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 |
---|---|
435 | ''What do you mean by it?'' 435 Fire- king--I ask you, on your honor as a gentleman, is this genuine unmixed poison?" |
435 | Fire- king--"Is there any medical gentleman here who will examine it?" |
435 | Have you prepared yourself with phosphorus, or will you take some of mine, which is laid on that table?" |
435 | Some said there must be a confederacy between the challenger and the challenged, and others asked whether any money had been deposited? |
435 | The Fire- king--"Then wherefore did you send me a challenge? |
435 | The question now is, were the fifteen auditors of Mr. Sothern fooled and deceived, or was this a genuine manifestation of extraordinary power? |
435 | When my opening added a third sensational surprise, one of the London dailies asked,"Is this going to be another Georgia Magnet fiasco?" |
45370 | How does he do it? |
45370 | More lock- breaking? 45370 Tell me,"I begged,"are the feats you do on the screen different to those you do enact before the footlights?" |
45370 | Want to try our locks? 45370 Was I afraid of the sharks?" |
45370 | What are you doing here? |
45370 | What are you in for? |
45370 | Will you remove the handcuffs for a moment,he said,"in order that I may take my coat off?" |
45370 | You ask me how I did it? 45370 Are we ready? |
45370 | Being billed, and not appearing, what would the public think? |
45370 | HIS GREATEST STUNT"What do you consider the greatest stunt you have done for the screen?" |
45370 | One minute-- two-- then three---- Would he do it? |
45370 | PRISONERS ARE DUMBFOUNDED Chase gave a gasp of fear, and then cried,"Have you come to let me out? |
45370 | Was the door which had been fastened against him single, double, or triple locked? |
45370 | What are you doing without clothes?" |
45370 | What for? |
45370 | What then? |
42723 | ''But,''the King added, taking out of the box a carefully sealed packet,''can the handkerchiefs, by possibility, be in this?'' 42723 ''How can that be? |
42723 | ''I can not deny it, Sire; but what would my magic powers avail me if I could not perform incomprehensible tricks? 42723 ''Only that, Sire? |
42723 | ''Will your Majesty deign to inform me?'' 42723 After making my Sosia repeat my signature a thousand times, I gave it this question:''What o''clock is it?'' |
42723 | Charles Bertram who wrote"Is n''t it Wonderful?" |
42723 | Do you know what this card proposes?'' |
42723 | For who has not heard the cry of the modern Bosco,"Eat-''em- alive"? |
42723 | Has your brain deceived your eyes, or your eyes your brain? |
42723 | I had just laid the first sheet of paper before my writer and asked him this question:''Who is the author of your being?'' |
42723 | Should I drop off and see Herr Frikell, or wait for my appointment on the morrow? |
42723 | The mason''s wife chose the question,"What is the emblem of fidelity?" |
42723 | What could he present to the public in opposition to the second sight, the suspension, and the inexhaustible bottle? |
42723 | What could it mean? |
42723 | What did Anderson have to offer in opposition to Robert- Houdin''s much- vaunted Suspension, Second Sight, and Inexhaustible Bottle? |
42723 | What is the matter with my heart? |
42723 | [ Illustration: Charles Bertram( James Bassett), the English author and conjurer, who wrote"Is n''t it Wonderful?" |
7082 | And did you not bring away something from his house? |
7082 | For what purpose am I called? |
7082 | What is it you demand to have done? |
7082 | Wherefore am I called? |
7082 | Who are you? |
7082 | ''How now?'' |
7082 | And how is this devil employed according to sir Matthew Hale and sir Thomas Browne? |
7082 | And, if these poor women were too obtuse of soul entirely to feel the pang, did that give their superiors a right to overwhelm and to crush them? |
7082 | Are all the Gods subject to this control, or, is there one God upon whom it has power, who, himself compelled, compels the elements? |
7082 | Do they yield from necessity, or is it a voluntary subjection? |
7082 | He said, he was not guilty; but, being asked how he would be tried? |
7082 | How can I be secure from the false accusations of the unprincipled informers who infest your court? |
7082 | Is it the piety of these hags that obtains the reward, or by menaces do they secure their purpose? |
7082 | Macduff pursued him, and was hard at his heels, when the tyrant turned his horse, and exclaimed,"Why dost thou follow me? |
7082 | Now the first circumstance that strikes us in this affair is, why the crime was not expressed in more perspicuous and appropriate language? |
7082 | Now what are the premises on which they proceed in this question? |
7082 | The wife in great terror asked,"Were you not at Dr. Lamb''s to- day?" |
7082 | We hear there is likely to be a battle shortly: what, fled from your colours?'' |
7082 | Well may they exclaim, like the ghost of Samuel in the sacred story,"Why hast thou disquieted me?" |
7082 | What can be more tyrannical, than an inquisition into the sports and freaks of fancy? |
7082 | What is, to a proverb, more lawless than imagination? |
7082 | What more unsusceptible of detection or evidence? |
7082 | What shall we say to the story of his various transmigrations? |
7082 | When Mr. Thoroughgood saw his friend Lindsey come into his yard, his horse and himself much tired, in a sort of a maze, he said,''How now, colonel? |
7082 | Why, for example, was it not said, that the first and chief branch of treason was to"kill the king?" |
7082 | Wot ye not that such a man as I could certainly divine?" |
7082 | Yet what so irrational as man? |
7082 | [ 19] They brought the strangers again into the presence of Joseph, who addressed them with severity, saying,"What is this deed that ye have done? |
7082 | said Cromwel,''What, troubled with the vapours? |
7082 | said he,"and what is it that you demand?" |
518 | A girl, like ourselves? |
518 | And as for being odd in appearance, let me ask how you could reasonably expect a fairy to appear as mortal maidens do? |
518 | And does the rumor state what the High Ki of Twi is like? |
518 | And have you been cured of your longing for something that you can not have? |
518 | And if we disagree? |
518 | And they expect to force me to give up my captives? |
518 | And what army assisted him? |
518 | And what is the Kingdom of Twi like? |
518 | And what is to become of us now? |
518 | And what will you do? |
518 | And who has done this evil thing? |
518 | And who may you be? |
518 | And why should we take the other path? |
518 | Are none of your people single? |
518 | Are you all double?--or are some of you just one? |
518 | Are you nervous about the decision of the pretty High Ki? |
518 | Are you not contented? |
518 | Are you not the Red Rogue of Dawna? |
518 | Are you ready? |
518 | Are you, then, a real fairy? |
518 | But do you suppose I''m going to kill a man against his will? |
518 | But suppose something should happen to you? |
518 | But tell me, please, how would you prefer to be killed? |
518 | But where does this road lead? |
518 | But why do not the people rebel? |
518 | But why is that? |
518 | But would it be right? |
518 | But, if I restore to you the treasure, how will it benefit you, since you are about to die? |
518 | Ca n''t you see I''m very miserable? |
518 | Can not something be done to rescue these poor people from their sad fate? |
518 | Did I not say there are new adventures before us? 518 Did he say what adventure brought him to our Kingdom of Heg?" |
518 | Dim? |
518 | Do n''t I look awful? 518 Do you hear that, Terribus?" |
518 | Do you intend to obey my orders? |
518 | Do you still remember that a moment ago you were a fairy? |
518 | Do you think you can trust these men? |
518 | Does this path never end? |
518 | Has any one ever yet dared defy him? |
518 | Has he ever changed any one into a grasshopper or a June- bug? |
518 | Have you a wand? |
518 | Have you been invited? 518 How DARE you contradict me?" |
518 | How about the June- bugs? |
518 | How dare you contradict ME? |
518 | How dare you stop us, fellows? |
518 | How do you know that? |
518 | How many of them are there? |
518 | How much bigger? |
518 | How old may this Prince Marvel be? |
518 | How? |
518 | If that is so, why have we never heard of this power before? |
518 | Invited where? |
518 | Is my face indeed pleasing? |
518 | Is n''t it an awful thing to look forward to? |
518 | Is n''t your name Prince Marvel? |
518 | Is your own history written in this volume? |
518 | Must you really hang us? |
518 | Prince Marvel? |
518 | Shall we cut your foes into small pieces, or would you prefer to hang them? |
518 | The king? |
518 | Then how will they cut off my head with two axes? 518 Then why did n''t you light it again?" |
518 | Then why do n''t you begin? |
518 | Twice? |
518 | Well, then, what are you good for? |
518 | Well, what shall we do? |
518 | Well,returned the prince,"what of it?" |
518 | Well? |
518 | Well? |
518 | What are you doing up there? |
518 | What do you mean? |
518 | What does''one''mean? |
518 | What have you done with Nerle? |
518 | What is it? |
518 | What is that reason? |
518 | What is the High Ki like? |
518 | What is the Land of Twi? |
518 | What poor? |
518 | What sort of country have we got into? |
518 | What think you, Nerle? |
518 | What were you called as a fairy? |
518 | Where did you meet him? |
518 | Where do you keep your enchantments? |
518 | Who are these strangers? |
518 | Who cares? |
518 | Who is the High Ki of Twi? |
518 | Who is this Lady Seseley? |
518 | Who was the little knight? |
518 | Why are you here? |
518 | Why are you not breathing fire and brimstone? |
518 | Why do n''t I begin? 518 Why do you laugh?" |
518 | Why do you not lash your tail? |
518 | Why not leave the country as it is? |
518 | Why not? |
518 | Why not? |
518 | Why not? |
518 | Why should I die? |
518 | Why should I do that? |
518 | Why so? |
518 | Why? |
518 | Why? |
518 | Why? |
518 | Will he allow us to depart in the morning? |
518 | Will you allow me to object to being killed? |
518 | Will you let us go? |
518 | Will you obey my orders? |
518 | Will you permit me to advise you in this matter? |
518 | Will you please reunite us? 518 Will you stay here and help me to rule my kingdom?" |
518 | Will you? |
518 | Would you slay my Fool- Killer? 518 You say two of the party are girls?" |
518 | A few paces off the soldiers hesitated and stopped altogether, and Kwytoffle yelled at the captain:"Why do n''t you go on? |
518 | Am I not terrible to gaze on?" |
518 | Am I, then, a fool?" |
518 | And Seseley added:"Why-- you''re a GIRL fairy, are n''t you?" |
518 | And now tell me, will you help me to fight my battles?" |
518 | And now the Ki- Ki came forward and, bowing their handsome blond heads before the High Ki, demanded:"Are we forgiven also?" |
518 | And then he inquired:"Why do you stop here, in the middle of the path?" |
518 | And then she turned to Prince Marvel and asked in a soft voice:"Is the year ended, Prince?" |
518 | And why is the light here so dim?" |
518 | And why so?" |
518 | Both mothers boxed the children''s ears, and both men gasped out:"Who-- who are you?" |
518 | But he said, quickly:"Does it not seem centuries when one is unhappy?" |
518 | But the king merely nodded and inquired:"Since you have seen me, what do you think of me?" |
518 | But who will rule the Land of Twi in your absence?" |
518 | Do you suppose we great magicians carry around enchantments in our pockets?" |
518 | Do you take me for a common assassin-- or a murderer?" |
518 | Does he come from the Kingdom of Dawna, or that of Auriel, or Plenta?" |
518 | Eh, Ki- Ki?" |
518 | Eh, Ki- Ki?" |
518 | Finally Seseley asked:"Why do you regret being a fairy? |
518 | Have you ever,"she asked, suddenly,"seen a fairy before?" |
518 | Is n''t that so, boys?" |
518 | Is n''t that too long?" |
518 | Is the little fairy really transformed to this youth?" |
518 | Ki- Ki?" |
518 | Marvel jerked his bridle from the man''s grasp and said in return:"Who are you?" |
518 | Now at this the fairy burst into laughter again, and presently asked:"How old do you think me?" |
518 | Now she inquired:"What do you wish to become?" |
518 | One day Prince Marvel sought out Lady Seseley and said:"Will you ride with me to the Forest of Lurla?" |
518 | Seseley drew a long, sighing breath of amazement at her own powers, and turning to Berna and Helda she asked:"Do I see aright? |
518 | So Prince Marvel quickly asked:"Please tell us what country this is?" |
518 | Tell me-- have you been invited?" |
518 | The High Ki of Twi"Tell me, Prince, are we awake or asleep?" |
518 | Then he cast his eye toward the cave and asked:"What will you do with all our treasure?" |
518 | Then he said, aloud:"What has happened? |
518 | Then, turning to the Ki, they asked:"Why have you brought these strangers here?" |
518 | There was no denying this, so the three girls sat silent until Seseley asked:"Why do you wish to become a mortal?" |
518 | This announcement was interesting to Marvel and Nerle, but greatly shocked the aged Ki, who asked:"What is to become of our kingdom? |
518 | We have all reformed-- have we not, brothers?" |
518 | What is the proper fate for such men?" |
518 | Who am I? |
518 | Who is he?" |
518 | Why do n''t you capture them? |
518 | Why do n''t you fight them?" |
518 | Why do you all look so startled?" |
518 | Why should I not be?" |
518 | Will you give me your cloak?" |
518 | Will you have it now?" |
518 | Will you promise to guard my secret?" |
518 | Would n''t you like to enjoy a little more pain?" |
518 | You wish to go there?" |
518 | asked the boy, in return;"do n''t you understand that every minute I expect to fall upon those sword points?" |
518 | asked the esquire;"fight?" |
518 | asked the pretty High Ki, speaking together as all the twins of Twi did;"and why are they not mates, but only half of each other?" |
518 | cried Nerle, scornfully;"why do n''t you fight? |
518 | cried the gray- bearded Ki;"is there, then, anything or any place on the other side of the hedge?" |
518 | echoed the twin Ki,"die? |
518 | he cried;"how dare you enter my forest?" |
518 | remonstrated the bald- headed Ki;"are we to become grasshoppers, then?" |
518 | retorted the fairy, with a little frown;"what does beauty amount to, if one is to remain invisible?" |
518 | said the Dragon, thoughtfully, as if it did n''t relish the job;"this one is n''t Saint George, is it?" |
518 | what have we here?" |
47518 | ''Widow Dido''said you? |
47518 | A daughter? |
47518 | A space whose every cubit Seems to cry out,''How shall that Claribel Measure us back to Naples? |
47518 | And Trinculo is reeling ripe: where should they Find this grand liquor that hath gilded''em? |
47518 | And art thou living, Stephano? |
47518 | And how does your content Tender your own good fortune? |
47518 | And now, I pray you, sir, For still''tis beating in my mind, your reason For raising this sea- storm? |
47518 | And were the king on''t, what would I do? |
47518 | And,--do you mark me, sir? |
47518 | Art thou afeard? |
47518 | Ay, sir; where lies that? |
47518 | Before the time be out? |
47518 | But are they, Ariel, safe? |
47518 | But art thou not drowned, Stephano? |
47518 | But how is it That this lives in thy mind? |
47518 | But how should Prospero Be living and be here? |
47518 | But was not this nigh shore? |
47518 | But, for your conscience? |
47518 | By what? |
47518 | Canst thou bring me to the party? |
47518 | Canst thou remember A time before we came unto this cell? |
47518 | Carthage? |
47518 | Didst thou not say he lied? |
47518 | Do I so? |
47518 | Do you hear, monster? |
47518 | Do you love me, master? |
47518 | Do you love me? |
47518 | Do you not hear him? |
47518 | Do you not hear me speak? |
47518 | Do you put tricks upon''s with savages and men of Ind, ha? |
47518 | Do you understand me? |
47518 | Dost thou forget From what a torment I did free thee? |
47518 | Dost thou like the plot, Trinculo? |
47518 | Dost thou think so, spirit? |
47518 | Doth thy other mouth call me? |
47518 | Foul weather? |
47518 | Had I not Four or five women once that tended me? |
47518 | Hast thou forgot The foul witch Sycorax, who with age and envy Was grown into a hoop? |
47518 | Hast thou no mouth by land? |
47518 | Hast thou not dropp''d from heaven? |
47518 | Hast thou, spirit, Perform''d to point the tempest that I bade thee? |
47518 | Have we devils here? |
47518 | Have you a mind to sink? |
47518 | He is drunk now: where had he wine? |
47518 | Heard you this, Gonzalo? |
47518 | Here, master: what cheer? |
47518 | How came that widow in? |
47518 | How came we ashore? |
47518 | How camest thou here? |
47518 | How camest thou hither? |
47518 | How camest thou in this pickle? |
47518 | How didst thou''scape? |
47518 | How does my bounteous sister? |
47518 | How does thy honour? |
47518 | How fares my gracious sir? |
47518 | How now shall this be compassed? |
47518 | How now? |
47518 | How''s the day? |
47518 | How? |
47518 | I do beseech you-- Chiefly that I might set it in my prayers-- What is your name? |
47518 | I say, My foot my tutor? |
47518 | I''the name of something holy, sir, why stand you In this strange stare? |
47518 | If but one of his pockets could speak, would it not say he lies? |
47518 | If in Naples I should report this now, would they believe me? |
47518 | If you be maid or no? |
47518 | Is it so brave a lass? |
47518 | Is not this Stephano, my drunken butler? |
47518 | Is not this true? |
47518 | Is not, sir, my doublet as fresh as the first day I wore it? |
47518 | Is the storm overblown? |
47518 | Is there more toil? |
47518 | May I be bold To think these spirits? |
47518 | Mistress line, is not this my jerkin? |
47518 | My husband, then? |
47518 | No marrying''mong his subjects? |
47518 | Now, blasphemy, That swear''st grace o''erboard, not an oath on shore? |
47518 | O Stephano, hast any more of this? |
47518 | O thou mine heir Of Naples and of Milan, what strange fish Hath made his meal on thee? |
47518 | O, was she so? |
47518 | Or blessed was''t we did? |
47518 | Out o''your wits and hearing too? |
47518 | Presently? |
47518 | Say again, where didst thou leave these varlets? |
47518 | Say, how came you hither? |
47518 | Say, my spirit, How fares the king and''s followers? |
47518 | Shall we give o''er and drown? |
47518 | Shrug''st thou, malice? |
47518 | Sir, are not you my father? |
47518 | Tell me, heavenly bow, If Venus or her son, as thou dost know, Do now attend the queen? |
47518 | The wager? |
47518 | Then, tell me, Who''s the next heir of Naples? |
47518 | Thou makest me merry; I am full of pleasure: Let us be jocund: will you troll the catch You taught me but while- ere? |
47518 | Thy false uncle-- Dost thou attend me? |
47518 | Was Milan thrust from Milan, that his issue Should become kings of Naples? |
47518 | Was''t well done? |
47518 | What cares these roarers for the name of king? |
47518 | What foul play had we, that we came from thence? |
47518 | What harmony is this? |
47518 | What have we here? |
47518 | What if he had said''widower Æneas''too? |
47518 | What impossible matter will he make easy next? |
47518 | What is it thou didst say? |
47518 | What is the news? |
47518 | What is the time o''the day? |
47518 | What is this maid with whom thou wast at play? |
47518 | What is this same? |
47518 | What is''t thou canst demand? |
47518 | What is''t? |
47518 | What seest thou else In the dark backward and abysm of time? |
47518 | What seest thou else In the dark backward and abysm of time? |
47518 | What shall I do? |
47518 | What things are these, my lord Antonio? |
47518 | What wert thou, if the King of Naples heard thee? |
47518 | What would my potent master? |
47518 | What''s the matter? |
47518 | What''s the matter? |
47518 | What''s thy pleasure? |
47518 | What, art thou waking? |
47518 | What, must our mouths be cold? |
47518 | What? |
47518 | When I wore it at your daughter''s marriage? |
47518 | When did you lose your daughter? |
47518 | When we were boys, Who would believe that there were mountaineers Dew- lapp''d like bulls, whose throats had hanging at''em Wallets of flesh? |
47518 | Where is the master, boatswain? |
47518 | Where should they be set else? |
47518 | Where should this music be? |
47518 | Where the devil should he learn our language? |
47518 | Where was she born? |
47518 | Where''s the master? |
47518 | Wherefore did they not That hour destroy us? |
47518 | Wherefore this ghastly looking? |
47518 | Wherefore weep you? |
47518 | Which, of he or Adrian, for a good wager, first begins to crow? |
47518 | Whiles we stood here securing your repose, Even now, we heard a hollow burst of bellowing Like bulls, or rather lions: did''t not wake you? |
47518 | Who was so firm, so constant, that this coil Would not infect his reason? |
47518 | Why Doth it not then our eyelids sink? |
47518 | Why are you drawn? |
47518 | Why speaks my father so ungently? |
47518 | Why, how now? |
47518 | Why, thou deboshed fish, thou, was there ever man a coward that hath drunk so much sack as I to- day? |
47518 | Why, what did I? |
47518 | Will money buy''em? |
47518 | Will you grant with me That Ferdinand is drown''d? |
47518 | Will you laugh me asleep, for I am very heavy? |
47518 | Will''t please you taste of what is here? |
47518 | Wilt come? |
47518 | Wilt thou be pleased to hearken once again to the suit I made to thee? |
47518 | Wilt thou go with me? |
47518 | Wilt thou tell a monstrous lie, being but half a fish and half a monster? |
47518 | Within this half hour will he be asleep: Wilt thou destroy him then? |
47518 | You''ld be king o''the isle, sirrah? |
47518 | Your eld''st acquaintance can not be three hours: Is she the goddess that hath sever''d us, And brought us thus together? |
47518 | [ Illustration: PROSPERO:''_ What seest thou else In the dark backward abysm of time?_''( page 13).] |
47518 | a man or a fish? |
47518 | a spirit? |
47518 | by any other house or person? |
47518 | dead or alive? |
47518 | hast thou forgot her? |
47518 | how does thine ague? |
47518 | how say you? |
47518 | i''the air or the earth? |
47518 | moody? |
47518 | no? |
47518 | or that there were such men Whose heads stood in their breasts? |
47518 | say what; what shall I do? |
47518 | the best? |
47518 | what do you here? |
47518 | what do you mean To dote thus on such luggage? |
47518 | when? |
47518 | wilt thou let him, my lord? |
779 | Analytic? |
