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 |
---|---|
56471 | Are you telling me der truth? |
56471 | Eh? 56471 Eh?" |
56471 | Haf England got much food? |
56471 | Hey boss, what te name of t''place where te Kaiser stop? |
56471 | How many Maoris vos der bein trained? |
56471 | Oh dear me,said Marie in real surprise,"did you nefar read ze newspaper?" |
56471 | Vat is der poaka? |
56471 | Vell, I will ask you von more question:Vat do all dose big Maoris feed on?" |
56471 | Werra, where te Maori come in? |
56471 | What about Marie, then? |
56471 | You will be true to your absent warrior as he fights beside his Pakeha brothers, adding fresh glories to the honour of the noble Maori race? |
56471 | Are dey as big as you?" |
56471 | Did he get enough to eat? |
56471 | Had he quite recovered from his unfortunate"gassing"? |
56471 | He then asked:"How many soldiers vos coming from New Zealand efery mont?" |
56471 | Marie looked at him a moment, and then said,"What you say, M''sieur?" |
56471 | Phat the mischief are yez doing here?" |
56471 | The officer whom Henare addressed laughed heartily, and said--"Your compunction is evidently due to the refining influence of Nurse Bouvard, eh?" |
56471 | Was it the kind of food the Maoris were used to? |
56471 | What about te Maori? |
56471 | What about te Pritis Navy? |
56471 | What about te wery strong tank, an te wery quick harepeni flyin about everywhere? |
56471 | What te good of t''that silly bloke you got over there-- te Klown Prince? |
56471 | What te taipo you want to make te wery big fight for? |
56471 | What yer want ter know?" |
56471 | When he heard as much as he could stand, he ventured the remark,"I tink the Sherman soldier no hurt te gell and te woman, eh?" |
56471 | [ Illustration] When the back door opened a voice called out:"Weel naw, an''who might ye be?" |
56471 | anyting else?" |
34484 | Are they going to kill us? |
34484 | Can you tell us who the chief is? |
34484 | Do you think her father would allow her to pay us another visit? 34484 Do you understand that?" |
34484 | Had we not better turn back and continue along the bank of the main stream? |
34484 | Has not he come yet? |
34484 | He wishes to speak to us,said Valentine,"shall we wait for him?" |
34484 | How can you manage to cook without us? |
34484 | How has she received an injury? |
34484 | How shall you be able to pass through that thick forest? |
34484 | How will the savage treat us, and those who have been trying to aid our escape? |
34484 | Is it according to the religion you desire to teach me? |
34484 | Maori girl meet Lucy in heaven? |
34484 | May I go with you? |
34484 | More disturbances among the natives? |
34484 | They deserve death,--do you wish that we should kill them, or give them into the hands of your countrymen? |
34484 | What can that be? |
34484 | What place heaven? |
34484 | What say? |
34484 | What shall we say to them? 34484 Who are you?" |
34484 | Why God not take them then, and make them good? |
34484 | Would you like to turn shepherd? |
34484 | Can you do anything for her?" |
34484 | Do you understand me?" |
34484 | He returned, however, again coming up to Harry, and, with an inquiring look, seemed to ask whether he was understood? |
34484 | Is that the princess? |
34484 | What do you say, Harry, can you and Tobias take care of them?" |
34484 | Will you and your family join us?" |
34484 | Your servant, Miss, and that old gentleman, with the curious marks on his face, is her father, I suppose? |
41258 | Paddy,said he, calling to his servant,"who is that?" |
41258 | ''Dead? |
41258 | ''Oh, when shall I come and appear before God?'' |
41258 | And those of Zechariah,"Your fathers, where are they? |
41258 | And what was that object, which could raise him above the exhaustion of fatigue and the sense of severe cold? |
41258 | Are you sure that you are right? |
41258 | As a minister of Christ, did his light shine with a more resplendent ray, or was it disturbed and overcast with gloom? |
41258 | At what period of the day do they attend school? |
41258 | But to where am I now wandering? |
41258 | Did he become selfish and morose? |
41258 | Do they appear to have any views of the Lord Jesus Christ as a Saviour? |
41258 | Do they learn to read and write? |
41258 | Do they understand figures? |
41258 | Does it now give you full satisfaction? |
41258 | Have they any meeting in the week- days for prayer and religious instruction? |
41258 | Have they renounced generally their former superstitions? |
41258 | Have you an infant school, or a school for men and boys? |
41258 | He was one of Nature''s nobles; what might not be expected from such a man when he returned home again? |
