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
14014does not this narrative present us with some useful subjects for reflection?
14750What is that little we can do for our Lord and Saviour?
14750When we entered the room, what did we see?
14750[ Hungry children] May I, dear madam, give you some instances?
15436You are old,said he,"and have not much more time to live in this world, will you not turn to that Jesus, who has died for your sins also?
15436An old man,_ Netsiak_, addressed Brother Kohlmeister:"Are you Benjamin?
15436The old man replied:"What shall I do?
48528All which Circumstances considered, what Degree of Evidence can be required more than hath been given to authenticate this Account of_ de Fonte_?
48528As to_ de Fuca_ being taken Prisoner by Captain_ Cavendish_, and how did he escape out of the Hands of the_ English_?
48528He then proceeds,''If this should ever happen,''the Deliberation,''what would be the Condition of our Possessions?''
48528Our Opinion being in a great Measure influenced by the System we embrace, as, Whether there is a North- west Passage, or not?
48528The Captain asked, Why they would not come along Side?
48528The_ Lot_ is cast; one of the Company is taken; but where is the Executioner that shall do the terrible Office upon a poor Innocent?
15134Then, could we possibly prevent these Indians from hunting the deer wherever they meet them?
15134What happened to the great auk and the Labrador duck in the Gulf?
15134What happened to the musk- ox in Greenland?
15134What is happening everywhere to every form of beneficial and preservable wild life that is not being actively protected to- day?
15134What is the cause of this?
15134When his companion made to walk towards the animals, Sir---- said to him roughly:"''Where are you going?''
14866But is this business, sense, or conservation?
14866But what about those who ought to know better?
14866What could appear to have less in common than electricity and sanctuaries?
14866Where else are there so many intimate appeals both to the child and the philosopher?
14866Yet I must not forget the"flies"--who that has felt them once can ever forget them?
15190When did you leave Ramah?
15190( Aksunai, Be thou strong, or its plural, Aksuse, Be ye strong, are used both for"How do you do?"
15190A box?
15190And what of the spiritual life of this little congregation?
15190But where is the baby?
15190Do my readers want to know about the gardens?
15190Do my readers wish to look into the bedroom about fourteen feet by six?
15190Do you see the station boat lying a little way from the end of the pier?
15190How much longer yet?
15190Is it so where the true light has not yet shined into pagan darkness?
15190Shall I ever forget that communion at seven?
15190So some would tell us; but was it so here?
15190They are so like grassy mounds, that from any distance one would ask,"But where do the Eskimoes live?"
15190What does that stand for?
15190What had ruffled his temper?
15190What has become of the passenger?
15190What is that noise?
15190What is up among the dogs?
15190What is your impression of Eskimo abodes now you have seen their interiors?
15190What shall she offer?
15190Where are the rest?
9857But have you never hunted here yourself?
9857But it does n''t help matters any to swear, does it?
9857How do you do?
9857I''m glad to see you, sir; and how is you?
9857Well, Pete,I asked,"what luck?"
9857Well, Pete,said I,"how many caribou did you kill?"
9857Well, Richards,I asked, when he was comfortably settled at his meal,"what do you think of the river?"
9857Where''s Richards?
9857Why is that?
9857After we had eaten, Stanton asked:"How''d you like the partridge, Richards?"
9857All these things I pondered as I sat by this camp fire, and I asked myself,"Why is it that when Fate closes our eyes she does not lead us aright?"
9857CHAPTER II ON THE THRESHOLD OF THE UNKNOWN"When shall we reach Rigolet, Captain?"
9857Does that suit you?"
9857Finally Richards, in a tone of reproach that made me feel sorry for the very suggestion, asked:"Do you think there''s a quitter here?"
9857How did you miss so many times?"
9857Is your flat free, John, to take me aboard of her?"
9857Once I asked him:"Where in the world did you learn to swear like that, Duncan?"
9857Our young men had never eaten it before, and Richards, taking one of the cakes, asked Pete:"What do you call this?"
9857They ask me,''Where my brother?''
9857Wallace?"
9857Was I destined to see it now?
9857Who wants to go home?"
9857Would n''t you like to go back?"
15342Holla, Mac, where are you going with your basket?
15342My dear fellow, how can you think of risking yourself in such a gimcrack contrivance as that? 15342 Well, my boys, what is your business with me?"
15342What do you think of the sugar?
15342Among other questions, I asked him whether he had not been baptized?
15342And what was my reward?
15342But what can be the cause of it?
15342Could it be really so?
15342Has the fiat, then, gone forth, that the aboriginal inhabitants of America shall make way for another race of men?
15342He asked me if I would be baptized?
15342He is now a member of the Church, and is dismissed to his woods-- a Christian, can we say?
15342I asked him how he made that out?
15342Pray how do you like the beef- steaks?"
15342The white men are not dogs; they love their kindred as well as you; why should they not avenge their murder?"
15342Towards morning, recovering the use of speech, he inquired, in a voice scarcely audible, if he"had shed the blood of a white man?"
15342Was I indeed guilty of the blood of a fellow- creature?
15342Where did she get them?
15342With such an establishment to rule over, need it be matter of surprise that our_ bourgeois_ was in his own estimation a magnate of the first order?
15342[ 1] Belluga?
15342are you not going there?"
15342did you imagine you had sent for an old woman?"
15342does your religion teach you to tell lies?
15342not know of Fort Coulonge, and you so near to it?
15342said Godin, feigning ignorance of the Indian''s meaning:"Pray, to whom did he belong?"
15342shall we strike?"
15342would you really wish to see your husband hanged?"
16864And what if you had been overtaken by a storm?
16864What do you think of the ingenuity of our Yankee cats? 16864 After this, what protection, or generosity, or justice, can the Indians he said to receive from the Hudson''s Bay Company? 16864 And that man-- the slanderer-- the murderer of this martyred Missionary-- what punishment was inflicted on him? 16864 Are they to be left to the tender mercies of the trader until famine and disease sweep them from the earth? 16864 But are not the British themselves to blame, in some measure, for the continuance of these irritated feelings? 16864 Could the Honourable Company be swayed by so paltry a consideration in subjecting us to so grievous an inconvenience? 16864 Did he never visit Wapping with the same views, whatever they might be? 16864 Did the murders committed by the natives at New Caledonia, Thompson''s River, and the Columbia, pass unavenged? 16864 If he did, did he observe nothing in that sink of filth and wickedness equal to the scenes that shocked him so much in the outskirts of New York? 16864 If our fathers quarrelled, can not we be friends? 16864 Might not this circumstance lead the geologist to the conclusion that the fall had receded this distance? 16864 Now, now is the time to apply the remedy; in 1863, where will the Indian be? 16864 Strip the nobility and land- owners of their possessions-- convert our monarchy into a republic-- and the church into ameetin ouse?"
16864The present proprietors of the soil of England have, undoubtedly, large incomes; but what becomes of those incomes?
16864The question is-- Is it consistent with prudence to allow an_ individual_ to assume and retain such power?
16864These_ reforms_ effected, would the people of England be permanently benefited by them?
16864This looks very well on paper; but are we allowed the means of bestowing these gratuities?
16864Those results attained, what is there to prevent the American gentleman from becoming as polished and accomplished as his cousin in Britain?
16864To what cause then are we to ascribe the present scarcity?
16864What became of the Hannah Bay murderers?
16864What cause, then, can there be for still cherishing those feelings of animosity which the unhappy disruption gave rise to?
16864What do they obtain from us without payment?
16864What plan would this philanthropic divine recommend to remove those evils, which, while he affects to deplore, he yet glories over?
16864What spot in the world, in fact, can present such varied charms, as the summit of Mount Edgecumb?
16864What the"Dickens"brought him to the"Five Points?"
16864What was the decision of this mock court martial?
16864Where are the evils which interested alarmists predicted would follow the modification of the East India Company''s charter?
16864Who could doubt the fulfilment of the promises of a British peer?
16864Who would not be an Indian trader?
16864Why should not the Indians succeed in domesticating these animals, and rendering them subservient to their wants, as the Laplanders do?
16864Why then is it continued?
16864Why, otherwise, do we not find the different varieties in Canada, where the grisly bear has never been seen?
16864Yet while stern justice alike condemns both, which is the more guilty party?
16864or which has the greater claims on our sympathy?
16864what do you think of that, now?"
16864| an|| dee ay| an adee|| Where| Andé aish| Tanté ay to| Tee ay ghay| Ed luzeet|| are you|[= a]e an| tay an| de[= a]za| hee hee|| going?
16809And a bit o''shot for my gun?
16809And how''ll they make harbor, not knowin''what to sail by?
16809Any signs of fish, b''y?
16809Are the men of your crew loyal enough to fight for you?
16809Be there a doctor aboard, sir?
16809Be you a_ real_ doctor, sir?
16809Been ill long?
16809Do you believe dogs can travel against this gale?
16809Do you kill much game here on the island?
16809Domino Run? 16809 Have you any provisions on hand?"
16809How are you going to take care of these children this winter?
16809Is there a stove in it?
16809Is you sure, now, Pop?
16809Liveyeres? 16809 What are the signs of fish?"
16809What are you going to do with it?
16809What have you been doing since?
16809What have you to eat?
16809What is the trouble, Uncle Tom?
16809What''s the matter with the man? 16809 What''s the trouble?"
16809When did you leave Cape Norman?
16809Where are the dogs, Walter?
16809Where did you come from in this storm?
16809Where did you kill it?
16809Where is it?
16809Where is your man?
16809Yes, Uncle Tom, it is I?
16809You deserve the punishment of man and God?
16809And with his rifle and one good eye, who knows but he may knock over a silver fox or a bear or two?
16809Are they not afraid to play with these pretty things?"
16809Can any one wonder that the people love Grenfell?
16809Can we wonder that Grenfell is happy in his work?
16809Can we wonder that nothing in the world could induce him to leave the Labrador for a life of ease?
16809Do you know?"
16809Grenfell sat silently for several minutes observing his patient and asking himself the question:"What can I do for this poor man?"
16809How could he help the man in such a place?
16809How far is it?"
16809If he and the dogs survived the night and another day, what would the dogs do?
16809Oh is it weed, or fish, or floating hair-- A tress o''golden hair, O''drown''ed maiden''s hair, Above the nets at sea?
16809The jolly boat was launched, and as it approached the land the man arose and coming down to the water''s edge, shouted:"Be that you, Doctor?"
16809Well, what of it?
16809What are liveyeres?"
16809What could he do?
16809What did her blue flag mean?
16809What had she come for?
16809What has Grenfell been doing since?
16809What is that?"
16809What_ was_ her business?
16809Would he be caught under an ice pan?
16809Would the cold so paralyze him as to render him helpless?
16809and anxiously asked,"Had we better put back?"
39130An''why, zur?
39130And what have you been doing since?
39130And what might that cure be?
39130And what''s the matter with him?
39130And who is this?
39130But have you ever seen another?
39130But where,said I,"did she get her looking- glass?"
39130But you is n''t?
39130Did you do this thing?
39130Do you think of the sea as a friend?
39130Do your besettin''sin get the best o''you, sir?
39130Does you think she''ll die, zur?
39130Eh?
39130Hard?
39130Has you ever been there?
39130Have you never_ had_ a sea- boil?
39130He was n''t_ frightened_, was he?
39130How long have you waited?
39130How many years ago, sir?
39130Is you sure you could n''t do nothin''? 39130 Is you sure, skipper?"
39130No?
39130Noa? 39130 Sure, I be a old feller t''be down the Labrador, is n''t I, zur?"
39130Sure,said he,"not a hundred have n''t?"
39130Then why,they said--"why did you come at all?"
39130Thick? 39130 Think I''m going to turn out this time of night?"
39130Think they''ll be one comin''soon?
39130Were you sick when you sailed for the Labrador in the spring?
39130What detains you?
39130What do we pay you for?
39130What have you been doing since?
39130What you going to be when you grow up?
39130What you going to work at,said I, in desperation,"when you''re a man?"
39130What you going to_ be_, what you going to_ do_,I repeated,"when you grow up?"
39130What you laughing at?
39130What''s the last harbour in the world?
39130Where do the tide go, zur, when''e runs out?
39130Where do''e go, zur? 39130 Where have you been?"
39130You are an evil man, of whom the people should beware?
39130You are eighty- three?
39130You deserve the punishment of man and God?
39130You have fished out of this harbour for seventy- six years?
39130After a silence, he continued, speaking wistfully,"What''s the last harbour in all the whole world, zur?
39130An''you is n''t a doctor, you says?
39130And when he was about to be on his way again----"Could you bear word,"said the woman,"t''Mister Elliot t''come bury my boy?
39130Are they not afraid to play with these pretty things?"
39130But perhaps you might know something about doctorin''?
39130But you is n''t, you says?"
39130Does n''t you know?"
39130Have ye never heard, sir, what the poet says?"
39130How have the fish been to- day?"
39130Is n''t you?
39130Is you noa kind of a doctor, at all?
39130Is you sure, zur?"
39130Noa?"
39130So I up with me trap, for I''d been gettin''nothin''; an''--an''--would you believe it?
39130Sure, zur, would you believe it?
39130Sure, zur,_ you_ is able t''tell me that, is n''t you?"
39130Then,"Be you a doctor, zur?"
39130They be sea- horses an''sea- cows an''sea- dogs, Why not the shape o''humans?"
39130Turn out?
39130What did_ that_ matter?
39130What do it be?"
39130Where are the fish?
39130Which ones shall it be, John?"
39130Which ones?
39130Why wull ye speak such trash to a stranger?
39130Woan''t you come up an''see she, zur?
39130Would the doctor go?
39130Would the doctor help her?
4019And was the bride- elect kept waiting?
4019And we passed right by the mouth of the Nascaupee?
4019Are you awake, b''y?
4019But did n''t you see Allen Goudie''s tilt, sir?
4019But do n''t you know how you got lost?
4019But how can it come through those mountains?
4019But if he be dead?
4019But why did you take it? 4019 But why do you wish to go there?"
4019Dead?
4019Did George get out and send you?
4019Do they have cake and pie?
4019Do they have gingerbread in the camps?
4019Do you catch enough fur to keep you in flour and molasses?
4019Do you remember,asked Hubbard,"the slogan of the old Pike''s Peakers?--''Pike''s Peak or Bust?''"
4019Do you see that second knoll?
4019Do you think she would mind?
4019Do you think you can live as long as that?
4019For Heaven''s sake,said Hubbard,"why did you do it?"
4019George,I asked,"have you your Testament with you?"
4019George,I cried indignantly,"where did you get that pea meal?"
4019George,said I,"however in the world could you keep it so long?"
4019Had n''t you better break a few more boughs?
4019Have I escaped starvin''only to drown?
4019Have you found Hubbard?
4019How did it happen, George?
4019How do they make it? 4019 How''s that?"
4019How''s the weather, b''y?
4019Is that so?
4019Man,he replied,"do n''t you realise it''s about the only part of the continent that has n''t been explored?
4019Mornin'', Wallace,he said, when he had collected his senses,"that blamed rain will make the travellin''hard, wo n''t it?"
4019Now where in the world is Labrador?
4019Wallace,he at length asked,"do you like pig''s knuckles?"
4019Well, do n''t you remember it? 4019 Well,"said Hubbard,"what''s the vote?--shall we turn back or go on?"
4019Well?
4019What are you shooting at now?
4019What are you stopping for?
4019What could you do with a beaver if you got him?
4019What do you hunt? 4019 What do you think the chances of getting caribou are?"
4019What in the world do you expect to do with it? 4019 What is it, b''y?"
4019What kind of fur do you find here?
4019What was it-- a summer or a winter camp?
4019What''s that?
4019What''s the matter, George?
4019What''s the use of killing them?
4019What''s too bad?
4019What''s up? 4019 What?"
4019Where are my ships?
4019Which would you rather have, Wallace, a piece of bread or a blanket?
4019Who?
4019Why what in the world would you do with them?
4019Why,said George,"do n''t you expect to get back to eat any more?"
4019You do n''t mind sitting here for a while and chatting, do you, b''y?
4019''Will you have some more?''
4019After he had greeted us, Lloyd asked:"Is all the world at peace, sir?"
4019Ai n''t there any men here?"
4019Allen hesitated for a moment; then asked:"If the other man be dead, sir?"
4019And how would oatmeal go for porridge?--don''t you think that would be bully on a cold morning?"
4019And what do you suppose I did?"
4019Are n''t you hopeful we shall?"
4019As the other bird flew away, he rose to his feet and shouted:"I hit''im!--did you see how he went?
4019But how?
4019But should we meet with more delays, and arrive on the George too late for the caribou migration, and fail to find the Indians, what then?
