taken people to those places, Peter?
14532Have you a mount for me, Watts, for to- morrow? 14532 Have you come to?
14532Have you just discovered that?
14532Have you seen this morning''s''Voice of Labor?'' 14532 Having a quiet smoke?"
14532He did n''t have the face to say that?
14532He had been trying Kennedy?
14532He is a big beast, is n''t he? 14532 He said that, Dorothy?"
14532He''s not killed?
14532Headwear?
14532How about November fourth?
14532How are Mrs. Podds and the children?
14532How can I help you?
14532How can you be? 14532 How can you expect a person to keep a secret when you ca n''t keep it yourself?"
14532How could you be so late?
14532How could you?
14532How dare you approach without knocking? 14532 How did you do that?"
14532How did you know I was going to do it?
14532How did you know?
14532How do they like Catlin?
14532How do you figure that?
14532How do you manage about the prog, chum?
14532How else could I take it?
14532How is it possible that the papers can treat you so?
14532How is that?
14532How long ago did that occur to you, please?
14532How long have you been here?
14532How long shall you be in Washington?
14532How long will it take?
14532How many votes can you hurt us, Stirling?
14532How many waltzes are you going to give me?
14532How many will there be?
14532How much do I owe you?
14532How much is that?
14532How much longer will I have to wait? 14532 How much would it take, Peter?"
14532How serious is it likely to be, Colonel?
14532How serious is it likely to be?
14532How soon can it be tried, if they find a true bill? 14532 How the---- should I know?
14532How was that?
14532How''ll yer close my place?
14532How?
14532How?
14532How?
14532How?
14532How?
14532How?
14532How?
14532I beg your pardon,said the girl in a frank yet shy way,"but will you tell me your first name?"
14532I can easily understand his asking you, but what first threw you together?
14532I do n''t know him well enough, do I? 14532 I do n''t know what you mean?"
14532I do n''t see what you wanted to have that Stirling for?
14532I do n''t suppose he has much practice?
14532I do n''t understand?
14532I do n''t want the money,said Peter,"I want to know who sent the check to me?"
14532I had no business to ask you that?
14532I hope you do n''t mean that?
14532I mean about the row in the Democratic organization over the nomination for governor?
14532I mean,explained Peter,"do respectable people live there?"
14532I say, Dot, does n''t this have a jolly cosy feeling? 14532 I say, Peter, what do those fellows really say of us?"
14532I say,said Watts,"how did you ever manage to get such a place here?"
14532I suppose I could n''t tempt you to come and keep house for me?
14532I suppose if he had tried to be a boss he would have failed?
14532I suppose you have anything you please socially?
14532I suppose you have seen the pictures, and so wo n''t care to go round with us?
14532I suppose,said Leonore to Peter,"if you have one lawyer to do all your work, that he does each thing cheaper, does n''t he?"
14532I thought he was studying law?
14532I thought you tried to prevent Porter''s nomination?
14532I will walk with you to your hotel, if you will permit me?
14532I wonder if I can afford to get your opinion on my being an American? 14532 I wonder what he''s in such a hurry for?"
14532I wonder what the papers will say,thought Peter,"if a governor gives toboggan parties?"
14532I wonder what''s nonsense?
14532I wonder why he would n''t buy a ticket?
14532I wonder,he pondered to himself,"how much of that was Maguire, and how much Porter?
14532I wonder,thought Peter,"if he enjoys politics?"
14532I''m told Kennedy is growling, and running amuck?
14532If I-- if I could kill you-- you--She was interrupted by Peter''s bringing a chair to her and saying in French,"Will you not sit down, please?"
14532If he is, why the deuce does he get off in those solitary quarters of his?
14532If he only would have said something?
14532If not, why did you insist on my twice asking you to call on me?
14532If that was why you would n''t call at first on us?
14532If you would rather, I will not give you my answer till to- morrow morning?
14532If you''ll let me say what I want?
14532In that case,said Peter quietly,"I suppose you wo n''t mind my closing yours up?"
14532In what fool paper did you read that?
14532In your lease?
14532Is Dennis inside?
14532Is Mr. Nelson in?
14532Is Mrs. Pell at home?
14532Is everything going right, Jenifer?
14532Is he a gentleman, cousin Anneke?
14532Is it a respectable street?
14532Is it about that famous dinner?
14532Is it because Hummel''s a big contractor and gives you lots of law business?
14532Is it money trou--?
14532Is it necessary for you to be there?
14532Is it true, Peter, that you can decide who it is to be as the papers say?
14532Is it very hard?
14532Is it?
14532Is it?
14532Is my Rosebud so busy that she ca n''t spare her lover a few moments?
14532Is n''t he?
14532Is n''t it jolly?
14532Is n''t it? 14532 Is n''t she prettier even than she was in the old days?"
14532Is not condoning a man''s sins, by failing to blame him, direct encouragement to them?
14532Is she clever?
14532Is she? 14532 Is that Maguire''s message?"
14532Is that Miss Biddle as clever as people say she is?
14532Is that all the news?
14532Is that all you can say? 14532 Is that part of the message?"
14532Is that right?
14532Is that the child?
14532Is that what you do?
14532Is that you, Le Grand? 14532 Is there any way of putting pressure on him?"
14532Is this Mr. Stirling''s room?
14532Is this an incorporated company?
14532Is what?
14532It''s Blaker Strate, is it? 14532 It''s going beautifully,"she said;"do you see how Peter has turned his back to the room?
14532Just about what you please, I should say, if you know her well, and make money out of her?
14532Look here, chum, will you take me into Blunkers''s place some night, and let me hear you powwow the''b''ys?'' 14532 Madame, will you allow me to say something?"
14532Mamma,cried Leonore, appealingly,"do n''t you see that-- that-- that I suffer more by not knowing it?