41258 | I spoke from the 6th chapter of Revelation.--''Behold the great day of his wrath is come; and who shall be able to stand?'' |
41258 | If"music charms the savage breast,"sir, why should not the sweetest sounds that ever met man''s ear do more? |
41258 | It may be asked, who are proper persons, and what are the requisite qualifications? |
41258 | Let the question be asked, who taught them to be so? |
41258 | Marsden?" |
41258 | THE GREAT QUESTION; Will you consider the Subject of Personal Religion? |
41258 | The Christian reader will probably ask what were the effects of these various trials upon Mr. Marsden''s mind and temper? |
41258 | The question was put to the whole army,"Do you agree to this?" |
41258 | They had come among them to preach the gospel of peace, how then could they be expected to furnish the means and implements of destruction? |
41258 | We are wholly in their power, and what is there to hinder them from abusing it? |
41258 | Were the Maories an inferior race, compared with the aborigines of the Tahitian group? |
41258 | What contrast could indeed be greater, or more distressing? |
41258 | What do they learn? |
41258 | What schools there are at the station, and who are the teachers? |
41258 | What shall we call those pure sensations that thus warm and captivate the soul? |
41258 | Who would not desire that the Maorie tribes may long be a great and powerful nation, protected, but not oppressed by English rule? |
41258 | Why should a nomad race be settled upon the workhouse plan, or even confined to an English farm? |
41258 | Why should not a similar state of things be brought about in New Zealand? |
41258 | You have no covetousness? |
41258 | a school for women? |
41258 | and the prophets, do they live for ever?" |
41258 | dead?'' |
41258 | havn''t you? |
41258 | stop, my friend,''responded the mourner, in a solemn manner,''do n''t you know that Mrs. Cartwright is dead?'' |
41258 | were his spiritual affections quickened? |
29070 | An''f''what do ye do wid it, at all? |
29070 | And the lady? |
29070 | Did ye ivver hear the loike av that, now? |
29070 | Do you mean to say you''ve never heard the story of the battle and capture of Marahemo, the tale of Te Puke Tapu? |
29070 | F''what did shells is it, me dear? |
29070 | F''what might this be? |
29070 | Have they come, I say? 29070 I know; but wo n''t it be simpler to do that than to collect oysters on the beach? |
29070 | Pray, are you gentlemen actually going to dance with those creatures? |
29070 | What are your prospects here? 29070 What would they say at home, if they could see us now?" |
29070 | Who went? |
29070 | Will you kindly keep my pipe alight for a minute? |
29070 | You know who Hongi was, I suppose? 29070 And is she not clever? 29070 And is there not a certain princess within, into whose seraphic presence we are now entering? 29070 And now what are we to do? 29070 But what are a sheath- knife and a wooden skewer, if not everything that is needed? 29070 But what have we to do with sentimental rubbish? 29070 But why pursue this topic? 29070 But, what matter? 29070 Can I assist in removing it? |
29070 | Can every one in the old country, no matter how industrious, say that of himself? |
29070 | Did it not convey an instant recollection of all the worst emasculating tendencies from which we had come out? |
29070 | Does patient industry invariably lead to a better fortune for the declining years in England? |
29070 | F''what do ye expict nixt? |
29070 | Fine as the scenery there may be, is it to be supposed that alone would attract such hordes of tourists every summer? |
29070 | Her features may not be good, judged by Greek art standards; but what do we care about art and its standards here in the bush? |
29070 | How am I to convey an idea of what you really are to the dull and prejudiced intellects of people in far- off foggy Britain? |
29070 | Is it likely that we are to be allowed to go there while the Mayor has a comfortable house in which to receive guests? |
29070 | Is the result we see-- for these contrasts are to be found plentifully in all the colonies at the Antipodes-- what it ought to be, or not? |
29070 | Oh no; how could there be? |
29070 | So, he is in a measure bound to take possession of us, do n''t you see? |
29070 | Then, why do we not get some of it out here? |
29070 | We say, why should not we go in for it? |
29070 | We were none of us practised carpenters; but what did that matter? |
29070 | What does he care for such puny projectiles? |
29070 | What have we to do with trim appearances? |