4019But were we ever to get out to tell about it?
4019But what does George say?"
4019Could it come from Lake Michikamau?
4019Could we reach the flour?
4019Could you get one or two good men besides yourself to go with us, George?"
4019Could''un spare a dollar t''buy grub, sir?"
4019Did I ever tell you about the day I was married?--the trouble I had?"
4019Did you ever eat any, Wallace?"
4019Did you ever eat apple butter, boys?"
4019Got a pipe, sir?"
4019Had it ceased?
4019Had they come and missed me, and gone away again?
4019Have you fellows experienced any such feeling?"
4019Have you felt that way, George?"
4019He came quickly forward, and, grasping my hand as I stepped from the boat, asked abruptly:"Where''s Hubbard?"
4019How do you feel, Wallace?"
4019How long had I been wandering, anyway... My sisters in far- away New York, were they hoping and praying to hear from me?
4019How would it be to stew them to- night, and stir in a little flour to thicken them?
4019Hungry?
4019I could no longer walk; why not sleep?
4019If not, what were we to do?
4019It''s up to you, b''y-- which route are we to take?"
4019Looking critically at my share, he asked:"How long can you keep alive on that?"
4019No luck?"
4019No?
4019Or was George, brave fellow, lying dead on the trail somewhere below?
4019Poor Hubbard... Why did not the men come to look for us-- the trappers that George was to send?
4019Shall I put them all to cook?
4019Should I not now be justified in surrendering to the overpowering desire to sleep?
4019Standing there with the icy current swirling about me, I said,"What''s the use?"
4019Suddenly, and without a word of introduction, he said:"Boys, what do you say to turning back?"
4019THE OBJECT OF THE EXPEDITION"How would you like to go to Labrador, Wallace?"
4019The silence became so oppressive that I had to break it:"George,"I said,"were you never hungry before?"
4019Therefore take no thought, saying, What shall we eat?
4019Was he looking and waiting for me?
4019Was it a shout?
4019We can run''em, ca n''t we, Wallace?"
4019What do you say, b''y?"
4019What do you say, boys,"he added,"to throwing away some of the outfit?
4019What does glory and all that amount to, after all?
4019What were you talking about?"
4019What will you do, boys?"
4019What would we need to get at the post, George?"
4019Where had all the people in the world gone to, anyway?
4019Who hath lain alone to hear the wild- goose cry?
4019Who hath seen the beaver busied?
4019Who hath watched the black- tail mating?
4019Who hath worked the chosen water where the ouananiche is waiting, Or the sea- trout''s jumping-- crazy for the fly?
4019Who would be anywhere else, if he could?
4019Why could I not find him?
4019Why not give it up and go to sleep?
4019Why should I worry about them?
4019Why?
4019Would he never fire?
4019Would it lead us to Michikamau?
4019Would n''t they thicken up better if you were to cook them to- night and let them stand until morning?"
4019Would they find my bones and take them back?...
4019nothing could down your spirit for long, could there?
4019or, What shall we drink?
4019or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed?
16596''Tis like gettin''back t''th''Bay,said Bob, and he asked the Eskimos,"Will there be igloosoaks( shacks) all the way?"
16596''Tisn''t Bob instead o''Emily you''re wantin''so wonderful bad t''see now, is un?
16596A silver? 16596 An''could I make un now in a day?"
16596An''how be un now, Bill, an''how''s th''fur?
16596An''how did un get out?
16596An''how long may it be to th''New Year, mother?
16596An''how much will that cost?
16596An''how old may you be now? 16596 An''how were that?"
16596An''how were un doin''that now?
16596An''how''d un like t''be ridin''one o''them cakes o''ice out there, an''no way o''reachin''shore?
16596An''how''ll we be findin''th''owner?
16596An''how''s th''folk findin''th''fur?
16596An''if she do n''t go?
16596An''th''Lard lets angels come sometimes t''see th''ones they loves, do n''t He, mother?
16596An''what does un do?
16596An''what does you do?
16596An''what may salvage be, sir?
16596An''what says your father?
16596An''what''s he doin''here?
16596An''what''s th''day o''th''month?
16596An''what''s th''signs o''fur? 16596 An''where now?"
16596An''where were I?
16596An''where were that?
16596An''why were n''t you askin''she t''come back with un th''day?
16596An''you are thinkin''he''ll have_ time_ t''come here wi''all th''places t''go to? 16596 And am I to hunt it this year, sir?"
16596And did Santa Claus come?
16596But He does?
16596But how could all this ha''been happenin''t''me now?
16596But how''ll we be gettin''un now?
16596But,she insisted,"he''s an angel now_ if_ th''wolves killed un?"
16596D''ye know anything about this coast?
16596Did Ed say now as Bob were gettin''all that fur?
16596Do you speak Eskimo?
16596Does un think Bob''s angel ha''been comin''by night while we sleeps, mother? 16596 From Eskimo Bay, sir, an''what place may this be?"
16596Has un heard, sir, how mother an''Emily an''father is?
16596Ho, Bob, back ahead o''me, be un? 16596 How far did un go under th''ice?"
16596How''ll that suit th''maid?
16596Hunt deer?
16596I knows''tis not Bob,she sobbed,"but where is my lad?
16596Mother, an''th''wolves killed Bob, wo n''t he be an angel now?
16596Not t''-night?
16596Now what be that black on th''snow handy t''th''rock?
16596Now what be_ this_? 16596 Now what un makin''love t''me for?"
16596Now who''s been here, lads?
16596Now, where can Wolf Bight be?
16596Now, who''ll be goin''? 16596 Now,"said Dick,"what''s t''be done?
16596Oh,broke in Emily,"an''do n''t un_ really_ think Bob''s t''come?
16596Santa Claus? 16596 This side o''th''river or t''other?"
16596Well, Ungava Bob,the factor greeted,"are you getting tired of Ungava and anxious to get away?"
16596Well, how far down ought we t''go, d''ye think, before we lays up?
16596Well,asked Dick, when Ed was finally seated,"how''d th''mother take un?"
16596Were this in_ winter_?
16596What devilment has th''Injun been doin''? 16596 What does I do?
16596What does I do? 16596 What mean you, man?
16596What stove?
16596What were Bob havin''two axes for?
16596What were the yarn, now?
16596What''s th''matter with goin''down in th''fall before th''ice blocks th''coast? 16596 What''s un think, Bill?"
16596When you wantin''t''go, lass?
16596When''ll I be comin''for un, Bessie?
16596Where am I?
16596Where be un?
16596Where did you hail from? 16596 Where now be that?"
16596Where un hail from?
16596Where''d ye land, now?
16596Where''s yer other fur?
16596Which way should they go?
16596Who is it?
16596Who may th''Mingen Injuns be, now?
16596Who un talkin''to?
16596Whose now may un be if not Bob''s?
16596Why,she asked,"had he two axes?"
16596Ye sees steam, o''course, an''what else could ye see, now?
16596After an awkward pause Bob asked:"What un do wi''th''stove, John?"
16596An''be he a good un?"
16596An''be there much signs on th''Big Hill trail?
16596An''be un a good un?"
16596An''how could ye live wi''th''Injuns?
16596An''where has he gone?
16596An''where''d you be comin''from now?"
16596An''why has th''Injun been leavin''th''fur here an''not comin''for un again?
16596Are you a good traveller?"
16596As I was sayin''----""An''he took after ye without bein''provoked?"
16596Be that a threat?
16596Be there much marten signs?"
16596Bide here th''night, ca n''t un?"
16596Bob asked once,"What''s to be done with Chealuk?"
16596But then he asked himself, would his mother approve of this?
16596But why were Bob leavin''wi''th''stove?
16596Ca n''t un come''long, John?"
16596Ca n''t un wait a week or two?"
16596Could the Nascaupees have found his camp and carried his things away?
16596Does un mind that?"
16596Ed, would un_ mind_ goin''?"
16596Finally he asked,"When ye goin''back t''th''river, Bob?"
16596Got him here?"
16596Had the half- breed been suddenly smitten by his conscience?
16596Has she been lonesome without her daddy?"
16596Has you seen any signs o''Santa Claus bein''here?"
16596He entered the cabin with the old greeting--"An''how''s my maid been wi''out her daddy?"
16596How does un look t''be fierce an''scare folk?"
16596How far is that from Eskimo Bay,--a hundred miles?"
16596How in the world did you ever get across the country?
16596How is un?"
16596If ye ai n''t goin''back till Wednesday why do n''t ye try''em?
16596Is that a bargain?"
16596Is there anything yer wantin'', Mary?"
16596Now where be Bob?
16596Now why did he_ leave_ th''fur?
16596Now, what''s your true name, lad?
16596Now,"he continued when they were seated,"what do you think you''ll do?"
16596Once, late in November, she called her mother to her and asked:"Mother, how long will it be now an''Bob comes home?"
16596One day towards the last of May he asked Emily:"How''d un like t''go t''St. Johns an''have th''doctors make a fine, strong maid of un again?
16596One day when Douglas Campbell came over he found her very despondent, and he asked:"Now what''s troublin''you, Mary?
16596So what does I do?"
16596So, this was the place, but where was the tent?
16596Then to the half- breed:"An''what''s ailin''of ye th''evenin'', John?
16596Then, as a dismissal of the subject, the doctor, turning to Bob, asked:"Well, youngster, what''s the outlook for fur next season?"
16596Was it Bob they were after?
16596What did you say your name is?"
16596What has become o''my brave lad?"
16596What un cryin''for, now?"
16596What un tell such things for, Ed?"
16596What''s your name?"
16596When did you leave home?"
16596When he reached for a firebrand to light it Dick noticed what he was doing and asked good naturedly,--"Think t''smoke with us, eh?"
16596When he returned to the tilt Micmac John asked:"Gettin''much fur?"
16596When he was finally seated Mr. McPherson asked:"That was Sishetakushin''s crowd you came with, was n''t it?"
16596Where in the world, or what spirit land did you come from?
16596Where''d ye get th''deer''s meat?"
16596Why do n''t ye try it there, sir?"
16596Why had he not thought of all this before?
16596Why not go to sleep?
16596Why should he?
16596Why, for instance, he asked himself, did Micmac John steal the furs and then leave them in the tilt where they were found?
16596Will you keep them safe if I let you go with the Eskimos?"
16596Would Dick shoot him?
16596Ye took un, did n''t ye?"
16596Ye''d do murder, would ye?
16596Ye''d kill un, would ye?"
16596You wo n''t be gettin''lonesome now?"
16596You''re the young fellow just arrived, I suppose?"
16596[ Illustration:"He held the vessel steadily to her course"]"What land may that be?"
16596an''what''s_ this_?"
16596exclaimed Richard,"what may_ that_ be?
16596he exclaimed,"an''has th''old rascal been forgettin''t''come again?
20059''Ere I ham, and''ow are you hall?
20059After you raised them from pups, and always had them, and feed them and everything?
20059Am I going to haul this rig?
20059And ca n''t we set other traps?
20059Are rabbits so strong?
20059Are these all rabbit tracks?
20059Are they cross?
20059Are they wolf tracks or bear tracks?
20059Are you all warmed up, now?
20059Are you ready? 20059 But_ do_ you think she''ll come back?"
20059Ca n''t we get it?
20059Ca n''t we get to land?
20059Ca n''t we make a landin''somewhere, and wait for un to calm down?
20059Ca n''t you fix un and use un any more?
20059Ca n''t you use boats in winter?
20059Can we go around?
20059Did you ever shoot a wolf?
20059Do n''t the trout fight after you hook them?
20059Do n''t you bait it with anything?
20059Do they look like wolves?
20059Do you mean he''s been-- lost-- at-- sea?
20059Do you mean that haze that hangs over the water?
20059Do you mean walk on the ice when it comes?
20059Do you think I might see it now?
20059Do you think the ship will come back for me?
20059Do you think they will?
20059Does you mark that, Sophia? 20059 Feelin''good after yesterday''s wettin''and chillin''?"
20059For to- day?
20059Had n''t we better go back and wait until we''re sure?
20059Have you anything you think she''d like?
20059Having a rotten time?
20059Hear what?
20059How can we get from here without a boat?
20059How can you catch trout with everything frozen as tight as a drumhead?
20059How do you hold the rifle steady?
20059How long a trip is it?
20059How long will it likely be before the bay freezes?
20059How many dogs are there?
20059How''ll we carry it?
20059I wonder what''s up?
20059If the ship do n''t come,broke in Charley, suddenly startled into his old fear,"what_ can_ I do?
20059Is a lynx dangerous?
20059Is any one likely to come this way in a boat?
20059Is the boat wrecked?
20059Is this Double Up Cove, and are you Toby Twig?
20059It''s just like yours, is n''t it, Toby?
20059Looking for some one?
20059May I carry your rifle and try to shoot them if we see any?
20059May I go ashore in the boat?
20059May I go with you?
20059May I have a pull at the oars?
20059May I see the other one?
20059May I shoot?
20059Mother, how can we fit out the lad for clothes?
20059Not having a good time, eh?
20059Now what does you think o''the plan, Charley?
20059Now what shall we do with the seal?
20059Oh, can we snare them?
20059Perhaps we can get some game on the island?
20059See un?
20059Shall we be-- lost?
20059To the boat landin''?
20059Were you findin''the oars we caches on Swile Island?
20059Were you gettin''lost?
20059Were you gettin''your wood all hauled?
20059Were you sleepin''warm and snug the night? 20059 What can I tell his father?
20059What can we do now?
20059What can we do?
20059What can we do?
20059What do you mean?
20059What does you think of your new home, now? 20059 What is it?"
20059What is it?
20059What is you lads about?
20059What place is it?
20059What shall I do? 20059 What shall we do?"
20059What tracks are they?
20059What''ll I do when you go?
20059What''ll I do?
20059What''ll we do if it has?
20059What''ll we do now?
20059What''ll we do?
20059What''ll we do?
20059What''s that?
20059What''s that?
20059What''s to be done about un now? 20059 What''s your name?"
20059When shall we know whether we have caught anything?
20059When''ll you be gettin''home, Dad?
20059Where are the dogs?
20059Where are we going now? 20059 Where is your home?"
20059Where would we look?
20059Where you going?
20059Where you wantin''to go now?
20059Who, now, might that be?
20059Why did n''t the others fly after you shot the first ones?
20059Why do n''t you turn back and look for him?
20059Will he run when he sees us?
20059Will it be a long stop?
20059Will the wolf come back? 20059 Will you look for him, Captain?
20059Will you take me ashore? 20059 Will you turn back?"
20059Wo n''t that take a good while? 20059 Wo n''t you be home before then?"
20059You catch martens for the fur, do n''t you?
20059You just had a good snack of vittles?
20059You stay here, do n''t you? 20059 You''ll bide here the night, sir?"
20059You''re warm and snug?
20059You-- don''t mean-- you-- killed him?
20059''How much does you want for un?''
20059''Tis likely you gets plenty of deer''s meat?"
20059And does you hunt un?"
20059And has you duffle for sox?
20059And how does you ever get about in winter without un?"
20059And how does you like livin''at Double Up Cove?
20059And is it dangerous?"
20059And is there plenty o''deerskin on hand for moccasins?"
20059Charley hastened to join the sailors, and asked:"Are we going to make a port?"
20059Charley wondered how it was possible for him to remember where he had left them, and asked:"How do you ever find the traps where you left them?
20059Charley''s voice betrayed his thoughts, perhaps, for Skipper Zeb asked:"Not sorry now that the ship left you, be you, lad?"
20059Did you ever see a bear?"
20059Do n''t you know me?
20059Do you think it''s all right?"
20059Does you hear un?"
20059Has you been prayin'', Charley?"
20059How about that?"
20059How can I get home?"
20059How could Toby treat the incident with so little concern, and apparently with so little appreciation of the grave danger just ended?
20059How do you do it?"
20059How is you feelin''now, Vi''let?"
20059How long will it take us?"
20059How_ could_ I miss it?"
20059I suppose you''re Mrs. Twig and this little maid is your daughter?"
20059If we do n''t we''ll follow he till we does, wo n''t we, now, Charley?
20059Is n''t there something we can find to eat?"
20059Is there anywhere I could buy one with that?"
20059It was an achievement to be proud of, and what normal boy or man would not have been proud of it?
20059May I carry your shotgun when I go?"
20059Oh, what shall I do?"
20059Then we can travel with them?"
20059Toby sat up excitedly, and shaking Charley into wakefulness, asked:"Does you hear un?
20059Turning to Charley, he asked:"And how be you, lad?"
20059We wo n''t starve before then, will we?"
20059Were n''t you ever seein''a marten?"