779 | Do ye see yonder tall fellow in the round slop? 779 O Barbarous"? |
779 | O Barbarous? |
779 | Seek THOU to save? |
779 | This, Faustus?] |
779 | alone? |
779 | done?] |
779 | for TWICE forty DOLLARS?] |
779 | --How do you like them, madam? |
779 | Accursed Faustus, where is mercy now? |
779 | Affords this art no greater miracle? |
779 | And hath not he, that built the walls of Thebes With ravishing sound of his melodious harp, Made music with my Mephistophilis? |
779 | And what are you that live with Lucifer? |
779 | And what should I do with these? |
779 | Are not thy bills hung up as monuments, Whereby whole cities have escap''d the plague, And thousand desperate maladies been eas''d? |
779 | Away with such vain fancies, and despair; Despair in God, and trust in Belzebub: Now go not backward; no, Faustus, be resolute: Why waver''st thou? |
779 | Away, envious rascal!--What art thou, the fifth? |
779 | Ay, and body too: but what of that? |
779 | Ay, but whereabout? |
779 | But I''ll seek out my doctor, and have my forty dollars again, or I''ll make it the dearest horse!--O, yonder is his snipper- snapper.--Do you hear? |
779 | But may I raise up spirits when I please? |
779 | But must thou sit, and I stand? |
779 | But what is this inscription[86] on mine arm? |
779 | But, do you hear, Wagner? |
779 | But, do you hear? |
779 | But, leaving these vain trifles of men''s souls, Tell me what is that Lucifer thy lord? |
779 | But, tell me, Faustus, shall I have thy soul? |
779 | But, tell me, hath every sphere a dominion or intelligentia? |
779 | But, tell me, have they all one motion, both situ et tempore? |
779 | Canst thou conjure with it? |
779 | Choke thyself, glutton!--What art thou, the sixth? |
779 | Come on, Mephistophilis; what shall we do? |
779 | Come, Ralph: did not I tell thee, we were for ever made by this Doctor Faustus''book? |
779 | Come, what doest thou with that same book? |
779 | Contrition, prayer, repentance-- what of them? |
779 | Did not he charge thee to appear to me? |
779 | Did not my conjuring speeches raise thee? |
779 | Do you hear, Master Doctor? |
779 | Do you hear, sir? |
779 | Do you hear, sir? |
779 | Do you hear? |
779 | Doctor Fustian, quoth a? |
779 | Hast thou, as erst I did command, Conducted me within the walls of Rome? |
779 | Have not I made blind Homer sing to me Of Alexander''s love and Oenon''s death? |
779 | Have you any witness on''t? |
779 | Here they be, madam: wilt please you taste on them? |
779 | Homo, fuge: whither should I fly? |
779 | How comes it, then, that he is prince of devils? |
779 | How comes it, then, that thou art out of hell? |
779 | How many heavens or spheres are there? |
779 | How prov''st thou that? |
779 | How say you now? |
779 | How then, sir? |
779 | How, in verse? |
779 | I do repent; and yet I do despair: Hell strives with grace for conquest in my breast: What shall I do to shun the snares of death? |
779 | I have heard that great- bellied women do long for some dainties or other: what is it, madam? |
779 | I see there''s virtue in my heavenly words: Who would not be proficient in this art? |
779 | Is it unwilling I should write this bill? |
779 | Is not thy common talk found aphorisms? |
779 | Is that the reason why[79] he tempts us thus? |
779 | Is''t not too late? |
779 | Is, to dispute well, logic''s chiefest end? |
779 | Look, comes he not? |
779 | Master Doctor, I heard this lady, while she lived, had a wart or mole in her neck: how shall I know whether it be so or no? |
779 | My Lord of Lorrain, will''t please you draw near? |
779 | No, will you not wake? |
779 | Now tell me[77] what says Lucifer, thy lord? |
779 | Now, Faustus, how dost thou like this? |
779 | Now, Faustus, must Thou needs be damn''d, and canst thou not be sav''d: What boots it, then, to think of God or heaven? |
779 | Now, Faustus, thou hast heard all my progeny; wilt thou bid me to supper? |
779 | Now, Faustus, what wouldst thou have me do? |
779 | O, what shall we do to save[170] Faustus? |
779 | O, what will not I do to obtain his soul? |
779 | O, who art thou that look''st so terrible? |
779 | Oh faire bird, what foul musicke is this? |
779 | Or why is this immortal that thou hast? |
779 | Shall I make spirits fetch me what I please, Resolve[26] me of all ambiguities, Perform what desperate enterprise I will? |
779 | Speak, Faustus, do you deliver this as your deed? |
779 | Speak, Mephistophilis, what means this show? |
779 | Stay, Mephistophilis, and tell me, what good will my soul do thy lord? |
779 | Sweet friends, what shall become of Faustus, being in hell for ever? |
779 | Tell me who made the world? |
779 | Tell me, sirrah, hast thou any comings in? |
779 | Tell me, where is the place that men call hell? |
779 | Tell me,[96] Faustus, how dost thou like thy wife? |
779 | Think''st thou that Faustus is so fond[93] to imagine That, after this life, there is any pain? |
779 | Thou damned wretch and execrable dog, Bred in the concave of some monstrous rock, How dar''st thou thus abuse a gentleman? |
779 | Thus hitherto hath Faustus spent his time: But tell me now what resting- place is this? |
779 | To God? |
779 | Tush, These slender trifles Wagner can decide: Hath Mephistophilis no greater skill? |
779 | Villain, have I not bound thee to tell me any thing? |
779 | Was not that Lucifer an angel once? |
779 | Well, do you hear, sirrah? |
779 | Well, thou wilt have one? |
779 | Well, wilt thou serve me, and I''ll make thee go like Qui mihi discipulus? |
779 | Well, you will not tell us? |
779 | What ails Faustus? |
779 | What are you, Mistress Minx, the seventh and last? |
779 | What art thou, Faustus, but a man condemn''d to die? |
779 | What art thou, the first? |
779 | What art thou, the fourth? |
779 | What art thou, the second? |
779 | What art thou, the third? |
779 | What doctrine call you this, Che sera, sera,[19] What will be, shall be? |
779 | What mean you, sirrah? |
779 | What means Faustus? |
779 | What might the staying of my blood portend? |
779 | What, are they gone? |
779 | What, are you crossing of yourself? |
779 | What, is great Mephistophilis so passionate For being deprived of the joys of heaven? |
779 | What, is he gone? |
779 | What, will you go on horse- back or on foot[?] |
779 | When Mephistophilis shall stand by me, What god can hurt thee, Faustus? |
779 | Where are you damn''d? |
779 | Where art thou, Faustus? |
779 | Where be they? |
779 | Where is Justinian? |
779 | Who I, sir? |
779 | Who I, sir? |
779 | Who buzzeth in mine ears I am a spirit? |
779 | Who knows not the double motion of the planets? |
779 | Who, Faustus? |
779 | Why did not Faustus tell us of this before,[169] that divines might have prayed for thee? |
779 | Why should I die, then, or basely despair? |
779 | Why shouldst thou not? |
779 | Why wert thou not a creature wanting soul? |
779 | Why, Faustus, Thinkest thou heaven is such a glorious thing? |
779 | Why, Faustus, hast thou not attain''d that end? |
779 | Why, Robin, what book is that? |
779 | Why, didst thou not say thou knewest? |
779 | Why, dost not thou know? |
779 | Why, sir, what would you? |
779 | Why, sir, will he not drink of all waters? |
779 | Why, think''st thou, then, that Faustus shall be damn''d? |
779 | Wilt please your highness now to send for the knight that was so pleasant with me here of late? |
779 | Yes, sir, I will tell you: yet, if you were not dunces, you would never ask me such a question; for is not he corpus naturale? |
779 | Yet will I call on him: O, spare me, Lucifer!-- Where is it now? |
779 | [ 100] Tell me, are there many heavens above the moon Are all celestial bodies but one globe, As is the substance of this centric earth? |
779 | [ 84] Why streams it not, that I may write afresh? |
779 | [''?'' |
779 | and in the last line of the speech,"O bloody"? |
779 | and in the last line of the speech,"O bloody"? |
779 | and is not that mobile? |
779 | be they good? |
779 | beginnest thou now to runne into a poore mans house, where thou hast no power, and wert not able to keepe thy owne two dayes? |
779 | comes he not? |
779 | if I should serve you, would you teach me to raise up Banios and Belcheos? |
779 | in the next line but one,"O treacherous"? |
779 | in the next line but one,"O treacherous"? |
779 | is not thy soul shine own? |
779 | maledicat Dominus? |
779 | shall I have Nan Spit, and to mine own use? |
779 | then wherefore should you ask me such a question? |
779 | there''s no haste: but, good, are you remembered how you crossed me in my conference with the Emperor? |
779 | thou canst not read? |
779 | what be they? |
779 | what meanest thou, Robin? |
779 | what shall I do? |
779 | what shall I do? |
779 | what''s the news with thee? |
779 | what, dost think I am a horse- doctor? |
779 | where''s thy master? |
779 | who''s that which snatched the meat from me? |
779 | wretch, what hast thou done? |
779 | you have had a great journey: will you take sixpence in your purse to pay for your supper, and be gone? |
779 | you, hey- pass,[145] where''s your master? |
4282 | A dead spider, master? |
4282 | A rose tree? |
4282 | And did they not suspect that you were yourself? |
4282 | And he gives you no wages? |
4282 | And how shall I send them to you again? |
4282 | And those that dwelt in the castles, master, before the sword came? |
4282 | And where shall I leave the horses? |
4282 | And where will that bring me? |
4282 | And who is he? |
4282 | And you? |
4282 | And you? |
4282 | Are the wars near? |
4282 | Are you soldiers? |
4282 | But can nothing be done, master? |
4282 | But how shall you come by your castle? |
4282 | But where? |
4282 | But will there be no more fighting? |
4282 | But,said Rodriguez,"how does their lingering harm you?" |
4282 | Can Morano speak Latin? |
4282 | Can Morano talk Latin? |
4282 | Can Morano write? |
4282 | Can you stay there? |
4282 | Did he so? |
4282 | Do you desire such a journey? |
4282 | Does he surrender his castle, master? |
4282 | For which side will you fight, master? |
4282 | Gone? |
4282 | Has the King of Shadow Valley no castle? |
4282 | Have we far to go, master? |
4282 | Have you a gold great piece? |
4282 | Have you any castle for my friend? |
4282 | He gives you no food? |
4282 | How far is it? |
4282 | How far? |
4282 | How know you that he is a magician? |
4282 | How know you that? |
4282 | How shall we disguise ourselves? |
4282 | Indeed? |
4282 | Is he very near the castle? |
4282 | Is his house wonderful? |
4282 | Is it not? |
4282 | Is it so? |
4282 | Is it so? |
4282 | Is that not good for adventure? |
4282 | Is there any house on this road, señor,he said,"in which we could rest the night?" |
4282 | Is this your village? |
4282 | La Garda found you, señor? |
4282 | Let the owner of these have them till his own come back,he said, and added:"How far may I take these?" |
4282 | Like you the looks of it? |
4282 | Long? |
4282 | Master,Morano said plaintively,"shall I see to your comforts, your food, and not to your life?" |
4282 | Master,he said,"do you draw your sword of a night?" |
4282 | Master,said Morano,"shall we have more adventures to- day?" |
4282 | Master,said Morano,"that señor who likes my fat body so ill he would kill me, he...""Well?" |
4282 | Mistaken? |
4282 | My castle, señor? |
4282 | My frying- pan? |
4282 | My mandolin? |
4282 | No castle? |
4282 | Not always? |
4282 | Ride, master? |
4282 | Row, master? |
4282 | Señor,he said,"what is the right price for a bottle of this wine that la Garda drink?" |
4282 | Señor,said his old enemy,"will you tarry with us, in our house a few days, if your journey is not urgent?" |
4282 | Shall I tell him, master? |
4282 | Shall we gag him, master, like the rest? |
4282 | Sixty, master? |
4282 | Surely they will move farther off? |
4282 | The bowman''s badge, is it not? |
4282 | The forest is fair, is it not? |
4282 | The forest, señor; how is it now with the forest? 4282 There, master,"he said,"where our road runs through a wood, will our adventure be there, think you? |
4282 | They would give us horses? |
4282 | They would give us horses? |
4282 | Think you,said Rodriguez,"that for so stout a knave this branch of yours suffices?" |
4282 | Timber, Master? |
4282 | Tomorrow morning, señor? |
4282 | Was there a castle in this place? |
4282 | Well, Morano,he said,"have we come by that castle at last?" |
4282 | Well? |
4282 | What castle? |
4282 | What do you bring us? |
4282 | What do you seek? |
4282 | What forest? |
4282 | What is its name? |
4282 | What news? |
4282 | What shall I do to them, master? |
4282 | What shall we do then? |
4282 | What should a servant do if not work for his master? |
4282 | What village? |
4282 | What? |
4282 | When have I broken my word? |
4282 | When have I broken my word? |
4282 | Where are the wars, master? 4282 Where do you go?" |
4282 | Where is he? |
4282 | Where is your home, señor? |
4282 | Which way? |
4282 | Which were best, think you,said Rodriguez,"if you could have but one, a lofty place or comfort?" |
4282 | Whither? |
4282 | Who are you? |
4282 | Who are you? |
4282 | Who is this professor? |
4282 | Who knows? |
4282 | Who needs go anywhere from Shadow Valley? |
4282 | Who told you that? |
4282 | Who wears it? |
4282 | Whose chair is that? |
4282 | Whose word? |
4282 | Why, Morano? |
4282 | Will you buy horses, master? |
4282 | Would you care, señor, when you are well rested to give the chastisement yourself? |
4282 | Yes, yes, you shall have it,his master said,"but how do these folks hinder you?" |
4282 | Yes? |
4282 | You see nothing strange there, then? |
4282 | You were travelling? |
4282 | You would like another ride? |
4282 | Your name? |
4282 | And as he played and sang with his young soul in the music he fancied( and why not, if they care aught for our souls in Heaven?) |
4282 | And how work for him when dead? |
4282 | And in addition to these ways, one of them may draw a comrade''s sword with his teeth and thus...""Shall I pull out their teeth?" |
4282 | And now, my reader, the situation is this: who am I? |
4282 | And then Serafina said, as he walked all heavy with silence past a curving slope of dimly glowing azaleas,"You like flowers, señor?" |
4282 | And to whom or what would you give it? |
4282 | And what message did Serafina receive from those notes that were strange even to Rodriguez? |
4282 | And what of the days he saw? |
4282 | And what would life be if those that deny song are to be permitted to thrive unmolested by all good men?" |
4282 | But when men need him who knows which shadow is his of all that lie in the forest?" |
4282 | But why? |
4282 | By which road go you?" |
4282 | Could it have been the bell? |
4282 | Did he notice nothing as they rode by that balcony? |
4282 | Did he see them truly? |
4282 | Did they not seem sunnier than they really were? |
4282 | Do the boars still drink at Heather Pool? |
4282 | Do the geese go still to Greatmarsh? |
4282 | Does he deserve your pity on that account? |
4282 | Does my reader think that he then set spurs to his horse, galloping towards that house about whose balcony his dreams flew every night? |
4282 | Does my reader wonder they saw when they had no eyes? |
4282 | Does the hurt pain you, señor? |
4282 | Fear came on Morano at the thought: who had power to speak like this? |
4282 | For how would it be if those that have denied song should win and thrive? |
4282 | Had you been there, my reader, you would have said, any of us had said, Why not choose some other house? |
4282 | Have you ever noticed it, reader? |
4282 | He drank no wine that night with Don Alderon: what need had he of wine? |
4282 | He saw Rodriguez, indeed their eyes met as he dropped through the air, but what could mine host do? |
4282 | How is it with Larios, Raphael, Migada? |
4282 | How shall I tell with words what spirit sang wordless to spirit? |
4282 | How should it have been otherwise? |
4282 | In a weak voice and few words the hurt man thanked him, but the apathetic faces seemed to say What of that? |
4282 | Only why the hell do n''t we get back there again where the Evening Star swings low on the wall of the Mess? |
4282 | Or your envy? |
4282 | Over the door was burned on oak in ungainly great letters--"FERNANDEZ""For whom do you seek, señor?" |
4282 | Some evil spirit has done it, then why not he? |
4282 | The Slave of Orion stood watching in silence too, but who knows if he felt pleasure or any other emotion? |
4282 | The others will win the fight, master, and where will your castle be?" |
4282 | Were they not stranger to her? |
4282 | What am I saying? |
4282 | What did it mean? |
4282 | What had Rodriguez seen? |
4282 | What he meant was,"How can I believe you?" |
4282 | What shall I say of Morano? |
4282 | What ship was it? |
4282 | What sorrows had Rodriguez known in his life that he made so sad a melody? |
4282 | What was he to Serafina? |
4282 | What will the Goddess Clio say, or the well- deserving knight, if I offend History? |
4282 | What will they do? |
4282 | What will you do?" |
4282 | Where are the wars?" |
4282 | Whither bound? |
4282 | Who could say what they were in such a house, where bats and evil spirits sheltered perennially from the brooms of the just? |
4282 | Who shoots woodcock now?" |
4282 | Who was this man who so mysteriously blended with the other unknown things that haunted the gloom of that chamber? |
4282 | Whom, then, would you believe? |
4282 | Why had he fought him at night? |
4282 | Why should he know? |
4282 | Why there? |
4282 | Would Rodriguez really leave them? |
4282 | Would you like a new master, Morano?" |
4282 | [ Footnote: He does n''t, but why should n''t he?] |
811 | HOLY synod?] |
811 | one?] |
811 | sirs? |
811 | ''Snails, what hast thou got there? |
811 | ( this play):"But wherefore do I dally my revenge?-- Asteroth, Belimoth, Mephistophilis?" |
811 | (''?'' |
811 | Accursed Faustus, wretch, what hast thou done? |
811 | Affords this art no greater miracle? |
811 | And do you remember nothing of your leg? |
811 | And do you remember you bid he should not ride him[ 221] into the water? |
811 | And has the doctor but one leg, then? |
811 | And hath not he, that built the walls of Thebes With ravishing sound of his melodious harp, Made music with my Mephistophilis? |
811 | And what are you that live with Lucifer? |
811 | And what are you, Mistress Minx, the seventh and last? |
811 | And what art thou, the fifth? |
811 | And what art thou, the third? |
811 | Are all celestial bodies but one globe, As is the substance of this centric earth? |
811 | Are not thy bills hung up as monuments, Whereby whole cities have escap''d the plague, And thousand[ 5] desperate maladies been cur''d? |
811 | Ay, and body too; and what of that? |
811 | Ay, so are all things else; but whereabouts? |
811 | Ay; but, Sir Saucebox, know you in what place? |
811 | Be both your legs bed- fellows every night together? |
811 | But have they all one motion, both situ et tempore? |
811 | But is there not coelum igneum et crystallinum? |
811 | But may I raise such spirits when I please? |
811 | But must thou sit, and I stand? |
811 | But tell me, hath every sphere a dominion or intelligentia? |
811 | But what is this inscription on mine arm? |
811 | But where is Bruno, our elected Pope, That on a Fury''s back came post from Rome? |
811 | But wherefore do I dally my revenge?-- Asteroth, Belimoth, Mephistophilis? |
811 | But wherefore dost thou ask? |
811 | But, I prithee, tell me in good sadness, Robin, is that a conjuring- book? |
811 | But, leaving these vain trifles of men''s souls, Tell me what is that Lucifer thy lord? |
811 | But, tell me, Faustus, shall I have thy soul? |
811 | But, think''st thou heaven is[ 71] such a glorious thing? |
811 | Choke thyself, glutton!--What art thou, the sixth? |
811 | Come, Ralph: did not I tell thee, we were for ever made by this Doctor Faustus''book? |
811 | Come, sirs, what shall we do now[ 203] till mine hostess comes? |
811 | Contrition, prayer, repentance-- what of[ 46] these? |
811 | Did he conjure thee too? |
811 | Did not he charge thee to appear to me? |
811 | Did not my conjuring speeches[ 33] raise thee? |
811 | Do not you remember a horse- courser you sold a horse to? |
811 | First, may it please your sacred Holiness To view the sentence of the reverend synod Concerning Bruno and the Emperor? |
811 | Groan you, Master Doctor? |
811 | Ha''[ 225] you forgotten me? |
811 | Ha, ha, ha!--Dost hear him,[ 220] Dick? |
811 | Has not the Pope enough of conjuring yet? |
811 | Hast thou, as erst I did command, Conducted me within the walls of Rome? |
811 | Have not I made blind Homer sing to me Of Alexander''s love and Oenon''s death? |
811 | Homo, fuge: whither should[ 56] I fly? |
811 | How comes it, then, that he is prince of devils? |
811 | How comes it, then, that thou art out of hell? |
811 | How many heavens or spheres are there? |
811 | How prov''st thou that? |
811 | How should he but in desperate lunacy? |
811 | I do repent; and yet I do despair: Hell strives with grace for conquest in my breast: What shall I do to shun the snares of death? |
811 | I will, sir: but hark you, master; will you teach me this conjuring occupation? |
811 | I would lift up my hands; but see, they hold''em, they hold''em? |
811 | Is all our pleasure turn''d to melancholy? |
811 | Is it[ 53] unwilling I should write this bill? |
811 | Is not all power on earth bestow''d on us? |
811 | Is that the reason why he tempts us thus? |
811 | Is''t not too late? |
811 | Is, to dispute well, logic''s chiefest end? |
811 | Knew you not, traitors, I was limited For four- and- twenty years to breathe on earth? |
811 | Look, sirs, comes he not? |
811 | Nay, hark you; can you tell me[ 218] where you are? |
811 | No, Robin: why is''t? |
811 | Now tell me what saith Lucifer, thy lord? |
811 | Now tell me who made the world? |
811 | Now tell me, Faustus, are we not fitted well? |
811 | Now, Faustus, thou hast heard all my progeny; wilt thou bid me to supper? |
811 | Now, Faustus, what will you do now? |
811 | Now, Faustus, what wouldst thou have me do? |
811 | Now, Faustus, wilt thou have a wife? |
811 | Now, sir, I thinking the horse had had some quality[ 208] that he would not have me know of, what did I but rid[ 209] him into a great river? |
811 | Now, sirrah, I must tell you that you may ride him o''er hedge and ditch, and spare him not; but, do you hear? |
811 | O my dear Faustus, what imports this fear? |
811 | O, are you here? |
811 | O, help me, gentle friend!--Where is Martino? |