29070 | What is he Mayor and boss of the township for, he would like to know, if not to look after new- chums? |
29070 | What is the condition of a stockman after he has brought up his mob and yarded it for the night? |
29070 | What might not be expected from this most conservative of pioneers? |
29070 | What more can possibly be needed? |
29070 | What more could any one want? |
29070 | What shall be for the Maori? |
29070 | What will be the future of these young tea- drowned nations?" |
29070 | Whatever was to be done? |
29070 | Where are they now since the coming of the Pakeha? |
29070 | Where are they, then?" |
29070 | Who knows what else? |
29070 | Who would venture to introduce a mosquito- bar into a community of which he is member? |
29070 | Why should he go to the expense of new blankets? |
29070 | Why should we go on eating Adelaide flour, when we are growing wheat ourselves? |
29070 | Why will English traders continue to suppose that any rubbish is good enough for the colonies? |
29070 | Would n''t it be better to burn dead shells?" |
29070 | did ivver anny wan see the loike? |
29070 | f''what nixt?" |
29070 | great as was his bravery, his size, his strength, what could they avail in such foolhardy strife? |
29070 | how am I to describe the opulence of your charms, your virtues, and your accomplishments? |
44726 | Did you not consent to receive £ 300 for Port Nicholson and the Hutt? |
44726 | Drag Tainui till she reaches the sea: But who shall drag her hence? 44726 How can you dry up the sea? |
44726 | Was his death_ tika_? 44726 What are those lights and the smoke we see at the village?" |
44726 | What do you want with Rangihaeata that you come here to bind him? 44726 Who is she,"he asked,"that she should send her books and her constables after me? |
44726 | You of the crooked tattoo, what use would your ugly head be to me if I were to carry it back with me to Kapiti? 44726 Your words are very good, but who can tell what will be the words of the Governor?" |
44726 | [ 162] Mr. Ironside at once asked permission to go and bury the dead, whereupon the fiery Rangihaeata ejaculated,What do you want to go for? |
44726 | ''But what do I say?'' |
44726 | An Old New Zealander CHAPTER I WHENCE AND WHITHER? |
44726 | But how salute him now? |
44726 | But surely we can afford to be magnanimous enough to concede to so fine an example of generosity a less mercenary motive? |
44726 | But that chief haughtily answered,"Did I not warn you how it would be? |
44726 | CONTENTS PAGE CHAPTER I WHENCE AND WHITHER? |
44726 | Can one of you talk when I am here? |
44726 | Can you uphold the honour of the tribe?" |
44726 | Cotterell called out,''Where is Puaha?'' |
44726 | Cotterell then said,''Where is a canoe for us to cross?'' |
44726 | Do I go to Port Jackson or to Europe to steal your lands? |
44726 | For the precipitation of the conflict which followed, who shall say that the fault was Te Rauparaha''s? |
44726 | Have I burned your house? |
44726 | Have I destroyed tents or anything belonging to you?" |
44726 | His_ mata_, or prophecy, has been preserved amongst the oral treasures of Ngati- Toa, and has been freely translated as follows:--"What is the wind? |
44726 | I proposed going into the bush, but they said''No, let us remain where we are: what have we done that we should be thus beset?'' |
44726 | I pushed him away, saying,''What are you doing that for?'' |
44726 | I replied,''What for?'' |
44726 | I said,''What house have I burned down? |
44726 | IV Who will arise to save? |
44726 | If you can not come hither, will you write to me?" |
44726 | Mr. Thompson said,''Will you not go?'' |
44726 | Of what use are blankets, soap, tools, and iron pots, when we are going to war? |
44726 | Or was it_ kohuru_? |
44726 | Rangihaeata came running to me, crying out,''What are you doing, I say?'' |
44726 | Tamati Panau was the first to seek an explanation, by calling out to Te Whatu,"Where is the war party from?" |
44726 | They said again,''Where is Puaha?'' |
44726 | They said,''Where are Rauparaha and Rangihaeata?'' |
44726 | Thompson said,''Where is Rauparaha?'' |
44726 | To them he put the question:"Can you tread in my steps and lead my people to victory? |
44726 | Was it a tent belonging to you that you make so much ado about? |
44726 | What are you doing, I say?" |
44726 | What could they gain by enslaving me? |
44726 | What does it matter whether we die cold or warm, clean or dirty, hungry or full? |
44726 | What followed was according to Maori custom, but who would care to tell of it? |
44726 | What have I to do with her? |
44726 | What is there in writing?" |
44726 | What sound comes from the horizon? |