20059What be_ you_ thinkin''to do?"
20059What can I do?"
20059What can I tell him?
20059What could it have been?
20059What indeed could he do?
20059What kind now would you be wantin''?"
20059What kind of meat does you eat where you comes from?
20059What would his mother say and feel when his father reached home alone?
20059What_ will_ become of me?"
20059When can we start setting them?"
20059Wise returned without him?
20059You''ll stay here till the ship comes back for me, wo n''t you?"
20059You''re feelin''well and hearty to- day?"
20059You''re not on the boat, and how can they find you?
29374''What was it, Ed, that happened you?
29374A trappin''partner, Shad? 29374 A trip up th''country?"
29374A trip with you, sir?
29374A-- kid?
29374Am I awake or is it just a dream? 29374 An''what you wantin''me t''say t''Bessie, now?
29374An''what, now, be an Injun doin''out there this time o''night? 29374 An''your mother would be worryin''about you; now, would n''t she?"
29374Any fur this trip?
29374Any fur?
29374Be it''Toobridge''or''Tumbridge,''sir?
29374Be that you, Bob?
29374Be you comin''far, an''be you goin''back wi''th''ship?
29374Be you sartin'', now, you seen something?
29374Be you sure, now, th''lads is dead?
29374Be you thinkin'', now, you can manage th''tilts?
29374But how about Ungava Bob? 29374 But how do you get air enough to breathe?"
29374But suppose they do n''t come around this way and do n''t find us?
29374But suppose we do n''t get off this island before the others come to look for us? 29374 But that was the capital you were to begin trading on?"
29374But there were another time-- I''ll tell you o''this, Shad, an''Dick do n''t mind?
29374But what do you think of trying to cross, and make a landing down there where the rock slopes?
29374Ca n''t we take the morning off to visit them?
29374Ca n''t you go back, now, with me an''Bill, t''help us up with our outfits? 29374 Ca n''t you remember, now?
29374Did you hear where''bouts they was huntin''?
29374Did you land him?
29374Do you know, Bob, there has not been a night since she died that I have not dreamed of Manikawan? 29374 Do you think that these things just happened, Bob?
29374Do you think they would be willing to let me go with them until their return here, if I gave them some tobacco?
29374Don''t you know me now, Shad?
29374Forgettin''a purpose?
29374Get them in the shop?
29374Have you quite recovered from your injury? 29374 He must have had some rattling adventures?"
29374How are Manikawan and her mother?
29374How is Manikawan, Bob? 29374 How many of the men of the South were there?"
29374How much was there?
29374How old a man is this Ungava Bob, and is that his real name, or is''Ungava''a title?
29374I left un there, did n''t I, Shad?
29374In th''first tilt above th''river?
29374In th''nu''th''ard or s''uth''ard?
29374In what way?
29374Is it really you, Bob?
29374Is it well with White Brother of the Snow and his friend?
29374Is n''t there danger of scurvy if we have nothing but salt pork to eat?
29374Is she a little sister?
29374Micmac? 29374 Mookoomahn?"
29374No rapids to- day?
29374Not Ungava Bob?
29374Now I''m wonderin'',said Dick, as they arose,"what she''s goin''back for?
29374Now, how about gettin''grub?
29374Now, what devilment were she up to? 29374 T''see me, sir?"
29374Then it is just a choice between drowning and starving? 29374 Well, Bob,"Shad asked finally,"have you decided to go with me for a trip into the country?"
29374Well, what do you think of it, Bob?
29374Well?
29374Were it night, now?
29374Were she as pretty as Bessie, now?
29374Were th''strain at th''paddle too much? 29374 Were they goin''right back home?"
29374Were you ever noticin''how bad luck, when she strikes a man''s trail, follows him like a pack o''hungry wolves? 29374 What are we to do, then?
29374What birds do you get?
29374What did she say?
29374What happened to the little girl-- his sister?
29374What money did you lose, Bob? 29374 What speech were th''Injun maid tryin''t''get rid of, now?"
29374What was done to the half- breed Indian-- Micmac John, I think you called him?
29374What was the matter with those Indians, anyway? 29374 What were it, now?
29374What were she up to, now?
29374What you doin'', Bill, with your a dicky, now?
29374What you havin'', this cruise, Bill?
29374What you think of un?
29374What you think?
29374What''s she doin''there, now? 29374 What''s that, now?"
29374When was you havin''trouble with Injuns, now?
29374Where is he? 29374 Where the evil spirits dwell?"
29374Where''s Shad?
29374Who is Douglas Campbell?
29374Who were they?
29374Who? 29374 Why, Shad, what''s th''matter now?"
29374You an''who?
29374You gettin''any, Bill?
29374You''ve said a good many times that things do n''t happen by chance, but are brought about by the direction of the Lord; have n''t you, Bob?
29374?, Tenn.
29374An''where''s Bob an''Shad?"
29374An''you comes all th''way from Boston, now?"
29374And when will that be?"
29374And, after all, did Manikawan not worship the same God that you and I worship?
29374Are you angels from heaven, or really you?"
29374Be they in th''tilt?"
29374But dare any say He did not welcome her to His Father''s house?
29374But where did you drop from?
29374But why wern''t you shootin''at th''Injuns from th''canoe when they opens on you?
29374Come, Bob, what do you say?"
29374Did you make un out, Dick?"
29374Did you see the light of the Eternal City shining through its gates when they were opened to receive you?"
29374Do n''t you think that this combination of incidents points out to us our life work?
29374Do n''t you think they suggest that we are to unite our talents and so use them that we shall not only help ourselves but help others?
29374Do you hear my bones rattle when I move?
29374Do you really think I may be able to engage him to guide me on a two or three weeks''trip?"
29374Does you hear me?"
29374FINANCE COMMITTEE????
29374FINANCE COMMITTEE????
29374FINANCE COMMITTEE????
29374FINANCE COMMITTEE????
29374Foolish, was n''t it, to get frightened after it was all over?
29374Have you found the atuk?"
29374Here he drew from his pocket a stick of very black and very strong- looking tobacco, and holding it toward Shad, asked:"Does you smoke, sir?"
29374How now be we goin''t''pay un?"
29374How should he find them now?
29374How''d you find th''folks at th''Bay, Ed?"
29374How''d you like t''go, Bill?
29374How''d you make un, Dick?"
29374It is pretty awful, is n''t it?
29374It was not White Brother of the Snow sent to the torment of evil spirits?"
29374Look after her, wo n''t you?
29374Maybe now, she''s lookin''t''meet us t''help her?"
29374Me lyin''?"
29374Mrs. Gray and Emily cried a little, and often Emily would say:"I wonders where Bob is now, Mother, an''what he''s doin''?"
29374National Scout Commissioner, DANIEL CARTER BEARD,????
29374National Scout Commissioner, DANIEL CARTER BEARD,????
29374National Scout Commissioner, DANIEL CARTER BEARD,????
29374National Scout Commissioner, DANIEL CARTER BEARD,????
29374Or were they brought about by Divine direction?
29374Shall I put your things ashore?"
29374She was still standing where Ed had left her, and Dick asked kindly in Indian:"What message does the maiden bring to her white brothers?"
29374Suddenly Shad broke the silence and Bob''s thoughts with the question:"How would you like me for a partner, Bob?"
29374Take my hand and forgive me, wo n''t you?"
29374Tell she about th''Injun lass an''th''fine deerskin coat she''s givin''you?"
29374Then she recognised Tom Black''s voice, and heard Bessie asking:"Where''s Emily?"
29374Unless they gets scairt out by th''ha''nts in th''water--""The what?"
29374Vice- President, B. L. DULANY,???
29374Vice- President, B. L. DULANY,???
29374Vice- President, B. L. DULANY,???
29374Vice- President, DAVID STARR JORDAN,????
29374Vice- President, DAVID STARR JORDAN,????
29374Vice- President, DAVID STARR JORDAN,????
29374Vice- President, DAVID STARR JORDAN,????
29374Vice- President, MILTON A. McRAE,????
29374Vice- President, MILTON A. McRAE,????
29374Vice- President, MILTON A. McRAE,????
29374Vice- President, MILTON A. McRAE,????
29374WHITE, Chicago, Ill. Chief Scout, ERNEST THOMPSON SETON,????
29374WHITE, Chicago, Ill. Chief Scout, ERNEST THOMPSON SETON,????
29374WHITE, Chicago, Ill. Chief Scout, ERNEST THOMPSON SETON,????
29374WHITE, Chicago, Ill. Chief Scout, ERNEST THOMPSON SETON,????
29374What are we going to do about it?"
29374What d''you think, Dick?"
29374What do you say?"
29374What do you think of it?"
29374What is your name?
29374What kind of a fellow did the steward take him for, anyway?"
29374What then?"
29374What were it like?"
29374What would the fellows say now, if they were to see him-- the fellows who had known him in that former, happier life?
29374Where''s Shad?"
29374Where''s Shad?"
29374Will Manikawan minister to his friend as she would to him?
29374Will she see that no harm comes to him?"
29374Will there be a chance of my meeting them?"
29374You''ve really come?
29374he laughed, after breakfast,"I wonder what the fellows at home would say if they should see me now, playing the part of Robinson Crusoe?"
47128''An''my father''s bill is squared?'' 47128 ''An''that all your money in a lump would n''t buy you passage ashore?''
47128''An''your mother had her share?'' 47128 ''Ay, sir?''
47128''Ay,''says Sam;''but will you lie idle next winter?'' 47128 ''Did Doctor Luke tell you?''
47128''Does n''t you go t''church? 47128 ''Got any room for me?''
47128''How much you got, Sam?'' 47128 ''How much, sir?''
47128''Know what I found out from Doctor Luke?'' 47128 ''Laughin''at me, Tom?''
47128''Movin''away, Tom?'' 47128 ''Nex''winter?''
47128''No room for me?'' 47128 ''Rodney''s mine, is n''t she?''
47128''Sea- lawyers, eh?'' 47128 ''Sittin''out here all alone,''says Tom,''you been thinkin''a deal, you says?''
47128''Skipper Sam,''says Tom,''you''re rich, is n''t you?'' 47128 ''Tauntin''me again, Tom?''
47128''Tom,''says they,''what''s gone along o''you, anyhow?'' 47128 ''What you laughin''at?''
47128''What''s the matter with Bad- Weather Tom?'' 47128 ''What''s the price, Tom?''
47128''With me, Tom?'' 47128 ''You been thinkin''that money was n''t much, after all?''
47128''You wants this money paid t''your wife, Tom?'' 47128 ''You-- you--_will_ square it?''
47128''_ What?_''cried Sam. 47128 A cut o''bread, Billy?"
47128A dead man, gran''pa?
47128All alone?
47128All hands, sir?
47128All in a smother-- eh, Teddy?
47128All right, sir?
47128All the way, sir?
47128All well? 47128 An''gran''pa come along with you, did n''t he, Toby?
47128An''you''ve not repented, Toby? 47128 And all well over there?"
47128Any sign of un, Joe?
47128Any word o''Doctor Luke down north?
47128Anybody come across Ships''Run lately?
47128Anyhow, Billy,said he weakly,"you''ll take care o''me-- won''t you-- if the worst comes t''the worst?"
47128Are they all well?
47128Are you ready for home, Teddy?
47128As good as Billy Topsail''s off shank?
47128At Huddle Cove? 47128 Ay, Joe?"
47128Ay, Toby?
47128Ay-- is I, sir?
47128Ay?
47128Aye, kill un now, Billy-- ah, kill un right away now, wo n''t you, b''y? 47128 Aye?"
47128Bad- Weather West''s lad?
47128Been in the water?
47128Billy Topsail comin'', sir?
47128Billy,said he,"you''ll not tell what I said?"
47128But what_ for_?
47128Can I cross?
47128Can it be done?
47128Cap''n Saul, sir,he replied, his eyes popping,"the ice----""Sir?"
47128Cap''n Saul,said Archie, by and by,"will you be sailing to the s''uth''ard?"
47128Clever?
47128Cold, b''y?
47128Come across the Bight?
47128Could you manage with nine, Billy?
47128Did my gran''pa gimme his clothes?
47128Did my mother send you?
47128Did n''t I tell you,he sobbed, his eyes blazing,"that I knowed my mother''s ways?"
47128Did you fetch un a fatal wallop?
47128Did you kick the drifts?
47128Do n''t you think, sir,said he, doubtfully,"that we''d best go back?"
47128Do you think so?
47128Eh, Toby?
47128Eh, Toby?
47128Eh, sir?
47128For what, Billy? 47128 From Amen, Bob?"
47128Go?
47128Go_ where_? 47128 Have you a notion, b''y?"
47128Have you not heard about Tom?
47128Hear that, Billy?
47128How does she come to be at Poor Luck Barrens?
47128How does you?
47128How''d you like it?
47128How''s Toby?
47128How''s the ice on the Arm, Billy?
47128Is I been doin''well, sir-- as you''d have me do?
47128Is I doin''as well as my father done at my age?
47128Is I doin''well?
47128Is I t''go, mum?
47128Is I, gran''pa?
47128Is it right?
47128Is n''t I doin''pretty well for me, gran''pa?
47128Is n''t got no father, is you, Toby?
47128Is n''t got nobody but gran''pa t''fetch you up-- is you? 47128 Is she broke loose?"
47128Is she sleepin''still?
47128Is she sleepin''still?
47128Is that you, Doctor Luke, sir?
47128Is you afeared, Terry?
47128Is you apt?
47128Is you dead?
47128Is you dead?
47128Is you dead?
47128Is you safe, sir?
47128Is you strong enough t''kill a dog?
47128Is you takin''orders or is n''t you?
47128Is you tellin''me the truth, gran''pa? 47128 Is you there, Billy?"
47128Is you-- is you wet through, Toby?
47128It was discoloured?
47128Jack Hulk, you say? 47128 Laughing, Billy?"
47128Mad Harry?
47128Make it ten days, sir?
47128May I go, sir?
47128Me? 47128 Mm- m?
47128Mm- m?
47128Mm- m?
47128Must he do this thing?
47128Never you mind----"Wo n''t she?
47128No?
47128No?
47128No?
47128Not back? 47128 Now,"thought he,"what''s this?"
47128Now?
47128Queer, is n''t it?
47128Queer?
47128Quite sure about that?
47128Shall I come, sir?
47128Shall we try it, Archie?
47128She''ll move t''sea in this wind, wo n''t she?
47128Sir?
47128Skipper James,said Doctor Luke, in the kitchen, across the lamp- lit, devastated supper table, an hour later,"what''s the health of Amen Island?"
47128Somebody recommend an axe for this complaint?
47128Something queer? 47128 Sorry you came, Billy?"
47128Still, Cap''n Saul, is there any chance----"Why?
47128Surely you is n''t a pullin''little coward, is you? 47128 Thank- the- Lord Cove?"
47128Thanks?
47128That you, Bob?
47128That you, Jonathan?
47128The knife? 47128 This here ice, sir----""_ Sir?_""This here----""SIR?"
47128This here ice, sir----"_ Sir?_"This here----"SIR?
47128This here little job I''m doin''now?
47128Up from Laughter Bight, Bob?
47128Was it frost- bitten?
47128Was there a definite line between the discolouration and what seemed to be sound flesh?
47128We''ll tell Doctor Luke----"Yes; but what if Doctor Luke is n''t back in the morning?
47128Well, Billy?
47128Well, sir,said Archie, one day,"how you getting along?"
47128Well, then,Bob burst out,"what in thunder is you puttin''an edge on your axe for out here in the frost by candle- light at this time o''night?"
47128Well, who''s Doctor Luke?
47128Well,_ what_ you goin''t''kill?
47128Wh- wh- where''s Tom?
47128What about, son?
47128What colour?
47128What do you think, Billy?
47128What do_ you_ say?
47128What does he do it for?
47128What does it say?
47128What for, Tom?
47128What for?
47128What happened?
47128What is it?
47128What is it?
47128What is your job?
47128What say, Billy?
47128What say, son?
47128What say?
47128What sort of a sore finger?
47128What was clever?
47128What was that now?
47128What you goin''t''look for?
47128What you think of un, Bill?
47128What you usually use, Tom?
47128What you want it good an''sharp for?
47128What''ll I do now?
47128What''s gone wrong along o''you?
47128What''s that, Archie?
47128What''s that?
47128What''s the ice on Ships''Run?
47128What''s the matter with the Little Fiddler?
47128What''s the matter with the dogs, Billy?
47128What''s this mirth?
47128What, Billy?
47128What_ is_ it?
47128When did you find out, sir?
47128When shall we start?
47128Where is he?
47128Where''s Toby?