811 | O, hostess, how do you? |
811 | O, what art thou that look''st so terribly? |
811 | O, what may we do to save Faustus? |
811 | O, what will all thy riches, pleasures, pomps, Avail thee now? |
811 | Or why is this immortal that thou hast? |
811 | Out, envious wretch!--But what art thou, the fourth? |
811 | Say, Wagner,--thou hast perus''d my will,-- How dost thou like it? |
811 | Shall I make spirits fetch me what I please, Resolve me of all ambiguities, Perform what desperate enterprise[ 13] I will? |
811 | Sirrah Dick, dost thou[ 202] know why I stand so mute? |
811 | Sirrah, wilt thou be my man, and wait on me, and I will make thee go like Qui mihi discipulus? |
811 | Sirrah,[ 38] hast thou no comings in? |
811 | Speak, Faustus, do you deliver this as your deed? |
811 | Speak, are there many spheres above the moon? |
811 | Speak, wilt thou come and see this sport? |
811 | Stay, Mephistophilis, and tell me, what good will my soul do thy lord? |
811 | Sweet friends, what shall become of Faustus, being in hell for ever? |
811 | Tell me, where is the[ 62] place that men call hell? |
811 | That shall I soon.--What art thou, the[ 80] first? |
811 | Then you will not tell us? |
811 | These slender questions Wagner can decide: Hath Mephistophilis no greater skill? |
811 | Think''st thou that Faustus is so fond to imagine That, after this life, there is any pain? |
811 | Thou art a proud knave, indeed.--What art thou, the second? |
811 | Thus hitherto hath Faustus spent his time: But tell me[ 104] now, what resting- place is this? |
811 | Villain, have I not bound thee to tell me any thing? |
811 | Was not that Lucifer an angel once? |
811 | Was this fair Helen, whose admired worth Made Greece with ten years''war[ 233] afflict poor Troy? |
811 | Was this that damned head, whose art[ 185] conspir''d Benvolio''s shame before the Emperor? |
811 | Was this that stern aspect, that awful frown, Made the grim monarch of infernal spirits Tremble and quake at his commanding charms? |
811 | What Lollards do attend our holiness, That we receive such[ 133] great indignity? |
811 | What a devil ail you two? |
811 | What ails Faustus? |
811 | What art thou, Faustus, but a man condemn''d to die? |
811 | What boots it, then, to think on God or heaven? |
811 | What devil attends this damn''d magician, That, spite of spite, our wrongs are doubled? |
811 | What doctrine call you this, Che sera, sera, What will be, shall be? |
811 | What is the reason you disturb the Duke? |
811 | What may we do, that we may hide our shames? |
811 | What means this show? |
811 | What might the staying of my blood portend? |
811 | What needs this question? |
811 | What of this? |
811 | What rude disturbers have we at the gate? |
811 | What shall his[ 187] eyes do? |
811 | What shall we, then, do, dear Benvolio? |
811 | What sight is this? |
811 | What use shall we put his beard to? |
811 | What will not I do to obtain his soul? |
811 | What would they have? |
811 | What''s here? |
811 | What''s that? |
811 | What, in verse? |
811 | What, is great Mephistophilis so passionate For being deprived of the joys of heaven? |
811 | What, is he asleep or dead? |
811 | When Mephistophilis shall stand by me, What power can hurt me? |
811 | Where are you damn''d? |
811 | Where art thou, Faustus? |
811 | Where is Benvolio? |
811 | Where is Justinian? |
811 | Where shall we place ourselves, Benvolio? |
811 | Who buzzeth in mine ears[ 73] I am a spirit? |
811 | Who knows not the double motion[ 77] of the planets? |
811 | Who pays for the ale? |
811 | Who would not be proficient in this art? |
811 | Who''s this that stands so solemnly by himself? |
811 | Who, Faustus? |
811 | Who, I,[ 85] sir? |
811 | Why did not Faustus tell us of this before, that divines might have prayed for thee? |
811 | Why should I die, then, or basely despair? |
811 | Why shouldst thou not? |
811 | Why streams it not, that I may write afresh? |
811 | Why wert thou not a creature wanting soul? |
811 | Why, Faustus, hast thou not attain''d that end? |
811 | Why, do you hear, sir? |
811 | Why, dost not thou know, then? |
811 | Why, dost thou think that Faustus shall be damn''d? |
811 | Why, have you any pain that torture others? |
811 | Why, saucy varlets, dare you be so bold? |
811 | Will not his grace consort the Emperor? |
811 | Wilt thou stand in thy window, and see it, then? |
811 | Wouldst thou make a Colossus of me, that thou askest me such questions? |
811 | You are a couple of fine companions: pray, where''s the cup you stole from the tavern? |
811 | You are deceived, for I will tell you: yet, if you were not dunces, you would never ask me such a question; for is he not corpus naturale? |
811 | You know Doctor Faustus? |
811 | [ 251] What, weep''st thou? |
811 | and is not that mobile? |
811 | and now, sirs, having divided him, what shall the body do? |
811 | comes he not? |
811 | did I not tell you, To- morrow we would sit i''the consistory, And there determine of his punishment? |
811 | did not I[ 224] pull off one of your legs when you were asleep? |
811 | had the doctor three legs? |
811 | is not thy soul thine own? |
811 | shall I be haunted still? |
811 | shall I have Nan Spit, and to mine own use? |
811 | then wherefore should you ask me such a question? |
811 | what dost thou mean by that? |
811 | what lack you? |
811 | what news with thee? |
811 | what shall I do? |
811 | what strange beast is yon, that thrusts his head out at window? |
811 | where be these whores? |
811 | where''s thy master? |
811 | who snatch''d the meat from me? |
811 | why, will he not drink of all waters? |
811 | will it please you to[ 144] take a shoulder of mutton to supper, and a tester[ 145] in your purse, and go back again? |
811 | will you serve me now? |
811 | wretch, what hast thou done? |
959 | A King is n''t required to stay at home forever, and if he takes a notion to travel, whose business is it but his own? 959 All of them together?" |
959 | And do you know that your Ruler, Ozma of Oz, has been stolen? |
959 | And give me back my dishpan? |
959 | And is the dishpan still at the castle of Ugu the Shoemaker? |
959 | And my own magic tools? |
959 | And take a tumble among the thistles? |
959 | And the Frogman, is he also a Yip? |
959 | And the Great Book of Records of Glinda the Good? |
959 | And the Magic Picture? |
959 | And was n''t Ozma in it then? |
959 | And who is Ugu the Shoemaker? |
959 | And who is he? |
959 | And you''ll bring the little Pink Bear? |
959 | Are owls ever blind? |
959 | Are they giants? |
959 | Are they really rubber? |
959 | Are you all agreed to accept my judgment? |
959 | Are you sorry, then? |
959 | Are your people called Thists? |
959 | Are your people so dangerous, then? |
959 | But I have another question to ask: How does it happen that the Thists have no King to rule over them? |
959 | But by what name do others call your city? |
959 | But how about Ozma? 959 But how about my lost growl?" |
959 | But how could you execute us? |
959 | But none of you have answered my question: Where is my growl? |
959 | But tell me, please,said the Wizard,"how does it happen that your city jumps around so, from one part of the country to another?" |
959 | But what can we do when we get to Ugu? |
959 | But what good would that do? |
959 | But what will I do when I get home to the Glass Cat and the Pink Kitten? |
959 | But where is the place? 959 But who will rule in your place while you are gone?" |
959 | But who-- who-- who? |
959 | But who? |
959 | But why should we have anything else when we have so many thistles? 959 But why? |
959 | Ca n''t the Pink Bear tell? |
959 | Ca n''t you see? |
959 | Can you bark? |
959 | Can you hear what I say? |
959 | Could n''t the Little Pink Bear tell us what he did with Ozma? |
959 | Did Your Majesty speak? |
959 | Did any strange person come in or out of the city on the night before last when Ozma was stolen? |
959 | Did n''t he say Ozma was in that hole in the ground? |
959 | Did you get in? |
959 | Do n''t you like Button- Bright, then? |
959 | Do n''t you love Ozma? 959 Do n''t you s''pose we could get to it?" |
959 | Do n''t you suppose Ugu would listen to reason? |
959 | Do you come in war or peace? |
959 | Do you happen to have any talented magician among your people, one who is especially clever, you know? |
959 | Do you know of any wicked people in Oz, Dorothy? |
959 | Do you mean yourself? |
959 | Do you really eat those prickly things? |
959 | Do you s''pose it hurt them much to bump against those mountains? |
959 | Do you s''pose they have flying machines, Wizard? |
959 | Do you see her anywhere around here? |
959 | Do you suppose I can be any funnier than you? |
959 | Do you suppose Ozma could have taken them, herself, for some purpose? |
959 | Do you think the Herkus would hurt us? |
959 | Do you think the person who stole Ozma stole my growl? |
959 | Do you think we are afraid of a toy bear with a toy gun? |
959 | Do you think, then, that my growl was stolen? |
959 | Do you think,asked Dorothy anxiously,"that Ugu the Shoemaker would be wicked enough to steal our Ozma of Oz?" |
959 | Does Dorothy know you are here? |
959 | Does n''t Glinda the Good know where she is? |
959 | Does the Scarecrow admit that this overgrown frog is the wisest creature in the world? |
959 | Does this dragon of yours bite? |
959 | Has anyone a pin? |
959 | Have n''t you anything else to eat? |
959 | Have you a King? |
959 | Have you found Ozma? |
959 | Have you heard of any magicians being among them? |
959 | Have you seen the Herkus yourself? |
959 | He has stolen about everything else of value in Oz, has n''t he? |
959 | He has stolen everything he wants, perhaps,agreed the Lion,"but what could anyone want with your growl?" |
959 | How can that be done? |
959 | How can you wait here and find Button- Bright at one and the same time? |
959 | How could they do that? |
959 | How dare you interrupt me? |
959 | How did that happen? |
959 | How did you manage to conquer Ugu the Shoemaker? |
959 | How do you know that the Shoemaker stole your growl? |
959 | How do you know? |
959 | How ever will you get down? |
959 | However did you come alive? |
959 | I think I shall go last,said the Wizard,"so who wants to go first?" |
959 | I wonder if Ozma is there? |
959 | I wonder if it is strong? |
959 | I wonder if she''s been transformed into Button- Bright? |
959 | If she''s in a dungeon cell, how are you going to get her out? |
959 | If we explained to him how wicked he has been, do n''t you think he''d let poor Ozma go? |
959 | If you have disputes among you,said he after a little thought,"who settles them?" |
959 | If you know so much,she retorted,"why do n''t you know where your dishpan is instead of chasing around the country after it?" |
959 | In peace, of course,retorted the Wizard, and he added impatiently,"Do we look like an army of conquest?" |
959 | In what part of the room is she? |
959 | In what way? |
959 | In which one of Button- Bright''s pockets is Ozma? |
959 | Is Ozma REALLY in this hole? |
959 | Is Ozma up yet? |
959 | Is he alive? |
959 | Is n''t there anyone who rules over you? |
959 | Is that in the Land of Oz? |
959 | Is this your dishpan? |
959 | Is your throat sore now? |
959 | It''s mighty queer, is n''t it? |
959 | Magic, eh? |
959 | May I ask why you have left your home and where you are going? |
959 | Maybe, maybe,responded another Yip,"but why take chances? |
959 | Must we all go back? |
959 | No, but what everyone says must be true, otherwise what would be the use of their saying it? |
959 | Now, tell me,he said, turning to Button- Bright,"could your man in Philadelphia crumble marble in his fingers?" |
959 | Of what crime do you accuse them? |
959 | See here, Frogman, why ca n''t you carry me across the gulf when you leap it? 959 Shall we?" |
959 | So THAT''S the thief, is it? |
959 | Someone in the Land of Oz? |
959 | Stone, is it? |
959 | Tell me, could this man crush a block of stone with his bare hands? |
959 | That is the same thing as calling us thieves and robbers and bandits and brigands, is it not? |
959 | That? 959 The city has stopped hopping around, it is true, but how are we to get to it over this mass of prickers?" |
959 | Then he is the principal person here? |
959 | Then what about my dishpan? |
959 | Then what did he do with her? |
959 | Then why did n''t you answer the Frogman? |
959 | Then you forgive me for all the trouble I caused you? |
959 | They really look that way, do n''t they? 959 They''ve both been stolen, have n''t they?" |
959 | Ugu? 959 Up to your old tricks, eh? |
959 | WHO says so? |
959 | Was it enchanted? |
959 | We came here to capture the Shoemaker, did n''t we? |
959 | Well, what then? |
959 | Well, where is my dishpan? |
959 | Were you ever a dog? |
959 | What COULD it be, then? |
959 | What are they like? |
959 | What are we going to eat? |
959 | What are you doing out of your frog- pond? |
959 | What did he look like? |
959 | What do n''t you believe? |
959 | What do you mean? |
959 | What do you suppose Ugu has done with her? |
959 | What do you suppose has become of it? |
959 | What harm could happen to us in Oz? |
959 | What harm happened to Ozma? |
959 | What has caused you to change your mind so suddenly? |
959 | What if you lost your roar, Lion? 959 What is a King?" |
959 | What is he mumbling about? |
959 | What is that around your waist, Dorothy? |
959 | What makes you so strong? |
959 | What makes you so wonderfully wise? |
959 | What''s gone? |
959 | What''s that? |
959 | What''s the matter with YOUR brains? |
959 | What''s the matter with the country ahead of us? |
959 | What''s the matter? |
959 | What''s this? |
959 | What''s wanted? |
959 | What, jump from here to that whirling hill? |
959 | What? 959 When did you perform those enchantments?" |
959 | When? |
959 | Where IS she? |
959 | Where can it be, then? |
959 | Where else could she be? |
959 | Where has Your Honor been? |
959 | Where has he gone? |
959 | Where is Ozma? |
959 | Where is Ozma? |
959 | Where is the mountain? |
959 | Where''s Dorothy? |
959 | Where? |
959 | Which of you has dared defy my magic? |
959 | Which way? |
959 | Who can fight against magic? |
959 | Who is Ugu the Shoemaker? |
959 | Who is Ugu the Shoemaker? |
959 | Who is the thief? |
959 | Who says all that? |
959 | Who says that? |
959 | Who''s that? |
959 | Why ca n''t you use another Royal Ruler? 959 Why could n''t the Lion ride on the Woozy''s back?" |
959 | Why did n''t I think of that before? |
959 | Why did n''t we think of those blankets before? |
959 | Why do n''t I? |
959 | Why do you wish to capture us? |
959 | Why do you yell at me, woman? |
959 | Why have you dared intrude in my forest? |
959 | Why is that? |
959 | Why not look in the Magic Picture? |
959 | Why not? |
959 | Why on earth did you eat the enchanted peach? |
959 | Why? |
959 | Why? |
959 | Why? |
959 | Wo n''t YOU get lost, too? |
959 | Wo n''t the room keep turning? |
959 | Would n''t he know it? |
959 | Would n''t it be a rich joke if he made prisoners of us, too? |
959 | Yes, yes, wo n''t he say he''s sorry and get on his knees and beg our pardon? |
959 | You have never lost it before, have you? |
959 | And did n''t I bring to you the little Pink Bear, which has told you where Ozma is hidden?" |
959 | And do n''t you want to find her?" |
959 | And how was it enchanted? |
959 | And then he inquired,"Were you born with those queer forms you have, or has some cruel magician transformed you to them from your natural shapes?" |
959 | And then he looked all around him and said in a solemn voice,"Ozma, are you here?" |
959 | And then he turned the crank of the little Pink Bear again and asked,"Is this the hole that Ozma of Oz is in?" |
959 | And then the Lavender Bear King asked,"Would you like to see this magical shoemaker?" |
959 | And then, after looking around the group, he inquired,"What is that on your finger, Trot?" |
959 | And what will happen to one who eats it?" |
959 | And who could wish to deprive her of her Great Book of Records? |
959 | And who else could have carried away my beautiful magic dishpan without being seen?" |
959 | And who, having the power, could also have an object in defying the wisest and most talented Sorceress the world has ever known? |
959 | Are n''t you angry? |
959 | Are n''t you indignant? |
959 | Are you ready to start for the wicker castle of Ugu the Shoemaker?" |
959 | At first a chorus of growls arose, and then a sharp voice cried,"What has happened, Corporal Waddle?" |
959 | But how?" |
959 | But how?" |
959 | But tell me, where did you come from?" |
959 | But what errand requires you to travel such a distance?" |
959 | But what has happened to your Royal Ozma?" |
959 | But where are we?" |
959 | But who, in all the Land of Oz, was powerful and skillful enough to do this awful thing? |
959 | But why ca n''t your friend wash her dishes in another dishpan?" |
959 | But why is he called Ugu the Shoemaker?" |
959 | Ca n''t we do ANYthing to find her, Wizard?" |
959 | Could n''t the Little Pink Bear tell us how?" |
959 | Do n''t you know it''s impolite to get lost and keep everybody waiting for you? |
959 | Do you s''pose it''s on wheels, Wizard?" |
959 | Do you think I''d risk the safety of my innocent people by using a biting dragon to draw my chariot? |
959 | Do you two girls think you can find your way back home again?" |
959 | Do you want to keep our dear Ozma there any longer than we can help?" |
959 | Even if I landed there and could hold on, what good would it do? |
959 | How can you fight a great magician when you have nothing to fight with?" |
959 | How far or how near?" |
959 | How, do you say, how? |
959 | However, Cayke wanted her dishpan very badly, so she turned to her friends and asked,"Who will go with me?" |
959 | If I were Ozma, do you think I''d have tumbled into that hole?" |
959 | In the darkness, the Cowardly Lion felt a shaggy little form nestling beside his own, and he said sleepily,"Where did you come from, Toto?" |
959 | Is n''t it kind of him?" |
959 | Is n''t it queer?" |
959 | No wall?" |
959 | Presently he inquired,"Where is the Little Pink Bear?" |
959 | Seems mighty strange and mysterious, does n''t it?" |
959 | So he turned the crank in the Little Pink Bear''s side and inquired,"Did Ugu the Shoemaker steal Ozma of Oz?" |
959 | So tell me, are you going to struggle, or will you go peaceably to meet your doom?" |
959 | So why do dogs do it?" |
959 | So you''ve eaten the enchanted peach, have you?" |
959 | Suddenly, Trot asked,"Where''s Button- Bright?" |
959 | Tell me, my Pink Pinkerton, what has become of this lady''s jeweled dishpan?" |
959 | The Great Frogman is hungry as any tramp, is he? |
959 | The Great Frogman pick up sticks?" |
959 | The King turned to the throng of toy bears surrounding him and asked,"Has any of you ever seen this golden dishpan before?" |
959 | Then he asked,"Why do you attach so much importance to a dishpan?" |
959 | Then she looked steadily at the boy and asked,"Are you Ozma? |
959 | What is Ugu, and what is a magician? |
959 | What shall we do with this one, which we have just found?" |
959 | What shall we do?" |
959 | What''s become of the city?" |
959 | When the woman had listened to this story, she asked,"Then you have no idea as yet who has stolen your dishpan?" |
959 | When they had finished, she said,"Where are you going next?" |
959 | Where did YOU come from?" |
959 | Where did you find it, Toto?" |
959 | Where is he?" |
959 | Who could have done this wicked, bold thing? |
959 | Who do you think did it, Wizard?" |
959 | Who?" |
959 | Why do n''t you give it up and go home? |
959 | Why do you speak such nonsense?" |
959 | Why would he wish to steal HER?" |
959 | Will some one of you kindly give me a match?" |
959 | Will you kindly tell us by what name your city is called?" |
959 | Will you let me ask him one more question?" |
959 | Would n''t YOU like a dose, sir?" |
959 | Would n''t you feel terrible?" |
959 | Would you like to eat some?" |
959 | Yet what other explanation of the mystery could there be? |
959 | she called,"Have you seen Ozma this morning?" |
955 | A Pink Kitten? 955 A Scarecrow? |
955 | A dark well? 955 A little''Cleverness''? |
955 | A popular song? |
955 | A tin woodchopper? |
955 | A what? |
955 | All ready? 955 All ready?" |
955 | Am I captured? |
955 | And alive? |
955 | And am I a prisoner? |
955 | And are n''t you hungry? |
955 | And could he chop wood then? |
955 | And how shall we find the road of yellow bricks? |
955 | And then shoot them at more travelers? 955 And where did you come from?" |
955 | And where is that? |
955 | And you are a Hopper? |
955 | Any more? |
955 | Any more? |
955 | Are flowers alive? |
955 | Are you afraid of men? |
955 | Are you fond of eating honey- bees? |
955 | Are you going to make that dreadful thing live? |
955 | Are you hurt? |
955 | Are you so broken up that you ca n''t play? |
955 | Be quiet, will you? |
955 | Better than mine? |
955 | Better than mine? |
955 | But a mouth is to talk with, is n''t it? |
955 | But do you think for a moment that I would permit you, or anyone else, to pull the left wing from a yellow butterfly? |
955 | But how can you walk, with only one leg? |
955 | But is there ever any oil in a man''s body? |
955 | But it''s a queer animal with three hairs on the tip of its tail that wo n''t come out and--"What wo n''t come out? |
955 | But tell me, is there any way to get to the Horner Country without going through the city of the Hoppers? |
955 | But the question is not if we will behave, but if you will behave? 955 But the question is, do we want to go where the path does?" |
955 | But they''re part of it; and are n''t they pretty trees? |
955 | But what can he have done, and what made him do it? |
955 | But what do you eat now? |
955 | But what else does this Crooked Magician want? |
955 | But why do you go to bed? |
955 | But, tell me, good sir, are you not a trifle lumpy? |
955 | But,said he, in a puzzled way,"what makes those three hairs important? |
955 | Ca n''t I dance till morning, if I want to? |
955 | Ca n''t I sing? |
955 | Ca n''t I whistle? |
955 | Ca n''t anything else be done? |
955 | Ca n''t you get angry''bout something, please? |
955 | Ca n''t you see? |
955 | Ca n''t you take a joke? |
955 | Ca n''t you take''em out, then, and replace''em with pebbles, so that I wo n''t feel above my station in life? |
955 | Ca n''t you talk from this side? |
955 | Can you dig? |
955 | Can you do anything else? |
955 | Can you see it, Scraps? |