44726 | What would Te Rauparaha''s attitude be if Rangihaeata were attacked? |
44726 | When will your power arise? |
44726 | Who to the rescue comes? |
44726 | With unrestrained excitement he called out to his comrade:"Oh, Raha,[45] do you see that people sailing on the sea? |
44726 | [ 173] Heke had asked the pertinent question,"Is Rauparaha to have all the credit of killing the_ pakeha_?" |
44726 | [ 201] Had it been compassed in fair fight? |
44726 | by fastening irons on these poor old hands? |
44726 | said he;''what is my talk about? |
33342 | ''Did he not come from the sea?'' 33342 Come on!--what are you waiting for?" |
33342 | He has said, how do you all do? |
33342 | How would you prefer being killed, old ruffian?--can you do anything in this way? |
33342 | I wonder how many I can kill before they''bag''me? 33342 Stole off with his own head?" |
33342 | Strip!--he does n''t mean to give me five dozen, does he? |
33342 | Was not little Jackey-_poto_, the sailor, drowned by the Taniwha? 33342 We can not find your book,"said I,"where have you concealed it?" |
33342 | What? |
33342 | Which of them? |
33342 | You are seeking for some information, what do you want to know? 33342 ''His foot is in his own country, and his name is''--what? |
33342 | A woman''s voice now from another part of the room anxiously cried out--"Have you seen my sister?" |
33342 | And was not the body of the said Jackey found some days after with the Taniwha''s mark on it,--one eye taken out?" |
33342 | And what is the use of being angry?--what will_ anger_ do for you?" |
33342 | At last the brother spoke, and asked,"How is it with you?--is it well with you in_ that_ country?" |
33342 | Before the_ taua_ started, the oracle was consulted, and the answer to the question,"Shall this expedition be successful?" |
33342 | But as for poor, mean, mere_ Pakeha tutua, e aha te pai_? |
33342 | But here lies the gist of the matter-- how did I, in the first instance, become possessed of my gold? |
33342 | But why should I have anything more to do with cooking?--was I not cast off and repudiated by the human race? |
33342 | Did not his fire burn on the ocean? |
33342 | Had he not slept on the crests of the waves?" |
33342 | Has he not half a shipful of_ taonga_? |
33342 | He asks,"Is it a great_ taua_?" |
33342 | How is this to be done? |
33342 | I was beaten, but made another effort.--"What have you written in that book?" |
33342 | I was checked by an exclamation of horror and surprise from the whole band--"Oh, what are you about? |
33342 | I was going on with my observations when I was saluted by a voice from behind with,"Looking at the eds, sir?" |
33342 | I was going to"astonish the natives,"was I?--with my black hat and my_ koti roa_? |
33342 | Is it the"crack of doom?" |
33342 | Men_ must_ fight; or else what are they made for? |
33342 | Of what use on earth was he except to eat? |
33342 | Once or twice the_ tohunga_ said to him in a very loud voice,"The tribe are assembled, you wo n''t die silent?" |
33342 | She, being occupied in domestic affairs, said,"Ca n''t you fetch it yourself? |
33342 | The brother spoke again--"Have you seen----, and----, and----?" |
33342 | The_ tohunga_ stood back and said,"Have you been in the house?" |
33342 | Thunder!--but no; let me get ashore; how can I dance on the water, or before I ever knew how? |
33342 | Was he not a fish? |
33342 | Was not the sea solid land to him? |
33342 | What cared I? |
33342 | What could he do? |
33342 | What do I hear? |
33342 | What do I see?--or rather what do I not see? |
33342 | What was to be done? |
33342 | What will all this end in? |
33342 | What will my kind reader say when I tell him that I myself once got_ tapu''d_ with this same horrible, most horrible, style of_ tapu_? |
33342 | What would old"Lizard Skin"say to it? |
33342 | What_ iron_ could be got from her? |
33342 | When I had concluded, and been asked"if I had anything more to say?" |
33342 | Where would she anchor? |
33342 | Who cared then whether he owned a coat?--or believed in shoes or stockings? |
33342 | Who is the last_ mataika_ slain by this famous warrior? |
33342 | Who killed the pakeha? |
33342 | Why should I not tear my leg of pork raw, like a wolf? |
33342 | Would it be possible to seize her? |
33342 | You are a nice man, are you not? |
33342 | [ 1] PRINTER''S DEVIL.--How is_ this_ to be done?--_which?_--_civilize_ or_ exterminate_? |
33342 | _ E aha te pai?_--What is the good( or use) of him? |
33342 | _ No hea_--Literally, from whence? |
33342 | hu!_""What_ can_ he mean?" |
33342 | what is it now? |