47128Where''s Tom Land?
47128Where''s Tom?
47128Whereabouts, Bob?
47128Who done that?
47128Who done that?
47128Who is she?
47128Who killed un?
47128Who''s sick?
47128Who''s skipper here?
47128Who''s that, Billy?
47128Who''s that?
47128Who? 47128 Who?
47128Who? 47128 Who_ is_ that man?"
47128Who_ is_ you goin''t''kill?
47128Whose dogs?
47128Why not?
47128Will he be as good as new, sir?
47128Will he?
47128Will it be you that''s t''use the knife?
47128Will the Arm be free in the morning?
47128Will you be usin''the knife, sir?
47128Will you save him, Jonathan?
47128With an axe?
47128Would you?
47128Yes; but surely----"If''twere mortification, sir, would n''t you cut that finger off?
47128Yes; but, sir----"Is n''t you got no sense at all? 47128 You can patch un up, sir?"
47128You cherish that finger, Terry?
47128You did n''t fetch your axe, did you, Billy?
47128You does, b''y? 47128 You is n''t afeared, is you?"
47128You living yet?
47128You see my whip anywhere?
47128You usually do your doctorin''with an axe?
47128You wait here, Toby, an''mind Billy and Archie, wo n''t you, while I''m gone?
47128You would, in a tight place, would n''t you, Billy, b''y?
47128You''ll put it off, sir?
47128You''re thinkin''he''d make a nice little morsel o''dog meat?
47128You''ve need of it, eh?
47128You''ve no fancy for the passage?
47128_ Whisper_ of wind?
47128''G- O- N- C- R- A- S.''What in the world is that?
47128''Tis what he calls one of his fiddle fingers, sir, an''he''s holdin''out----""Cut it off?
47128''_ What!_ You''re not_ knowin''_, eh?
47128A dead beat?
47128A girl?
47128A jail- bird?''
47128A man must take a chance-- what?
47128A rascal?
47128A scoundrel?
47128A thief?
47128Afraid?
47128Ah, well, said he, what matter?
47128Ah, well, then, would he trust his dogs?
47128Already?
47128An''her cheek, sir-- an''one ear, sir----""What''s the night?"
47128An''might Billy Topsail drive the team?
47128An''the moon----""You did n''t cross the Bight?
47128An''then----""Ay, Billy?"
47128An''they''d send the news up an''down the coast from Our Harbour-- wouldn''t they, Billy?"
47128An''what does I find you doin''?
47128An''why?
47128An''you was all on fire t''come t''the ice, was n''t you, Toby?"
47128And so for your good, and the good of the men, and the good of the firm, I have decided that----""That I may go sealing?"
47128And then Teddy plaintively again:"My mother said----"Billy Topsail''s rebuke was gentle:"You is n''t goin''t''cry for your mother, is you?"
47128And then Toby, whom Archie had in hand, keeping him moving, spoke in alarm:"Where you goin'', gran''pa?"
47128And to Cap''n Saul:"How long will you give me, sir?"
47128And what now?
47128And yet again:"Is you dead?"
47128Another slice o''pork, Doctor?"
47128Any sign o''Doctor Luke yet, Joe?"
47128Archie put in:"May I go, Cap''n Saul?"
47128Billy Topsail shouted:"Can you make it, sir?"
47128Billy was confronted by a cryptogram:_ Dokr com quk pops goncras i m ferd_"What do you make of it?"
47128But leaping thus-- alert and agile and daring-- a man might---- Might?
47128But the mail- man, old Bob Likely, with his long round-- the mail- man, where was he?
47128By and by Billy asked:"Was it you put the letter in the cleft stick?"
47128CHAPTER XLI_ In Which a Dead Man is Made to Order for Little Toby Farr_"Could n''t you find none?"
47128Ca n''t you guess it, Billy?"
47128Camp for the night?
47128Conscience?
47128Cracker had intended no mischief, had he?
47128Day''s work done?
47128Did n''t it seem that way t''you, Archie?"
47128Did n''t you have them there supplies?''
47128Did you mark it?
47128Did you see a line of demarcation?"
47128Do n''t you think so, Billy?
47128Do n''t you''low so?"
47128Does you ever think o''that?
47128Dogs?"
47128Eh, Billy?"
47128Eh, Toby?"
47128Eh, Toby?"
47128Eh, Toby?"
47128Eh, lad?"
47128Eh?
47128Everybody else well on Amen Island?"
47128Follow Cracker?
47128Food?
47128Have you?"
47128Hear me?
47128How can I say a week or ten days?
47128How can I tell where the ice will go?"
47128How long must a man wait?
47128Huh?
47128Hungry?
47128I seed a case, sir, when I were off sealin''on the----""Was the finger bruised?"
47128If Doctor Luke could do that, why could not Billy Topsail learn to do it?
47128Is n''t I, Toby?
47128Is n''t you clothed?
47128Is n''t you fed?
47128Is n''t you got a parson and a schoolmaster?
47128Is n''t you got no conscience?''
47128Is n''t you housed?
47128Is n''t you, Toby?"
47128Is that what they learns you there?
47128Is the ice broke loose?"
47128Is you rested?"
47128It is n''t jus''t''hearten me, is it?"
47128Jus''the way they done when ol''Bad- Weather West was cast away-- eh, Billy?
47128Know what he told me?
47128Labour?
47128Look here, Billy-- what''s F- E- R- D?
47128Me?
47128Me?"
47128Me?"
47128Mm- m?
47128Mm- m?
47128Mm- m?"
47128Must they put foot on it?
47128My mother says----""You is n''t timid, is you?"
47128No?
47128No?
47128Old Sam''s brother, is n''t he?
47128P- O- P- S. What''s that?"
47128Pop''s----_''What now?
47128Released from the wolfskin bag and heartened by Billy''s laughter, Teddy Brisk demanded:"Was it Cracker?"
47128Rescue?
47128Seals?
47128Somebody here?
47128Something out of the way?
47128They must be skiffs from Walk Harbour an''Skeleton Cove an''Come- Again Bight searchin''this floe for we-- eh, Billy?"
47128They''re not feastin'', is they?
47128Timothy Light?
47128Was he workin''north, Bob?"
47128Was it ten below?
47128Was it too high?
47128Was there never to be any food?
47128Well, what sort of an education had Archie Armstrong had?
47128Well,"he yielded--"if you will----""You, too, Billy Topsail?"
47128Well,''says he to Sam,''how much?''
47128What did it portend?
47128What did ye buy?
47128What do you think, Bob?"
47128What does it sound like?"
47128What happens?
47128What is it?"
47128What is you?
47128What next, anyhow?
47128What shall we do about it?"
47128What shall we do?"
47128What sort of sickness could she be afraid of?"
47128What the mischief was the matter?
47128What the mischief was the matter?
47128What was it Tommy West had said?
47128What was the direction of this swift melting?
47128What was the man up to?
47128What was the matter with the dogs?
47128What was this?
47128What was this?
47128What will ye pay for?
47128What woman?
47128What would happen to Cracker?
47128What would happen to a man under there, Billy?"
47128What you fellers want, anyhow?
47128What''ll you give for my seat in the boat?''
47128When was that?"
47128Where is he?"
47128Where is it?"
47128Where was Toby?
47128Where''s the letter?"
47128Who can?
47128Who is I?
47128Who was in the way?"
47128Why not kill the dogs?
47128Why not?"
47128Why should Doctor Luke do these things?
47128Why should the writer of this be afraid?
47128Why?
47128Will that do ye?"
47128Will you grant that I''d earn a hundred and fifty dollars a year if I lived?''
47128Will you grant that I''d live t''be as old as you?''
47128Will you pay two thousand dollars for my seat in the boat?''
47128Wo n''t you?"
47128Wrong?
47128You bound over, sir?"
47128You come across from Candlestick?"
47128You know all about that sort of thing, do n''t you, Billy?"
47128You mind the time, sir?"
47128You think a woman wrote the letter?
47128You wanted ol''gran''pa for company, did n''t you?
47128You''ve plenty of dogs in Tight Cove, have n''t you?"
47128said he, suspiciously;"what you doin''out here in the frost?"
19981''Docks,''says the skipper,''what''s the matter with they folk, anyhow? 19981 ''Is you gone an''forgot,''says I,''about Jagger?''
19981''Is you?'' 19981 ''Skipper Jim,''says I, lookin''in his blood- red eyes, an''then t''the breakers,''what you goin''t''do?''
19981''Skipper Jim,''says I, one day,''what_ is_ you goin''t''do?'' 19981 ''Skipper,''says I, when they come aboard,''_ is_ it the smallpox?''
19981''Tis t''you, first of all, Davy,she protested, quickly,"that I''m wishin''t''be helpful; an''then t''him, an''then t''----""T''who?"
19981''Twould not be a better world, thinks you?
19981''What ship''s that?'' 19981 ''What''s found out?''
19981''What''s the meanin''o''that, Docks?'' 19981 ''What''s took you, you fool?''
19981''What''s took you?'' 19981 ''Where you goin''?''
19981A book?
19981A grief? 19981 A holy thing?"
19981Afeared o''hell?
19981Ah, come,I pleaded;"what is it, dear?"
19981Ah, is_ that_ where it hurts you? 19981 Alive?"
19981All the time?
19981An'', now, what, lad,he inquired with deep interest,"is you thinkin''the mother would do?"
19981An'', pray, who is they?
19981An''Bessie?
19981An''for me?
19981An''labour?
19981An''only me? 19981 An''she''s waitin''there for you?"
19981An''then?
19981An''was you-- was you--_cotched_?
19981An''we was sort o''wonderin'', was n''t we, Skipper Tom,another put in,"how much this doctor would be askin''t''go over an''cure un?"
19981An''what did you do then?
19981An''what did_ you_ say, lad?
19981An''what is it?
19981An''what word,I asked,"might that word be?"
19981An''what, zur,I asked,"shall I tell my sister for you?"
19981An''why, dear?
19981An''will you try t''sleep, now?
19981An''would mind tellin''us,he continued, his voice now touched with passion,"what''s_ come_ o''that damned craft?"
19981An''writin''something on a bit o''paper,she went on, pulling at her apron, and looking down,"an''gluin''it t''the bottle?"
19981And does he talk?
19981And how are_ you_?
19981And is this the rheumatiz the Prompt Exterminator is to cure, Sammy?
19981And now, my girl,said the doctor,"what''s what?"
19981And was there no fall on the rock, at all? 19981 And what is it?"
19981And what shall I sing, lad?
19981And what, my child,asked the doctor, sympathetically,"may be the matter with you?"
19981And why?
19981And-- you were asking about my fee-- were you not? 19981 And_ how_ did it come?"
19981Ay, Davy?
19981Ay, Davy?
19981Ay, dear?
19981Ay, sir?
19981Ay, zur?
19981Ay,I whimpered, for I was deeply agitated;"what you lookin''for?"
19981Ay?
19981Ay?
19981Ay?
19981Ay?
19981Bessie Roth,said I, severely,"what''s come upon you?"
19981Bessie,I said, with heat,"is you gone mad?
19981Better?
19981But one?
19981But you''re not wanting to go to bed?
19981But, David-- the doctor- woman?
19981But----"You''re_ wantin''_ her, is n''t you?
19981Ca n''t you see how''twas? 19981 Charge?
19981Could n''t make a shift at it?
19981Cure un?
19981Dad,Jacky demanded,"did n''t the Lard kindly send a switch o''wind from the sou''east t''save you oncet?"
19981Dad,Timmie asked, sorrowfully,"is you been askin''Davy t''read that letter?"
19981David,said my poor mother, her voice breaking with sudden alarm,"have you been talking much with him?
19981Davy, dear, my little son,she will whisper in my ear,"are n''t you glad that you, too, are dead?"
19981Davy, lad,she whispered, bending close, so that she could look into my eyes, which wavered,"is you listenin''?"
19981Davy,he whispered,"you is n''t got that letter_ aboard_ o''you, is you?"
19981Davy,my sister called,"is you hurt?"
19981Davy,she asked, anxiously,"where have you been?"
19981Davy?
19981Did n''t you?
19981Did you?
19981Doctor Luke?
19981Does n''t you think she is?
19981Does you not hear?
19981Does you think,Timmie pursued,"that He''ll turn His hand_ again_ t''save you?"
19981Does you think,she asked, looking away,"that he will be back"--she hesitated--"the morrow?"
19981Eh, Davy?
19981Eh, man? 19981 Eh?"
19981Eh?
19981Five days?
19981Fo''c''s''le?
19981For her father t''come?
19981For me?
19981For their sons?
19981Go''way?
19981Happy? 19981 Happy?"
19981Has I got it right, zur?
19981Have you another?
19981Have you, now?
19981He is n''t come through the tickle, have he?
19981Hear that?
19981Hell, Mary?
19981How long, oh, how long?
19981How was I to know?
19981How was you t''know?
19981I been thinkin'', since,I faltered, floundering in search of a simile,"that you''re like a-- like a----""Like what?"
19981Is I right,pursued my father, his voice rising,"in thinkin''the gov''ment pays you t''tend the sick o''this coast?"
19981Is I right,said my father, bending close to the doctor''s face,"in thinkin''you says you_ wo n''t_ come ashore?"
19981Is I? 19981 Is he t''stay, now?
19981Is he?
19981Is it you, mama?
19981Is it you, zur?
19981Is n''t he, now? 19981 Is n''t you give a thought t''the crew?"
19981Is n''t you hearin''me? 19981 Is n''t you?"
19981Is that he?
19981Is we right, doctor,said Skipper Tommy,"in thinkin''you knows she lies desperate sick?"
19981Is you afraid?
19981Is you askin''me t''fetch that sick woman aboard this here ship?
19981Is you awake?
19981Is you better, this even, sister, dear?
19981Is you forgettin'',I demanded,"that I''m your brother?"
19981Is you forgot what I told you?
19981Is you goin''on?
19981Is you goin''t''be good?
19981Is you goin''t''get married?
19981Is you kissed me yet?
19981Is you listenin'', zur?
19981Is you sayin''_ that_?
19981Is you sorry for me an''Davy an''the lass?
19981Is you spoke t''the twins?
19981Is you sure he does?
19981Is you sure he''s wantin''me?
19981Is you sure?
19981Is you sure?
19981Is you the doctor?
19981Is you thinkin''o''_ she_, Davy?
19981Is you thinkin''so, Davy?
19981Is you, dear?
19981Is you?
19981Is you?
19981Is you?
19981Is you?
19981Is you?
19981Is you_ got_ t''tell me, Mary?
19981Jacky,said the skipper, anxiously,"what was you thinkin''you heared, b''y?"
19981Lads,he asked, his voice shaking,"was it the mail- boat?"
19981Like flies?
19981Like what?
19981Listenin''?
19981Lookee, lad,said he, leaning over until his face was close to the face of Docks,"was_ you_ ever aboard the_ Sink or Swim_?"
19981Love?
19981Mama,he whispered,"where is you?"
19981Mama,said the child,"is your soul hidin''from me?"
19981Marry folk?
19981Mine?
19981Naught else?
19981No harm in writin''?
19981No harm?
19981No, zur?
19981No? 19981 No?
19981Not for sale?
19981Not one?
19981Not sick?
19981Not so?
19981Not you?
19981O''what?
19981Of the man at Runner''s Woe?
19981Oh, Bessie, where is you?
19981Oh, does you think, zur,she said, clasping her hands, a sob in her voice,"that you can cure me-- afore the fleet-- gets home?"
19981Oh, what?
19981Oh, why?
19981Oh,''tis_ out_ with me, is it? 19981 Oh,_ have_ you seed the skipper o''the schooner_ Sink or Swim_?
19981Oh,_ have_ you seed the skipper o''the schooner_ Sink or Swim_? 19981 Oh,_ was_ you?"
19981Oh,_ was_ you?
19981Once?
19981Pleasantly, I hope?
19981Sad, is it?
19981Sammy,he demanded,"where did this letter come from?"
19981Saved her, Doctor?
19981Scared to know? 19981 See that?"
19981She would have lain here the night had you come afore? 19981 She''ve been waitin''--since then?
19981She''ve not come?
19981Sick, is she?
19981Skipper Billy, sir, who-- who died-- like that?
19981Skipper Billy, sir,said Docks, his voice breaking to a whimper,"was they goin''t''hang the crew?
19981Skipper Billy, sir,said Docks, hoarsely, leaning into the light of the forecastle lamp,"does you say_ hang_?
19981Skipper Tommy saved?
19981Skipper Tommy,I asked, at last,"is_ my_ mother at the gate?"
19981Skipper Tommy,Tom Tot asked, and that most properly,"is you got leave o''the boss''s son?"