14532Mamma?
14532Matter with what?
14532May I have this waltz?
14532May I save that up?
14532May I tell you how you can make me absolutely contented?
14532May I trouble you to pull that bell?
14532May I, Mr. Stirling? 14532 Mean?"
14532Miss De Voe?
14532Misther Stirling, do yez know my name?
14532More Italian lessons, eh?
14532Mr. Duer, is there any bad news from New York?
14532Mr. Nelson, ca n''t you overlook politics for a moment, and think of--"Who said anything of politics?
14532Mr. Nelson,he said,"do you intend to push that case?"
14532Mr. Stirling, why do you like saloons?
14532Mr. Stirling,said Mrs. D''Alloi,"ca n''t you tell us the meaning of the Latin motto on this seal?"
14532Mrs. Dooley, could you take your children away to the country to- morrow, if I find a place for you?
14532My darling,cried the mother,"what is the matter?"
14532My vow?
14532Never, Dot?
14532No,said Peter,"but everything I have comes from her, and that''s the kind of a mother a fellow wants to please; do n''t you think so?"
14532No? 14532 No?
14532No?
14532No?
14532Not off already, Dot, surely?
14532Not really?
14532Not really?
14532Not that man?
14532Not till then?
14532Not--?
14532Not--?
14532Now of what are you going to talk?
14532Now what shall we do or talk about?
14532Now what will you call me?
14532Now who had better be there?
14532Now who''s obstinate?
14532Now, sir, about the convention?
14532Now, what is it?
14532Now,he said,"will you come back?"
14532Of course I sha n''t tell you that"Peter, will you tell me?
14532Of what were you thinking?
14532Of what?
14532Of whose child were you speaking?
14532Oh, Captain Moriarty,said Leonore,"wo n''t you let me see him?
14532Oh, Justice Gallagher told you that?
14532Oh, wo n''t you please? 14532 Oh,"cried Leonore,"is it about the Convention?"
14532Oh? 14532 Oh?
14532On what grounds?
14532On what?
14532One of my scouts tells me you''ve had a call from Maguire?
14532Papa,cried Leonore,"do n''t you see it''s killing me?
14532Papa?
14532Perhaps I can help you?
14532Perhaps you would like to meet Le Grand?
14532Perhaps,continued Lispenard,"she talked too much, and so did not remember to ask you?"
14532Perhaps,said Leonore, helping him out, though with a most insulting laugh in her voice and face,"you will get a string and lead me?"
14532Peter, have you that opinion?
14532Peter, how much does a written opinion cost?
14532Peter, will you invite me some day?
14532Peter, will your regiment have to do anything more?
14532Peter, you must have met a great many men in politics whom you knew to be dishonest?
14532Peter,cried Leonore,"what is it?"
14532Peter,said Leonore, later, as he was sipping his tea,"do you think I''m nothing but a foolish society flutterbird?"
14532Peter,said Leonore, the moment they were on the stairs,"do you ever tell other girls political secrets?"
14532Peter,said Pell,"have you heard what Miss D''Alloi has been saying?"
14532Plain Peter?
14532Please tell me what it means?
14532Politics?
14532Porter?
14532Pretty bad, is n''t it? 14532 Really?"
14532Really?
14532Say it is n''t so?
14532Say you are fooling?
14532She does not know?
14532She is married?
14532She told you?
14532Shure, do n''t yez know about him?
14532Shure,said Dennis,"an''if they do, what then?
14532Shure,said Dennis,"what''s the party but the men that run it?"
14532So as you should not have had to make yourself unpopular?
14532So she threatens to tell your wife?
14532So that is your Democratic heeler?
14532So this is the office of the great Peter Stirling?
14532So this is what the papers call the''Stirling political incubator?'' 14532 So you are tired of your new plaything already?"
14532Still up? 14532 Suppose the disagreeable girl should break her engagement-- or declare there never was one?"
14532Suppose you dine with me, and take a late train?
14532Suppose,said Leonore,"that you go and cut the roses on those furthest bushes while I go in and arrange these?"
14532Surely you are not a Democrat?
14532Surely you''ve heard of the baby?
14532Tell me the news before you shoot?
14532Tell me what it is?
14532Tell me who told you about it?
14532Tell me whom you found who knew anything about me?
14532Tell me?
14532That Stirling is a gritty bull- dog for holding on, is n''t he?
14532That bites, eh? 14532 That if you do yield, if you do what you ought n''t to, you''ll write and tell me about it?"
14532That is, jewelry?
14532That raises the same question,laughed Ogden,"that the Irishman did about the street- fight, when he asked''Who throwed that last brick first?''"
14532That was before your dinner?
14532That was curious,she thought,"I wonder if he intends to come?"
14532That was in the milk drunk by the children?
14532That you will never tell her? 14532 That''s fifteen- love, is n''t it?"
14532That''s it"And you have put no money in yourself?
14532That''s the glove I lost at Mrs. Costell''s, is n''t it?
14532The amendments have n''t hurt them?
14532The editors know you?
14532The flowers came from Thorley''s?
14532The journey?
14532The sixth, do n''t you?
14532Then Edelhein is really the principal, and you are only put in to keep him out of sight?
14532Then I can put the screws on him safely, you think?
14532Then I suppose you would like some arrangement about him?
14532Then he''s a man we do n''t need to conciliate, if he wo n''t behave?
14532Then how did you get them?
14532Then it was economy?
14532Then it was n''t anything?
14532Then it was the big law practice, eh? 14532 Then show me how?"
14532Then that''s your protector of sick kittens?
14532Then the bosses really ca n''t do what they want?
14532Then they are deliberately lying to deceive the people?
14532Then they were laughing at Maguire?