955 | Can you swim? |
955 | Champion what? |
955 | Could n''t we make a raft? |
955 | Dear me, Ojo,said the cat;"do n''t you think the creature is a little bit crazy?" |
955 | Did n''t I say you were Ojo the Lucky? |
955 | Did n''t he say what the Hoppers and Horners were like? |
955 | Did you call me''Scraps''? 955 Did you come to us for advice?" |
955 | Did you pick the six- leaved clover? |
955 | Did you see no girls as beautiful as I am in your own country? |
955 | Do n''t my colors run whenever I run? |
955 | Do n''t travelers cross it? |
955 | Do n''t you ever cross it? |
955 | Do n''t you feel tired? |
955 | Do n''t you find it very annoying to be so crooked? |
955 | Do n''t you own a boat? |
955 | Do n''t you see? |
955 | Do n''t you think we ought to land? |
955 | Do n''t you? |
955 | Do you know where one may be found? |
955 | Do you live here, my good man? |
955 | Do you mean me? |
955 | Do you need more stuffing? 955 Do you suppose you could throw me over that fence? |
955 | Do you surrender? |
955 | Do you think a pink kitten-- common meat-- is as pretty as I am? |
955 | Do you think they are all fast colors, Ojo? |
955 | Does anyone live on those mountains beyond here? |
955 | Does she always watch the Magic Picture? |
955 | Fiddle- cum- foo, Howdy- do? 955 Has she any brains?" |
955 | Has something pleased you? |
955 | Have n''t you always lived in the Land of Oz? |
955 | Have n''t you eaten anything in many years? |
955 | Have you any dark wells in your city? |
955 | Have you any other accomplishments? |
955 | Have you ever been to the Emerald City? |
955 | Have you noticed my pink brains? |
955 | Have you now secured all the things you were in search of? |
955 | Have you one? |
955 | Have you plenty of it? |
955 | Have you seen her, then? |
955 | Horrid? |
955 | How about that sign? |
955 | How big a measure? |
955 | How can I lose that''Un,''Dame Margolotte? |
955 | How can I? |
955 | How dare you put your foot on Chiss? |
955 | How did you get in? |
955 | How did you know I had arrived? |
955 | How do you like Oz? |
955 | How do you manage to do it, Diksey? |
955 | How far is it to the Horner Country? |
955 | How long must we keep this up, Shags? |
955 | How many horns do the Horners have? |
955 | How much is a gill? |
955 | How much of the water do you need? |
955 | How would you like it, Shaggy Man, if I took all your shags away from you? |
955 | How? |
955 | Hullo, Ojo,said Scraps;"how are you?" |
955 | I know; but what road shall I take? |
955 | I''ve a right to be surprised, have n''t I? |
955 | I''ve never heard of a dark well; have you? |
955 | If the mountain is under Ozma''s rule, why does n''t she know about the Hoppers and the Horners? |
955 | Is Dorothy made of tin? |
955 | Is Dorothy the little girl who came here from Kansas? |
955 | Is anything hurting you? |
955 | Is blue the only respectable color, then? |
955 | Is it impolite to romp and shout and be jolly? |
955 | Is n''t any butter? 955 Is n''t one punished enough in knowing he has done wrong? |
955 | Is n''t the country and the climate grand? |
955 | Is she patchwork, like me? |
955 | Is that all? |
955 | Is that the extent of your wisdom? |
955 | Is that the way we go? |
955 | Is the Wizard of Oz a humbug? |
955 | Is the owl so very foolish? |
955 | Is there any water in it? |
955 | Is there anything I can do in return for your kindness? |
955 | Is there such a road? |
955 | Is this mountain in the Land of Oz? |
955 | Is this really a prison? |
955 | Is this true? |
955 | Jinjur did a neat job, did n''t she? 955 Let me see; that''s about seven thousand chicks she has hatched out; is n''t it, General?" |
955 | Makes civilized folks wild folks, eh? 955 May I pull out the hairs now?" |
955 | May I stay here a little while before I go to prison? |
955 | May we see the famous Magician, Madam? |
955 | Me? 955 Me?" |
955 | No jam, either? 955 No? |
955 | None at all? |
955 | Nor a raft? |
955 | Now tell me, please, what magic things must you find? |
955 | Oh; can you growl? |
955 | Oh; do you change your head? |
955 | Oh; do you mean the pink pebbles you call your brains, and your red heart and green eyes? |
955 | Oh; is that so? 955 Outside? |
955 | Raven, or crow? |
955 | Real fire? |
955 | Really? |
955 | Scraps? |
955 | Seems? 955 Shall I throw in a stone, to waken him?" |
955 | So the clover has n''t been picked, eh? |
955 | Tell me,pleaded Ojo, speaking to the Crooked Magician,"what must we find to make the compound that will save Unc Nunkie?" |
955 | Tell me,said the Patchwork Girl earnestly,"do all those queer people you mention really live in the Land of Oz?" |
955 | The question is, who''s going to explain the joke to the Horners? 955 The shape does n''t make a thing honest, does it?" |
955 | Then what in the world shall we do? |
955 | Then what shall I do? |
955 | Then why did you both leave him? |
955 | Then why is the prison so fine, and why are you so kind to me? |
955 | Then why was I ever invented? |
955 | Then,said Scraps,"suppose we go in and find him? |
955 | There''s a Patchwork Girl and--"A what? |
955 | They''ll have to prove him guilty, wo n''t they?'''' 955 This is somewhere, is n''t it?" |
955 | True that we have less understanding? |
955 | Unlucky? 955 Was it you who rescued me from the leaf?" |
955 | Well, Doc Pipt, do you mean to introduce us, or not? |
955 | Well, what of it? |
955 | Well, why do n''t you sprinkle some of that powder on them and bring them to life again? |
955 | What about the Hoppers? |
955 | What about the Scarecrow? |
955 | What are the people like? |
955 | What are you trying to find? |
955 | What caused you to think that? |
955 | What companions? |
955 | What crime? |
955 | What did he do then? |
955 | What did old Mombi the Witch do with the Powder of Life your husband gave her? |
955 | What did you do all night? |
955 | What do you know about the Crooked Magician who lives on the mountain? |
955 | What do you mean by such impertinence? |
955 | What do you s''pose he''s done? |
955 | What do you think, Champion? |
955 | What do you want? |
955 | What does it mean? |
955 | What does that mean? |
955 | What does the Liquid of Petrifaction do? |
955 | What for? |
955 | What for? |
955 | What good will that do? |
955 | What had you to do with my brains? |
955 | What has happened to Scraps? |
955 | What has happened to you? |
955 | What have we got? |
955 | What in the world were you doing? |
955 | What is a Woozy, please? |
955 | What is a patchwork quilt? |
955 | What is a servant? |
955 | What is it? |
955 | What is it? |
955 | What is queer about it? |
955 | What is sleep? |
955 | What is the best way to get to the Emerald City? |
955 | What is the next thing Ojo must get? |
955 | What kind of a well is that, sir? |
955 | What next? |
955 | What right have you to order me around? 955 What seems to be the trouble?" |
955 | What shall we do, Shaggy Man? 955 What sign?" |
955 | What was the joke? |
955 | What weapons do you fight with? |
955 | What will they do with him? |
955 | What wolf? |
955 | What''s funny? |
955 | What''s rag- time? |
955 | What''s the game, anyhow-- blind- man''s- buff? |
955 | What''s the news since I left? 955 What''s the trouble?" |
955 | What''s up, Chief? |
955 | What''s wrong now? |
955 | What''s wrong? |
955 | What, a live Scarecrow? |
955 | What, that little squeak? |
955 | What? |
955 | When do you expect to return to the Emerald City? |
955 | Where are you bound for? |
955 | Where does he live? |
955 | Where does this river go to? |
955 | Where is the Horner Country? |
955 | Where is the house, Bungle? |
955 | Where shall we go? 955 Where''s the gold flask, Dorothy?" |
955 | Where? |
955 | Which one? 955 Who are the Hoppers?" |
955 | Who are you, Unknown Being? |
955 | Who cares for a butterfly? |
955 | Who cares for''em, anyhow? 955 Who carves the faces on them?" |
955 | Who is Dorothy? |
955 | Who is the dwarf? |
955 | Who is there? |
955 | Who made the joke? |
955 | Who would think such a funny harlequin lived in the Land of Oz? 955 Who, me?" |
955 | Who? 955 Why are we so poor, Unc?" |
955 | Why are you Ojo the Unlucky? |
955 | Why ca n''t the man make us a raft? |
955 | Why did n''t you make her pretty to look at? |
955 | Why did they shut you up here? |
955 | Why do n''t you take me with you? |
955 | Why do n''t you use it on your streets, then, and the outside of your houses, to make them as pretty as they are within? |
955 | Why do they sit so still, and all in a row? |
955 | Why do you put those things into your mouth? |
955 | Why do you say that, madam? |
955 | Why does n''t he say anything? |
955 | Why not, sir? |
955 | Why not? 955 Why not?" |
955 | Why not? |
955 | Why not? |
955 | Why not? |
955 | Why not? |
955 | Why should I understand that, or anything else? |
955 | Why should there be any road, if the river stops everyone walking along it? |
955 | Why, what''s wrong? |
955 | Why? |
955 | Will that make you angry? |
955 | Will you? |
955 | Would anyone at the royal palace break a Glass Cat? |
955 | Would you like to? |
955 | Yes; is n''t he jolly? |
955 | You do n''t want war, do you? |
955 | A Patchwork Girl? |
955 | A prisoner?" |
955 | After a little while he asked:"Where is the Patchwork Girl now?" |
955 | And in the Munchkin Country?" |
955 | And no cake-- no jelly-- no apples-- nothing but bread?" |
955 | And there''s a Glass Cat--""Glass?" |
955 | And there''s a Woozy--""What''s a Woozy?" |
955 | Anything important?" |
955 | Are n''t you feeling a little queer, just now?" |
955 | Are n''t you horrid?" |
955 | Are you glass, or what?" |
955 | But here is a house by the roadside, so why go farther?" |
955 | But if I let you go, what will you do?" |
955 | But the Glass Cat gave a little laugh and inquired in her scornful way:"How do you intend to get the beast out of this forest?" |
955 | But what is the fifth and last thing you need, in order to complete the magic charm?" |
955 | But when that is gone, what shall we eat, Unc?" |
955 | Ca n''t you see? |
955 | Ca n''t you understand that you and I are superior people and not made like these poor humans?" |
955 | Champion?" |
955 | Chapter Twenty The Captive Yoop As they were preparing to leave, Dorothy asked:"Can you tell us where there is a dark well?" |
955 | Could the leaf whistle, Ojo wondered? |
955 | Did n''t you feel the ground tremble? |
955 | Did you notice my brains, stranger? |
955 | Did you say you were traveling toward the Emerald City?" |
955 | Do n''t they ever run around and play and laugh, and have a good time?" |
955 | Do n''t you love classical music?" |
955 | Do n''t you wish, Ojo, with all your heart, that you had not been disobedient and broken a Law of Oz?" |
955 | Do you suppose all the world becomes unlucky one- seventh of the time?" |
955 | Do you suppose they''d flash imitation fire?" |
955 | Do you understand that?" |
955 | Does n''t your straw ever bunch?" |
955 | Fine sparks, were n''t they?" |
955 | Have you any name of your own?" |
955 | Have you met our Scarecrow, then?" |
955 | Have you noticed how beautiful my patches are in this sunlight?" |
955 | Her tootsie''s bare, but she do n''t care, So what''s the odds to you?" |
955 | How are you?" |
955 | How is it, Sawhorse; are you equal to a swift run?" |
955 | How shall we get over the fence?" |
955 | How''s that for a joke, eh? |
955 | Howdy- do, Miss What''s- your- name?" |
955 | Hurry up, ca n''t you? |
955 | I ca n''t see that my colors have faded a particle, as yet; can you?" |
955 | Is anyone in your party named Ojo the Unlucky?" |
955 | Is it glass?" |
955 | Is it possible you ca n''t appreciate rag- time?" |
955 | Is n''t it wonderful what a little paint will do, if it''s properly applied?" |
955 | Is that magic?" |
955 | Is that my name?" |
955 | It called out, reproachfully:"What''s the matter? |
955 | It was locked on both sides and over the latch was a sign reading:"WAR IS DECLARED""Ca n''t we go through?" |
955 | It''s free, is n''t it?" |
955 | It''s funny you and I should live here all alone, in the middle of the forest, is n''t it?" |
955 | Lucky I passed by, was n''t it?" |
955 | Magic- maker?" |
955 | May I go?" |
955 | May we come out again? |
955 | Me?" |
955 | Nice place, is n''t it? |
955 | Not the Shaggy Man?" |
955 | Now she turned to Ozma and asked:"May I go with Ojo, to help him?" |
955 | Ojo and I are not afraid; are we, Ojo?" |
955 | Ojo had been deep in thought, and now he asked the Chief:"Is there a dark well in any part of your country?" |
955 | Ojo kept close to the Scarecrow and the Scarecrow kept close to Dorothy; but the little girl turned to the queer creatures and asked:"Who are you?" |
955 | Or are you still cruel and slappy?" |
955 | Pausing to look back, it asked:"All ready?" |
955 | See? |
955 | Suppose we wait and talk with him about it? |
955 | Tell me, Phony, what is this record like, which you say you have on tap?" |
955 | Tell me, Unc; why are we so poor?" |
955 | The Shaggy Man said the people loved her; but how could they? |
955 | The adventurers now found themselves alone, and Dorothy asked anxiously:"Is anybody hurt?" |
955 | The girl eyed this sign a moment and turned to the Scarecrow, asking:"Who is Yoop; or what is Yoop?" |
955 | The man was standing on the river bank and he called to them:"How do you do? |
955 | The music stopped, at that, and the machine turned its horn from one to another and said with great indignation:"What''s the matter now? |
955 | Then he turned to Dorothy and added:"What will become of the Munchkin boy?" |
955 | Then he went to the table and said:"I wonder if this is my breakfast?" |
955 | Then one said:"That is clear enough; but where does the joke come in?''" |
955 | Then she seated herself at a desk and asked:"What name?" |
955 | Then what do you call all those sweet poems?" |
955 | Then why do n''t you use cotton, such as I am stuffed with?" |
955 | There; does that suit your royal highness?" |
955 | They walked a little while in silence and then Ojo said:"If Ozma forbids the Crooked Magician to restore Unc Nunkie to life, what shall I do?" |
955 | Too bad, Shaggy Man, is n''t it?" |
955 | Understand?" |
955 | Unkind, was n''t it?" |
955 | What are the other things you are to find?" |
955 | What are you able to do; anything''special?" |
955 | What are you made of-- gelatine?" |
955 | What do you say to my offer, Quadling?" |
955 | What do you think, Wizard?" |
955 | What else, Unc?" |
955 | What harm could there be in picking it? |
955 | What is Chiss? |
955 | What is that?" |
955 | What is your name, my poor abused phonograph?" |
955 | What qualities have you given your new servant?" |
955 | What right has this girl Ruler to keep my Unc Nunkie a statue forever?" |
955 | What would you prefer: planked whitefish, omelet with jelly or mutton- chops with gravy?" |
955 | When the visitors had eaten heartily of this fare the woman said to them:"Do you wish to see Dr. Pipt on business or for pleasure?" |
955 | Where did you come from, Crazy- quilt?" |
955 | Where''s the jam then?" |
955 | Who but poor Margolotte could have managed to invent such an unreasonable being as I? |
955 | Who cares for the outside of anything?" |
955 | Who is that bright- colored delicacy behind you?" |
955 | Who put noodles in the soup? |
955 | Who wants to walk?" |
955 | Will you please rescue my companions, also?" |
955 | With my heart- rending growl-- my horrible, shudderful growl? |
955 | Wo n''t it be funny to run across something yellow in this dismal blue country?" |
955 | Would you like that kind of food?" |
955 | Would you like to visit it?" |
955 | You ask me why not? |
955 | You see the point, do n''t you? |
955 | asked the Shaggy Man;"the tail?" |
955 | asked the boy,"when all my attempts to save my dear uncle have failed?" |
955 | cried a man in the first group of Hoppers they met;"whom have you captured?" |
955 | cried the Hoppers in a chorus;"can you help us? |
955 | exclaimed Ojo, greatly astonished at the sight of this stranger; and then he added:"Who has saved me, sir?" |
955 | he asked, reproachfully;"have n''t you any fun in you at all?" |
14591 | ''Twill warm thy heart with new desire: Art with the Devil hand and glove, And wilt thou be afraid of fire? |
14591 | ( MEPHISTOPHELES_ knocks_) FAUST(_ stamping his foot_) Who''s there? |
14591 | (_ To some, who are sitting around dying embers_:) Old gentlemen, why at the outskirts? |
14591 | (_ To the Animals_) But tell me now, ye cursed puppets, Why do ye stir the porridge so? |
14591 | (_ To the Animals_) It seems the mistress has gone away? |
14591 | (_ To_ FAUST,_ who has left the dance_:) Wherefore forsakest thou the lovely maiden, That in the dance so sweetly sang? |
14591 | (_ To_ MARGARET) How fares the heart within your breast? |
14591 | A FIFTH You swaggering fellow, is your hide A third time itching to be tried? |
14591 | A FOURTH Come up to Burgdorf? |
14591 | A VOICE Which way com''st thou hither? |
14591 | ALTMAYER How? |
14591 | ALTMAYER Where am I? |
14591 | AUTHOR Who, now, a work of moderate sense will read? |
14591 | Again my quiet broken? |
14591 | Ah, know''st thou what it means? |
14591 | Ah, thought I, in my conduct has he read it-- Something immodest or unseemly free? |
14591 | Ah, who may all this splendor own? |
14591 | Air? |
14591 | And I? |
14591 | And do I ask, wherefore my heart Falters, oppressed with unknown needs? |
14591 | And first, of course, we''ll make the journey thither? |
14591 | And must I find her body, there reclining, Of all the heavens the bright epitome? |
14591 | And rise not, on us shining, Friendly, the everlasting stars? |
14591 | And stirreth not and quickens Something beneath thy heart, Thy life disquieting With most foreboding presence? |
14591 | And supping there with Hans occasioned your delay? |
14591 | And that damned stuff, the bestial, human brood,-- What use, in having that to play with? |
14591 | And this one Book of Mystery From Nostradamus''very hand, Is''t not sufficient company? |
14591 | And thus, thou''rt prisoner to me? |
14591 | And will her foul mess take away Full thirty years from my existence? |
14591 | And, if you''ll probe the thing profoundly, Knew you so much-- and you''ll confess it roundly!-- As here of Schwerdtlein''s death and place of rest? |
14591 | Another baffled hope must be lamented: Has Nature, then, and has a noble mind Not any potent balsam yet invented? |
14591 | Arches not there the sky above us? |
14591 | Are we the sport of every changeful atmosphere? |
14591 | Art thou, my gay one, Hell''s fugitive stray- one? |
14591 | At night, one learns his house to prize:-- Why stand you thus, with such astonished eyes? |
14591 | BRANDER But with the grapes how was it, pray? |
14591 | BRANDER Perhaps you''ll warmly take their part? |
14591 | BRANDER What shall therewith be done? |
14591 | BRANDER(_ to_ SIEBEL) And yours that still I have in hand? |
14591 | Base Being, hearest thou? |
14591 | Believest thou in God? |
14591 | Both hands and feet are, truly-- And head and virile forces-- thine: Yet all that I indulge in newly, Is''t thence less wholly mine? |
14591 | But is there one in all the land Like sister Margaret, good as gold,-- One that to her can a candle hold?" |
14591 | But what comes sneaking, there, to view? |
14591 | But what do I see in the creature? |
14591 | CHORUS OF DISCIPLES Has He, victoriously, Burst from the vaulted Grave, and all- gloriously Now sits exalted? |
14591 | CHORUS_ Quid sum miser tunc dicturus, Quem patronem rogaturus, Cum vix Justus sit securus_? |
14591 | CHORUS_ Quid sum miser tune dicturus_? |
14591 | Can Earth with such a thing be mated? |
14591 | Can I trust my eyes? |
14591 | Can woman, then, so lovely be? |
14591 | Canst thou thyself not brew the potion? |
14591 | Com''st ever, thus, with ill intention? |
14591 | Could such a spirit be so cheated? |
14591 | D''ye rightly take the jest? |
14591 | DOGMATIST I''ll not be led by any lure Of doubts or critic- cavils: The Devil must be something, sure,-- Or how should there be devils? |
14591 | Dare such a human voice disturb the flow, Around me here, of spirit- presence fullest? |
14591 | Did we thrust ourselves upon thee, or thou thyself upon us? |
14591 | Do I find you burning? |
14591 | Dost recognize no more the tall cock''s- feather? |
14591 | Dost thou thy father honor, as a youth? |
14591 | FAUST Ah, can I not remain? |
14591 | FAUST Ah, shall there never be A quiet hour, to see us fondly plighted, With breast to breast, and soul to soul united? |
14591 | FAUST And Margaret? |
14591 | FAUST And shall I see-- possess her? |
14591 | FAUST And thou forgiv''st my freedom, and the blame To my impertinence befitting, As the Cathedral thou wert quitting? |
14591 | FAUST And what shall be my counter- service therefor? |
14591 | FAUST But who is that? |
14591 | FAUST Can we go thither? |
14591 | FAUST Canst thou, poor Devil, give me whatsoever? |
14591 | FAUST Demand''st thou, Pedant, too, a document? |
14591 | FAUST Fear not that I this pact shall seek to sever? |
14591 | FAUST Gnash not thus thy devouring teeth at me? |
14591 | FAUST Hast played the spy again? |
14591 | FAUST How shall we leave the house, and start? |
14591 | FAUST How so? |
14591 | FAUST How? |
14591 | FAUST I know not, should I do it? |
14591 | FAUST If''twould, my love, would I advise it? |
14591 | FAUST In Hell itself, then, laws are reckoned? |
14591 | FAUST Inspect him close: for what tak''st thou the beast? |
14591 | FAUST Is parchment, then, the holy fount before thee, A draught wherefrom thy thirst forever slakes? |
14591 | FAUST MEPHISTOPHELES MEPHISTOPHELES DOST thou not wish a broomstick- steed''s assistance? |
14591 | FAUST May I not, then, upon you wait? |
14591 | FAUST Meanwhile, may not the treasure risen be, Which there, behind, I glimmering see? |
14591 | FAUST Mephisto, seest thou there, Alone and far, a girl most pale and fair? |
14591 | FAUST Must we? |
14591 | FAUST No doubt you''re much alone? |
14591 | FAUST Not even a jewel, not a ring, To deck therewith my darling girl? |
14591 | FAUST Now, whither shall we go? |
14591 | FAUST Seest thou the black dog coursing there, through corn and stubble? |
14591 | FAUST Seest thou the spiral circles, narrowing faster, Which he, approaching, round us seems to wind? |
14591 | FAUST Shall I outlive this misery? |
14591 | FAUST Shall that a nosegay be? |
14591 | FAUST That, too, from thee? |
14591 | FAUST The pentagram prohibits thee? |