33342 | what would have become of you, if such a stopper had been clapt on your jawing tackle? |
33342 | where are those good old times?" |
33342 | where is your boat- hook?--where is your bellows? |
33342 | who ever heard of such an awful imposition? |
33342 | who, with yellow hair-- yellow? |
39361 | ''Did he not come from the sea?'' 39361 Have you seen----, and----, and----?" |
39361 | He has said, how do you all do? |
39361 | How is it with you?--is it well with you in_ that_ country? |
39361 | How would you prefer being killed, old ruffian? 39361 I wonder how many I can kill before they''bag''me? |
39361 | Oh, I see; here''s at him; pull off my coat and boots; I''ll wrestle him; his foot is in his own country, and his name is-- what? |
39361 | Stole off with his own head? |
39361 | Was not little Jackey-_poto_, the sailor, drowned by the Taniwha? 39361 We can not find your book,"said I,"where have you concealed it?" |
39361 | What do you mean? |
39361 | What have you written in that book? |
39361 | What is_ utu_? |
39361 | What? 39361 What?" |
39361 | Which of them? |
39361 | You are seeking for some information, what do you want to know? 39361 -- Why? 39361 A woman''s voice now from another part of the room anxiously cried out,Have you seen my sister?" |
39361 | And the old man said,"Son, I am slain; but in whose battle should I die if not in yours? |
39361 | And was not the body of the said Jackey found some days after with the Taniwha''s mark on it,--one eye taken out?" |
39361 | And what is the use of being angry? |
39361 | Before the_ taua_ started the oracle was consulted, and the answer to the question,"Shall this expedition be successful?" |
39361 | But Te Atua Wera perceived that there was blood on the cartridge- box, so he started back and said,"Where did you get this?" |
39361 | But here lies the gist of the matter-- how did I, in the first instance, become possessed of my gold? |
39361 | But the chiefs of the Ngapuhi_ hapu_ said amongst themselves,"How long will the fire of the Maori burn before it is extinguished?" |
39361 | But who can bind a flowing river? |
39361 | But why should I have anything more to do with cooking? |
39361 | Could anything have been more practical and business- like than this? |
39361 | Did not his fire burn on the ocean? |
39361 | Had he not slept on the crests of the waves?" |
39361 | Has he not half a shipful of_ taonga_? |
39361 | Have I not prayed to him for years? |
39361 | He asks,"Is it a great_ taua_?" |
39361 | He stood back and said,"Have you been in the house?" |
39361 | Heke certainly had many friends amongst the Europeans, as why should he not? |
39361 | How could it be helped? |
39361 | How is this to be done? |
39361 | I was going on with my observations when I was saluted by a voice from behind with,"Looking at the eds, sir?" |
39361 | I was going to"astonish the natives,"was I?--with my black hat and my_ koti roa_? |
39361 | I will do the same with my friends, for, perhaps, the soldiers might go to- night to take away the wounded to the Waimate and then return: who knows? |
39361 | Is it the"crack of doom?" |
39361 | It is, however, no matter; what is there in a few black marks? |
39361 | Men_ must_ fight; or else what are they made for? |
39361 | Neither is this a war for Te Tihi, but for Kororareka; but if you remember Te Tihi also, how can you help it?" |
39361 | Now, what are you laughing at? |
39361 | Of what use on earth was he except to eat? |
39361 | Once or twice the_ tohunga_ said to him in a very loud voice,"The tribe are assembled, you wo n''t die silent?" |
39361 | Shall it not be different now? |
39361 | Shall my descendant be taken alive?" |
39361 | She, being occupied in domestic affairs, said,"Ca n''t you fetch it yourself? |
39361 | Te Atua said,"Where is he?" |
39361 | The short iron guns looked like potato pots, and we laughed at them, and thought of Heke''s saying of"What prize can be won by such a gun?" |
39361 | Then Heke cried out,"Where should I get it? |
39361 | Then Heke said,"Is he quite dead?" |
39361 | Then Heke said,"What old man?" |
39361 | Then another was fired, and missed also; so when Heke saw this, he cried out in a loud voice,"What prize can be won by such a gun? |
39361 | Then he came to where the old man lay, and having knelt down, pressed his nose to the nose of the dying man, and said,"Father, are you slain?" |
39361 | They began to say to the chiefs,"Can shadows carry muskets?" |
39361 | Thunder!--but no; let me get ashore; how can I dance on the water, or before I ever knew how? |
39361 | Was I not cast off and repudiated by the human race? |
39361 | Was he not a fish? |