14532Then this room is the real taste of the''plain man,''eh?
14532Then what do the papers mean by calling you a boss?
14532Then what good will your opposition do?
14532Then what is it?
14532Then who is she? 14532 Then why are you here?"
14532Then why did mamma say you would n''t call?
14532Then why did n''t you?
14532Then why do n''t you go away?
14532Then why does n''t he pay the fine?
14532Then why would n''t you stay and dine at Saratoga?
14532Then you are not prepared to give him a mother''s care and tenderness?
14532Then you can make them do what you want?
14532Then you do charge it?
14532Then you do n''t think--?
14532Then you do prefer sunshine to grimy old law books?
14532Then you think Helen and Watts care for each other?
14532Then,said Dennis,"maybe ye''ll be afther goin''wid me to the primary?"
14532They must know better?
14532They say Schlurger says he intends to vote for Porter, and Kennedy''s getting cold?
14532Think so? 14532 This is a great secret, you understand?"
14532This is to be one of what Lispenard calls your''often, frequently, only once''affairs, is it?
14532Time is: Time was: Time will never be again?
14532To whom are you talking?
14532Vell,said the brewer,"what is dat?"
14532Was Mr. Stirling there?
14532Was Mrs. D''Alloi a great friend of his?
14532Was any one hurt?
14532Was he really? 14532 Was it friendly or unfriendly to Porter?"
14532Was it true that the ward machine had split, and intended to nominate rival tickets?
14532Was it written by a lunatic?
14532Was that better?
14532Was the last motion seconded?
14532Was this morning luck too?
14532Watts D''Alloi?
14532Watts,cried Mrs. D''Alloi, coming forward,"of what child are you talking?
14532We will talk about that, after the criminal trial is over"Why not now?
14532Well enough to dance with you?
14532Well, are you goin''to drive me out?
14532Well, if you think best, we''ll placate him? 14532 Well, what are you going to do about it?"
14532Well, what do you intend to do?
14532Well,said Leonore after a pause,"are you going to do that?"
14532Well?
14532Well?
14532Well?
14532Well?
14532Well?
14532Well?
14532Well?
14532Well?
14532Well?
14532Well?
14532Were you able to translate it?
14532Were you in a college scrape?
14532Were you pleased with the nomination and election of Catlin?
14532What a funny old chap he is?
14532What a pretty horse Miss Winthrop has?
14532What a tremendous horse you have?
14532What about Missy?
14532What are they about?
14532What are those?
14532What are we in for now?
14532What are you here for?
14532What can I do for you?
14532What can I say to him?
14532What can you do with such a fellow''s talk? 14532 What causes it?"
14532What did he mean by that plain statement, spoken in such a matter- of- fact voice?
14532What did you do at Hornellsville?
14532What did you want me for?
14532What do they talk about?
14532What do you mean?
14532What do you mean?
14532What do you mean?
14532What do you mean?
14532What do you mean?
14532What do you mean?
14532What do you mean?
14532What do you mean?
14532What do you say?
14532What do you want of me?
14532What do you want us to do?
14532What do you want with Italian?
14532What does he mean, Peter?
14532What does he mean?
14532What does the other side offer you?
14532What else?
14532What evening are you to be at home?
14532What for?
14532What has been sprung on you that will take you that long?
14532What is a family at such a moment?
14532What is he trying to keep back?
14532What is it, Peter?
14532What is it, Podds?
14532What is it, then?
14532What is it?
14532What is it?
14532What is it?
14532What is it?
14532What is that compared to getting a really fine man whom one can truly love?
14532What is that, Peter?
14532What is that?
14532What is that?
14532What is that?
14532What is that?
14532What is that?
14532What is that?
14532What is the Health Board about, that poison for children can be sold in the public streets?
14532What is the first business before the meeting?
14532What is the matter?
14532What is the question before the meeting?
14532What is the resolution?
14532What is the trouble?
14532What is the trouble?
14532What is your name?
14532What kind of beer does Mr. Bohlmann make?
14532What kind of men are they?
14532What made that worth doing to you?
14532What makes my Dot so silent?
14532What makes you look so happy?
14532What party is it?
14532What poor things words are?
14532What primary?
14532What regiment was it?
14532What saloon- keeper round here has the biggest pull?
14532What shall I call you?
14532What shall I tell you?
14532What shall it be?
14532What sort of a man is Dennis Moriarty?
14532What sort of facts?
14532What the deuce is the old boy up to?
14532What were you fined for?
14532What were you smiling over?
14532What will he say of you?
14532What will people say of me on November fourth, if my regiment flunks on September thirtieth?
14532What''s all this to- day''s papers are saying, Peter?
14532What''s that, Peter?
14532What''s that?
14532What''s the matter?
14532What''s this I hear?
14532What, Peter?
14532What, my darling?
14532What, never seen her? 14532 What?"
14532What?
14532What?
14532What?
14532What?
14532What?
14532What?
14532What?
14532What?
14532What?
14532What?
14532When did you arrive?
14532When did you come?
14532When did you last hear from the D''Allois?
14532When must you pay the fine?
14532When?
14532When?
14532Where are Helen and Stirling?
14532Where can she have picked it up? 14532 Where do you generally dine?"
14532Where do you live?
14532Where is the District Attorney, that prosecutions for the public good have to be brought by public- spirited citizens?
14532Where were you?
14532Where will you put up?
14532Which way are you walking?
14532Who are bound?
14532Who do you think is downstairs?
14532Who else?
14532Who is she, Peter? 14532 Who is that?"
14532Who is yer, anyway?
14532Who owns it?
14532Who says so?
14532Who she is?
14532Who told you that?
14532Who wants to?
14532Who was that?
14532Who will that be?''
14532Who''s her big fish?