14591 | FAUST The same thing, in all places, All hearts that beat beneath the heavenly day-- Each in its language-- say; Then why not I, in mine, as well? |
14591 | FAUST Thee, form of flame, shall I then fear? |
14591 | FAUST Then how shall we begin? |
14591 | FAUST This was the poodle''s real core, A travelling scholar, then? |
14591 | FAUST Thou nam''st thyself a part, yet show''st complete to me? |
14591 | FAUST What ails thee? |
14591 | FAUST What am I, then, if''tis denied my part The crown of all humanity to win me, Whereto yearns every sense within me? |
14591 | FAUST What are, within her arms, the heavenly blisses? |
14591 | FAUST What fresh and vital forces, canst thou guess, Spring from my commerce with the wilderness? |
14591 | FAUST What hidden sense in this enigma lies? |
14591 | FAUST What is thy name? |
14591 | FAUST What murmurest thou? |
14591 | FAUST What weave they there round the raven- stone? |
14591 | FAUST What''s that to thee? |
14591 | FAUST Wherefore the hag, and her alone? |
14591 | FAUST Who? |
14591 | FAUST Why, here in dust, entice me with your spell, Ye gentle, powerful sounds of Heaven? |
14591 | FAUST Wilt thou, to introduce us to the revel, Assume the part of wizard or of devil? |
14591 | FAUST(_ to_ MEPHISTOPHELES) Now, what shall come of this? |
14591 | FAUST(_ who during all this time has been standing before a mirror, now approaching and now retreating from it_) What do I see? |
14591 | FAUST_( awaking)_ Am I again so foully cheated? |
14591 | FROSCH Are you, perhaps, a virtuoso? |
14591 | FROSCH But what has happened, tell me now? |
14591 | FROSCH How do you mean? |
14591 | FROSCH No doubt''twas late when you from Rippach started? |
14591 | FROSCH Vines? |
14591 | FROSCH Was that your nose I tightened? |
14591 | Far away, or nearer singing? |
14591 | Find''st nothing right on earth, eternally? |
14591 | For wilt thou not, no lover fairer, Poor Margaret flatter, and ensnare her, And all thy soul''s devotion swear her? |
14591 | From an old hag shall I demand assistance? |
14591 | GENERAL Say, who would put his trust in nations, Howe''er for them one may have worked and planned? |
14591 | Greet her? |
14591 | Had you not, long since, demonstration That ghosts ca n''t stand on ordinary foundation? |
14591 | Has not your heart been anywhere subjected? |
14591 | Hast for the scarlet coat no reverence? |
14591 | Hast never known a man, nor proved his word''s intent? |
14591 | Have I all the power in Heaven and on Earth? |
14591 | Have I concealed this countenance?-- Must tell my name, old face of leather? |
14591 | Have you so many kinds? |
14591 | Have you, perchance, elsewhere begun? |
14591 | Hear I noises? |
14591 | Hear I tender love- petitions? |
14591 | Hear''st thou voices higher ringing? |
14591 | Here am I balked: who, now can help afford? |
14591 | How can a further test delight you? |
14591 | How comes it that thou dost not shrink from me?-- Say, dost thou know, my friend, whom thou mak''st free? |
14591 | How comes that lovely casket here to me? |
14591 | How dare you venture thus? |
14591 | How has he helped the town, I say? |
14591 | How is it, then? |
14591 | How shall we plan, that all be fresh and new,-- Important matter, yet attractive too? |
14591 | How would the pearl- chain suit my hair? |
14591 | However is it, such A man can think and know so much? |
14591 | I delay to free her? |
14591 | I dread, once again to see her? |
14591 | I feel, I know not why, such fear!-- Would mother came!--where can she bide? |
14591 | I shall recover, dost thou tell me, Through this insane, chaotic play? |
14591 | I''ll levy thine attendance: Why waste so vainly thy resplendence? |
14591 | I, or thou? |
14591 | INQUISITIVE TRAVELLER Is''t but masquerading play? |
14591 | INQUISITIVE TRAVELLER Say, who''s the stiff and pompous man? |
14591 | If I''ve six stallions in my stall, Are not their forces also lent me? |
14591 | If buried, did he own it? |
14591 | If the fount of wine should still be playing? |
14591 | If_ I_ should choose to preach Posterity, Where would you get contemporary fun? |
14591 | In all its tides sweeps not the world away, And shall a promise bind my being? |
14591 | In brooding souls the sunset burn above? |
14591 | In one foot is the fellow lame? |
14591 | Is He, in glow of birth, Rapture creative near? |
14591 | Is it necessary, however, that there should always be this alternative? |
14591 | Is it the first time in your life you''re driven To bear false witness in a case? |
14591 | Is it the_ Thought_ which works, creates, indeed? |
14591 | Is she gone? |
14591 | Is that in the course of nature? |
14591 | Is there a magic vapor here? |
14591 | Is''t actual fact? |
14591 | Is''t life, I ask, is''t even prudence, To bore thyself and bore the students? |
14591 | Is''t not enough, that what I speak to- day Shall stand, with all my future days agreeing? |
14591 | Is''t not his heart''s accord, urged outward far and dim, To wind the world in unison with him? |
14591 | Is''t not soon enough when morning chime has run? |
14591 | Is''t suffering, or pleasure? |
14591 | Is''t the salamander pushes, Bloated- bellied, through the bushes? |
14591 | It will not harm her, when one tries it? |
14591 | Know''st thou the thief, And darest not name him? |
14591 | Know''st thou, at last, thy Lord and Master? |
14591 | LISBETH Dost pity her, at that? |
14591 | LISBETH Hast nothing heard of Barbara? |
14591 | Lies not beneath us, firm, the earth? |
14591 | Light? |
14591 | MARGARET Day? |
14591 | MARGARET Did you not see it? |
14591 | MARGARET How is''t with thy religion, pray? |
14591 | MARGARET How so? |
14591 | MARGARET How so? |
14591 | MARGARET Kiss me!--canst no longer do it? |
14591 | MARGARET Out yonder? |
14591 | MARGARET What means the gentleman? |
14591 | MARGARET What rises up from the threshold here? |
14591 | MARGARET What would I not, to give thee pleasure? |
14591 | MARGARET Whoever could have brought me things so precious? |
14591 | MARGARET(_ coming out_) Who lies here? |
14591 | MARGARET(_ turning to him_) And is it thou? |
14591 | MARTHA And you, Sir, travel always, do you not? |
14591 | MARTHA Had he all love, all faith forgotten in his riot? |
14591 | MARTHA He gave you, further, no commission? |
14591 | MARTHA I mean, have you not felt desire, though ne''er so slightly? |
14591 | MARTHA I meant to say, were you not touched in earnest, ever? |
14591 | MARTHA I''m she: what does the gentleman desire? |
14591 | MARTHA Is dead? |
14591 | MARTHA Say, how? |
14591 | MARTHA Speak plainly, Sir, have you no one detected? |
14591 | MARTHA What is your business? |
14591 | MARTHA(_ coming from the house_) The murderers, whither have they run? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES And the danger to which thou wilt expose thyself? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES And this young lady will be present, too? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES Ask you, pray? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES Hast thou done? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES Have you not led this life quite long enough? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES Indeed? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES Is it permitted that we share your leisure? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES Poor Son of Earth, how couldst thou thus alone Have led thy life, bereft of me? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES Presents at once? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES She, there? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES The Doctor Faust? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES What means the sieve? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES What time takes she for dissipating? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES What will you bet? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES What wouldst thou, then? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES What? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES Which, then? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES Who knows, now, whither the four winds have blown it? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES Why heat thyself, thus instantly, With eloquence exaggerated? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES Why not? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES(_ approaching the fire)_ And what''s this pot? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES(_ to_ BRANDER) And you? |
14591 | MEPHISTOPHELES(_ to_ FAUST) How findest thou the tender creatures? |
14591 | Might I again presume, with trust unbounded, To hear your wisdom thoroughly expounded? |
14591 | Might I, perhaps, depart at present? |
14591 | My friend, so short a time thou''rt missing, And hast unlearned thy kissing? |
14591 | My mother can that have been? |
14591 | My powers I have not rashly estimated: A slave am I, whate''er I do-- If thine, or whose? |
14591 | My work and worry, day and night? |
14591 | Nearer hover Jay and screech- owl, and the plover,-- Are they all awake and crying? |
14591 | Not a pocket- piece? |
14591 | On the brink of death he slandered? |
14591 | PROKTOPHANTASMIST You still are here? |
14591 | Perceiv''st thou yonder snail? |
14591 | Perhaps''twas brought by some one as a pawn, And mother gave a loan thereon? |
14591 | Pray''st thou for mercy on thy mother''s soul, That fell asleep to long, long torment, and through thee? |
14591 | Remains there naught of lofty spirit- sway, But that a dream the Devil counterfeited, And that a poodle ran away? |
14591 | Rescue her? |
14591 | SEVERAL APPRENTICES Why do you go that way? |
14591 | SHOOTING- STAR Darting hither from the sky, In star and fire light shooting, Cross- wise now in grass I lie: Who''ll help me to my footing? |
14591 | SIEBEL What happened? |
14591 | SIEBEL What mean you? |
14591 | SIEBEL Where is he? |
14591 | SIEBEL Who are the strangers, should you guess? |
14591 | SIEBEL(_ as_ MEPHISTOPHELES_ approaches his seat_) For me, I grant, sour wine is out of place; Fill up my glass with sweetest, will you? |
14591 | SPIRIT Who calls me? |
14591 | Say, where? |
14591 | See I with precision? |
14591 | Sees not the gardener, even while buds his tree, Both flower and fruit the future years adorning? |
14591 | Shall I attempt, this once, to seize and bind ye? |
14591 | So might a compact be Made with you gentlemen-- and binding,--surely? |
14591 | Still o''er my heart is that illusion thrown? |
14591 | THE FAIR ONE(_ dancing_) Why does he come, then, to our ball? |
14591 | THE LORD Hast thou, then, nothing more to mention? |
14591 | THE LORD Know''st Faust? |
14591 | THE OTHERS And what will_ you_? |
14591 | THE WITCH Wherein, Sirs, can I be of use? |
14591 | THE WITCH Why so? |
14591 | Tell me, if we still are standing, Or if further we''re ascending? |
14591 | That is no little space: what say''st thou, friend? |
14591 | The All- enfolding, The All- upholding, Folds and upholds he not Thee, me, Himself? |
14591 | The anguish of the dungeon, and the chain? |
14591 | The days of that old Northern phantom now are over: Where canst thou horns and tail and claws discover? |
14591 | The elements of Life how conquers he? |
14591 | The spring- time stirs within the fragrant birches, And even the fir- tree feels it now: Should then our limbs escape its gentle searches? |
14591 | The terms with graver, quill, or chisel, stated? |
14591 | Thee, boundless Nature, how make thee my own? |
14591 | Then may his teaching cheerfully impel thee: Dost thou, as man, increase the stores of truth? |
14591 | There''s an old story has the same refrain; Who bade them so construe it? |
14591 | They dance, they chat, they cook, they drink, they court: Now where, just tell me, is there better sport? |
14591 | Thine endless love, thy faith assuring, The one almighty force enduring,-- Will that, too, prompt this heart of thine? |
14591 | Things worsen,--what improvement names he? |
14591 | Thou, surely, certainly? |
14591 | Though I be glowing with her kisses, Do I not always share her need? |
14591 | Thy soul''s high calling, where? |
14591 | To satisfy them is a task.-- What ails you now? |
14591 | Upon thy threshold whose the blood? |
14591 | VALENTINE(_ comes forward_) Whom wilt thou lure? |
14591 | VOICE(_ from above_) Who calls from the rocky cleft below there? |
14591 | Voices of those heavenly visions? |
14591 | WAGNER Pardon, I heard your declamation;''Twas sure an old Greek tragedy you read? |
14591 | WAGNER Why, therefore, yield to such depression? |
14591 | Was it not given to thee and me? |
14591 | Well, well,--to- night--? |
14591 | What are my lord''s commands? |
14591 | What can within it be? |
14591 | What does he want in this holy spot? |
14591 | What dost thou here In daybreak clear, Kathrina dear, Before thy lover''s door? |
14591 | What dreams are yours in high poetic places? |
14591 | What drew me here with power? |
14591 | What every journeyman within his wallet spares, And as a token with him bears, And rather starves or begs, than loses? |
14591 | What from the world have I to gain? |
14591 | What has it done to thee? |
14591 | What have I done to thee? |
14591 | What helps one''s beauty, youthful blood? |
14591 | What hinders me from smiting now Thee and thy monkey- sprites with fell disaster? |
14591 | What is that here? |
14591 | What is that? |
14591 | What is''t gripes thee, elf? |
14591 | What need to shorten so the way? |
14591 | What need to talk of Inspiration? |
14591 | What seek I? |
14591 | What use, a Whole compactly to present? |
14591 | What want you thus? |
14591 | What wilt from me, Base Spirit, say?-- Brass, marble, parchment, paper, clay? |
14591 | What''s going on? |
14591 | What, in the twilight, can your mind so trouble? |
14591 | When was a human soul, in its supreme endeavor, E''er understood by such as thou? |
14591 | Whence came Such things? |
14591 | Whence o''er the heart his empire free? |
14591 | Where art thou, Faust, whose voice has pierced to me, Who towards me pressed with all thine energy? |
14591 | Where hast thou servant, coach and horses? |
14591 | Where is he? |
14591 | Where is our couple now? |
14591 | Where now is all my pain? |
14591 | Where tends thy thought? |
14591 | Where you, ye beasts? |
14591 | Who are you here? |
14591 | Who art thou, then? |
14591 | Who bids the storm to passion stir the bosom? |
14591 | Who braids the noteless leaves to crowns, requiting Desert with fame, in Action''s every field? |
14591 | Who brings the One to join the general ordination, Where it may throb in grandest consonance? |
14591 | Who dare express Him? |
14591 | Who dares the child''s true name in public mention? |
14591 | Who has done me this ill? |
14591 | Who makes Olympus sure, the Gods uniting? |
14591 | Who scatters every fairest April blossom Along the shining path of Love? |
14591 | Who sneaks to us? |
14591 | Who was it that plunged her into ruin? |
14591 | Who would n''t lose his heart, that met you? |
14591 | Who''d think of that in love''s selected season? |
14591 | Whom then? |
14591 | Why at the threshold wilt snuffing be? |
14591 | Why didst thou enter into fellowship with us, if thou canst not carry it out? |
14591 | Why howl, you women there? |
14591 | Why is my heart so anxious, on thy breast? |
14591 | Why must the stream so soon run dry and fail us, And burning thirst again assail us? |
14591 | Why plague thyself with threshing straw forever? |
14591 | Why should I fly? |
14591 | Why so fast and so fell? |
14591 | Why so full my heart, and sore? |
14591 | Why some inexplicable smart All movement of my life impedes? |
14591 | Why such a noise? |
14591 | Why suck''st, from sodden moss and dripping stone, Toad- like, thy nourishment alone? |
14591 | Why, all at once, exhaust the joyance? |
14591 | Why, tell me now, thou Son of Hades, If that prevents, how cam''st thou in to me? |
14591 | Wilt fly, and art not secure against dizziness? |
14591 | Wilt thou grasp the thunder? |
14591 | With little art, clear wit and sense Suggest their own delivery; And if thou''rt moved to speak in earnest, What need, that after words thou yearnest? |
14591 | With what a vintage can I serve you? |
14591 | Within thy bosom What hidden crime? |
14591 | Yet I perceive no cloven foot; And both your ravens, where are_ they_ now? |
14591 | Yet this delusion in our hearts we bear: Who would himself therefrom deliver? |
14591 | You are not miserly, I trust? |
14591 | You face it out, impertinent and heady? |
14591 | You''ll have him, when and where you wander: His partner in the dance you''ll be,-- But what is all your fun to me? |
14591 | You''re pleased, forsooth, full houses to behold? |
14591 | You''ve not the casks already at the door? |
14591 | Yourself, perhaps, would keep the bubble? |
14591 | [ Illustration:_ Under the old ribs of the rock retreating_,] MEPHISTOPHELES Has not Sir Mammon grandly lighted His palace for this festal night? |
14591 | [ Illustration] IV THE STUDY FAUST MEPHISTOPHELES FAUST A knock? |
14591 | [ Illustration] V AUERBACH''S CELLAR IN LEIPZIG CAROUSAL OF JOLLY COMPANIONS FROSCH Is no one laughing? |
14591 | [ Illustration] XI A STREET FAUST MEPHISTOPHELES FAUST How is it? |
14591 | _ He_ art thou, who, my presence breathing, seeing, Trembles through all the depths of being, A writhing worm, a terror- stricken form? |
14591 | _ The dear old holy Roman realm, How does it hold together_? |
14591 | and soon complete? |
14591 | didst thou recognize, As through the garden- gate I came? |
14591 | know''st thou me? |
14591 | no jewelry? |
14591 | no one drinking? |
14591 | or Fancy''s shows? |
14591 | or we are parted, in our turn, Where art thou? |
14591 | shall the Poet that which Nature gave, The highest right, supreme Humanity, Forfeit so wantonly, to swell your treasure? |
14591 | songs that follow? |
14591 | such words to me? |
14591 | to say? |
14591 | transform the reptile again into his dog- shape? |
14591 | under way? |
14591 | unto thee such power Over me could give? |
14591 | what hast thou done? |
14591 | what''s happened thee? |
14591 | whirled so far astray? |
14591 | who can the field embrace? |
32094 | A Pink Kitten? 32094 A Scarecrow? |
32094 | A dark well? 32094 A little''Cleverness''? |
32094 | A popular song? |
32094 | A tin woodchopper? |
32094 | A what? |
32094 | All ready? 32094 All ready?" |
32094 | Am I captured? |
32094 | And alive? |
32094 | And am I a prisoner? |
32094 | And are n''t you hungry? |
32094 | And could he chop wood then? |
32094 | And how shall we find the road of yellow bricks? |
32094 | And then shoot them at more travelers? 32094 And where did you come from?" |
32094 | And where is that? |
32094 | And you are a Hopper? |
32094 | Any more? |
32094 | Any more? |
32094 | Are flowers alive? |
32094 | Are you afraid of men? |
32094 | Are you fond of eating honey- bees? |
32094 | Are you going to make that dreadful thing live? |
32094 | Are you hurt? |
32094 | Are you so broken up that you ca n''t play? |
32094 | Be quiet, will you? |
32094 | Better than mine? |
32094 | Better than mine? |
32094 | But a mouth is to talk with, is n''t it? |
32094 | But do you think for a moment that I would permit you, or anyone else, to pull the left wing from a yellow butterfly? |
32094 | But how can you walk, with only one leg? |
32094 | But is there ever any oil in a man''s body? |
32094 | But it''s a queer animal with three hairs on the tip of its tail that wo n''t come out and--"What wo n''t come out? |
32094 | But tell me, is there any way to get to the Horner Country without going through the city of the Hoppers? |
32094 | But the question is not if_ we_ will behave, but if_ you_ will behave? 32094 But the question is, do we want to go where the path does?" |
32094 | But they''re part of it; and are n''t they pretty trees? |
32094 | But what can he have done, and what made him do it? |
32094 | But what do you eat now? |
32094 | But what else does this Crooked Magician want? |
32094 | But why do you go to bed? |
32094 | But, tell me, good sir, are you not a trifle lumpy? |
32094 | But,said he, in a puzzled way,"what makes those three hairs important? |
32094 | Ca n''t I dance till morning, if I want to? |
32094 | Ca n''t I sing? |
32094 | Ca n''t I whistle? |
32094 | Ca n''t anything else be done? |
32094 | Ca n''t you get angry''bout something, please? |
32094 | Ca n''t you see? |
32094 | Ca n''t you take a joke? |
32094 | Ca n''t you take''em out, then, and replace''em with pebbles, so that I wo n''t feel above my station in life? |
32094 | Can you dig? |
32094 | Can you do anything else? |
32094 | Can you see it, Scraps? |
32094 | Can you swim? |
32094 | Champion what? |
32094 | Could n''t we make a raft? |
32094 | Dear me, Ojo,said the cat;"do n''t you think the creature is a little bit crazy?" |
32094 | Did n''t I say you were Ojo the Lucky? |
32094 | Did n''t he say what the Hoppers and Horners were like? |
32094 | Did you call me''Scraps''? 32094 Did you come to us for advice?" |
32094 | Did you pick the six- leaved clover? |
32094 | Did you see no girls as beautiful as I am in your own country? |
32094 | Do n''t my colors run whenever I run? |
32094 | Do n''t travelers cross it? |
32094 | Do n''t you ever cross it? |
32094 | Do n''t you feel tired? |
32094 | Do n''t you find it very annoying to be so crooked? |
32094 | Do n''t you own a boat? |
32094 | Do n''t you see? |
32094 | Do n''t you think we ought to land? |
32094 | Do n''t you? |
32094 | Do you know where one may be found? |
32094 | Do you live here, my good man? |
32094 | Do you mean me? |
32094 | Do you need more stuffing? 32094 Do you suppose you could throw me over that fence? |
32094 | Do you surrender? |
32094 | Do you think a pink kitten-- common meat-- is as pretty as I am? |
32094 | Do you think they are all fast colors, Ojo? |
32094 | Does anyone live on those mountains beyond here? |
32094 | Does she always watch the Magic Picture? |
32094 | Fiddle- cum- foo, Howdy-- do? 32094 Has she any brains?" |
32094 | Has something pleased you? |
32094 | Have n''t you always lived in the Land of Oz? |
32094 | Have n''t you eaten anything in many years? |
32094 | Have you any dark wells in your city? |
32094 | Have you any other accomplishments? |
32094 | Have you ever been to the Emerald City? |
32094 | Have you noticed my pink brains? |
32094 | Have you now secured all the things you were in search of? |
32094 | Have you one? |
32094 | Have you plenty of it? |
32094 | Have you seen her, then? |