19981So he''s not coming?
19981Sure, an''why?
19981Sure, why not?
19981Sure, why, Bessie?
19981Sure,I asked, puzzled,"what''s that?"
19981T''him?
19981T''me, Bessie?
19981Tell me why not, wo n''t you?
19981The law?
19981The magistrate?
19981Think I''m going ashore in this weather? 19981 To hell?"
19981Waitin''?
19981Was it, now?
19981Was n''t you sayin''so, dad?
19981Was you drove far?
19981Was you sayin'',he asked,"t''fetch her aboard?"
19981Was you sayin'',my father quietly persisted,"t''fetch her aboard?"
19981Well,he admitted, his face falling,"I thinks and wonders a deal,''tis true, but somehow I do n''t seem t''----""Ay?"
19981Well----"Look you, dad,said Jacky,"is n''t you got in trouble enough all along o''wonderin''too much?"
19981Well?
19981Well?
19981What am I looking for?
19981What do you make, Jagger?
19981What do you think of that?
19981What does she mean, Davy,he inquired,"by her''lights''?"
19981What for?
19981What have he done, Davy?
19981What hundred- tonner?
19981What in the world,she asked,"is you thinkin''so dolefully of?"
19981What is it? 19981 What say?"
19981What say?
19981What say?
19981What they doin''at the gate? 19981 What they doin''there?"
19981What was it?
19981What you been doin''?
19981What you doin'',he demanded, scowling like a thunder- storm,"with that man?"
19981What you lookin''at, mum?
19981What you lookin''for?
19981What you thinkin''about?
19981What''s He gone an''done, now?
19981What''s gone amiss?
19981What''s it like, Mary?
19981What''s it like,I pleaded, lusting for the unholy knowledge,"in hell?"
19981What''s it like,I urged,"in hell?"
19981What''s that?
19981What''s that?
19981What''s they waitin''for?
19981What''s this atween the doctor an''you? 19981 What''s this?
19981What''s what?
19981What''s-- this you''re-- giving me?
19981What,said he, gravely,"did you dream of me?"
19981Where is he?
19981Where is you, Bessie?
19981Where you been? 19981 Where''s the man?"
19981Who is asking for me?
19981Who knows,he asked,"that''tis wonderful hard on they?"
19981Who told you that?
19981Why not, sister?
19981Why not?
19981Why not?
19981Why not?
19981Will no one stop him?
19981Will you have another?
19981Will you walk with me to- morrow, Davy?
19981Wo n''t you count a hundred?
19981Women, Skipper Tommy?
19981Wonderin''?
19981Would you mind puttin''some queer lookin''stuff in one o''they bottles o''yours?
19981Yes,he drawled;"but----""But what?"
19981Yes?
19981Yes?
19981You are still there?
19981You are the son,said he,"of the woman who died, are you not?"
19981You are waiting for me?
19981You is n''t goin''?
19981You is n''t goin''alone, is you?
19981You is n''t goin''away, is you?
19981You is n''t sick, is you?
19981You is n''t_ sure_ about that, is n''t you? 19981 You would n''t_ say_''twould be more''n po- lite, would you?
19981You''ll be singin''for me, mum, will you not?
19981You''ll not be rash, dear?
19981You''ll not come?
19981You''ll not go?
19981You''ll not leave your mother all alone, will you?
19981You''ll tell me, Davy, will you not? 19981 You''re always wanting to do some good thing, Skipper Tommy, are you not?"
19981You''re not sick, Tom?
19981You''ve not been eavesdroppin'', Davy?
19981You_ is n''t_ a man, is you?
19981Your lights?
19981Your sister?
19981Zur?
19981Zur?
19981_ She?_"Ay.
19981_ Was_ we?
19981''A scurvy trick,''says you,''t''leave old Skipper Jim an''Tommy Mib in the forecastle, all alone-- an''Tommy took that way?''
19981''An'',''says she,''is it not lonely, Skipper Thomas,''says she,''at the Rat Hole?''
19981''An''is that where they''ve the-- the-- smallpox?''
19981''Blood- poison in the hand?''
19981''But you, Skipper Jim,''says I,''_ you_; what_ you_ doin''this here for?''
19981''Dip- theria?''
19981''Has you a pain in your back?''
19981''Him?''
19981''Poor Luck Harbour, is it?''
19981''Right?''
19981''We is n''t hurtin''_ they_, is we?''
19981''What you goin''t''do about it?''
19981''What''ll I do?
19981''What''s that?
19981''Who says''tis the smallpox?
19981After a pause, he said hoarsely, to Skipper Billy:"They had the smallpox at Tops''l Cove, says you?
19981An''all hands lost?
19981An''does you know what happened?"
19981An''does you think us could get word to un?
19981An''if she tells me she''s a lone woman, and if she begins t''cry, what is I to do?
19981An''is you thinkin''I''d_ be_ a man an I could?
19981An''one was a kid?"
19981An''she would have been here the night?
19981An''t''Wolf Cove?
19981An''would n''t you, mum?
19981An''you,"he flashed, turning on the stranger,"could have saved her?
19981And are you brave?
19981And how had he come to that pass?
19981And it''s very hard to bear, is n''t it?"
19981And she is your sister?"
19981And the bruise was just there-- where it hurts so much?
19981And why?"
19981And you''ll try to be, at any rate, wo n''t you?
19981At Harbour Rim an''Highwater Cove they been dyin''?
19981But as you_ does_ happen t''have that letter in your jacket, you would n''t mind me just takin''a_ look_ at it, would you?"
19981But does you think I ca n''t_ try_ un all on_ meself_ afore I has un_ put_ in the book?"
19981But it hurts a good deal, sometimes, does it not?
19981But what shall I write?"
19981But what''s gone amiss along o''you?"
19981But you could n''t, says you?"
19981But, then, what concern have I, in these days, with the identical follies of dimples and kissing?
19981But----""No?"
19981Come now, speak fair; did they have it there?"
19981Come now; did they?"
19981Come, now, what do you make o''that?"
19981Could the doctor cure it?
19981Could you manage three dollars?"
19981Davy Roth,"she mocked, a sad little laugh in her eyes,"an''how,"said she,"did you manage to find it out?"
19981Davy, lad,"drawing me closer,"you will not judge me harshly?"
19981Did they send you that message?
19981Did they, now?
19981Do n''t be hard----""_ Hard_ on him?"
19981Do n''t it, Will?"
19981Do you know what that means?"
19981Do you understand, Davy?"
19981Does n''t you know that no man in his seven senses would fish the Last Chance grounds in a light southerly wind?
19981Does you hear me?"
19981Eh, Jagger?
19981Eh, lad?
19981Else what hope is there for us poor sons of men?
19981For Sammy, zur?"
19981For her?
19981Has you got the dip- theria?
19981Have you heared tell o''my poor wife?"
19981Here in her dear body?
19981Here like she used t''be?
19981Here?"
19981Hold her?
19981Holdin''on, did you say?
19981How are you?"
19981How did he come to do that?"
19981How did they die at Seldom Cove?
19981How does that there song go?
19981How long ago?"
19981I exclaimed, with heat,"what craft picked_ you_ up?"
19981I''ll pay; but----""Oh, will you?"
19981I''m not so very sick, am I?"
19981I''ve got you, Jagger, sure...''Tis no fit night for a man to go ashore... Fifteen, ten, did I say?
19981If he cared very much, he''d fetch her aboard, would n''t he?"
19981If he could?
19981Inform the skipper?
19981Is it you, Docks, that''s askin''me that?
19981Is n''t you l''arned that yet?
19981Is you hearin''me, Tom Tot?
19981Is you thinkin''I do n''t_ know_?
19981Is you wantin''this here letter read?"
19981Is you wishin''t''be helpful-- only t''me?"
19981It bein''from a lone woman?"
19981Kids?
19981Like flies, says you?
19981Mastery?
19981Me-- that nibbled once?
19981No?
19981Not goin''t''_ hang_ un?"
19981Now what do you make o''that?
19981Now, what do you think of that?"
19981Now,"dropping his eyes suddenly to my sister''s,"how much are you askin''for this here trade?"
19981Now-- what is it you want for Sammy and mama?"
19981Oh, there_ was_ a fall?
19981Oh, why did n''t you come?"
19981Oh, you would, would you?
19981Oh, you_ was n''t_, was n''t you?
19981On the Harbourless Shore, says you?
19981Rash?
19981Right on the point of the bone, there?"
19981So sick as that?"
19981Straight ahead?
19981Tell her----""Ay?"
19981Tell me, did they?
19981Thank you,"in a mollified way, as Skipper Jonas opened the door; and then, most engagingly:"May we come in?"
19981The Last Chance grounds?
19981The doctor?
19981Then,"What''s_ your_ name, zur?"
19981Then----"Skipper Tommy,"he implored, in agony,"how long-- oh, how long-- is you had this letter?"
19981They got it yet at Smith''s Arm?
19981They was drunk-- an''Jagger was drunk-- an''I asked un about my maid-- an''....""Would he tell you nothing?"
19981They was n''t, was they?
19981They would n''t be no hurt in me_ holdin''_ it, would they?"
19981Tired?
19981Tired?
19981Understand?
19981Was they goin''t''hang Skipper Jim if they cotched him?"
19981Was you hearin''me_ say_ I was?
19981Was you thinkin'', David Roth,"now so reproachfully that my doubts seemed treasonable,"that I''d_ want_ you to?
19981We is n''t draggin'', is we?''
19981What about they lakes o''fire?
19981What do you do, then?
19981What has he told you, David?
19981What is you t''do, you wants t''know?
19981What of the mail- boat doctor?
19981What should she sing?
19981What was it he said?
19981What you been doin''?
19981What you been doin''?"
19981What''s the matter with him?"
19981What''s the word you want to send?"
19981When do we start?"
19981Where is he?"
19981Where is you?"
19981Where''s Davy?"
19981Where''s that confounded pen?
19981Where''s that pen?
19981Where''s the paper?
19981Whereabouts?"
19981Who is you?
19981Who knows to whom the stricken soul-- downcast whether of sin or sorrow-- may appeal?
19981Why did n''t you come-- t''give the gift o''life t''she?"
19981Why not?
19981Why not?
19981Will you tell me, David Roth,_ what_ is I t''do?"
19981Wo n''t you, lass?
19981Worse than that, says you?
19981XXV A CAPITAL CRIME"You never set eyes on old Skipper Jim, did you, Skipper Billy?"
19981You could n''t do it nohow?"
19981You could n''t do it''ithout Jim bein''here, could you?"
19981You do n''t know-- you do n''t know--""What you been doin''?
19981You does, does you?
19981You was n''t frettin''about_ me_, was you, Davy?
19981You would not have me sad?"
19981You''d cast un off because he''ve sinned?
19981You''ll not wreck her, Timmie, will you?"
19981_ What_ would I have grow in the ground, says you?
19981says I, pointin''t''the scales,''have n''t you got no conscience?''
19981will you never open?"
19981you sung?
35338A four- footman place?
35338A means,he asked,"to what?
35338Adorable happy young people....Did you notice, dear, how she held that dainty little chin of hers?...
35338After the year before last?
35338After,he said thoughtfully and paused, and then resolved to have it over forthwith,"all you leave will be mine?
35338Again?
35338Alone?
35338And Marjorie?
35338And afterwards?
35338And dreaming? 35338 And how''s Sydney getting on with the music?"
35338And if it comes to that-- where''s my complexion?
35338And leave her?
35338And then perhaps a still bigger house?
35338And then,he asked,"what are we going to do?"
35338And then----?
35338And then? 35338 And then?"
35338And then?
35338And think?
35338And we are to talk?
35338And what do you think is the remedy?
35338And what then?
35338And what would that do?
35338And what''s Daffy doing?
35338And what,said Aunt Plessington,"do they all amount to?
35338And where do we stand? 35338 And yet is n''t it strange?
35338And you''ve come from them to_ this_.... Sir, what_ have_ you come for?
35338And your friend?
35338Are n''t you stiff?
35338Are you for meeting me then, Marjorie?
35338Are you still engaged to Magnet?
35338Are you sure?
35338Are you sure?
35338Because I''ve bought this picture?
35338Behrens?
35338Behrens?
35338Better?
35338Bring back here?
35338Busy?
35338But Madge?
35338But are n''t these rather good?
35338But do I love_ you_, Marjorie? 35338 But have n''t you flown before?"
35338But how_ can_ I, mother?
35338But is n''t this-- rather unusual? 35338 But the way?"
35338But what a pull they get, Trafford, if perhaps-- they do n''t, eh?
35338But what can one do?
35338But what can one do?
35338But what is there to be afraid of?
35338But what right has he to object?
35338But what was it all about?
35338But what?
35338But what_ is_ there to clear up, my dear boy?
35338But why?
35338But your work,she said;"your research?"
35338But,said Trafford incredulous, and with a friendly arm about his admirer,"is this tall young woman yours?"
35338But,she said,"think of the good things in life?"
35338But----Has it been love? 35338 But_ why?_""Oh!
35338Ca n''t you read it after supper?
35338Can we go on like this?
35338Champagne, m''am?
35338Come, Mr. Baynes,she said,"what do your people eat here?
35338Coming down?
35338Could n''t I write?
35338Daffy, dear, do you mind going in for the racquets and balls?
35338Daffy,he said,"what in the name of goodness----?"
35338Davis?
35338Do n''t believe what, dear?
35338Do n''t they?
35338Do n''t we know we''ve got to manage and control''em-- just as we''ve got to keep''em and stand the racket of their misbehaviour? 35338 Do n''t you know, Rag,"she said, forcing herself to speak----"Don''t you guess?
35338Do n''t you think this sort of thing is interesting?
35338Do n''t you_ see_ all you are throwing away?
35338Do n''t_ you_ play?
35338Do you mean that I can spend what I like?
35338Do you really care?
35338Do you remember?
35338Do you think that man means to come here again?
35338Do you think you''d better?
35338Do?
35338Does Marjorie care for me?
35338Does Marjorie like the life you are leading?
35338Does that matter? 35338 Does that strike you as a dull subject?"
35338Done?
35338Dowd,said Trafford after a fair pause,"What would you do if you were me?"
35338Eh, Magnet?
35338Eh?
35338Eh?
35338Er--''Dear Sir,''"Ought n''t it to be simply''Sir,''father, for an editor?
35338Er?
35338Find out-- what it all means, my boy?
35338For good?
35338For myself?
35338Forgot?
35338Go back to your laboratory?
35338Go right away?
35338Going to do-- when?
35338Grant me what?
35338Has it ever been answered?
35338Have n''t I promised?
35338Have you come here, sir, merely to bandy words?
35338Have you ever tasted turtle soup?
35338How are you, old Theodore?
35338How are you?
35338How can we?
35338How is that going to work?
35338How long has it been?
35338How on earth did all this happen?...
35338How?
35338How_ could_ you? 35338 I asked what_ you_ were up to, Daffy?"
35338I beg your pardon, Aunt?
35338I do n''t think the engine''s damaged?
35338I do n''t think you can have it,he said, and then as she remained silent,"Marjorie, do you know how much money I''ve got?"
35338I do n''t want to sleep yet; do you? 35338 I have done nothing----""Will you be off, sir?
35338I wonder, is Salvation the same for every one? 35338 I''ve been a good squaw this time, old man?"
35338I''ve been sleeping, Madge?
35338If Marjorie, or Mrs. Pope, or Daffy...?
35338If he_ chooses_ to do something here,said Durgan not too hopefully,"a man can....""What''s become of the little old room where we two used to work?"
35338Impossible?
35338In London?
35338Industrial development?
35338Is he discovering what you want to discover?
35338Is he hurt?
35338Is he hurt?
35338Is it comfortable?
35338Is it for long?
35338Is n''t it a lark?
35338Is n''t it amazing we did n''t smash our engine?
35338Is n''t it charmingly rural?
35338Is n''t it jolly?
35338Is n''t it rather a waste not to finish a university career?
35338Is n''t that rather what he would like to do, aunt?
35338Is n''t the engine rather wonderful?
35338Is she all right?
35338Is that the Pigmentation Solomonson?
35338Is that the heavier mallet?
35338Is there anything else so rich and beautiful in all the world? 35338 Is your friend hurt?"
35338It is n''t the money?
35338Leave you?
35338Lecturing?
35338Look here, mother, I_ may_ see Mr. Trafford again? 35338 Look here, sir, this is all very well,"he began,"but why ca n''t I fall in love with your daughter?
35338Look here,he said,"do you still love me, Marjorie?"
35338Looking around for something to take up?
35338Love-- still?