14532Who''s that girl to whom Mr. Stirling is talking?
14532Who''s that? 14532 Who?
14532Who?
14532Whom does he favor?
14532Whom must I see in his stead?
14532Whose wedding was that?
14532Why ca n''t the women let such an innocent child alone?
14532Why did Rome insist on burning while Nero fiddled?
14532Why did n''t you dine?
14532Why did n''t you tell me sooner? 14532 Why did you come--?"
14532Why did you tell me to say''yes''?
14532Why do n''t you get your beer elsewhere then?
14532Why do n''t you go into something else?
14532Why do n''t you smoke?
14532Why do the papers call you''Pete''?
14532Why do you have three swords?
14532Why do you want to know about to- day?
14532Why does the President want to see you?
14532Why have n''t you been to see us? 14532 Why is Justice Gallagher so down on him?"
14532Why is it, that the best girls do n''t care to marry?
14532Why is that?
14532Why make bad, worse?
14532Why not do as they do in Parliament? 14532 Why not?"
14532Why not?
14532Why not?
14532Why not?
14532Why not?
14532Why not?
14532Why not?
14532Why not?
14532Why, Williams, do n''t you know me?
14532Why, have n''t you heard?
14532Why?
14532Why?
14532Why?
14532Why?
14532Why?
14532Why?
14532Why?
14532Why?
14532Why?
14532Why?
14532Why?
14532Why?
14532Will I? 14532 Will there be more ciphers, to- morrow?"
14532Will there be speeches, and cheers, and all that sort of thing?
14532Will yez be afther bein''chairman for us?
14532Will yez take my arm?
14532Will you deny it?
14532Will you do me the favor to go with me to his court, and get him to remit Dennis Moriarty''s fine?
14532Will you give me till to- morrow?
14532Will you if I bite off the end?
14532Will you let me come down some day, and talk with you about it?
14532Will you listen to me for five minutes?
14532Will you look up at me?
14532Will you make a couple of speeches for us in this ward?
14532Will you move to make it unanimous?
14532Will you order your men to fire on us?
14532Will you really give me a dinner?
14532Will you release Mr. Kennedy from his promise if he asks it?
14532Will you stay here so as to give me the names of those I do n''t know?
14532Will you talk it with me?
14532Will you tell Dorothy that I have helped you translate cipher telegrams and write the replies?
14532Will you tell me about it?
14532Will you, if you see him, say that I''m in New York and should like to run across him?
14532Wo n''t you have a cup, papa?
14532Wo n''t you let me see him?
14532Wo n''t you sit out this dance with me?
14532Wo n''t you stay and take some whisky and water with us?
14532Wo n''t you tell me the story you read from the book? 14532 Wot der yer mean?"
14532Wot do yer want with it?
14532Wot yer got against me?
14532Would all the days go like this?
14532Would he have come if you had been travelling out west?
14532Would he?
14532Would it be possible to hire one more barge, and take the children free? 14532 Would it support Catlin?"
14532Would the country members refuse to vote for really good and needed city legislation?
14532Would you like to know what he said?
14532Would you mind my not telling you?
14532Yes, dear,she said,"I wish we had them here, and then you could treat them as they deserve, would n''t you, Bêtise?
14532Yes? 14532 Yes?"
14532Yes?
14532Yes?
14532Yet you came out?
14532Yet you will acknowledge that Curtis ought to rule, rather than Sullivan?
14532Yez mean?
14532Yissah?
14532You are clever, arn''t you?
14532You are in earnest?
14532You are not deceiving me?
14532You are not going out in such weather?
14532You are not hurt, Belden?
14532You are quite sure?
14532You are so popular in the ward?
14532You are sure?
14532You ca n''t expect to beat us single?
14532You can support us?
14532You consider yourselves pledged to support Maguire?
14532You did n''t walk?
14532You do n''t approve of wine?
14532You do n''t mean it?
14532You do n''t mean?
14532You do n''t want to give me anything bitter, do you?
14532You evidently believe,said Watts,"in the saying,''Everybody knows more than anybody?''"
14532You have come to me,he said,"Has he told you?"
14532You have n''t drunk in them yet, Peter?
14532You have offered her money?
14532You have smoked after dinner already?
14532You mean Gallagher and Blunkers and the rest of them?
14532You mean Newport, do n''t you?
14532You mean in endorsing Maguire?
14532You mean the smaller bosses?
14532You mean?
14532You mean?
14532You really think I had better?
14532You really want to know?
14532You should have declined to agree to that condition?
14532You still think I could?
14532You think a briefless lawyer of thirty can go it alone, do you, even against the whole city government?
14532You think so?
14532You think that possible?
14532You think they have a chance?
14532You want me to interfere?
14532You were Mr. D''Alloi''s chum, were n''t you?
14532You will report it to the Health Board?
14532You will tell me about it, wo n''t you, Peter?
14532You''ll be a traitor?
14532You''ll go back on the party?
14532You''ll let the scabs go on?
14532You''ve had a doctor?
14532You''ve seen something of Mr. Bohlmann lately, Dennis?
14532Your ward, Peter?
14532_ Maintenant_, I suppose you want to know why I wrote you to come so quickly?
14532''Bully for you, Ma,''said the son,''Does Dr. Brown know it?''"
14532''Does he say he''ll do it?''
14532''Were n''t we lucky?''
14532***** WHO IS THIS BOY?
14532Aloud she said,"Did it say who were killed?"
14532Aloud she said,"Who says so?"
14532Aloud she said:"You will come again?"
14532Am I not a talker, Miss D''Alloi?"
14532An''is it engaged yez are for this night?"
14532An''what ward do Oi live in?"
14532An''what''s my business?"
14532And he said, after a big swallow,"What do you want of me?"