32094 | Horrid? |
32094 | How about that sign? |
32094 | How big a measure? |
32094 | How can I lose that''Un,''Dame Margolotte? |
32094 | How can I? |
32094 | How dare you put your foot on Chiss? |
32094 | How did you get in? |
32094 | How did you know I had arrived? |
32094 | How do you like Oz? |
32094 | How do you manage to do it, Diksey? |
32094 | How far is it to the Horner Country? |
32094 | How long must we keep this up, Shags? |
32094 | How many horns do the Horners have? |
32094 | How much is a gill? |
32094 | How much of the water do you need? |
32094 | How would you like it, Shaggy Man, if I took all your shags away from you? |
32094 | How? |
32094 | Hullo, Ojo,said Scraps;"how are you?" |
32094 | I know; but what road shall I take? |
32094 | I''ve a right to be surprised, have n''t I? |
32094 | I''ve never heard of a dark well; have you? |
32094 | If the mountain is under Ozma''s rule, why does n''t she know about the Hoppers and the Horners? |
32094 | Is Dorothy made of tin? |
32094 | Is Dorothy the little girl who came here from Kansas? |
32094 | Is anything hurting you? |
32094 | Is blue the only respectable color, then? |
32094 | Is it impolite to romp and shout and be jolly? |
32094 | Is n''t any butter? 32094 Is n''t one punished enough in knowing he has done wrong? |
32094 | Is n''t the country and the climate grand? |
32094 | Is she patchwork, like me? |
32094 | Is that all? |
32094 | Is that the extent of your wisdom? |
32094 | Is that the way_ we_ go? |
32094 | Is the Wizard of Oz a humbug? |
32094 | Is the owl so very foolish? |
32094 | Is there any water in it? |
32094 | Is there anything I can do in return for your kindness? |
32094 | Is there such a road? |
32094 | Is this mountain in the Land of Oz? |
32094 | Is this true? |
32094 | Jinjur did a neat job, did n''t she? 32094 Let me see; that''s about seven thousand chicks she has hatched out; is n''t it, General?" |
32094 | Makes civilized folks wild folks, eh? 32094 May I pull out the hairs now?" |
32094 | May I stay here a little while before I go to prison? |
32094 | May we see the famous Magician, Madam? |
32094 | Me? 32094 Me?" |
32094 | No jam, either? 32094 No? |
32094 | None at all? |
32094 | Nor a raft? |
32094 | Now tell me, please, what magic things must you find? |
32094 | Oh; can you growl? |
32094 | Oh; do you change your head? |
32094 | Oh; do you mean the pink pebbles you call your brains, and your red heart and green eyes? |
32094 | Oh; is that so? 32094 Outside? |
32094 | Raven, or crow? |
32094 | Real fire? |
32094 | Really? |
32094 | Scraps? |
32094 | Seems? 32094 Shall I throw in a stone, to waken him?" |
32094 | So the clover has n''t been picked, eh? |
32094 | Tell me,pleaded Ojo, speaking to the Crooked Magician,"what must we find to make the compound that will save Unc Nunkie?" |
32094 | The question is, who''s going to explain the joke to the Horners? 32094 The shape does n''t make a thing honest, does it?" |
32094 | Then what in the world shall we do? |
32094 | Then what shall I do? |
32094 | Then why did you both leave him? |
32094 | Then why is the prison so fine, and why are you so kind to me? |
32094 | Then why was I ever invented? |
32094 | Then,said Scraps,"suppose we go in and find him? |
32094 | There''s a Patchwork Girl and--"A what? |
32094 | They''ll have to prove him guilty, wo n''t they? |
32094 | This is somewhere, is n''t it? |
32094 | True that we have less understanding? |
32094 | Unlucky? 32094 Was it you who rescued me from the leaf?" |
32094 | Well, Doc Pipt, do you mean to introduce us, or not? |
32094 | Well, what of it? |
32094 | Well, why do n''t you sprinkle some of that powder on them and bring them to life again? |
32094 | What about the Hoppers? |
32094 | What about the Scarecrow? |
32094 | What are the people like? |
32094 | What are you trying to find? |
32094 | What caused you to think that? |
32094 | What companions? |
32094 | What crime? |
32094 | What did he do then? |
32094 | What did old Mombi the Witch do with the Powder of Life your husband gave her? |
32094 | What did you do all night? |
32094 | What do you know about the Crooked Magician who lives on the mountain? |
32094 | What do you mean by such impertinence? |
32094 | What do you s''pose he''s done? |
32094 | What do you think, Champion? |
32094 | What do you want? |
32094 | What does it mean? |
32094 | What does that mean? |
32094 | What does the Liquid of Petrifaction do? |
32094 | What for? |
32094 | What for? |
32094 | What good will that do? |
32094 | What had you to do with my brains? |
32094 | What has happened to Scraps? |
32094 | What has happened to you? |
32094 | What have we got? |
32094 | What in the world were you doing? |
32094 | What is a Woozy, please? |
32094 | What is a patchwork quilt? |
32094 | What is a servant? |
32094 | What is it? |
32094 | What is it? |
32094 | What is queer about it? |
32094 | What is sleep? |
32094 | What is the best way to get to the Emerald City? |
32094 | What is the next thing Ojo must get? |
32094 | What kind of a well is that, sir? |
32094 | What next? |
32094 | What right have you to order me around? 32094 What seems to be the trouble?" |
32094 | What shall we do, Shaggy Man? 32094 What sign?" |
32094 | What was the joke? |
32094 | What weapons do you fight with? |
32094 | What will they do with him? |
32094 | What wolf? |
32094 | What''s funny? |
32094 | What''s rag- time? |
32094 | What''s the game, anyhow-- blind- man''s- buff? |
32094 | What''s the news since I left? 32094 What''s the trouble?" |
32094 | What''s up, Chief? |
32094 | What''s wrong now? |
32094 | What''s wrong? |
32094 | What, that little squeak? |
32094 | What? |
32094 | When do you expect to return to the Emerald City? |
32094 | Where are you bound for? |
32094 | Where does he live? |
32094 | Where does this river go to? |
32094 | Where is the Horner Country? |
32094 | Where is the house, Bungle? |
32094 | Where shall we go? 32094 Where''s the gold flask, Dorothy?" |
32094 | Where? |
32094 | Which one? 32094 Who are the Hoppers?" |
32094 | Who are you, Unknown Being? |
32094 | Who cares for a butterfly? |
32094 | Who cares for''em, anyhow? 32094 Who carves the faces on them?" |
32094 | Who is Dorothy? |
32094 | Who is the dwarf? |
32094 | Who is there? |
32094 | Who made the joke? |
32094 | Who would think such a funny harlequin lived in the Land of Oz? 32094 Who, me?" |
32094 | Who? 32094 Why are we so poor, Unc?" |
32094 | Why are you Ojo the Unlucky? |
32094 | Why ca n''t the man make us a raft? |
32094 | Why did n''t you make her pretty to look at? |
32094 | Why did they shut you up here? |
32094 | Why do n''t you take me with you? |
32094 | Why do n''t you use it on your streets, then, and the outside of your houses, to make them as pretty as they are within? |
32094 | Why do they sit so still, and all in a row? |
32094 | Why do you put those things into your mouth? |
32094 | Why do you say that, madam? |
32094 | Why does n''t he say anything? |
32094 | Why not, sir? |
32094 | Why not? 32094 Why not?" |
32094 | Why not? |
32094 | Why not? |
32094 | Why not? |
32094 | Why not? |
32094 | Why should I understand that, or anything else? |
32094 | Why should there be any road, if the river stops everyone walking along it? |
32094 | Why, what''s wrong? |
32094 | Why? |
32094 | Will that make you angry? |
32094 | Will you? |
32094 | Would anyone at the royal palace break a Glass Cat? |
32094 | Would you like to? |
32094 | Yes; is n''t he jolly? |
32094 | You do n''t want war, do you? |
32094 | 20[ Illustration] As they were preparing to leave, Dorothy asked:"Can you tell us where there is a dark well?" |
32094 | A Patchwork Girl? |
32094 | A prisoner?" |
32094 | After a little while he asked:"Where is the Patchwork Girl now?" |
32094 | And in the Munchkin Country?" |
32094 | And no cake-- no jelly-- no apples-- nothing but bread?" |
32094 | And there''s a Glass Cat--""Glass?" |
32094 | And there''s a Woozy--""What''s a Woozy?" |
32094 | Anything important?" |
32094 | Are n''t you feeling a little queer, just now?" |
32094 | Are n''t you horrid?" |
32094 | Are you glass, or what?" |
32094 | But here is a house by the roadside, so why go farther?" |
32094 | But if I let you go, what will you do?" |
32094 | But the Glass Cat gave a little laugh and inquired in her scornful way:"How do you intend to get the beast out of this forest?" |
32094 | But what is the fifth and last thing you need, in order to complete the magic charm?" |
32094 | But when that is gone, what shall we eat, Unc?" |
32094 | Ca n''t you see? |
32094 | Ca n''t you understand that you and I are superior people and not made like these poor humans?" |
32094 | Champion?" |
32094 | Could the leaf whistle, Ojo wondered? |
32094 | Did n''t you feel the ground tremble? |
32094 | Did you notice my brains, stranger? |
32094 | Did you say you were traveling toward the Emerald City?" |
32094 | Do n''t they ever run around and play and laugh, and have a good time?" |
32094 | Do n''t you love classical music?" |
32094 | Do n''t you wish, Ojo, with all your heart, that you had not been disobedient and broken a Law of Oz?" |
32094 | Do you suppose all the world becomes unlucky one- seventh of the time?" |
32094 | Do you suppose they''d flash imitation fire?" |
32094 | Do you understand that?" |
32094 | Does n''t your straw ever bunch?" |
32094 | Fine sparks, were n''t they?" |
32094 | Have you any name of your own?" |
32094 | Have you met our Scarecrow, then?" |
32094 | Have you noticed how beautiful my patches are in this sunlight?" |
32094 | Her tootsie''s bare, but she do n''t care, So what''s the odds to you?" |
32094 | How are you?" |
32094 | How is it, Sawhorse; are you equal to a swift run?" |
32094 | How shall we get over the fence?" |
32094 | How''s that for a joke, eh? |
32094 | Howdy- do, Miss What''s- your- name?" |
32094 | Hurry up, ca n''t you? |
32094 | I ca n''t see that my colors have faded a particle, as yet; can you?" |
32094 | Is anyone in your party named Ojo the Unlucky?" |
32094 | Is it glass?" |
32094 | Is it possible you ca n''t appreciate rag- time?" |
32094 | Is n''t it wonderful what a little paint will do, if it''s properly applied?" |
32094 | Is that magic?" |
32094 | Is that my name?" |
32094 | It called out, reproachfully:"What''s the matter? |
32094 | It was locked on both sides and over the latch was a sign reading:"WAR IS DECLARED""Ca n''t we go through?" |
32094 | It''s free, is n''t it? |
32094 | It''s funny you and I should live here all alone, in the middle of the forest, is n''t it?" |
32094 | Lucky I passed by, was n''t it?" |
32094 | Magic- maker?" |
32094 | May I go?" |
32094 | May we come out again? |
32094 | Me?" |
32094 | Nice place, is n''t it? |
32094 | Not the Shaggy Man?" |
32094 | Now she turned to Ozma and asked:"May I go with Ojo, to help him?" |
32094 | ONE[ Illustration]"Where''s the butter, Unc Nunkie?" |
32094 | Ojo and I are not afraid; are we, Ojo?" |
32094 | Ojo had been deep in thought, and now he asked the Chief:"Is there a dark well in any part of your country?" |
32094 | Ojo kept close to the Scarecrow and the Scarecrow kept close to Dorothy; but the little girl turned to the queer creatures and asked:"Who are you?" |
32094 | Or are you still cruel and slappy?" |
32094 | Pausing to look back, it asked:"All ready?" |
32094 | See? |
32094 | Suppose we wait and talk with him about it? |
32094 | Tell me, Phony, what is this record like, which you say you have on tap?" |
32094 | Tell me, Unc; why are we so poor?" |
32094 | The Shaggy Man said the people loved her; but how could they? |
32094 | The adventurers now found themselves alone, and Dorothy asked anxiously:"Is anybody hurt?" |
32094 | The girl eyed this sign a moment and then turned to the Scarecrow, asking:"Who is Yoop; or what is Yoop?" |
32094 | The man was standing on the river bank and he called to them:"How do you do? |
32094 | The music stopped, at that, and the machine turned its horn from one to another and said with great indignation:"What''s the matter now? |
32094 | Then he turned to Dorothy and added:"What will become of the Munchkin boy?" |
32094 | Then he went to the table and said:"I wonder if this is my breakfast?" |
32094 | Then one said:"That is clear enough; but where does the joke come in?" |
32094 | Then she seated herself at a desk and asked:"What name?" |
32094 | Then what do you call all those sweet poems?" |
32094 | Then why do n''t you use cotton, such as I am stuffed with?" |
32094 | There; does that suit your royal highness?" |
32094 | They walked a little while in silence and then Ojo said:"If Ozma forbids the Crooked Magician to restore Unc Nunkie to life, what shall I do?" |
32094 | Too bad, Shaggy Man, is n''t it?" |
32094 | Understand?" |
32094 | Unkind, was n''t it?" |
32094 | What are the other things you are to find?" |
32094 | What are you able to do; anything''special?" |
32094 | What are_ you_ made of-- gelatine?" |
32094 | What do you say to my offer, Quadling?" |
32094 | What do you think, Wizard?" |
32094 | What else, Unc?" |
32094 | What harm could there be in picking it? |
32094 | What is Chiss?" |
32094 | What is that?" |
32094 | What is your name, my poor abused phonograph?" |
32094 | What qualities have you given your new servant?" |
32094 | What right has this girl Ruler to keep my Unc Nunkie a statue forever?" |
32094 | What would you prefer: planked whitefish, omelet with jelly or mutton- chops with gravy?" |
32094 | When the visitors had eaten heartily of this fare the woman said to them:"Do you wish to see Dr. Pipt on business or for pleasure?" |
32094 | Where did you come from, Crazy- quilt?" |
32094 | Where''s the jam then?" |
32094 | Who but poor Margolotte could have managed to invent such an unreasonable being as I? |
32094 | Who cares for the outside of anything?" |
32094 | Who is that bright- colored delicacy behind you?" |
32094 | Who put noodles in the soup? |
32094 | Who wants to walk?" |
32094 | Will you please rescue my companions, also?" |
32094 | With my heart- rending growl-- my horrible, shudderful growl? |
32094 | Wo n''t it be funny to run across something yellow in this dismal blue country?" |
32094 | Would you like that kind of food?" |
32094 | Would you like to visit it?" |
32094 | You ask me why not? |
32094 | You see the point, do n''t you? |
32094 | [ Illustration]"Is this really a prison?" |
32094 | [ Illustration]"Tell me,"said the Patchwork Girl earnestly,"do all those queer people you mention really live in the Land of Oz?" |
32094 | [ Illustration]"What, a live Scarecrow?" |
32094 | asked the Shaggy Man;"the tail?" |
32094 | asked the boy,"when all my attempts to save my dear uncle have failed?" |
32094 | cried a man in the first group of Hoppers they met;"whom have you captured?" |
32094 | cried the Hoppers in a chorus;"can you help us? |
32094 | exclaimed Ojo, greatly astonished at the sight of this stranger; and then he added:"Who has saved me, sir?" |
32094 | he asked, reproachfully;"have n''t you any fun in you at all?" |
14460 | --And stirs there not, already Beneath thy heart a life Tormenting itself and thee With bodings of its coming hour? |
14460 | A bouquet? |
14460 | A knock? |
14460 | A man''s heart bearing, What man has the daring To say: I acknowledge him not? |
14460 | A travelling clark? |
14460 | Again has witchcraft triumphed o''er me? |
14460 | Ah, can I ne''er recline One little hour upon thy bosom, pressing My heart to thine and all my soul confessing? |
14460 | Ah, thought I, has he, haply, in thy manner Seen any boldness-- impropriety? |
14460 | Air? |
14460 | All our loving, longing, yearning? |
14460 | Am I a God? |
14460 | Am I content with all creation? |
14460 | Am I not gazing eye to eye on thee? |
14460 | And I have caught thee then? |
14460 | And Margery? |
14460 | And call this glow, within me burning, Infinite-- endless-- endless yearning, Is that a devilish lying game? |
14460 | And could not all his troubles sore Arrest his vile career, I wonder? |
14460 | And dost thou know, my friend, who''tis thou settest free? |
14460 | And he has left it somewhere buried? |
14460 | And if you search the matter clearly, Knew you as much thereof, to speak sincerely, As of Herr Schwerdtlein''s death? |
14460 | And in return what service shall I render? |
14460 | And is it thou indeed? |
14460 | And must I leave thee then? |
14460 | And see her, too? |
14460 | And shall a promise hold, unbroken? |
14460 | And still dost ask what stifles so The fluttering heart within thy breast? |
14460 | And the danger which thou incurrest? |
14460 | And this was all you had to bring me? |
14460 | And this young lady''ll be there too? |
14460 | And thou forgav''st that liberty, of late? |
14460 | And what d''ye do? |
14460 | And what d''ye want? |
14460 | And what hast thou to give, poor devil? |
14460 | And what''s this pot? |
14460 | And where the dungeon''s anguish? |
14460 | And who are you? |
14460 | And who confess him, Saying, I do believe? |
14460 | And who sneaked in? |
14460 | And why from dripping stone, damp moss, and rotten wood Here, like a toad, suck in thy food? |
14460 | And will this filthy cooked- up mess My youth by thirty years bring nigher? |
14460 | And you, sir, are you always travelling so? |
14460 | And you? |
14460 | And, to the law of All each member consecrating, Bids one majestic harmony resound? |
14460 | Are the jay, and owl, and pewit All awake and loudly calling? |
14460 | Are we the sport of every puff of air? |
14460 | Are you pleased or pained? |
14460 | Art thou a jail- bird, A runaway hell- bird? |
14460 | At night we learn our homes to prize.-- Why dost thou stop and stare with all thy eyes? |
14460 | Believest thou in God? |
14460 | Beneath thy riddle- word what meaning lies? |
14460 | Brass, marble, parchment, paper, shall it be? |
14460 | Breathe I a magic atmosphere? |
14460 | But by the tide of song that from his bosom springs, And draws into his heart all living things? |
14460 | But how about the bunches, brother? |
14460 | But how are we to start, I pray? |
14460 | But how shall we begin? |
14460 | But is there one, in all the land, With my sweet Margy to compare, A candle to hold to my sister fair? |
14460 | But not a jewel? |
14460 | But now Might I for once, with leave retire? |
14460 | But of all heavens the finest essence see? |
14460 | But that thy brain, like mine, once trembling, hoping, Sought the light day, yet ever sorrowful, Burned for the truth in vain, in twilight groping? |
14460 | But then we first must make the journey thither? |
14460 | But to guess I''m vainly trying-- Are we stopping? |
14460 | But what ails the creature? |
14460 | But what is gained, if you a whole present? |
14460 | But what is this? |
14460 | But where''s our pair of doves? |
14460 | But why just that old hag? |
14460 | But why must hope so soon deceive us, And the dried- up stream in fever leave us? |
14460 | By Nostradamus''s[5] own hand, Is it not guide enough for thee? |
14460 | By what inexplicable woe The springs of life are all oppressed? |
14460 | Can a brave man do more or less Than with nice conscientiousness To exercise the calling he inherits? |
14460 | Can it be the Salamander-- Belly thick and legs a- sprawling? |
14460 | Canst no more do it? |
14460 | Canst read his nature? |
14460 | Canst thou Not brew thyself the needful liquor? |
14460 | Close around us-- far before us? |
14460 | Come, climb with me yon hillock''s breast, Was e''er the Prater[40] merrier then? |
14460 | D''ye take there, boys? |
14460 | Did not my downcast eyes show you surprised me? |
14460 | Did we thrust ourselves on thee, or thou on us? |
14460 | Discern''st thou the thief, And darest not name him? |
14460 | Does that delay thee? |
14460 | Dost promise me I shall recover In this hodge- podge of craziness? |
14460 | Doubt for a moment of my noble blood? |
14460 | Doubt me? |
14460 | Ere you go further, give your views As to which faculty you choose? |
14460 | Feel I not always her distress? |
14460 | For have not they themselves arisen? |
14460 | For will you not, in honor, to- morrow Befool poor Margery to her sorrow, And all the oaths of true love borrow? |
14460 | Forgive my keeping you with many questions, Yet must I trouble you once more, Will you not give me, on the score Of medicine, some brief suggestions? |
14460 | From an old hag do I advice require? |
14460 | From here to the endless resting- place, And not another pace-- Thou go''st e''en now? |
14460 | Go behind the stove there and rest thee, There''s my best pillow-- what wouldst thou more? |
14460 | Grasp''st thou after the thunder? |
14460 | Ha, bravo? |
14460 | Has none made out a tender flame to waken? |
14460 | Has not Sir Mammon gloriously lighted His palace for this festive night? |
14460 | Has not a noble mind found long ago Some balsam to restore a youth that''s vanished? |
14460 | Has the cock''s- feather, too, escaped attention? |
14460 | Has the grave''s lowly one Risen victorious? |
14460 | Has the red waistcoat thy respect no more? |
14460 | Hast heard no news of Barbara to- day? |
14460 | Hast never seen this face before? |
14460 | Hast nothing for our edification? |
14460 | Hast played the spy again? |
14460 | Hast thou done? |
14460 | Have I all power in heaven and on earth? |
14460 | Have we not giv''n you demonstration? |
14460 | Have you made any applications elsewhere? |
14460 | Have you not felt, I mean, a serious intention? |
14460 | Have you so many kinds? |
14460 | Hear I rustling? |
14460 | Hearst thou voices high up o''er us? |
14460 | Henceforward I remain a slave, What care I who puts on the setter? |
14460 | Here shall my craving heart find rest? |
14460 | How comes it, then, that thou art not afraid of me? |
14460 | How could you bear to kiss it? |
14460 | How dare you undertake To carry on here your old hocus- pocus? |
14460 | How do you find the dainty creatures? |
14460 | How do you mean? |
14460 | How does he conquer every element? |
14460 | How does he stir each deep emotion? |
14460 | How in the world came this fine casket here? |
14460 | How is it now with thy religion, say? |
14460 | How is it with your heart, my best, now? |
14460 | How long does she spend in gadding and storming? |
14460 | How now? |
14460 | How shall we work to make all fresh and new, Acceptable and profitable, too? |
14460 | How so? |
14460 | How? |
14460 | How? |
14460 | How? |
14460 | How? |
14460 | I can not loose the bonds of the avenger, nor open his bolts.--Rescue her!--Who was it that plunged her into ruin? |