39361 | Was not the sea solid land to him? |
39361 | What cared I? |
39361 | What could he do? |
39361 | What do I hear? |
39361 | What do I see?--or rather what do I not see? |
39361 | What if you had killed him dead, or broken his bones? |
39361 | What payment are you going to give me? |
39361 | What sin has Walker committed that he should die in this war? |
39361 | What was to be done? |
39361 | What will all this end in? |
39361 | What will my kind reader say when I tell him that I myself once got_ tapu''d_ with this same horrible, horrible, most horrible style of_ tapu_? |
39361 | What would old"Lizard Skin"say to it? |
39361 | What_ iron_ could be got from her? |
39361 | When I had concluded, and having been asked"if I had any more to say?" |
39361 | Where would she anchor? |
39361 | Who cared then whether he owned a coat?--or believed in shoes or stockings? |
39361 | Who cares anything about them? |
39361 | Who is the last_ mataika_ slain by this famous warrior? |
39361 | Who killed the pakeha? |
39361 | Who will there be to fight with you, and who to fight the red garment?" |
39361 | Who would not have thought as we did? |
39361 | Why should I not tear my leg of pork raw, like a wolf? |
39361 | Would it be possible to seize her? |
39361 | You are a nice man, are you not? |
39361 | You are only a young man; what do you know about it? |
39361 | [ 34] Then Heke roared out,"What care I for either men or spirits? |
39361 | [ Footnote 5: PRINTER''S DEVIL:--How is_ this_ to be done?--_which?__ what?_--how?--_civilise_ or_ exterminate_? |
39361 | [ Footnote 5: PRINTER''S DEVIL:--How is_ this_ to be done?--_which?__ what?_--how?--_civilise_ or_ exterminate_? |
39361 | _ E aha te pai?_--What is the good( or use) of him? |
39361 | _ Eaha mau_--What''s that to you? |
39361 | _ No hea_--Literally, from whence? |
39361 | _ Tena koutou_; or,_ Tenara ko koutou_--The Maori form of salutation, equivalent to our"How do you do?" |
39361 | answered the Maori, much astonished,"If we had stolen their powder and food, how could they have fought?" |
39361 | can you do anything in this way?" |
39361 | he does n''t mean to give me five dozen, does he?" |
39361 | hu!_""What_ can_ he mean?" |
39361 | is not this war?" |
39361 | what are you waiting for?" |
39361 | what is it now? |
39361 | what will_ anger_ do for you?" |
39361 | what would have become of you, if such a stopper had been clapt on your jawing tackle? |
39361 | where are those good old times?" |
39361 | where is your boat- hook?--where is your bellows? |
39361 | who ever heard of such an awful imposition? |
39361 | who, with yellow hair-- yellow? |
42228 | Ah, Conway,drawled the new- comer,"so we have arrived at last, and this is the hotel you recommended, is it? |
42228 | But yourself? |
42228 | But,he continued,"how long start will you give me?" |
42228 | Did you eat meat to- day? |
42228 | Do you mean to tell me that that black fellow can see spoor going at this pace and over such ground as we are now on? |
42228 | Do you think he will be able to track them? |
42228 | Fast, is it? |
42228 | First, why did the chief attack us? 42228 Halt, who goes there?" |
42228 | How on earth does he know that? |
42228 | If so, what then? |
42228 | Is it not written,I said,"''He that lendeth to the poor giveth to the Lord''? |
42228 | Is your head well above water, and can you hang on till I get help from the fort? |
42228 | Look for you? |
42228 | Lost in the bush? |
42228 | Now, what made you come here? |
42228 | Sure, and do n''t I know that? |
42228 | Tracks? |
42228 | Well, and whose fault is that now? 42228 What do you mean? |
42228 | What have they been doing to you to capsize you in this fashion, and why do n''t you take water with your pongello? |
42228 | What have you given the colonel? |
42228 | What the deuce have you been up to, Mike? |
42228 | What''s that? |
42228 | Where are they? |
42228 | Who has been here? 42228 Who the devil has been here, you drunken blackguard?" |
42228 | Why, Davy, what''s the matter? |
42228 | Why, what''s gone wrong with you? |
42228 | Will they become converted and join the Hau Haus? |
42228 | Will you try some, sir? |
42228 | Word of honour? |
42228 | Again I not pointed him out the dangers he ran in attacking a Christian? |
42228 | Again, how did he escape my search and that of other parties who had looked for him? |
42228 | And were we not responsible for the honour of it? |
42228 | And what greater calamity was possible to mortal man than to have an obscene lizard grow out of his hand? |
42228 | And, above all, why did not a lion skoff him? |
42228 | Another thing, what were they doing there? |