14532And how well had that"talk- it- over"group at the end of Peters wedding- day grasped his character?
14532And we are the best of friends, are n''t we?"
14532And what do you think the wily old fox said?
14532And what was Peter doing all this time?
14532And will you promise to give me a great deal of attention?"
14532And would it hold?
14532And, Peter, do you dislike women?"
14532Are there any further orders?"
14532Are there not friends whose advice or wish would influence you?"
14532Are they equally worthy of description?
14532Are those lights?
14532Are we fools, or is Peter a gay deceiver?"
14532Are you free for the ninth?"
14532Are you going to call on us?"
14532As soon as that meal was over, Peter said,"Now will you teach me waltzing again?"
14532As the gourmand says in''Richelieu,''''What''s diplomacy compared to a delicious pâté?''"
14532At the end of a three months''campaign?
14532At times I have really wondered, from their determination to change things, whether it was for them to live in, or for my use?"
14532Brown?"
14532But Gallagher seemed to think he could n''t do much?"
14532But I should be so happy if--?"
14532But I thought you did n''t think regular charities did much good?"
14532But I thought you would n''t talk politics?"
14532But Mr. Pell told Leonore something one day which made her say to Peter later:"Is it true that you promised to speak in New York on the fifteenth?"
14532But a fourth said:"Then what are we here for?"
14532But all he said was:"Well?"
14532But do you think others would?"
14532But does that make him forget his old weak mother, who''s had a hard life av it, yet has done her best by him?
14532But just as he was going to expose his ignorance on that game, Leonore said:"Mr. Pell, what do you think of the political outlook?"
14532But now?
14532But she could not help saying,"Why?"
14532But she could see his expression, and when he hesitated, with that drawn look on his face, Leonore said softly:"You mean-- about-- mamma?"
14532But the law requires it""Wo n''t they investigate?"
14532But the moment the visitor was out of the room, Leonore said:"What is it, papa?"
14532But was n''t the journey hot, old man?"
14532But what ever made him do that?"
14532But what have we been doing for six days?"
14532But what shall we say of a pretended Brutus who caresses while he stabs?"
14532But what will you do for me and my child?
14532But you have written him?"
14532But, of course, you have opinions for the present state of things?"
14532By the way, how does one stop a man''s falling in love?"
14532CUI BONO?
14532Ca n''t guess?
14532Ca n''t you hear her scream?
14532Ca n''t you hear my darling scream?
14532Ca n''t you make the men do what you want, so as to have them choose only the best men?"
14532Can I do anything?"
14532Can we ever learn that the thing is blue, and that the green or purple aspect is only the tinge which we ourselves help to give?
14532Can we ever learn that we love and are loved entirely as we give ourselves colors which may harmonize with those about us?
14532Can you join me in a pipe?"
14532Can you leave your family?"
14532Celestine looked at him again, saying rapidly:"Why should I listen to you?
14532Costell?"
14532Could n''t one sit here blowy nights, with the candles lit, eating nuts and telling stories?
14532Could you tell me a lie?"
14532D''Alloi?"
14532Did Peter bring his horses?"
14532Did he find therein a box of cigars, or a bunch of violets, gold- piece, ribbon and sheet of paper?
14532Did he give me some medicine?
14532Did n''t I tell you he joked?
14532Did n''t he swear strong an''fine like?
14532Did they tramp on your flowers, and frighten poor old Russet[ Russet was the cat] out of his fast waning lives?
14532Did you say Miss Winthrop was married?"
14532Did you send them to the country on purpose to get that kind of evidence?"
14532Did you?
14532Do n''t make my consent bring us both suffering?"
14532Do n''t we deserve tenderness and protection?"
14532Do n''t you ever do work for very, very poor people, for nothing?"
14532Do n''t you owe us help, too?
14532Do n''t you see how absurd it is to suppose that the people are going to take the opinions of the better element off- hand?
14532Do n''t you see that is all in your favor, though apparently against you?
14532Do n''t you see, that society is like any other kind of work, and that the people who will centre their whole life on it must be the leaders of it?
14532Do n''t you think so?"
14532Do n''t you think you are different?"
14532Do n''t you think you had better let things drift?"
14532Do say that you can stay to dinner?"
14532Do tell him that--""Do you dare do it?"
14532Do the other parties make a good fight of it?
14532Do you care to go?"
14532Do you know him?"
14532Do you know what cut these holes and bent this coin?"
14532Do you remember your being called home in our Spanish trip, unexpectedly?
14532Do you think I had better sign them?"
14532Do you think I intended to kill her?
14532Do you think that can be so?"
14532Do you think you could like it?"
14532Do you?"
14532Does Dr. Brown know it?"
14532Does he fall in love early in life, and hamper himself with a Miss Nobody?
14532Does he lose votes?
14532Does it kill him?
14532Does it shock respectable people?
14532Does n''t he fill you with''wonder, awe and praise?''"
14532Does n''t it hold true as to a party?"
14532Does n''t that make me an American, Peter, no matter where I was born?"
14532Does n''t the nominating delegate have to make a speech in his favor?"
14532Does she annihilate him as she would have other men?
14532Does she introduce them at a dance, so that Peter shall be awkward and silent?
14532Does the brewer wait for his turn to get even with him?
14532Drewitt?"
14532Finally Peter said,"Will you do me a great favor?"
14532Finally the pose said,"I suppose it''s time we started?"
14532From the newspaper report of one of the latter We quote the rest:"You wish to see me?"
14532Had she taken Peter with trust or doubt, knowledge or blindness?
14532Has Miss Luck done enough?
14532Has an agent any right to refuse what will help is client, even if it comes by setting pitfalls?"
14532Has any one any remarks to make?"