14460 | I mean, has ne''er your heart been smitten slightly? |
14460 | I or thou? |
14460 | I think you spent some time at Rippach[22] lately? |
14460 | I wonder it so long delights you? |
14460 | I''ll hang upon her neck, a raptured wooer, But only tell me, who shall lead me to her? |
14460 | I''m sick of hearing of it; Supposing I the future age would profit, Who then would furnish ours with fun? |
14460 | If I mistook not, did n''t we hear Some well- trained voices chorus singing? |
14460 | If I''ve six horses in my span, Is it not mine, their every power? |
14460 | In all thy life hast never, to this hour, To give false witness taken pains? |
14460 | In all thy life, no man, nor man''s word hast thou known? |
14460 | In hell itself, then, laws are reckoned? |
14460 | Insult to injury add? |
14460 | Is dead? |
14460 | Is it real? |
14460 | Is it the_ thought_ does all from time''s first hour? |
14460 | Is it, then, thou? |
14460 | Is parchment, then, the holy well- spring, thinkest, A draught from which thy thirst forever slakes? |
14460 | Is that flask a magnet to the eyes? |
14460 | Is this in the course of nature? |
14460 | Is this thing thou? |
14460 | Is''t not enough that I the fatal word That passes on my future days have spoken? |
14460 | Is''t true? |
14460 | Know''st thou me, Thy lord and master? |
14460 | Knowest thou Faust? |
14460 | Knowest thou all it mean? |
14460 | Light? |
14460 | Love- plaints, sweet and melancholy, Voices of those days so holy? |
14460 | Markst thou how, ever nearer, ever faster, Towards us his spiral track wheels round and round? |
14460 | May I not now attend you? |
14460 | May I thy aid desire? |
14460 | May all be very well and good; What then? |
14460 | Might I another time, without encroaching, Hear you the deepest things of wisdom broaching? |
14460 | Must I perchance a thousand books turn over, To find that men are everywhere distrest, And here and there one happy one discover? |
14460 | Must one? |
14460 | My fair young lady, will it offend her If I offer my arm and escort to lend her? |
14460 | My name, perchance, wouldst have me mention? |
14460 | My very eyes believe I? |
14460 | No, say what was the real case? |
14460 | Not a ring? |
14460 | Not thee? |
14460 | Now that I like; so then, one may, in fact, Conclude a binding compact with you gentry? |
14460 | Now, Come tell me, son of hell, I pray thee, If that spell- binds thee, then how enteredst thou? |
14460 | Now, gentles, what shall I produce? |
14460 | Oh, in that blest, ecstatic hour, I felt myself so small, so great; Thou drovest me with cruel power Back upon man''s uncertain fate What shall I do? |
14460 | On your poetic heights what dream comes o''er you? |
14460 | Out yonder? |
14460 | Poor son of earth, if left alone, What sort of life wouldst thou have led? |
14460 | Prayest thou haply for thy mother, who Slept over into long, long pain, on thy account? |
14460 | Quem patronum rogaturus? |
14460 | Quid sum miser tunc dicturus? |
14460 | Quid sum miser tunc dicturus? |
14460 | Refuse thee, what can I, poor creature? |
14460 | See''st thou not, nightly climbing, Tenderly glancing eternal stars? |
14460 | Seeft thou, not thicker than a knife- blade''s back, A small red ribbon, fitting sweetly The lovely neck it clasps so neatly? |
14460 | Sees not the gardener, in the green young plant, That bloom and fruit shall deck its coming season? |
14460 | Seest thou that black dog through stalks and stubble roaming? |
14460 | Seest thou the snail? |
14460 | Shall I subscribe with pencil, pen or graver? |
14460 | Shall I? |
14460 | Shall we start at once? |
14460 | She? |
14460 | Sing you, ye choirs, e''en now, the glad, consoling song, That once, from angel- lips, through gloom sepulchral rung, A new immortal covenant sealing? |
14460 | Sits he, God''s Holy One, High- throned and glorious? |
14460 | So short an absence, love, as this, And forgot how to kiss? |
14460 | So then, my little angel recognized me, As I came through the garden gate? |
14460 | So you''re all on fire? |
14460 | Speak plainly, sir, has none your fancy taken? |
14460 | Spring through the birch- tree''s veins is flowing, The very pine is feeling it; Should not its influence set our limbs a- glowing? |
14460 | Still bid me clutch the charm that lures and flies? |
14460 | Still thy old work of accusation? |
14460 | Such lovely woman can there be? |
14460 | Tell me who is that stiff man? |
14460 | That impudence of mine, so daring, As thou wast home from church repairing? |
14460 | That impulse must I, then, obey? |
14460 | That is no scanty space; what sayst thou, friend? |
14460 | That which at nothing the gauntlet has hurled, This, what''s its name? |
14460 | That''s wrong, there''s one true faith-- one must believe it? |
14460 | That, too, from thee? |
14460 | The All- enfolder, The All- upholder, Enfolds, upholds He not Thee, me, Himself? |
14460 | The Doctor has been well catechized then? |
14460 | The Doctor? |
14460 | The Pentagram disturbs thee? |
14460 | The Uncreated, Ineffably Holy, With Deity mated, Sin''s victim lowly? |
14460 | The dear old holy Romish realm, What holds it still together? |
14460 | The devil''s something, that I know, Else how could there be devils? |
14460 | The earnest soul with evening- redness glow? |
14460 | The houseless am I not? |
14460 | The monster without aim or rest? |
14460 | The thirst for knowledge and the martyrdom of doubt, had they not tormented his early years? |
14460 | The world- stream raves and rushes( hast not heard?) |
14460 | Thee, flame- born creature, shall I fear? |
14460 | Then believ''st thou not? |
14460 | Then there''ll be talk of truth unending, Of love o''ermastering, all transcending-- Will every word be heart- born there? |
14460 | There''s an old tale that ends just so, Who gave that meaning to it? |
14460 | There, in a row, a hundred fires are burning; They dance, chat, cook, drink, love; where can be found Any thing better, now, the wide world round? |
14460 | They''ve gone on gabbling so a thousand years; Who on the fools would waste a minute? |
14460 | This lofty life, this bliss elysian, Worm that thou waft erewhile, deservest thou? |
14460 | Thou, with the devil, hand and glove,[25] And yet wilt be afraid of fire? |
14460 | Through brain and bosom Throngs not all life to thee, Weaving in everlasting mystery Obscurely, clearly, on all sides of thee? |
14460 | Time flies, I do n''t offend you? |
14460 | To all the mind conceives of great and glorious A strange and baser mixture still adheres; Striving for earthly good are we victorious? |
14460 | To deck my mistress not a trinket? |
14460 | To hold you fast doth still my heart implore me? |
14460 | To know of these who would not pay attention? |
14460 | To me he seems to dart around our steps so shyly, As if he said: is one of them my master there? |
14460 | To stay here threshing straw why car''st thou? |
14460 | Trailing from the sky I shot, Not a star there missed me: Crooked up in this grassy spot, Who to my legs will assist me? |
14460 | Underneath thee does not earth stand fast? |
14460 | Upsprings not Heaven''s blue arch high o''er thee? |
14460 | Was e''er a human mind, upon its lofty level, Conceived of by the like of thee? |
14460 | Was it a God who wrote each sign? |
14460 | Was it a ghostly show, so soon withdrawn? |
14460 | Was it not sent to be mine and thine? |
14460 | Was such a thing on earth seen ever? |
14460 | Was that thy nose, friend, I had hold of? |
14460 | Well now, who art thou then? |
14460 | Well, what''s that to you? |
14460 | What ails me? |
14460 | What am I then? |
14460 | What are the joys of heaven while her fond arms enfold me? |
14460 | What are you twirling with the spoon? |
14460 | What boots it thus to snatch at pleasure? |
14460 | What bring you, sir? |
14460 | What brought thee here? |
14460 | What can so chain thy sight there, in the gloaming? |
14460 | What crime is buried Deep within thy heart? |
14460 | What do I see? |
14460 | What do the strangers seem to thee? |
14460 | What does that fellow at our ball? |
14460 | What does this mean? |
14460 | What dost take the beast to be? |
14460 | What dost thou here through cave and crevice groping? |
14460 | What glads a crowded house? |
14460 | What goes through the bushes yonder? |
14460 | What griping pain has hold of thee? |
14460 | What has it done to you? |
14460 | What is thy name? |
14460 | What is your worship''s pleasure? |
14460 | What kind of life is this to be living, Ennui to thyself and youngsters giving? |
14460 | What lovely light, so sudden, blooms around me? |
14460 | What makes thy heart so sore? |
14460 | What means the gentleman? |
14460 | What means the sieve? |
14460 | What meanst thou? |
14460 | What murmurest thou? |
14460 | What new life- power it gives me, canst thou guess-- This conversation with the wilderness? |
14460 | What nonsense is she talking here? |
14460 | What now, Margery? |
14460 | What other Knows the pangs that eat me to the bone? |
14460 | What prevents my dashing Right in among thy cursed company, Thyself and all thy monkey spirits smashing? |
14460 | What progress? |
14460 | What saddens me so as I hang about thy neck? |
14460 | What shall be done with that? |
14460 | What then''s to do? |
14460 | What use to fly? |
14460 | What will he in the sacred place? |
14460 | What will you bet? |
14460 | What will you do, then? |
14460 | What will you have? |
14460 | What wilt thou, evil sprite, from me? |
14460 | What woman''s that? |
14460 | What wouldst thou here? |
14460 | What''s doing there? |
14460 | What''s doing, off there, round the gallows- tree? |
14460 | What''s here? |
14460 | What''s that comes yonder, sneaking along? |
14460 | What''s that for? |
14460 | What''s that, comes up from the ground? |
14460 | What? |
14460 | Where am I? |
14460 | Where are the murderers, have they flown? |
14460 | Where are thy servants, coach and horses? |
14460 | Where are thy thoughts? |
14460 | Where are you going to carouse? |
14460 | Where art thou, Faust? |
14460 | Where art thou? |
14460 | Where is he? |
14460 | Where is the breast? |
14460 | Where is the cry of thought? |
14460 | Where now is all my pain? |
14460 | Where you, ye breasts? |
14460 | Where''s the old lady gone a mousing? |
14460 | Where''s thy love left? |
14460 | Where? |
14460 | Where? |
14460 | Which one? |
14460 | Which way didst thou come? |
14460 | Which way now shall we go? |
14460 | Who bids the tempest rage with passion''s power? |
14460 | Who calls from the rocky cleft below there? |
14460 | Who calls upon me? |
14460 | Who comes again to tease me? |
14460 | Who dares express him? |
14460 | Who dares the child''s true name outright to mention? |
14460 | Who helps me to proceed? |
14460 | Who hinders? |
14460 | Who knows which way by the four winds''twas carried? |
14460 | Who makes Olympus fast? |
14460 | Who minds such thing in happy amorous hour? |
14460 | Who on the whole will read a work today, Of moderate sense, with any pleasure? |
14460 | Who robbed me? |
14460 | Who scatters vernal bud and summer flower Along the path where loved ones go? |
14460 | Who weaves each green leaf in the wind that trembles To form the wreath that merit''s brow shall crown? |
14460 | Who''s lying here? |
14460 | Who''s there? |
14460 | Who? |
14460 | Whom lur''ft thou here? |
14460 | Whom then? |
14460 | Whose blood upon thy threshold lies? |
14460 | Whose may this splendor be, so lonely? |
14460 | Why all this noise? |
14460 | Why delay? |
14460 | Why do I gaze as if a spell had bound me Up yonder? |
14460 | Why grin''st thou down upon me, hollow skull? |
14460 | Why has the churl one halting foot? |
14460 | Why howl, as if half- dead? |
14460 | Why let the lovely girl slip through thy fingers, Who to thy dance so sweetly sang? |
14460 | Why like a hornèd owl sit moping? |
14460 | Why make a partnership with us, if thou canst not carry it through? |
14460 | Why not? |
14460 | Why seek ye me in dust, forlorn, Ye heavenly tones, with soft enchanting? |
14460 | Why so? |
14460 | Why talk of being in the humor? |
14460 | Why waste at such a rate thy fire? |
14460 | Will not this life have tired you by and bye? |
14460 | Will things grow better with him? |
14460 | Will things on earth be never right for thee? |
14460 | Will you add to your load the sin of slander? |
14460 | Will''t come right? |
14460 | Wilt fly, and art not proof against dizziness? |
14460 | Wilt thou, as things are now in this condition, Present thyself for devil, or magician? |
14460 | Wilt''t not be time when Matin bell has rung? |
14460 | With what description can I serve you? |
14460 | With your permission, shall we make one party? |
14460 | Would I advise it then, my charmer? |
14460 | Wouldst thou not like a broomstick, now, to ride on? |
14460 | Ye murmuring bells, already make ye known The Easter morn''s first hour, with solemn pealing? |
14460 | Yet this delusion haunts the human breast, Who from his soul its roots would sever? |
14460 | You are perhaps a connoisseur? |
14460 | You mean perhaps to keep the bauble? |
14460 | You monstrous madcap, does your skin Itch for the third time to try that inn? |
14460 | You supped with Mister Hans not long since, I dare say? |
14460 | You take their case so much to heart? |
14460 | You wanted it, what would you more? |
14460 | You who in trouble and distress Have both held fast your old allegiance, What think ye? |
14460 | You''re, may be, much alone? |
14460 | You''ve not the casks before the door, I take it? |
14460 | [ 21] Will nobody drink? |
14460 | [ 38] What''s this ye undertake? |
14460 | ][ 30] What dost thou here, Katrina dear, At daybreak drear, Before thy lover''s chamber? |
14460 | _ Margaret._ Who could have brought both caskets in succession? |
14460 | _ Martha._ I''m she, what, sir, is your desire? |
14460 | _ Witches_[_ chorus]._ The way is broad, the way is long, What means this noisy, crazy throng? |
14460 | and have her? |
14460 | and these walls still prison me? |
14460 | are we hieing? |
14460 | but ai n''t they dressed up neatly? |
14460 | carried off already? |
14460 | darling, who engages To say, I do believe in God? |
14460 | hear I singing? |
14460 | here in German regions Our enterprise may hope success? |
14460 | if that for which my heart Yearns with invincible endeavor, The crown of man, must hang unreached forever? |
14460 | is she gone? |
14460 | not a medal, pin nor stone? |
14460 | or one of Fancy''s shows? |
14460 | the figure is not drawn correctly; One of the angles,''tis the outer one, Is somewhat open, dost perceive it? |
14460 | the gods assembles? |
14460 | the unbefriended? |
14460 | thy head and all that''s in it, Hands, feet and------ are thine; What I enjoy with zest each minute, Is surely not the less mine? |
14460 | what harm have I done to thee? |
14460 | what power Stirs in my deepest soul this hour? |
14460 | what prey dost scent? |
14460 | what slum, thus lonely? |
14460 | what will come of this? |
14460 | what worrisome fiend hath possest thee, Nosing and snuffling so round the door? |
14460 | where find I thee, immense, unknown? |
14460 | whose voice rang through my ear, Whose mighty yearning drew me from my sphere? |
14460 | will writing gain thy faith, alone? |
14460 | you''re engaged in declamation;''Twas a Greek tragedy no doubt you read? |
41071 | A Brother of the Shadow? |
41071 | A legacy? 41071 A loss of expected money,"he muttered,"and Lucy is ill.""Who is Lucy?" |
41071 | Ah, my young sir, men always call women so before marriage; but what do they call them afterwards? |
41071 | Alice, how can you live here? |
41071 | Am I a fool? 41071 Am I cruel? |
41071 | Am I dealing with a gentleman or a scoundrel? |
41071 | Am I? 41071 And as he is a servant of Christ as you are, what does it matter?" |
41071 | And does he know anything about clairvoyance? |
41071 | And how do you know we have met for the first time to- night? |
41071 | And if I am flirting? |
41071 | And if I refuse? |
41071 | And if I refuse? |
41071 | And if they renounce Self? |
41071 | And the inner teaching? |
41071 | And those who do not find it are lost? |
41071 | And what are we to live on? |
41071 | And what do you say? |
41071 | And what explanation did you give her? |
41071 | And what more do you want? |
41071 | And why not if they get them in the right way? |
41071 | And would you? |
41071 | And you trust me even though you have known me such a short time? 41071 And you understand my position?" |
41071 | And you? |
41071 | And you? |
41071 | And your father? |
41071 | Are any marriages made in heaven? |
41071 | Are they puppets? |
41071 | Are you against me also? 41071 Are you aware that you are speaking to your father?" |
41071 | Are you clairvoyant? |
41071 | Are you ill? |
41071 | Are you so sure? 41071 Are you sure that I make you afraid?" |
41071 | Are you then incomplete? |
41071 | Are you tired of all this, Alice? |
41071 | Are you very angry, Julian? |
41071 | At what price? |
41071 | Better? |
41071 | Brunhild or Brynhild-- what do you call that Norse goddess you said you so admired until you met me? |
41071 | But are there really such men? |
41071 | But can not you tell, Master? 41071 But can religion be proved logically?" |
41071 | But how can that golden heart help? |
41071 | But how do you know? |
41071 | But how was this found out? |
41071 | But if he has more power than you----? |
41071 | But if you would only advise me what to do? |
41071 | But is he guilty? |
41071 | But is it a crime? |
41071 | But the danger which threatens me? |
41071 | But the teaching you are giving me? |
41071 | But what am I to do? |
41071 | But what can the vicar do, Douglas? 41071 But what?" |
41071 | But when are you going to move in the matter? |
41071 | But why has n''t he come to help you? |
41071 | But why not? |
41071 | But why this night of all nights? |
41071 | But you believe in the doctrine of reincarnation? |
41071 | But your father----? |
41071 | Ca n''t you understand, Douglas? 41071 Ca n''t you understand?" |
41071 | Can I not help? |
41071 | Can he do this? |
41071 | Can not you understand? 41071 Can that be done?" |
41071 | Can_ you_ leave your body consciously? |
41071 | Did The Adversary strike you down? |
41071 | Did father send the carriage? |
41071 | Did you attempt to convert him? |
41071 | Did you come after us? |
41071 | Did you guess then? |
41071 | Did you kill Hardwick? |
41071 | Did you make an invisible third at my interview with Cane? |
41071 | Did you strike him down? |
41071 | Did you want me? |
41071 | Do epigrams require explanations? |
41071 | Do n''t I tell you that if I thought your feeling for me was really genuine I should not be so wicked as to risk your unhappiness? 41071 Do n''t you feel fire running through your veins when I touch you, Julian?" |
41071 | Do n''t you see what I mean, Enistor? 41071 Do the Chaldeans worship the Stars themselves?" |
41071 | Do what? |
41071 | Do you accuse me of killing the man? |
41071 | Do you call me a child? |
41071 | Do you indeed? 41071 Do you intend to give him that vitality?" |
41071 | Do you know who the other two people are? |
41071 | Do you like my father for his own sake or for mine? |
41071 | Do you live in the Temple of Mars? |
41071 | Do you mean to kill Hardwick? |
41071 | Do you mean to say that she does not know what she told Narvaez and her father? |
41071 | Do you not see the light that is brighter than the sun? |
41071 | Do you really regard yourself as Christ''s steward? |
41071 | Do you reckon knowledge by Time? |
41071 | Do you reckon knowledge by Time? |
41071 | Do you see Hardwick? |
41071 | Do you see any change in the ground? |
41071 | Do you see me? |
41071 | Do you think he will die to- night? |
41071 | Do you think it right to let Don Pablo give you such presents? |
41071 | Do you think that I have nothing to do but to waste my time in that way? 41071 Do you think that I shall surrender you to him?" |
41071 | Do you think that knowledge should make one happy? |
41071 | Do you think that my looks are due simply to a short season of pleasure in London? |
41071 | Do you want me? |
41071 | Do you wish him to die at all? |
41071 | Do? |
41071 | Does Douglas carry you away? |
41071 | Does any woman ever listen to reason? |
41071 | Does n''t Shelley say something like that in''Adonais''? |
41071 | Does n''t your heart beat nineteen to the dozen: have n''t you the feeling that this is heaven on earth? |
41071 | Does the trouble you predicted come from that quarter? |
41071 | Don Pablo is? |
41071 | Don Pablo? 41071 Elementals?" |
41071 | Every one knows that, do n''t they, doctor? |
41071 | Experienced? |
41071 | Feel anything? |
41071 | For what purpose? |
41071 | Has each Angel a temple? |
41071 | Has he not returned? |
41071 | Has it gone as far as that? |
41071 | Have you any brandy? |
41071 | Have you any proof? |
41071 | Have you come here to measure your strength against mine? |
41071 | Have you come to give yourself up? |
41071 | Have you indeed? |
41071 | He does not follow the Left- hand Path then? |
41071 | He is a friend of yours? |
41071 | He is a man then? |
41071 | He is not dead? |
41071 | He is----"Wo n''t you sit down and explain? 41071 Her best friend?" |
41071 | His murder of me in Chaldea? |
41071 | How are you going to manage? |
41071 | How can I be that when my sister has cheated me in this way? |
41071 | How can I explain? 41071 How can I when I do n''t know why we are enemies?" |
41071 | How can I when the fishing''s been bad and Job ca n''t earn enough to keep things going? 41071 How can that be when you were struck down in your moment of triumph?" |
41071 | How can we get time? |
41071 | How can you ask me to take up such a position when you know that I love you, Alice? |
41071 | How can you bear a fire on this hot day? |
41071 | How can you get the vitality? |
41071 | How can you talk so? 41071 How did he know that I was here?" |
41071 | How did you guess? |
41071 | How do you intend to act? |
41071 | How do you know that I can explain, doctor? |
41071 | How do you know that my father is aware of our engagement? |
41071 | How do you know that? |
41071 | How do you know? |
41071 | How does he know? |
41071 | How is it some people repel while others attract? |
41071 | How long were you in the library? |
41071 | How-- how-- did-- you-- come here? |
41071 | I am a fraud, am I? 41071 I do feel tremendously hungry,"admitted the patient;"and your father?" |