35338Madge, what''s up?
35338Marjorie,he asked abruptly,"are you sorry we came?"
35338Marjorie,he said,"did you really mean what you told me the other day, that there was indeed no hope for me?
35338Marjorie,he shouted,"d''you remember?
35338May we all come?
35338May we come?
35338Meaning-- if I were in your place?
35338Mrs. Trafford in?
35338Mummy?
35338My dear, do_ you_ understand?
35338No grub?
35338Nothing organized?
35338Nothing wrong?
35338Nothing?
35338Oh, where have you been?
35338Oh,said Trafford,"have n''t you heard that before?
35338Old man, why are you so prejudiced against a bigger house?
35338Or shall we just sit and talk until the next motor car kills us?
35338Partner,he asked,"will you play out my ball for me?
35338Pass- book?
35338Perhaps a gun?
35338Perhaps recently?
35338Perhaps we might see the Water Garden?
35338Rag,she said,"something''s the matter?"
35338Rom dear,said Mrs. Pope,"will you take the pot in and get some fresh tea?"
35338Shall I call him?
35338Shall I take a shot?
35338Shall we go and look at the aviary?
35338Shall we race?
35338She''s been?
35338Solomonson?
35338Tell me, Mr. Trafford,she asked,"was your wife beautiful like this when you married her?
35338That''s why you''ve never married, Sir Roderick?
35338The colours?
35338The house?
35338The leg''s better?
35338Then what''s going to happen?
35338Then why did n''t you say so?
35338Then_ what?_"Something sane.
35338Theodore getting on in school?
35338They''ve cleared that thing away?
35338To her?
35338Um,he said;"Is n''t this a bit stiff for little women''s brains?"
35338Up here?
35338Up there?
35338We''ll stay here, Mummy, eh?
35338Well, Marjorie,she said as she poured tea for the family,"did you get your laces?"
35338Well, is n''t it?
35338Well, may I speak to Mr. Trafford before he leaves Buryhamstreet?
35338Well, old Marjorie?
35338Well, ought n''t I to go to your father and give him a chance? 35338 Well, sir,"he said with a note of ironical affability,"to what may I ascribe this-- intrusion?"
35338Well, sir?
35338Well,his daughters heard him say, with a witty allusiveness that was difficult to follow,"so the Magnet has come to the Mountain again-- eh?"
35338Well?
35338Well?
35338Well?
35338What are we to do?....
35338What did I say?
35338What do you mean?
35338What do you say, Magnet? 35338 What do you think of it?"
35338What do you think of my chubby boys?
35338What has he done?
35338What have you?
35338What is it?
35338What next? 35338 What the devil are you doing?"
35338What things?
35338What things?
35338What would you do in my place?
35338What''s the book, Magsy?
35338What''s the book?
35338What?
35338What?
35338What_ is_ a Gawdsaker?
35338What_ is_ there to do?
35338Where are my boots?...
35338Where had we got to when we left England?
35338Where have you been?
35338Where''s the dressing- bag?
35338Where?
35338Where?
35338Where_ have_ you been?
35338Which is the favourite author now?
35338Who is it?
35338Who knows how long or how far? 35338 Who was Dahl?"
35338Who''s for a game of tennis?
35338Who''s here?
35338Who?
35338Who?
35338Why did we come here?
35338Why do n''t you?
35338Why not,he remarked,"have tea?"
35338Why not,she suggested,"wait a year?"
35338Why not? 35338 Why not?"
35338Why not?
35338Why not?
35338Why not?
35338Why not?
35338Why?
35338Why?
35338Will it affect your F.R.S.?
35338Will you come,he cried,"out of all this?"
35338Will you get some water?
35338Will you go back to your work?
35338Will you go, sir?
35338Will you let me come to your laboratory and work with you?
35338Will you let me come to your laboratory and work?
35338Will you try?
35338Wine of the country, yclept beer, red wine from France, or my wife''s potent brew from the golden lemon?
35338With your leg?
35338Wood?
35338Would you like to get out into that?
35338Yes, but_ why?_"Well, if they talk about things-- Discussions like this clear up their minds.
35338Yes,said Trafford as one who reconsiders it,"what would you do?"
35338Yes?
35338You believe in that libel on my dead father?
35338You did n''t know,said Trafford,"I had met you before?
35338You do n''t I hope, mind children?
35338You do n''t remember things you said-- when you were delirious?
35338You do n''t think that I''m shirking----?
35338You do n''t want me to?
35338You do n''t want to be a man?
35338You hear, sir?
35338You know of our little excursion for Friday?
35338You really mean that?
35338You want me to go?
35338You wish to see my husband?
35338You''ll live with us, mother?
35338You''ll take some tea?
35338You''re coming, mummy?
35338Your aunt goes to- morrow?
35338_ How?_"We must get out of its constant interruptions, its incessant vivid, petty appeals...."We might go away-- to Switzerland.
35338_ Is_ it a mother''s duty always to keep with her children? 35338 _ What''s the good of it?_"he said, echoing Trafford''s words.
35338_ Who?_The little voice laughed.
35338_ Wrong?_"You look pale and-- tired about the eyes,said Daffy, leading the way into the drawing- room.
35338( A voice:"_ Do_ we want them?")
35338( But what could it have cost him?)
35338A third effort gave"Wathall about, eh?"
35338After all, we''ve had a good time; is n''t it a little ungrateful to forget?..."
35338After this horror of rowdy intervention?
35338Alone?
35338Am I spinning it too fine, Madge?"
35338And about the whole position the question was,"what can one do?"
35338And also she was asking herself with futile reiteration why she had got into debt at Oxbridge?
35338And as for this devotion, what did it amount to?
35338And had this lasted the_ whole_ afternoon?
35338And how''s the Village Club getting on?"...
35338And since we do n''t know God, since we do n''t know His will with us, is n''t it plain that all our lives should be a search for Him and it?
35338And the wall behind--?
35338And the work----?
35338And then?
35338And was there not also an extraordinary egotism in this concentration upon his own purposes, a self- esteem, a vanity?
35338And what, in fact, did the whole thing amount to?
35338And when they grow up, what have we got for them?
35338And where is it now?
35338And you, Marjorie-- will you go indoors?"
35338And, after all, what good were they?
35338Are n''t you, Solomonson?
35338Are n''t you--_white?_""But why are you doing it?"
35338Are n''t you--_white?_""But why are you doing it?"
35338At the present time there are far more educated young women than educated young men available for research work-- and who wants them?
35338But are they?"
35338But did they see that it was clever?
35338But had she made it for him?
35338But here it seemed almost beyond her strength to achieve any sort of tiding over....( Why_ could n''t_ Mr. Pope lie quiet?)
35338But how about your wife being a deprived sort of woman?
35338But is n''t it what life is?
35338But suppose I come back?"
35338But we took it-- as people take flowers out of a garden, cut them off, put them in water.... How much of our daily life has been love?
35338But what was she to do, what was there for her to do?...
35338But what was she to do?
35338But why did n''t he begin to do it?
35338But why not fire a shot to let him know she was near?
35338But with you.... Have we, after all, got out of things at all?
35338But you_ do_ like it?"
35338But-- I say-- how did you get it?"
35338But----""You''re_ sure_ she was n''t kissing him?"
35338Ca n''t one-- converse?"
35338Ca n''t you leave me alone?
35338Can anything else matter,--after we are free from necessity?
35338Can you hold it if I use only one hand?"
35338Could Marjorie have heard?
35338Could that situation be saved?
35338Could they get to Switzerland?
35338Dear, you''re still only a young man; we''ve thirty or forty years before us-- forty years perhaps or more.... What shall we do with our years?
35338Did a man of Pope''s sort quite honestly believe that stuff?
35338Did all these things light up somehow to those dispossessed people-- from some angle she did n''t attain?
35338Did he think of Behrens and curse her under his breath as he entered that tiresome room?...
35338Did he want this great Renascence of the human mind because he was suffering from some subtle form of indigestion?
35338Did n''t I love you from the first, from that time when I was a boy examiner and you were a candidate girl-- because your mind was clear?"
35338Did old Booch over there, for example, guzzling oysters, cry at times upon the unknown God in the vast silences of the night?
35338Did she realize----?
35338Did the Traffords wish to run such risks?
35338Do n''t I want them to have education, to handle things, to vote like men and bear themselves with the gravity of men?
35338Do n''t I want women fine and sane and responsible?
35338Do n''t our instincts tell us?
35338Do n''t you see that unless I can have time for thought and research, life is just darkness to me?
35338Do n''t you think he''s a dreadfully amusing man, Mr. Trafford?
35338Do n''t you think on this special day, it might run to a biscuit?"
35338Do n''t you understand, Marjorie?
35338Do you know anything of the effects of polarized light, the sight of a slice of olivine- gabbro for instance between crossed Nicols?"
35338Do you mean to suggest that I''m reading like a child, who holds a book upside down?"
35338Do you remember how once or twice we''ve lunched at that Viennese place in Regent Street, and how they''ve given us stuffed Paprika, eh?"
35338Do you remember when we were young-- that life seemed so splendid-- it was intolerable we should ever die?...
35338Do you think Mr. Wintersloan will paint this?
35338Do you think that we were just cheated by instinct, that there was n''t something in it we felt and thought was there?
35338Does he do nothing but his researches?"
35338Does it?
35338Does n''t every wife disappoint her husband?
35338Does n''t something tell us all that if we let a woman loose with our honour and trust, some other man will get hold of her?
35338Does this life satisfy_ you?_ If it did would you always be so restless?..."
35338Does this life satisfy_ you?_ If it did would you always be so restless?..."
35338Eh?
35338Eh?
35338Eh?"
35338Eh?"
35338Give me my time again.... Why did you make me, and then waste me like this?
35338Had he as a matter of fact ever wanted it, except that he was glad to have it through her?
35338Had he really so greatly wanted Margharita?
35338Had he, Trafford, really put the thing so that Pope would listen?
35338Had her life no rights?
35338Had n''t she as a matter of fact wanted Margharita ten thousand times more than he had done?
35338Had she ever passed any trees?
35338Had she ever troubled to get to the bottom of that before?
35338Had she hitherto ever really cared what his ends might be?
35338Has Daddy gone to Wamping for some more cricket?..."
35338Have I got you?
35338Have n''t I lost you-- haven''t we both lost something, the very heart of it all?
35338Have n''t I watched?
35338Have n''t all we scientific men had''em in our laboratories working; do n''t we know the papers they turn out?
35338Have n''t we made rather a mess of your lawn?"
35338He does paint, does n''t he?"
35338He loved to discuss"Who are the Best Talkers now Alive?"
35338He was afraid of what might be Sir Roderick''s unspoken judgment on Marjorie and the house she had made-- though what was there to be afraid of?
35338How can I?"
35338How did you get me out of that scrape, Madge?
35338How do doctors tell when a man may stand on his broken leg?
35338How do you do it?
35338How had it begun?
35338How had she got on while he was away?
35338How is Sir Rupert?"
35338How long can it have been?"
35338How long has this been going on?"
35338How much of it mere consequences of the love we''ve left behind us?...
35338How much of real happiness had she and Trafford had together?
35338How much?
35338How much?"
35338How was he going to stay there?
35338How would they look?
35338How''s Rag?"
35338How''s every one?"
35338How''s the Babe?"
35338How_ could_ you?"
35338I can assure you I work sometimes like a man who is exploring a magic palace.... Do you know anything of molecular physics?"
35338I have been brooding upon this and brooding, but now I know....""But how?"
35338I know about telephones all right...."Why had they come here?
35338I mean we are to do this, and do it now, and nothing but sheer physical inability to do it will prevent my carrying it out.... And you?
35338I mean-- of course she was a beautiful girl and adorable and all that; but was n''t she just a slender thing?"
35338I say!--Is there such a thing in the world as a new- laid egg-- and some bread- and- butter?"
35338I say, do I strike you as talking nonsense?"
35338I say, would n''t it keep and improve this goose of ours if we put in a little brandy?"
35338I suppose they have n''t strings?"
35338I think he says such good things at times, do n''t you?
35338I wonder if you have ever been in the Natural History Museum at South Kensington, and looked at Ruskin''s crystal collection?
35338I wonder, which would you like?
35338I wonder----""What?"
35338I_ may_ really speak to him?"
35338If I did know, I would do it.... What are we to do?"
35338If I drag, can you help?"
35338If he wanted a girl he should have her, and if he had to take her by force, well, was n''t it his right?
35338If she did n''t take this by no means unattractive line, what was the alternative?
35338If they travelled second class throughout, and took the cheaper way, as Samurai should?...
35338Is it possible to get a doctor?
35338Is it?
35338Is life just all hunger and need, and are we left with nothing-- nothing at all-- when these things are done?...
35338Is n''t it jolly?"
35338Is n''t it perfectly lovely?"
35338Is that any answer?
35338Is that egg boiled?"
35338Is this salt- cellar English cut glass?"
35338It was like sticking a knife into herself to ask that, but she was now in a phase heroic enough for the task-- was he?
35338It was n''t so fast as this, eh?"...
35338It''s hard?
35338It_ is_ a puzzle, is n''t it?
35338Knife?
35338Knife?
35338Look here, Marjorie, what do you think you are up to with me and yourself?
35338Magnet answered:"Who wants things to eat on your birthday, Theodore?"
35338Magnet noticed Mr. Pope''s profound disturbance?
35338Magnet, Marjorie?"
35338Magnet, you are sufficiently kind to the New?"
35338Magnet,"Mrs. Pope went on as their emotions subsided,"that she really meant what she said?
35338Magnet?
35338Magnet?"
35338Magnet?"
35338Magnet?"
35338Magnet?"
35338Magnet?"
35338Make a pack of all the strongest food-- strenthin''--strengthrin''food-- you know?"
35338Metals?
35338Mr. Trafford''s exordium vanished from his mind, he was at a loss for words until spurred to speech by Mr. Pope''s almost truculent:"Well?"
35338Mummy, have you seen it?
35338Need he know?
35338Now you''ve begun the game you must keep it up?"
35338Now, the whole idea of her movement was to ask, how can we raise the standard of the national habits?
35338Of course, the tradespeople were rather enticing when first one went up----How much, anyhow?
35338Office?"
35338Old donkey cart?"
35338Or consider Sir Almroth Wright, did he speak well of women?
35338Or was he in some unsuspected way unhealthy?
35338Ought he to go into politics?
35338Out of nowhere, quite disconnectedly, would come the human, finite:"Do you remember----?"
35338Peter Dickery, William Dock-- I beg your pardon?"
35338Pope?"
35338Put business in two words and what is it?
35338Rom getting on?"
35338See?
35338See?
35338See?
35338See?
35338See?"
35338Shall we try again?"
35338Shall we walk to the Water Garden, and see if there are any white lilies?"
35338She felt there was more in this than a mere resentment at her persistence about the new house.... Why did n''t he go on with things?...
35338She had always assumed he was beyond measure grateful to her for his home, in spite of all her bills, but was he?
35338She lifted a fire- lit face to him and looked at him with steady eyes and asked----"Where?"
35338She ought, of course, never to have accepted Magnet.... She faced the disagreeable word; was she a liar?
35338She pounced suddenly upon Rex at her left with questions about the Keltic Renascence, was it still going on-- or what?
35338Should he maintain a colossal silence, continue his shielding, and let his friend marry the murderess saved by his perjury, or----?...
35338Should she go back to camp and get the tent?
35338Should she take a load of wood with her?
35338Some would- be humorist suddenly inquired,_ à propos_ of nothing:"What''s the fare to America, Billy?"
35338Tell me, make me your partner; it''s you who know, what are we doing with life?"
35338The slightest touch upon the pathetic note?
35338Then he plunged:"I wonder, mother, if it would put you out very much if I brought home a wife to you?"
35338Then she asked abruptly:"Why are you going away like this?"
35338Then she threw out,"Why should n''t Marjorie think, too?"
35338Then very touchingly to Mrs. Pope:"Mummy, shall we try a game of tennis with the New Generation?"
35338Then with a sort of naturalness that ought to have touched her he said:"Is it possible, Marjorie-- that I might hope?--that I have been inopportune?"
35338Then, almost breathlessly,"I wondered if there should be perhaps-- some one else?"
35338Theodore would like it, would n''t he?
35338Trafford?"
35338Trafford?"
35338Was Daffy really a better wife than herself?
35338Was he able to advise her?
35338Was he abnormal?
35338Was he on their side?
35338Was it fair that she should come back into the sheath because of this passion of his for a vast inexhaustible research?
35338Was it too much to grudge her four?
35338Was n''t most literature in the same class?
35338Was n''t she indeed entitled to travel first- class?