14532Has n''t he a funny half- embarrassed, half- cool manner?"
14532Have n''t we been ill- treated?
14532Have you seen him?"
14532He did not add that he did not notice young girls-- that for some reason they had not interested him since-- since--"Where does he live?"
14532He had also decided to say to Peter,"Who''s your dandy letter- writer?"
14532He only said"Watts?"
14532He turned to her, and asked:"Are you really in earnest in saying that you''ll refuse every man who asks you to marry him within five years?"
14532He was working over two conundrums not very easy to answer, which were somewhat to this effect: Does the best man always make the best official?
14532His manner may have suggested this, for suddenly the girl said:"But of course, you do not know who I am?
14532How are yez, Terence?"
14532How are you, Peter, old fellow?
14532How are you?"
14532How can he succeed in politics?
14532How can you talk so?
14532How clearly do we ever gain an insight into the feelings and motives which induce conduct even in those whom we best know and love?
14532How could he know her and not love her?
14532How did you enjoy your ride?"
14532How do you come on?"
14532How do you do, Miss Winthrop?"
14532How far had her love, and the sight of Peter''s misery, led her blindly to renew that trust?
14532How long will my patience hold out?"
14532How much do you have?"
14532How the deuce am I to take down evidence?"
14532How well do you know her?"
14532I am very much alone too, as perhaps you know?"
14532I did n''t know you could mimic?"
14532I do n''t know whether she exploited her brother Ogden to you?"
14532I do n''t see why you insist on starting in at once in New York?
14532I hope it''s no offence?"
14532I hope you have n''t been saying anything indiscreet, Miss D''Alloi?"
14532I shall be glad to talk, if you do n''t mind my taking a dull subject?"
14532I thought he was such a dishonest politician?"
14532I told her that--""Never mind details,"interrupted Peter,"Was it enough to put further offers out of the question?"
14532I want you always to keep your rooms just as they are?"
14532I want your advice?"
14532I wonder if he got any inkling?"
14532I wonder if she cares for handsome men?"
14532I wonder if she''s right?"
14532I wonder if there''s anything in it?"
14532I wonder if you would be willing to ask him?"
14532If a man wants to drink at any time, what right have I to say he shall not?"
14532If clients came, if fame came, if every form of success came,--for what?
14532If she cares for me?"
14532If you care to go, I''ll see if I can get you some?"
14532If you have aught to say why sentence should not now be passed on you, speak now or forever-- no-- that''s the wedding ceremony, is n''t it?
14532If you say so?"
14532If you wish I''ll send two thousand instead and then take your thousand?
14532If you''ll tell me what you are after, I''ll try to say a good word for you?"
14532Indeed?"
14532Is it a wonder that our government and office- holding is left to the foreign element?
14532Is it very bad to- day?"
14532Is n''t he somethin''for the ward to be proud av?"
14532Is n''t it Boileau who said that:''The best thing about many a man is his wife''?"
14532Is n''t it a dreadful night?"
14532Is n''t it heartless?''
14532Is n''t it, Peter?"
14532Is n''t it, Tawney- eye?"
14532Is n''t this an enticing chair?
14532Is not each person responsible for the tint he seems to produce in others?
14532Is that enough?
14532Is the honest judgment of a fellow verging on twenty- four better than the experienced opinion of many far older men?
14532Is the hopelessness of the impossible less or greater than the hopelessness of the unattainable?
14532It must be the only thing she did n''t say, then, in your long confabs?"
14532It was waiting-- waiting-- for what?
14532It''s a great pity that all the bosses ca n''t be good?"
14532Jenifer, can Mr. D''Alloi have some more stuffing?"
14532Just look over those lists, and see if you think they''ll do?"
14532Just supposing that I showed them to you now, and that you find they are n''t what you like?"
14532Just then some one in the"torchlight"shouted:"What''s the matter wid Stirling?"
14532Justice?
14532Ladies?"
14532Le Grand?"
14532Leonore and Dorothy had come together, and as soon as they were in their carriage, Leonore said,"What a dull dinner it was?"
14532Leonore asked,"What makes you so happy?"
14532Let me try again?"
14532Look about you and take your choice of whom you would like to meet?''
14532Mamma, did Peter tell you it was so?"
14532Mamma, will you play a valse?
14532May I harve the pleasure?"
14532May I pay you a compliment?
14532Men, will you stand by me, and help me to save her?"
14532Miss De Voe and the two girls dropped the"vulgar"subject, but Miss De Voe said later:"I should like to know what they laughed at?"
14532Mr. Stirling, am I not right?"
14532Must keep up appearances?"
14532No one came forward, so after a moment he said:"Will the meeting choose a presiding officer?"
14532No?
14532Nothing, or four figures, has always seemed your rule?"
14532Now I want to know why you wo n''t?"
14532Now are you really happy?"
14532Now do you understand how hard it is for such a girl as Dorothy to marry rightly?"
14532Now do you understand why and what a boss is?"
14532Now you''ll pull me through, old man, wo n''t you?"
14532Now, I want to know why you do n''t like them?"
14532Now, are you comfortable?"
14532Now, have you anything more to show us?"
14532Now, how could mortal man look grieved, even over an American newspaper, with that prospect in view?
14532Now, how do you pronounce it in New York?''
14532Now, how handsome a present may I send her?"
14532Now, if I introduce you, wo n''t you try to make her have a good time?"
14532Now, name your figure?"
14532Now, what did you order to- night?
14532Now, what kind of a day is it?"
14532Now, will you give me your hand?"
14532Of course I knew they were wrong, but are bosses bad, and are you a boss?"
14532Ogden, to change the subject, asked:"Did you really say''damn''?"
14532Only one?
14532Or can you bring one here?"