41071 | I do n''t look like a man who is able to enjoy a legacy, do I, Alice? |
41071 | I must if I must,he admitted grudgingly;"there is n''t another man, I suppose?" |
41071 | I see that you do n''t love him,said Douglas, his brow clearing;"but does Hardwick-- that is his name, is n''t it?--love you?" |
41071 | I thought that was spiritual strength? |
41071 | I thought you did not care for the money, father? |
41071 | I wonder what is behind all this amiable behaviour, Julian? |
41071 | I wonder what you mean? |
41071 | I wonder why? |
41071 | I? |
41071 | If I and others did not come to you where would your practice be? |
41071 | If he does n''t mean it, why does he do it? |
41071 | If so, why are n''t you plain with me? |
41071 | If that is the case why do n''t you thwart his schemes? |
41071 | Ill, sir? 41071 Impossible?" |
41071 | In the first place,said Montrose, asking a counter- question,"am I to be arrested for murdering Narvaez?" |
41071 | In what way? |
41071 | In what way? |
41071 | Into_ all_ religions? |
41071 | Is Dr. Eberstein religious then? |
41071 | Is Montrose the other man you spoke of at dinner last night? |
41071 | Is he good- looking? |
41071 | Is he ill? |
41071 | Is he mad to say so? |
41071 | Is he or Narvaez the liar? |
41071 | Is he very powerful? |
41071 | Is it foolish? |
41071 | Is it necessary for you to put that into words? |
41071 | Is it necessary to- night? |
41071 | Is n''t that a selfish way of looking at the matter? |
41071 | Is n''t that rather irrelevant? |
41071 | Is she in danger? |
41071 | Is that a hit at me? |
41071 | Is that all you have to say? |
41071 | Is that so strange? |
41071 | Is that the Squire? |
41071 | Is that the sole reason? |
41071 | Is there a Temple to the Earth- Angel? |
41071 | Job? 41071 Julian, how can you say such a thing?" |
41071 | Let you know who he is? |
41071 | Likewise in other lives? |
41071 | Mr. Montrose being the pear? |
41071 | Mr. Montrose,said the vicar, who looked more solemn than ever and was certainly more stiff,"are you wise to walk through the village just now?" |
41071 | Must I, father? 41071 My father?" |
41071 | My sin? |
41071 | Narvaez rules you, and will you bend to him rather than to the Holy One? |
41071 | Narvaez? 41071 Narvaez?" |
41071 | Need I explain? |
41071 | Not even to save his own neck? |
41071 | Now how can I give you an answer, when you have not the capability of grasping the answer, Julian? 41071 Oh hang him, who is he?" |
41071 | Oh, Alice,in a tone of deep reproach,"do you love him and not me?" |
41071 | Oh, Amy, what about Romeo and Juliet? |
41071 | Oh, Rose, why have you not been up to see me? |
41071 | Oh, doctor, how are you? 41071 Oh, my dear,"said Mrs. Barrast in despair,"what is the use of that? |
41071 | Oh, my dog is showing his teeth, is he? 41071 Oh, what a doubtful compliment,"said Alice gaily;"am I then, or rather was I, an ugly duckling?" |
41071 | Perhaps Job Trevel? |
41071 | Pooh, what has love to do with marriage? 41071 Poor soul, why blaspheme? |
41071 | Rather whimsical, do n''t you think? |
41071 | Say? 41071 Selfish? |
41071 | Shall I permit a fool to triumph over me? 41071 Shall we see my father now?" |
41071 | Should I take it, Miss Alice? |
41071 | Still he may want to escape? |
41071 | Stronger than I am? 41071 Tell me, dear, what does he say to you?" |
41071 | That is the name of Mrs. Barrast''s brother, is it not? |
41071 | The Adversary then is not absolutely certain of success? |
41071 | The enemy''s country? |
41071 | The law of love? |
41071 | The name of the Star- Angel? |
41071 | The question is,''Would Don Pablo marry you?'' 41071 The shadow-- the man?" |
41071 | The whole fortune of your sister? |
41071 | The will----? |
41071 | Then I take it that Eberstein has already declared war by bringing Montrose and Alice together? |
41071 | Then Montrose is not the guilty man? |
41071 | Then Mr. Enistor truly was my enemy? |
41071 | Then he has proposed? |
41071 | Then he has recovered? |
41071 | Then who can have murdered Narvaez? |
41071 | Then why ask him? |
41071 | Then why could we not come together? |
41071 | Then why does your father wish you to marry him? |
41071 | Then why not take up the new life at the point where the old one left off? |
41071 | Then you do n''t want me to ask him to dinner? |
41071 | There is a danger then? |
41071 | There is great room for improvement, is n''t there? |
41071 | There never was such a woman as you are,cried Douglas brokenly,"but oh, my darling heart, how can you love me when I lurk here so shamefully?" |
41071 | They then bring death with them? |
41071 | This is indeed a surprise,smirked the elderly lover, bowing;"are you on your way to see me?" |
41071 | To tempt you? 41071 Was your first impression of him pleasant?" |
41071 | We shall see you again, I hope? |
41071 | Well then,he cried impetuously,"my soul and your soul?" |
41071 | Well then-- all the same? |
41071 | Well, Alice, how are you? |
41071 | Well, Master, what is to be done? 41071 Well, do n''t you think his recovery is wonderful?" |
41071 | Well, sir,said Enistor shortly,"what have you to say for yourself?" |
41071 | Well? 41071 Well? |
41071 | Well? |
41071 | Well? |
41071 | Well? |
41071 | What about Job Trevel? |
41071 | What about her love for this Montrose? 41071 What about her?" |
41071 | What about ourselves? 41071 What about the chronology of the Bible? |
41071 | What are you doing? |
41071 | What are you then? |
41071 | What can I say but that I trust you? 41071 What can they do?" |
41071 | What chance? |
41071 | What did he mention to father? |
41071 | What did she tell you? |
41071 | What do you call proper behaviour on his part? |
41071 | What do you know about him? |
41071 | What do you know of this? |
41071 | What do you mean by temporary? |
41071 | What do you mean by that? |
41071 | What do you mean, Miss Enistor? |
41071 | What do you mean, father? |
41071 | What do you mean? |
41071 | What do you mean? |
41071 | What do you see? 41071 What do you see?" |
41071 | What does a child such as you are know about such things? 41071 What does he say?" |
41071 | What does his consent matter when you have hooked a rich man? |
41071 | What does it all mean? |
41071 | What does it matter what other people think? |
41071 | What does that matter? |
41071 | What else have you done? |
41071 | What game? |
41071 | What has come to you? |
41071 | What has she got to do with it, or with me, or with anything? |
41071 | What have you seen in me to lead you to make so infamous a proposition? |
41071 | What if it does? |
41071 | What is a true marriage, you silly girl? |
41071 | What is it: oh, what is it? |
41071 | What is it? |
41071 | What is that secret? |
41071 | What is that? |
41071 | What is the cause of the quarrel? |
41071 | What is the knowledge? |
41071 | What is the use of calling names? 41071 What is the use of hiding one''s light under a bushel?" |
41071 | What is the worship? |
41071 | What is your miracle? |
41071 | What need? |
41071 | What of that? 41071 What of that? |
41071 | What other self is there? |
41071 | What other word can I use to you when we have only known each other for a single week? |
41071 | What will he do? |
41071 | What will you do? |
41071 | What''s he been saying? |
41071 | What''s the row? 41071 What''s the-- the matter?" |
41071 | What, sir, shall the clay say to the potter what it wants to be? |
41071 | What, you know----? |
41071 | What? |
41071 | When did Mrs. Boyce discover the body? |
41071 | When will it be gratified? 41071 Where have you been these last few hours?" |
41071 | Where is Hardwick''s soul? |
41071 | Where is the boasted power of Christ? |
41071 | Where is the life that has been given? |
41071 | Where is the light? |
41071 | Who are they? |
41071 | Who is he? |
41071 | Who is she? |
41071 | Who is the Father? |
41071 | Who is the Son of Perdition? |
41071 | Who is the man? |
41071 | Who killed him? |
41071 | Who said I was going to get into trouble? 41071 Who saved me?" |
41071 | Who told you that? |
41071 | Who will win, you or Narvaez? |
41071 | Who-- who-- who are you? |
41071 | Whom did you come with? |
41071 | Whom or What do I worship then? |
41071 | Whose hatred? |
41071 | Why are you in the dark? 41071 Why did n''t you let me know?" |
41071 | Why did n''t you let me twist his neck? |
41071 | Why did you save my life? |
41071 | Why do n''t you get a new one? |
41071 | Why do n''t you smash Narvaez? |
41071 | Why do they come together? |
41071 | Why do you use my Christian name? |
41071 | Why has Señor Narvaez done this? |
41071 | Why not say with Douglas? |
41071 | Why not sell all we have and give it to the poor? |
41071 | Why not take his advice? |
41071 | Why not, Mr. Montrose? 41071 Why not, if the knowledge be rightly applied?" |
41071 | Why not, when such personality is myself? |
41071 | Why not? 41071 Why not? |
41071 | Why not? 41071 Why not? |
41071 | Why not? |
41071 | Why not? |
41071 | Why not? |
41071 | Why should I be? |
41071 | Why should I be? |
41071 | Why should I not? |
41071 | Why should it be? |
41071 | Why should it not be? |
41071 | Why should she require discipline rather than a millionaire? |
41071 | Why should sorrow come? |
41071 | Why should they try to rise? |
41071 | Why should you obey him? |
41071 | Why should you want protection, Douglas? |
41071 | Why to- morrow? |
41071 | Why trouble about other people? |
41071 | Why was Señor Narvaez lying on the floor? |
41071 | Why will not the parsons take this teaching? |
41071 | Why, what can I do? |
41071 | Why? 41071 Why?" |
41071 | Why? |
41071 | Why? |
41071 | Why? |
41071 | Why? |
41071 | Why? |
41071 | Will it arise? |
41071 | Will it ever come to light? |
41071 | Will there be no more trouble? |
41071 | Will they harm Alice? |
41071 | Would you do something for nothing yourself, Don Pablo? |
41071 | Would you have married him had he been poor? |
41071 | Would you have me sneak away like a cur? |
41071 | Would you have obeyed him if he had told you to give my father the money? |
41071 | Wrongly used to cure the sick? 41071 You appear to know a lot about these things, Montrose?" |
41071 | You are a priestess in the Temple of Mars? |
41071 | You are sure Alice has n''t suffered? |
41071 | You call him Julian-- Mrs. Barrast''s brother? |
41071 | You can feel my touch, can you not? |
41071 | You dare to set your will against my will? |
41071 | You do n''t pity me? |
41071 | You do n''t regret the loss? |
41071 | You feel it also? |
41071 | You fool, have I no means of searching other than in the physical? |
41071 | You inherit the fortune of my sister? |
41071 | You knew me as what? |
41071 | You know what I am thinking about? |
41071 | You know what took place? |
41071 | You mean her innocence? |
41071 | You mean to have me arrested on a charge of murder? |
41071 | You refused him? 41071 You spoke civilly to me when you thought I had lost my power, did n''t you?" |
41071 | You threaten, do you? |
41071 | You understand what? |
41071 | You will come to Cornwall? |
41071 | You will help me? |
41071 | You wish to speak to me about Douglas, father? |
41071 | Young and handsome and wealthy? |
41071 | Your father is in danger of death, you say? |
41071 | Your father? |
41071 | Your own city? 41071 A nice bribe for you to turn into a silly saint, is n''t it, my friend? 41071 Across his mind flashed insistently the question of Ahab,Hast thou found me, O mine enemy?" |
41071 | Alice laid a trembling hand on his arm;"have you felt that also?" |
41071 | Alice, clinging to Montrose, murmured incoherently:"Do you see Him: do you see Him? |
41071 | Alice, will you give me your arm to my lodgings? |
41071 | Alice, will you----?" |
41071 | All my life I have been lonely: all my life I have wanted to meet you, to adore you, to----""How could you when you did n''t know that I existed?" |
41071 | Although I do not know if you believe in reincarnation?" |
41071 | Am I a genius?" |
41071 | Am I blind?" |
41071 | Am I right?" |
41071 | And if he did not murder Narvaez, who did? |
41071 | And then?" |
41071 | And what had she to do with either of the two men? |
41071 | And who has done service? |
41071 | And why, may I ask?" |
41071 | And why? |
41071 | And why?" |
41071 | Are we free?" |
41071 | Are you about to become a pupil of The Adversary as I suggested when you taunted me in the cottage?" |
41071 | Are you bent upon following the feeble Christianity of Eberstein?" |
41071 | Are you going mad?" |
41071 | Are you not aware that God is the One manifesting Himself in us, the Many? |
41071 | Barrast?" |
41071 | Barrast?" |
41071 | But Julian is at least human, so----""Is n''t Don Pablo human?" |
41071 | But could a peaceful life be built up upon a crime? |
41071 | But do you think it was quite fair of her to leave the money away from her own family?" |
41071 | But do you think it was right that she should leave it away from her relations?" |
41071 | But he''s very nice, is n''t he, Alice? |
41071 | But how had Alice come so swiftly from the cave? |
41071 | But is Señor Narvaez the man to train it?" |
41071 | But of course, dear, if you are jealous----""I-- jealous?" |
41071 | But suppose he does n''t approve?" |
41071 | But what does it matter? |
41071 | But why did n''t you lat her as is to be his wife alone?" |
41071 | But why should you not when it is said,''Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God''?" |
41071 | Ca n''t you see now how wise I was to refuse you?" |
41071 | Can nothing be done?" |
41071 | Can you not trust me?" |
41071 | Children,"Montrose spoke half to himself and half to his companion,"what else? |
41071 | DAWN 386 CHAPTER I LOVE IN IDLENESS"How can any one hope to transfer that to canvas?" |
41071 | Did I not scheme to place this young fool in your power, and did I not do so? |
41071 | Did not one of your poets say:''We mortal millions live alone''? |
41071 | Did you feel anything just now?" |
41071 | Do I not deserve gratitude in return?" |
41071 | Do you believe it, Alice?" |
41071 | Do you hear? |
41071 | Do you hear? |
41071 | Do you hear?" |
41071 | Do you think that during the past three weeks I have left you and that nice boy together without guessing the truth ages and ages ago? |
41071 | Do you think that what I suffered from the darkness last night has exhausted me?" |
41071 | Do you understand now why I insulted Alice so that Montrose might publicly quarrel with me?" |
41071 | Do you understand?" |
41071 | Do you want to see Montrose murder me?" |
41071 | Does he practise love and unselfishness and all the rest of the necessary requirements?" |
41071 | Does not the Great Master tell us to love our enemies?" |
41071 | Eh? |
41071 | Eh?" |
41071 | Enistor?" |
41071 | Enistor?" |
41071 | Enistor?" |
41071 | Good Lord, how can any man be angry with another man, when he knows that his enemy is but a child? |
41071 | Hardwick?" |
41071 | Has Douglas proposed?" |
41071 | Has he said anything?" |
41071 | Has my father asked you down to Tremore?" |
41071 | Have I not rendered you a great service? |
41071 | Have you met the man who wanted to marry Alice?" |
41071 | He believes in reincarnation, does n''t he?" |
41071 | He hinted the other day that he----""Loved you? |
41071 | How can I be?" |
41071 | How can we do that?" |
41071 | How could he do so without a rope and lacking assistance? |
41071 | How dare you insult my daughter yesterday?" |
41071 | How did you do it?" |
41071 | How did you do it?" |
41071 | How did you see these fairies?" |
41071 | How do you do? |
41071 | How do you feel, Alice?" |
41071 | How do you like that, my dear friend?" |
41071 | How many?" |
41071 | How much money have you lost?" |
41071 | How often am I to tell you that it is impossible to hurry things? |
41071 | I advised you to get back your aunt''s money by marriage, did n''t I?" |
41071 | I do n''t know exactly how to put it, but in some way I saw----""Saw what?" |
41071 | I like pretty things, and if an old gentleman gives them to me, where''s the harm, I should like to know?" |
41071 | I? |
41071 | I?" |
41071 | If you loved me, would you have chatted about this, that and the other thing so lightly after I had rejected you?" |
41071 | If you turn to his foolish ways will he save your life?" |
41071 | In the first place, where did you meet my father?" |
41071 | Is age to protect him from being punished? |
41071 | Is he as often at Tremore as ever?" |
41071 | Is it in the library, father?" |
41071 | Is it then any wonder that opposing wills clash, when all are so ignorant? |
41071 | Is that it?" |
41071 | Is your head aching?" |
41071 | It is n''t Lent or any of their confounded Church feasts, is it?" |
41071 | It_ is_ Mr. Montrose, is n''t it? |
41071 | Love on one hand, wealth on the other: which will she choose, do you think? |
41071 | May I see Miss Enistor to comfort her and offer up a prayer in her present sorrow?" |
41071 | Montrose?" |
41071 | Montrose?" |
41071 | Montrose?" |
41071 | Montrose?" |
41071 | Montrose?" |
41071 | Montrose?" |
41071 | Montrose?" |
41071 | My dear, where did you learn such awful nonsense?" |
41071 | My sister has sold me in favour of this-- what do you say his name is?" |
41071 | Oh, my dear,"he went on entreatingly,"is there so much love in the world that you and I can afford to throw what we possess away? |
41071 | Oh, what''s to be done?" |
41071 | Only this can give you power, and will you consent to be a slave in the petty kingdom of this man, which will be destroyed when his measure is full?" |
41071 | Shall I see you again?" |
41071 | Shall I then not come when your life depends upon my coming?" |
41071 | Shall you ask Señor Narvaez?" |
41071 | So the young man is coming to Tremore to be put through his paces?" |
41071 | So you are the spider?" |
41071 | That is so satisfactory, is n''t it?" |
41071 | The question is, will you give me the money to save your neck?" |
41071 | Then it was this Montrose beast who made her change her mind?" |
41071 | Then you admit that I am right?" |
41071 | Then you can give your consent to the marriage----""What about your desire to marry Alice?" |
41071 | Then you see, dear-- oh, Dr. Eberstein, how are you? |
41071 | Then your knowledge is as wide as that of-- shall we say Narvaez?" |
41071 | Then----""Well, what then?" |
41071 | There,"he kissed her hand twice,"is it better, darling?" |
41071 | They''re lots cleaner than engineers, are n''t they? |
41071 | To tempt you, sir?" |
41071 | Was Montrose his victim, or his accomplice? |
41071 | Was he an honest man, or a schemer? |
41071 | Was not the warning given last night in this very room enough to shake your faith in his powers?" |
41071 | Was this another miracle in this life of miracles? |
41071 | We are brother and sister, are we not?" |
41071 | We are friends, are we not?" |
41071 | We quite understand one another, do n''t we?" |
41071 | Well, Don Pablo has been paying great attention to Rose; giving her presents and----""Does she accept his attentions?" |
41071 | Well? |
41071 | Well? |
41071 | Well?" |
41071 | Well?" |
41071 | What about your interview with this lawyer? |
41071 | What can we do with the rest of the evening?" |
41071 | What devil made her change her intentions?" |
41071 | What do you do? |
41071 | What do you know of temptation, or of life at all? |
41071 | What do you mean?" |
41071 | What do you mean?" |
41071 | What do you say to that?" |
41071 | What do you think yourself?" |
41071 | What does her ruin or his matter to you? |
41071 | What does this miserable money matter?" |
41071 | What have you got here?" |
41071 | What have you to say?" |
41071 | What is the matter?" |
41071 | What is the result, Alice?" |
41071 | What is the use of men if they do n''t give us things?" |
41071 | What is there she could tell?" |
41071 | What kind of a blow?" |
41071 | What now?" |
41071 | What of your Master who saved the lives of those past human aid?" |
41071 | What right has he to give her presents and talk about taking her to London? |
41071 | What says the Blessed Son of the Most High God?" |
41071 | What then?" |
41071 | What''s that about the Squire?" |
41071 | What''s the row?" |
41071 | When do you return?" |
41071 | When the people asked:''Who is this Son of Man?'' |
41071 | Where did that civilisation come from?" |
41071 | Where is she?" |
41071 | Where is your baggage?" |
41071 | Who are you, and who are those you mingle with? |
41071 | Who can afford to throw a stone at any one?" |
41071 | Who can protect you against me? |
41071 | Who is he?" |
41071 | Why am I cruel?" |
41071 | Why ca n''t you rely on your own strength? |
41071 | Why did you meddle?" |
41071 | Why do you blame me for Alice going to London?" |
41071 | Why do you seek to limit your powers, to circumscribe your knowledge?" |
41071 | Why fence, as if we now meet for the first time? |
41071 | Why not explain more fully?" |
41071 | Why not hide until we can find out the truth?" |
41071 | Why not?" |
41071 | Why should I? |
41071 | Why should an old man of eighty run after a girl of nineteen?" |
41071 | Why should he save one who designed his disgrace; who desired his death? |
41071 | Why should n''t I mean what I say?" |
41071 | Why should n''t my father approve, now that he evidently has given up his idea of my marrying Don Pablo? |
41071 | Why should n''t reincarnation be a great truth?" |
41071 | Why should you help others? |
41071 | Why the deuce could n''t he stay in the next world after taking the trouble to go there? |
41071 | Why?" |
41071 | Will you?" |
41071 | Wo n''t that do harm?" |
41071 | You believe in our having lived before also? |
41071 | You keep certain things from me, so if you are not entirely frank, how can you expect me to aid you?" |
41071 | You know how dull the people are?" |
41071 | You know what work you are appointed to do?" |
41071 | You love me, Alice?" |
41071 | You talk about my having insulted your daughter, Enistor: what about the insult of a married man coming to woo the girl in so shameless a fashion?" |
41071 | You were surprised when your father told you?" |
41071 | Your errand?" |
41071 | answered Alice, very much puzzled by this unusual behaviour;"but why do you ask Mr. and Mrs. Sparrow to dinner? |
41071 | capture my own city?" |
41071 | cried Douglas generously,"can I not see him?" |
41071 | do you know me?" |
41071 | my will has been shattered? |
41071 | said Alice ironically,"does my father call me that?" |
41071 | said Montrose indignantly,"how can you talk so?" |
41071 | she whispered,"that sense of doom and dread?" |