35338Was n''t she, after all, rather a mean human being?
35338Was n''t there some afternoon in the week when she sat and sewed, so that he might come and sit by her and read to her and talk to her?
35338Was she to blame for that?
35338Was the man satisfied?
35338Was there any case for the man at all?
35338Was there anything more pitiful?
35338Was there no way of evading that necessity?
35338We can get a sledge over the snow now?
35338Were they greater than he supposed?
35338Were they less happy now than they had been in the little house in Chelsea?
35338Were they living and moving realities when those others were at home again?
35338Were they murdering her?
35338What are they to do?
35338What are we doing to save them from the same bathos as this-- to which we have come?
35338What are we to tell them when they demand the purpose of all this training, all these lessons?
35338What can I say beyond that?
35338What can equal it?
35338What conceivably might they not say?
35338What could she say to straighten his back and lift his chin?
35338What did I say?"
35338What did it matter for the moment if the dim snow- heaps rose and rose about them?
35338What did they amount to now?
35338What do we need-- I mean the whole race of us-- kings and beggars together?
35338What do you say, Magnet?
35338What do you see me doing-- in the years ahead?"
35338What else was there for Marjorie to contemplate?
35338What had happened to the man?
35338What had happened to them?
35338What had her mother been hinting at?
35338What is the good of bread and health-- and no worship?...
35338What next?"
35338What next?"
35338What remains?
35338What shall we do with our lives and life?
35338What trees were these?
35338What was I saying?...
35338What was going to bring people to her house?
35338What was he going to do?
35338What was he thinking and feeling about her in the train?
35338What was her religion?
35338What was it exactly that Pope had said?
35338What was it he had said in reply to Pope?
35338What was it she had been thinking about?
35338What was that reality?
35338What was that?
35338What was the matter between himself and Marjorie that he could n''t even intimate his sense of their divergence?
35338What would she say?
35338What would they think?
35338What''s going to become of them all?"
35338What''s it like?"
35338What''s the correspondence between the altered angle and the substituted atom?
35338What''s the good of saying you do n''t care about the market- place, that_ your_ business is just to make bombs and drop them out of the window?
35338What_ did_ you do?...
35338When they ask what we are preparing them for?
35338Where have you been?"
35338Where is that brightness and wonder, Marjorie, and the pride and the immense unlimited hope?"
35338Where were they going altogether?
35338Where_ can_ we meet?"
35338Who knows?..."
35338Why after all should he concern himself with these riddles of some collective and ultimate meaning in things?
35338Why are we made for folly upon folly?
35338Why could n''t he take the gift of life as it seemed these people took it?
35338Why did n''t they always dress in flannels and look as fine and slender and active as the elder Carmel boy for example?
35338Why did she do that?
35338Why did they wear those ridiculous collars and ties?
35338Why did you get them together?"
35338Why do n''t they teach a girl to handle an axe?...
35338Why do n''t you come into Parliament?"
35338Why does this bit of clear stuff swing the ray of light so much out of its path, and that swing it more?
35338Why generally and in all sorts of things does Behrens come in?..."
35338Why had he been so violent, so impossible?
35338Why had he come just when he had, just as he had?
35338Why had she?
35338Why not"make money"for a brief strenuous time, and then come back, when Marjorie''s pride and comfort were secure?...
35338Why not?
35338Why not?
35338Why on earth should n''t I see her?"
35338Why she had got into debt?
35338Why should n''t I?
35338Why should n''t he make a supreme effort here?
35338Why should n''t that be tried?
35338Why should n''t we make another sledge from the other bunk and start down--""To Hammond?"
35338Why should n''t we?"
35338Why should n''t you?"
35338Why should one sell one''s brains any more than one sells one''s body?...
35338Why should we wait here on this frosty shelf outside the world?
35338Why should you weep?"
35338Why was he continually lapsing into these sombre, dimly religious questionings and doubts?
35338Why was it that the researches that had held him once, could hold him now no more?
35338Why was n''t she worth it altogether?...
35338Why, after all, should he go to Labrador at all?
35338Why, for instance, when you change the composition of a felspar almost imperceptibly, do the angles change?
35338Why, then, had she agreed to marry him?
35338Will you go with Christabel?"
35338Will you never understand?
35338Will you take a little Burgundy to- night, Mummy?"
35338Wintersloan?"
35338Would n''t the donkey go, poor dear?"
35338Would she ever see him again?
35338Would the girls be hustled and flattered into advantageous marriages, that dinners and drawing- rooms might still prevail?
35338Would the rise of the ground to the ribs of rock never come?
35338Would the world get them in turn?
35338Would they give him the brandy bottle and let him get drunk?
35338Would they go back to it all?
35338Would they in their turn for the sake of another generation have to give up fine occupations for mean occupations, deep thoughts for shallow?
35338Would they talk of her and Trafford?
35338Would you care----?
35338You do n''t mind my praising your wife?"
35338You do n''t play golf, do you, by any chance?"
35338You really_ do_ like it?"
35338_ Was_ it?
35338altogether away, that they find despair in the sky?
35338are n''t I feminist?
35338do n''t you see how you''re behind?"
35338he said cheerfully,"do you?"
35338he said, as one might speak to a child,"why are n''t you in bed?
35338he said, giving her an affectionate but sound and heavy thump on the left shoulder- blade,"got a kiss for the old daddy?"
35338he said, in a peculiar voice that sounded as though his mouth was full( though of course, poor dear, it was n''t),"how''s the First Class?"
35338he said,"in this last uncontaminated patch of air?
35338how can we get rid of bad habits and cultivate good ones?...
35338she said,"you home?"
35338what else can it be?"
35338what was it he needed?
35338what was she herself?
35338why do you always want to turn love into-- touches?...
35338why not?
35338why_ should_ the life of every day conquer us?
35338you are n''t crying, Madge, are you?"
35338§ 13 What are we doing with life?
35338§ 3"Shall we go and look at the aviary?"
14756A favour?
14756A financial man?
14756A tough place, eh? 14756 A-- woman-- for this thing?
14756All because two mighty fine enterprises reckoned they''d common interests which were jeopardised by rivalry, which was also-- foolishly?
14756An''you do n''t want her to?
14756And Standing?
14756And all this?
14756And if there was trouble? 14756 And is n''t it so?
14756And the rest?
14756And these fool criminals? 14756 And this little gal- child, with the same name as the mother who just meant the whole of everything life could hand you?
14756And this man saved your life, eh? 14756 And this man you figger to locate?
14756And this strong physical, and spiritual, and mental force? 14756 And to what extent?"
14756And what''re you doin''about it?
14756And you are glad-- of course?
14756And you are-- Father Adam?
14756And you called it a business arrangement?
14756And you got all-- those things?
14756And you guess he can be handled?
14756And you hate-- that way?
14756And you heard?
14756And you sail-- to- morrow? 14756 And you''ll get-- promotion?
14756And you''re wasting all this time driving me up to my apartments?
14756And you-- a girl-- are the emissary?
14756And--?
14756Anyway, you''ll take a cocktail with me? 14756 Are there others?
14756Are you talking that way just because you are a rival concern?
14756Astonish him?
14756Beat?
14756Because I''m a girl?
14756Big? 14756 Big?"
14756Bright? 14756 But do you guess it''s always so?
14756But he must have a place where you folks can get him? 14756 But not out West?
14756But say-- you ai n''t Sternford of Labrador? 14756 But these Labrador folk?"
14756But you drop it as you come, I think, yes?
14756But you would have-- bought this Sachigo?
14756By the forest?
14756Ca n''t anything be done?
14756Can he?
14756Can we get them together?
14756Can you hate-- yes? 14756 Can you-- twist''em?"
14756Changed? 14756 Did I look so darn foolish?"
14756Did he hand a squeal before-- he went?
14756Did he know you were-- prospecting?
14756Dinner? 14756 Directly after lunch?"
14756Do n''t it make you feel good?
14756Do the reports bear out those facts?
14756Do you always keep an automobile in Quebec?
14756Do you get it? 14756 Do you know him?
14756Do you know him?
14756Do you often dine with him?
14756Do you really think I should write? 14756 Do you think Nancy did n''t understand why she was packed off to school-- and kept there?
14756Do you?
14756Do you?
14756Do you?
14756Does it matter?
14756Does she know about her share in the mills?
14756Does that satisfy?
14756Does the report hand you anything else?
14756Does war mean that-- that I must submit even-- to that?
14756Dope?
14756Father Adam did n''t write that letter for you? 14756 Father Adam?
14756Father Adam?
14756Fer all she''s a kind of prisoner right here, caught red- hand doin''the damnedest she knows to break us in favour of the outfit that pays her?
14756Fer me, laddie?
14756Glad?
14756Guess I ought to turn right around and ask who the devil you are to look into my affairs? 14756 Have you completed an option on-- Sachigo?
14756Have you handled him? 14756 He had your''phone number?"
14756He''ll pull around? 14756 Here we are standing in the sort of fool position of-- what''ll I call it?
14756How did you do it? 14756 How did you persuade him to ship down on the_ Myra_ with you?"
14756How do we travel?
14756How''s that?
14756How? 14756 How?"
14756How?
14756How?
14756How?
14756How?
14756How?
14756How?
14756How?
14756How?
14756How?
14756I had visions of the--"Scuppers?
14756I wonder?
14756I''d like to-- but--"But what?
14756Is he the-- owner? 14756 Is it yours?
14756Is it?
14756Is it?
14756Is n''t it?
14756Is she arrived?
14756Is that stuff just-- hearsay?
14756Is there anything wrong?
14756It does n''t really matter, does it? 14756 It has no relation to his-- undertaking?"
14756It would n''t be a wolf or fox?
14756It''ll-- astonish him, eh?
14756It''s all complete?
14756It''s not exactly a swell hotel, is it? 14756 It_ is_--Idepski?"
14756Ken he do it?
14756Laval, eh?
14756Leo Murko?
14756Makes you wonder, eh?
14756Marry her?
14756May I ask why you''re going to Sachigo?
14756May I sit?
14756May I take another of your good cigarettes?
14756May I?
14756Maybe you''ll''fancy hearing how things are fixed after I see Peterman?
14756No?
14756No?
14756Nothing? 14756 Now, why in hell should I tell you?"
14756Now?
14756Oh, do n''t you understand? 14756 Oh, yes?"
14756Oh, yes?
14756Oh, yes?
14756One of your-- dockside loafers?
14756Our man-- this Martin-- has gone out of Sachigo because-- of you? 14756 Queer?"
14756Say, Les,he cried,"do you think I want to see my partner, and best friend, hounded to a life of hell by that swine, Hellbeam?
14756Say, are you every sort of darn fool on God''s earth, man? 14756 Say, do you think you''re stowing cargo in your darn, crazy old barge?"
14756Say, how many years is it since I sent you along here with a promise of good work and better wages, and a square deal?
14756Say, what in--? 14756 Say, what''s your bizness around here?"
14756Say, you knew me-- at the wharf?
14756Say, you were a mathematical professor at a Scottish University before you reckoned to buck the game on Wall Street, were n''t you?
14756Say,he began, abruptly,"you reckon to go on for-- yourself?
14756Say,he went on,"have you heard of the things going on?
14756See him, there?
14756So man built things like the_ Myra_, which, of course, was-- foolish?
14756So you can only cut the stuff here within reach of our light haulage system?
14756So?
14756Sternford, sir?
14756Sternford? 14756 Sternford?"
14756Tell me,he went on,"what is it you want to do?
14756Tell''em? 14756 That all your baggage?"
14756That he guessed to shoot me to small meat if I did n''t do as he said?
14756The coast?
14756The cost? 14756 The mail?"
14756The mill? 14756 The mill?
14756The mill?
14756The pipe of-- peace, eh?
14756The rest?
14756The_ Myra_? 14756 Their methods?"
14756Then he goes-- where? 14756 Then it''s war?
14756Then you mean to-- smash him?
14756Then you will read it?
14756Then-- it''s war?
14756They have been approached?
14756They that think?
14756This girl? 14756 This is for Skert an''me--""Is it?"
14756This man will crush Skandinavia?
14756This man? 14756 This-- all this you''re saying-- offering?
14756To do with these fires?
14756Tough?
14756Trouble?
14756Trouble?
14756Trouble?
14756Volunteered?
14756Wal?
14756Well, what''s the logic of it all?
14756Well, what''s the play?
14756Well?
14756Well?
14756Well?
14756Well?
14756Well?
14756Well?
14756Well?
14756Well?
14756Well?
14756What are you doing? 14756 What brought you into the life of the woods?
14756What d''you mean?
14756What do they say? 14756 What do you mean?
14756What do you mean?
14756What for?
14756What have you done about the Skandinavia?
14756What in the hell do I pay you for?
14756What is it? 14756 What is it?"
14756What sort of things?
14756What the--?
14756What''s his position-- in Sachigo?
14756What''s it about?
14756What''s that?
14756What''s that?
14756What''s the favour?
14756What''s the job you want him for? 14756 What''s the price you set on your enterprise up at Labrador?"
14756What''s the proposition?
14756What''s the trouble, boy?
14756What''s the use? 14756 When are you going to-- pull your freight?"
14756When the whole work''s put through?
14756When your boy''s born, what then?
14756Where did you meet him?
14756Where is he?
14756Where''s our boasted sense of things? 14756 Where?"
14756Who did then? 14756 Who is he, anyway?
14756Who is he? 14756 Who is it?
14756Who says that?
14756Who speaks that way?
14756Who the hell are you, anyway? 14756 Who was that?"
14756Who''s Jason anyway? 14756 Who''s that guy in the tweed pea- jacket an''looks like a city man?"
14756Who''s this?
14756Why am I telling you all this?
14756Why did n''t you show yourself? 14756 Why did you say that?"
14756Why not?
14756Why should I?
14756Why should I?
14756Why should n''t I-- anyway?
14756Why should n''t I? 14756 Why-- me?"
14756Why? 14756 Why?
14756Why?
14756Will I do it? 14756 Will you come right along?"
14756Will you come right in?
14756Will you come right in?
14756Will you come to me after lunch?
14756Wo n''t you shed your furs and sit?
14756Wo n''t you sit down?
14756Work? 14756 Would they be all one feller?
14756Would you care to come along through the woods to my shanty, Miss McDonald?
14756Would you let them send it for me-- wireless?
14756Yes?
14756Yes?
14756You are determined? 14756 You are not going to keep me here, prisoner in-- your house?"
14756You ask that, yes? 14756 You brought him down with you-- to meet us?"
14756You did your work so well that he entertained the notion sufficiently to come along down-- with you?
14756You goin''down to talk to the boys?
14756You got all my code messages?
14756You heard all this-- when you were held prisoner and working like a swine in Martin''s forests?
14756You know the woods? 14756 You live here?"
14756You mean he figures to have you join up with the Skandinavia?
14756You mean he''s done wrong? 14756 You mean that?
14756You mean the Nancy McDonald business?
14756You mean the outfit working it?
14756You mean they-- always want help?
14756You mean you avoided me-- deliberately?
14756You mean you would buy up-- the Skandinavia?
14756You mean you''re going to sail to- morrow?
14756You mean-- you think to-- smash us?
14756You mean--?
14756You mean--?
14756You not have heard-- yet?
14756You pull out? 14756 You reckon it''s handed you happiness-- this thing?"
14756You reckon you''ll quit?
14756You remember?
14756You sent for me?
14756You think so?
14756You think that they have the right to demand my-- child? 14756 You think that way?"
14756You think that?
14756You think that?
14756You understand me? 14756 You want me to go and take possession of Sachigo, and ten-- Say, where''s the catch?"
14756You want promotion under Peterman-- in the Skandinavia?
14756You will pay ha''f a million dollars for this thing?
14756You''ll come right along and eat, Nancy?
14756You''ll go along down an''meet her?
14756You''ll let me know later?
14756You''re goin''--now?
14756You''re goin''to talk to''em-- the boys?
14756You''re not going back?
14756You''re ready then to let the fool public benefit at your expense?
14756You''re talking of Father Adam?
14756You''re the lady representing the-- Skandinavia?
14756You, Father?
14756You-- haven''t wired him already?
14756--I want to-- I want to-- Oh, how can I tell you?
1475610 camp?"
14756A buck?
14756A corporation?"
14756A ghost?
14756A good- looker, eh?
14756A priest?"
14756A sort of Wandering Jew?
14756A spook?
14756Achievement?
14756After it''s in you''ll have made all the good you reckon to?
14756Ai n''t that what Canada''s forests are for?
14756Ai n''t there a thing I can say to boost you?
14756An added month of open season?