14532Or had she, as he had once done, reared an ideal, and given that ideal the love which she supposed she was giving Peter?
14532Or if you prefer, we''ll give it to you all written for delivery?"
14532Or was it my eyes?
14532Or was it that his discovery that a girl was lovable had made the sex less terrible to him?
14532Or were their votes bribed?"
14532Or will it embarrass you?"
14532Ought I, for the sake of doing my best for my ward, to have let him go on?
14532People, no matter what Peter stated, never said"Really?"
14532Perhaps you can suggest a gift that will do?
14532Perhaps you will carry me back?
14532Perhaps you''ll forgive me now?"
14532Perhaps you''ll let me bring it up myself?"
14532Peter had no idea what was wrong, but when he found that she did not mollify at the end of that time, he said to her;"What is the matter?"
14532Peter smiled and said,"Then you think my views on license, and food- inspection, and tenement- house regulation are''Deformities''?"
14532Peter smiled at her, and said:"If I do, will you give me another waltzing lesson after lunch?"
14532Peter stopped his writing, looking up quickly:"Did he say on what business?"
14532Peter turned to go, but in leaving he said:"Is there any pleasure or service I can do, to make up for the trouble I''ve caused you?"
14532Peter turned to him:"You are one of the employees of the National Milk Company?"
14532Peter was rather longer over the handshake than convention demands, but he asked very politely,"How are your father and--?"
14532Peter''s face lighted up in a way which made the lady say to herself:"I wonder why he would n''t buy another ticket?"
14532Peter, will you do me a great favor?"
14532Pierce?"
14532Please, Peter?
14532Please?
14532Please?"
14532Pretty sight, is n''t it?"
14532Reading about your own iniquity?"
14532Rivington?"
14532Rivington?"
14532Rivington?"
14532Say it is n''t so?"
14532Say something?
14532Several of the members remarked crossly:"Why could n''t they wait ten minutes?"
14532Shall I show you the law?"
14532Shall you speak?"
14532She keeps all the windows full of flowers-- perhaps you have noticed them in the other rooms, as well?"
14532She knew that Peter was helpless, and she said,"How?"
14532She said,"What?"
14532Shure, when that dirty little spalpeen av a Caggs went back on us so, what could Oi do?
14532Shure, who wants to work seven days a week, if he can do wid six?"
14532So a''Mick''ward wants its great man to put on all the frills?
14532So he merely said,"You think so?"
14532So now, drop it, and say what you''ll settle the civil suits for?"
14532So you are in it too?"
14532So you''ve yielded to the demands of your toney friends?"
14532Soldiers, ball- rooms or the like, and who does not?
14532Some one would tell him something, and then appeal to him, if he did n''t think that was so?
14532Something in Peter''s voice made Maguire say:"It will be of the usual kind, of course?"
14532Spare his wife and child?
14532Stirling?"
14532Stirling?"
14532Stirling?"
14532Stirling?"
14532Stirling?"
14532Stirling?"
14532Stirling?"
14532Stirling?"
14532Stirling?"
14532Stirling?"
14532Stirling?"
14532Stirling?"
14532Stirling?"
14532Stirling?"
14532Suppose we go to the library and sit with mamma and papa?"
14532Suppose you stay and try his skill at lunch to- day?
14532Surely there must be others like you?"
14532Tell me what these long years have brought you?"
14532Tell me what you have been doing?"
14532That does n''t include me, of course?"
14532That is a corker, is n''t it?
14532That is, Costell said he''d try and help me on some legislation I want--""Special?"
14532That is, unless your not asking them means you are not interested?"
14532That just such elements as we give to the individual, the individual gives back to us?
14532The Spaniard was right who said it was easier to take care of a peck of fleas than one woman, eh, chum?"
14532The color blazed up into Lispenard''s face and he rose, saying:"Did I understand you aright?"
14532The family and friends who had gathered over that body, according to their customs, or the party who looked in on them and laughed?"
14532The problem was whether they were right?
14532Then Jenifer was sent out with a telegram, which merely said:"May I come to- day by Shore line limited?
14532Then a reporter said to a confrère,"What a stunning headline that will make?"
14532Then after Peter had left the room, the Governor asked,"How is he on law?"
14532Then aloud she said:"Then I sha n''t be friends any more?"
14532Then he asked aloud:"What do you want?"
14532Then he asked,"Is that all?"
14532Then he looked up quickly at Peter?
14532Then he said:"Will you give it to me, Miss D''Alloi?"
14532Then it''s just a struggle over who shall be elected?"
14532Then she asked:"For whom are those violets?"
14532Then she said,"Peter, will you do me a favor?"
14532Then what do you think she said?"
14532There ca n''t be any money in their business?"
14532There is no sacrifice I would not make, rather than give the order that ends a human life; and you think that paper ballots can influence my action?
14532This practice was becoming habitual with Peter; in fact, so habitual that his cabby had said to him this very day,"The old place, sir?"
14532To himself, Jenifer remarked:"Who he gwine hab dis day?
14532Trust me and I will--""Tell me,"cried Leonore interrupting,"was this why you did n''t come to see us?
14532Twice he was asked point blank,"Who''s your man?"
14532Unless you''re guardian of some bewitching girl?"
14532Waiting for what?
14532Was it her long ill- health, or was it the mere lapse of years, which had wrought such changes in her?
14532Was it merely the poise of added years?
14532Was it possible life had such richness in it?
14532Was it that he had ceased to care what women thought of him?
14532Was it this memory that had kept him, at thirty- eight, still a bachelor?
14532Was n''t it shabby treatment, Dot?"
14532Was not the stain great enough, but you must make my poor child suffer for it?"
14532Was she right in her theory that she was the only one who understood him?
14532Was that man good or bad?"
14532Was this the woman for whom he had so suffered?