42228 | Are you much hurt?" |
42228 | Are you one?" |
42228 | But then why, O Te Parione, did he forbid us food and water? |
42228 | But, then, what will not some men risk for notoriety? |
42228 | By the way, what is the strength of your invading force?" |
42228 | Could I not give him some sound advice? |
42228 | Could he not be allowed to sleep longer? |
42228 | Did you imbibe the faith?" |
42228 | Do n''t you hear the row the boys are making inspanning, or see the river in front of you?" |
42228 | Do n''t you see the waggons? |
42228 | Do n''t you see you are on the road? |
42228 | Do you mind taking him with you? |
42228 | Do you want work of that sort?" |
42228 | Had I not assured him that the mana of the white man''s God was far stronger than the mana of his pagan deities? |
42228 | Had he believed me and taken my advice? |
42228 | Had he brought his dress out with him? |
42228 | Had it not knocked him over and over again, and that with the peaceful end of it? |
42228 | Had it not made him see more stars in a few minutes than he had ever before seen in his whole life? |
42228 | Had not the Waikatos lent us their pah to live in? |
42228 | Have you removed anything from it?" |
42228 | He was game to lead, were the twenty- five game to follow? |
42228 | How could we give it up? |
42228 | How could we give up the pah? |
42228 | How dare you grin over my shoulder like that?" |
42228 | I jumped forward and seized him, saying:"What''s the matter with you? |
42228 | If we had prevented you from obtaining food, how could you have continued to fight?" |
42228 | If you had fallen three days ago where would you have been now?" |
42228 | It was clear that the first thing to be done was to get the natives to come back to their kainga; but how? |
42228 | Long odds, my gentle reader? |
42228 | My friend was raving mad, and wanted me at once to alarm my troopers, but I said:"No; you''d got your gun with you just now, why did you not use it?" |
42228 | No; had they not seen the beast come out of my hand at the very moment I was relating my dream? |
42228 | Now I hold pen instead of carbine and revolver, but why should memories of the old days pass away? |
42228 | Now was that Hau Hau, blood- stained brute as he undoubtedly was, a martyr or only a bally fool? |
42228 | Now what in the name of Comus could Jack want with a wheelbarrow? |
42228 | Oh, how can you say that? |
42228 | Peering over, I could see nothing, so shouted:"Steve, are you much hurt?" |
42228 | Presently along''e comes, and sez''e to me, sez''e:''Brother, wherefore did you assault me while in the water?'' |
42228 | Stubbs, another of the Englishmen, was stabbed by a boy, and when he felt it was his death wound exclaimed:"Am I to be killed by a boy like you?" |
42228 | The General knew they had no water, then why did he risk the lives of his splendid men by ordering futile assaults? |
42228 | The man thereupon brought out the bottle from his haversack, and said to him:"Do you think this would do you any good, sir?" |
42228 | Then he cursed them with unction, but that succeeded no better, till at last, thoroughly angry, he shouted out:"Oh, you want a smash, do you? |
42228 | Then who was to blame? |
42228 | Then, turning to his people, he would say:"What is the use of this crying? |
42228 | True, I only had my sheath knife and fingers to eat with, but what of that? |
42228 | Was I not fighting in the Crimee with your honourable father before he was breeched? |
42228 | Was I spiteful? |
42228 | Was I, fool as I had been, to lose my head and run mad through the bush like an untrained new chum? |
42228 | Was he growing wings like a duck, or, perchance, fins like a fish? |
42228 | Was the river uncrossable? |
42228 | Was there no soda water? |
42228 | Was there not great danger from wild animals and snakes? |
42228 | We were thin, footsore, our legs torn, our kit in rags; but what mattered that? |
42228 | What are you doing here?" |
42228 | What became of his rifle, boots and clothes? |
42228 | What for did yer try to drown me?'' |
42228 | What had happened? |
42228 | What is the cause of this awful smell, and what have you been making such a row about?" |
42228 | What man dare make fun of, or render ridiculous, the dignity and majesty of the head chiefs of the Arawa tribe? |
42228 | What on earth use could the gift of tongues be to a man when there was not to be a single foreigner left in the country with whom to collogue? |
42228 | What then should be done with Pehi and his party? |
42228 | What was to be done? |
42228 | What was to be done? |
42228 | What will I do? |
42228 | What will I do?" |
42228 | What''s that you say? |