14756An''it''s the thing Bull and I want--""Then why in hell did n''t you say it instead of talking-- notions?"
14756And his irritation was promptly displayed by the vindictive"Well?"
14756And now?
14756And then you, personally, cut right out of this thing?"
14756And they''re not the words of a monstrous tyrant who is utterly heartless, eh?"
14756And why in the name of all that''s crazy am I sitting in this boss chair-- right now?"
14756And why should it be?
14756And yet--"Miss-- Nancy McDonald?"
14756And you ask me why I do n''t marry her?
14756Antagonism?
14756Anything you want besides that written report passed on down?"
14756Anyway, I''m just crazy for-- for--""Red hair, an''--an''a pair of mighty pretty eyes?"
14756Anyway--""How is it you say?
14756Are n''t we mostly concerned with big notions?
14756Are they ready?
14756Are they to become murderers because your foreign money has bought them machine guns?
14756Are they to become thieves at your bidding?
14756Are they wise you''re coming along?
14756Are they wise you''re pulling out?
14756Are you so hard set on your purpose of achievement that nothing else matters?
14756Are you yearning to hand out a killing?
14756As for his darn agents?
14756As for work-- work?
14756Besides, was there not the possibility of certain rougnnesses occurring between the two men which it might be within her power to smooth down?
14756Big notion?
14756Big notion?
14756Blinded, freezing, weary, how long could the lonely traveller endure and retain any sense of direction?
14756British Columbia?"
14756But I do n''t believe he''d turn down any business arrangement that would hand him the thing he wants--""Business arrangement?"
14756But tell me, when''ll you be through making your report to Peterman?"
14756But when I''m through, like that lumber- jack who''s struck off the pay roll, how''s it going to be with me?
14756But why not marry the gal?
14756But without them-- why?
14756But you would n''t just do that?"
14756But-- don''t you understand?
14756Ca n''t all this be saved?
14756Ca n''t the offer be made-- more suitable?
14756Ca n''t you feel good?
14756Ca n''t you feel like a feller gettin''out into the light after years of the darkest hell?
14756Ca n''t you try to forget?
14756Ca n''t you?
14756Can I do it?
14756Can I not go out into the forests?
14756Can I not serve them, too?
14756Can I sacrifice this great purpose in such a personal disaster?
14756Can I?
14756Can the Skandinavia''s junk stand in face of it?
14756Can you beat it?
14756Can you beat it?
14756Can you do it?
14756Can you do it?
14756Can you forget it all?
14756Can you make out in it to- night?"
14756Can you understand?
14756Can you?
14756Can you?
14756Canada for the Canadians?
14756Cigars?
14756Could anything, then, be better than this early thaw?
14756Could n''t you fix it that way?"
14756Could you locate him in time?"
14756Defeat?
14756Did he call himself,''Father Adam?''"
14756Did it not mean the moment of shouldering the great burden of responsibility she had so steadfastly trained herself to bear?
14756Did n''t it break him or something?
14756Did we fight the world war for that?
14756Did you send that fruit, and the flowers I ordered to the address I gave you?
14756Do n''t I count with you?
14756Do n''t it make you want to holler?
14756Do n''t she count?
14756Do n''t the others you came along to help count?
14756Do n''t you feel that way?
14756Do n''t you know?
14756Do n''t you see, or does your cynical philosophy blind you?
14756Do you blame them for defending themselves?"
14756Do you follow it all?
14756Do you get it?
14756Do you get me?
14756Do you guess they feel happiness in a tree dropped right?
14756Do you know I guessed I''d have to sail to- morrow without seeing you again?"
14756Do you know all that means, Nancy?
14756Do you know what''s happened?
14756Do you know why?
14756Do you see that?
14756Do you see?
14756Do you think so?"
14756Do you understand all that, my dear?
14756Do you want a feller to beat the laws of God and man?
14756Does a man give up the money, the big plan he makes, at the sight of an-- agent?
14756Does it grieve you?"
14756Does it scare you?"
14756Does she say-- yes?"
14756Drive?
14756Eh?
14756Eh?
14756Eh?
14756Eh?
14756Eh?"
14756Ever hit a lumber camp?"
14756Failure?
14756Feeling cold?"
14756Fight?
14756Fools, yes?
14756For how long?
14756From old man Hardy''s slop- chest?
14756Gouge?
14756Had he not experience of the terror of a northern blizzard?
14756Has he achieved?"
14756Hate?
14756Have I heard of him?
14756Have I the nerve?"
14756Have a cigar?"
14756Have you known hate?
14756Have you the nerve?"
14756He just handed it out to you to bring along?"
14756He on the run is-- Yes?"
14756He spread out his hands,"Where do I stand?
14756He''s here-- in Quebec?"
14756Hellbeam?
14756Hellbeam?
14756Here, what are you asking?
14756How can I hope to marry her?
14756How can you come near me?
14756How can you know them?
14756How can you stand there summoning me to eat food-- with you?
14756How could he with a fellow creature out there in peril?
14756How do I stand?
14756How do you mean?"
14756How do you think?"
14756How had Father Adam learned of this visit?
14756How had this girl become representative of the Skandinavia?
14756How had this thing come about?
14756How is it you make this fight?"
14756How is it?"
14756How long does it last, and then-- what happens?
14756How many trips at ten thousand tons?
14756How many?
14756How should there be?
14756How''d a woman feel if she''d an elegant baby child, thoroughbred from the crown of his dandy bald head to the pretty pink soles of his feet?
14756How''d you fancy a trip up country?
14756How''s the cut goin''?"
14756How?
14756How?
14756How?
14756How?"
14756I ast''why''?
14756I do n''t get you?"
14756I have n''t handled him right?
14756I mean boys we can trust?"
14756I mean dinner here?
14756I mean that always happens?
14756I mean up the Shagaunty?"
14756I see it on the carpet, yes?"
14756I wish-- but what''s the use?
14756I woke up then, and he was carrying me--""Sternford?"
14756I wonder--""You''re guessing to know who I''d marry, eh?"
14756I''ve blundered?
14756If Hellbeam succeeds, can I let this thing happen?
14756If I''m gone will you tell them the thing you know-- all of it?
14756Is he interested for the Skandinavia to keep folk out?"
14756Is he known?
14756Is it a trip-- a trip to some waste space of God''s earth that''ud freeze up a normal heart?
14756Is it anyway agreeable?"
14756Is it good?
14756Is it ready?"
14756Is n''t it to do with temperament?
14756Is n''t that right?"
14756Is n''t that so?
14756Is the victory so much to you that you have no thought, no feeling, for the suffering it has brought?
14756Is there happiness in it for you?"
14756Is there need for them to fall out?"
14756Is there no place for me under your leadership?
14756Is there nothing to be achieved that way-- nothing to last you to your last living moment?
14756It seems a pity, eh?"
14756It sounds like the devil talking, does n''t it?
14756It would be hypocrisy to deny it, would n''t it?
14756It''s all real, true?"
14756It''s dreadful when you think of it, is n''t it?"
14756It''s more than a month since-- and you were expecting-- Things all right?"
14756It''s necessary, is n''t it?
14756It''s not the-- the challenge of a-- what''ll I say-- competitor?
14756It''s quite a piece up the hill, which helps to keep it clear of skitters an''things?"
14756It''s this business standing between your folk and me?"
14756It''s your first trip?"
14756Keen set to talk with me?"
14756Keen set, eh?
14756Labour?
14756Lawton?"
14756May I ask the price you''re considering?"
14756May I tell you about it?"
14756Maybe you know the name?"
14756Mercy?
14756Money?
14756Money?
14756More--?"
14756Mother?"
14756Must all this sort of-- bloodshed-- go on?
14756Now you tell me-- if you fancy to?"
14756Now, I wonder what you mean?"
14756Now, Nancy, what about to- night?
14756Now-- where was he?
14756Of course, as you say, you''re a''kid''yet-- a school- kid, eh?
14756Oh, do n''t you see?
14756Oh, how are you?
14756Oh, that Bennetts?
14756Oh, why, why did n''t I refuse the work?
14756Oh, will you step up a moment, Miss McDonald?
14756Oh, you did?
14756On the work?
14756Peterman-- friendly?"
14756Peterman?"
14756Promotion-- in Skandinavia?"
14756Right away?
14756Ruthless, implacable-- war?"
14756Sachigo?
14756Sachigo?
14756Say, do you know, it gets me bad when I think of you going back to Peterman and his crew?
14756Say, do you remember the old_ Myra_ you''ll soon be boarding again?
14756Say, my dear, will you give me the chance to show you?
14756Say, where did you raise all that junk?
14756Say--""Are you laughing at me?"
14756Say--""Yep?"
14756See?
14756See?
14756See?
14756See?
14756See?
14756See?"
14756See?"
14756Shall we go and eat?"
14756Shall you cut right out with the boodle?
14756Shall you quit?
14756She for me is-- yes?
14756She is pleasant-- to men?
14756Should I entertain one, eh?
14756So why let the contemplation of it distract her?
14756Sort of prize for a good girl, eh?
14756Sternford, the man running Sachigo was with you on the_ Myra_?
14756Sternford?"
14756Stop right here, an''--""Will you tell''em?"
14756Successful?
14756Tell me, what is he like?"
14756Tell''em?"
14756That dandy gal I''ve heard you wish was your own daughter?
14756That how?"
14756That is so?
14756That man?"
14756That so?"
14756That so?"
14756That sounds tough, does n''t it?
14756That was your desire when you came to me-- that they should buy me up?"
14756That you?
14756That''s the queer thing in commercial warfare, is n''t it?
14756That''s what you wanted-- isn''t it?"
14756The Skandinavia was powerful, but was it powerful enough to deal as they desired with this man who was as ready to fight as to laugh?
14756The dogs?
14756The feller that got it?"
14756The groundwood outfit up at-- up at--""Sachigo?"
14756The labour?
14756The men of the forests?"
14756The result?
14756The strength of the enemy we know to the last fraction--""Do you?"
14756The thing that''s happening?"
14756The trade they''re working at?"
14756Their life?
14756Then she added:"You go by the_ Empress_?"
14756Then spasmodically:"Why should-- he-- get away with it?
14756Then who sets this Bull Sternford in the mill?
14756Then with a sudden explosive force:"In God''s name why in hell did n''t he break that skunk''s neck?"
14756They knew all that in Standing''s mind is?"
14756They''re the triumphant pennants of successful industry, eh?
14756Think of this in war time, eh?"
14756This kiddie with her mother''s blood running in innocent veins?
14756Those words?
14756Time?
14756To beat the Skandinavians out of Canada''s trade, and claim it all for a country that does n''t care a curse?
14756To build up a great name that in the end must be dragged in the mire of public estimation?
14756To feed us the stuff we''re needin''?
14756Trade?
14756Try one?"
14756Victory?
14756Wages?"
14756Wal?"
14756Was it for that something that was all good stirring in him?
14756Was it good, or-- bad?
14756Was it likely that this Bull Sternford was going to yield for a business proposition in this fashion at the request of a formidable rival?
14756Was it the thought of doing a great act for his country?
14756Was n''t it Leslie Standing who built it?
14756Was she not already the trusted, confidential secretary to the ruling power in the great offices of the Skandinavia Corporation?
14756Was there not some means by which she could join in the work of rescue?
14756We declared war, did n''t we?
14756We''re just driven to the plateau where the cut looks to me more like one in twenty than any better?"
14756Well you have thought much?
14756Well, are you-- going to vote the credit for this fight?"
14756Well, can you kind of forgive it?
14756Well, do you see what''s going to happen if the game succeeds?
14756Well, how would you feel?
14756Well, what was I going to do?
14756Well?
14756Well?
14756Well?
14756Well?
14756Well?
14756Well?"
14756Well?"
14756Well?"
14756Well?"
14756Well?"
14756Were the men who lived in those times great men?
14756Were their scruples and morals any more lax than those of to- day?
14756Were they any different from those who walked under the shadow of the old walls?
14756Were they scoundrelly Buccaneers?
14756Were they such bad old days?
14756What am I to do?
14756What am I to see next on-- Labrador?"
14756What are they mostly?
14756What are you doing this evening?
14756What can I do?
14756What d''you mean?
14756What do we spend our lives worrying to beat the other feller for?
14756What do we work, and fight, and hate for?
14756What does he fear?
14756What does it mean to me?
14756What does it mean?"
14756What had followed it?
14756What had preceded that incident?
14756What happened after that fool missionary got him away?
14756What is he that he has the power to-- to make me a sort of slave to his wishes?
14756What is it when you play the market as you choose?
14756What is it?
14756What is it?
14756What is it?
14756What is it?
14756What is it?
14756What left you quitting the things I can see civilisation handed you?
14756What next?"
14756What say?
14756What sort of passage did-- oh, bad, eh?
14756What sort of use can a girl like that have for the man who''s beat her right out of everything she ever hoped to achieve?
14756What sort of-- trouble?"
14756What then?
14756What then?
14756What then?
14756What was it they had told her?
14756What was that purpose?
14756What was the great work that was to place no limit on her advancement?
14756What was the result?
14756What will you do?"
14756What''ll you do?"
14756What''s that?
14756What''s that?
14756What''s that?
14756What''s the civilisation we love to pat ourselves on the back for?
14756What''s the play?"
14756What''s the use talking?
14756What-- what are you going to do?"
14756When do you return?"
14756When the time comes for me to pay, will you tell her?
14756When would you like to go?"
14756When, when would it reveal itself?
14756Where comes the money for Sachigo to grow?
14756Where is he?
14756Where is it?"
14756Where is she?
14756Where to?"
14756Where?
14756Where?
14756Which way?"
14756Who are you to assume the right of inquisitor?"
14756Who can tell?
14756Who is he?
14756Who is she?"
14756Who is the head?
14756Who''s cuttin''''em, and why?
14756Who-- who could they be bringing up to that house, which was the home and the office of the master of the mill?
14756Who?
14756Why did n''t you say?"
14756Why did they send me?
14756Why do we fight and hate?
14756Why do we set our noses into other folks''affairs and worry them to death to think, and act, and feel the way we do?
14756Why do we work?
14756Why has he quit?
14756Why in hell do n''t he--?"
14756Why in the name of sanity should I go on?
14756Why not?"
14756Why not?"
14756Why not?"
14756Why should I go on living here, working, slaving, haunted by the terror of Hellbeam?
14756Why should n''t I?
14756Why was she looking forward to dining with Bull Sternford?
14756Why, in God''s name, do n''t you quit it?"
14756Why-- in hell-- should you?"
14756Why?
14756Why?
14756Why?
14756Why?
14756Why?
14756Why?
14756Why?
14756Why?
14756Why?
14756Why?
14756Why?"
14756Why?"
14756Why?"
14756Will I go?
14756Will I?
14756Will it?"
14756Will you come right along up to Mr. Sternford''s office?
14756Will you come right over to the window and sit?
14756Will you do that?"
14756Will you go-- and send just that message?"
14756Will you help me to support it this evening?
14756Will you help me?"
14756Will you let me help you to forget?
14756Will you read the message?
14756Will you step this way?"
14756Will you tell them both?
14756Will you-- honour me?
14756Will you--?"
14756Will you?
14756Will you?
14756Will you?
14756Will you?"
14756Wo n''t you?"
14756Woman?
14756Would n''t she get hell raised with her?"
14756Would n''t she hear the sort of things a woman of that sort ought to?
14756Would n''t you like to rest awhile?
14756Would n''t you want that-- promotion?
14756Yes?
14756Yes?
14756Yes?
14756Yes?"
14756Yes?"
14756Yet you do not know of her return-- yet?
14756You approve?
14756You do n''t like their-- methods?"
14756You get that?
14756You get that?
14756You get that?
14756You get that?"
14756You get that?"
14756You got those things?"
14756You have been?
14756You have planned for the fight?
14756You have your confidential man, yes?
14756You reckon to take a chance on your judgment?"
14756You remember our talk on the deck, when the howling gale hit us?
14756You say she is in?"
14756You think I can-- will?"
14756You think so?"
14756You think to get this''sharp''asleep, or what?
14756You think?
14756You told me so, did n''t you?"
14756You understand me?
14756You understand?
14756You want to help those who need help?
14756You will never go back to the Skandinavia?
14756You''ll be along to fix him again?"
14756You''ll be over right away?
14756You''ll forgive me, wo n''t you, Mr. Peterman?
14756You''re sure you feel like telling me?
14756You''re wise to it all?"
14756You''ve a letter for me?"
14756You''ve never seen her, have you?
14756You''ve quit the Skandinavia?
14756You''ve seen the forest boys?"
14756You?"
14756You?"
14756You?"
14756Your first trip?"