14532We''ll go at it right after lunch and decipher it together, wo n''t we?"
14532Were they very bad?
14532Were they voting honestly in the interest of their fellow- men?
14532Were those things done for votes?
14532Were you an ascetic or a sybarite?"
14532Wha foh yo''think I doan do as I ginl''y do?"
14532What I want to see you for, is to ask if you wo n''t dine with me this evening?
14532What are you so set on the Hummel crowd for?"
14532What are you to me?
14532What can I do?"
14532What can I say?"
14532What can you expect of a son of a mill- foreman, who lives the first sixteen years of his life in a mill- village?
14532What could he do to keep himself from thinking of-- from thinking?
14532What could he mean?"
14532What do you think of Milton?"
14532What do you think she had the face to say to me to- day?"
14532What do you want me to do?"
14532What do you wish to do?"
14532What else do you want?"
14532What happens?
14532What have you got in its place?"
14532What is Peter?"
14532What is fifteen hundred a year to such a girl?
14532What is it?"
14532What is this pain in her head and eyes?
14532What kind of an evening had you?"
14532What party?"
14532What room would you like to see first?"
14532What shall I answer?"
14532What shall I call you?"
14532What should I do?"
14532What was it Dr. Pilcere said about her eyes?
14532What was it the French doctor said to do, if it came back?
14532What was it?"
14532What was there to worry over?"
14532What was to be done with the rest of the time?
14532What will you give me for them?"
14532What would the age of chivalry be, if the chronicles had recorded only the brutality, filthiness and coarseness of their contemporaries?
14532What would you care for my opinion, if you did n''t know that the votes are back of it?"
14532What''s that horse trying to do?
14532What''s the good of being a good citizen, when the other fellow wo n''t be?
14532What''s the matter with you?
14532What''s the matter?"
14532What''s the next case?"
14532What''s your name?"
14532What?"
14532When Leonore had progressed as far as her fourth partner, she asked:"What sort of a girl is that Miss Biddle?"
14532When Peter stopped, she whispered,"Why are you going to New York?"
14532When a man can ally himself with the best, why should he choose the worst?"
14532When he had reached the bottom he said,"Well?"
14532When they had drifted into the drawing- room, Leonore asked:"Have you been learning how to valse?"
14532When they reached the hotel entrance, Peter asked:"Can you see me for a few moments?"
14532When will you come back?"
14532When would you like to know?"
14532When?"
14532When?"
14532Where can we get a cab?
14532Where do you want to go?"
14532Where is that?"
14532Where on earth have you been living?"
14532Where shall you stay?"
14532Where the deuce did she get it, and is it so?"
14532Which horse will you have?"
14532Who can tell, when sweet comes, how far it is sweetened by the bitterness that went before?
14532Who can tell, when the bitter comes, and we later see how we could have avoided it, what we should have encountered in its place?
14532Who dares to say after that that women have no business ability nor shrewdness?
14532Who is this woman?
14532Who is this woman?"
14532Who says that a luck- piece is nothing but a superstition?"
14532Who was the most heartless?
14532Who''s that in the''yard''a yelling in the rain?
14532Whom would you like to have there?"
14532Whose child?
14532Why am I a power in my ward?
14532Why are n''t these men elected?"
14532Why ca n''t I think?
14532Why ca n''t I think?
14532Why ca n''t they just be friends?"
14532Why do men have to behave so?
14532Why do you cry out?
14532Why does everything look so dark, except when those pains go through her head?
14532Why should n''t one tell one''s love as soon as one feels it?
14532Why, look at his marriage alone?
14532Why, what more do you want?
14532Why?"
14532Why?"
14532Will nobody speak?"
14532Will the men stand by me?"
14532Will they let me vote?"
14532Will yez try?''
14532Will you attend to it?"
14532Will you defend me?
14532Will you do it?"
14532Will you let me ask you something?"
14532Will you play too?"
14532Will you respond?"
14532Will you smoke?"
14532Will you tell me what you did?"
14532Will you try to forgive me for breaking one of your pretty set?"
14532Will you try to understand me?"
14532Will you?"
14532Wo n''t the Health Board punish the sellers?"
14532Wo n''t you believe me?"
14532Wo n''t you believe me?"
14532Wo n''t you go with me, and help me lie?"
14532Wo n''t you score for us?"
14532Wo n''t you stop that unsocial tramp of yours long enough to give us your opinion on the subject?"
14532Wo n''t you tell me about some of the other men you are meeting in politics?"
14532Would he?
14532Would it be expensive?"
14532Would it be possible for a fellow to have a second help?"
14532Would it be right to give something of that kind?
14532Would not society have been scandalized had it known of their doings?
14532Would that girl bother him?
14532Would you like a rose?"
14532Would you like to hear about it?"
14532Would you like to see them?"
14532Would you mind-- I mean----"Leonore hesitated a moment and then said in an apologetic tone--"Would you like to invite madame?
14532Would you open on Sunday?"
14532Yer would n''t want to do it dis time, would yer?"
14532Yes?"
14532You are joking?"
14532You can not have forgotten?
14532You caught Dot''s inference, I hope?
14532You do n''t mean--?"
14532You do n''t spell Society with a capital, do you?"
14532You do n''t want to be generous, and let me have these four?"
14532You have plenty of time?"
14532You know?"
14532You really think I had better?"
14532You will help me?"
14532You wo n''t give your consent?"
14532You wo n''t mind that?"
14532You''ve probably noticed them in church?"
14532Your romantic, your dramatic,_ mon Dieu!_ your noble sacrifice?
14532not another?
14532or"You really mean it?"
14532said Leonore, mollifying,"what is it this time?"
14532said Leonore,"what a shame?
14532save her I Why ca n''t I get to her?