42228 | Where was he to sleep? |
42228 | Where, therefore, would be the fun if he could not kill his enemy, eat him, nor turn his bones into useful and ornamental articles? |
42228 | Why did they not go for me? |
42228 | Why now should I let these childish qualms assail me and funk shadows? |
42228 | Why? |
42228 | Will yez call on the blessed saints or not, ye contumacious blaggard?" |
42228 | Would I give it him? |
42228 | Would he do me a very great favour? |
42228 | a horse ca n''t understand you? |
42228 | he was a poor man, he had none; but would I not lend him the gun, just to shoot one Christian with? |
42228 | rifles, and that you will take three or four batteries of artillery, rockets, etc., and that a percentage of your natives will be armed with rifles?" |
42228 | tell me I was too small? |
33619 | And is there any chance of your going off in any other groove now, Atherton? |
33619 | And what have you been doing since? |
33619 | And you are really pleased, Wilfrid? |
33619 | Are the negroes slaves, Mr. Atherton? 33619 Are there any snakes?" |
33619 | Are they cannibals, captain? |
33619 | Are you going to settle at last, sir? |
33619 | Are you going to start at once? |
33619 | But I suppose we should not be ill now even if it were rough, after being a week at sea? |
33619 | But how about me, Miss Mitford? |
33619 | But if they lie further north that must surely be our shortest way, so why should we not go through them? |
33619 | But surely that table and book- case were never made in New Zealand? |
33619 | But what are we to do then, sir? |
33619 | But what do they talk about, Jack? |
33619 | But when will you get breakfast? |
33619 | But who could have dreamt we should want it? |
33619 | By the way, what has become of young Allen? |
33619 | Do n''t you know that one always jokes when one is serious, Miss Renshaw? 33619 Do n''t you think they are likely to go away now that they have suffered so much loss?" |
33619 | Do n''t you think, Mr. Atherton, that it would be better for mother to go home? 33619 Do you always get this sort of weather down here, captain?" |
33619 | Do you know where they have gone to, Wilfrid? |
33619 | Do you mean we do not go round it? |
33619 | Do you not think so, Mary? |
33619 | Do you think I did not know,she said softly,"and did n''t you really know too? |
33619 | Do you think it safe to let them on board? |
33619 | Do you think they will succeed? |
33619 | Have they got a stockade built? |
33619 | Have you a compass? |
33619 | Have you had my interest at heart as well as those of Wilfrid and his people? |
33619 | Have you heard the little story of the spider and the fly, Miss Kate? |
33619 | Have you room, Miss Renshaw? 33619 Have you seen Mr. Atherton in a scrimmage?" |
33619 | Have you seen any natives since you started? |
33619 | Have you thought of anything, Wilfrid? |
33619 | How about meals, sir? |
33619 | How are we to find the ship? |
33619 | How are you getting on, Wilfrid? |
33619 | How can you say such things? |
33619 | How do you mean? |
33619 | How has the night passed, Ryan? |
33619 | How is it that your plans are vague? 33619 How is that?" |
33619 | How many men will you take? |
33619 | How many of them do you think there are? |
33619 | I did not mean to say that they were vague, Mrs. Renshaw; did I really say so? |
33619 | I hardly know what to say yet, you have taken me so by surprise; but I am awfully glad-- you know that, do n''t you? 33619 I have been making an ass of myself,"Wilfrid said penitently;"but you believe that I am awfully glad, do n''t you? |
33619 | I hope that you have enough? |
33619 | I suppose the people here have lately arrived? |
33619 | I suppose you have not settled yet as to what ship you will return by, Atherton? |
33619 | I wonder how long I am to keep it over? |
33619 | Is all well? |
33619 | Is father very bad, mother? |
33619 | Is it all over, my boy, and are you unhurt? |
33619 | Is it any use my stopping here any longer? |
33619 | Is it not happiness, mother,she cried,"to think that we shall still be together?" |
33619 | Is the country inhabited? |
33619 | Is there anything I can do for you, gentlemen? |
33619 | It is awkward, is n''t it, young lady? |
33619 | Mr. Renshaw, will you go aft and tell the ladies that all is over? |
33619 | Not hurt, I hope? |
33619 | Not hurt, father? |
33619 | Now, who would have thought that? |
33619 | Of course it is possible,she said almost pettishly"how could I help it, I should like to know?" |
33619 | So you are Renshaw? |
33619 | So you are a non- combatant this morning, Miss Marion? |
33619 | The question is, What is it? |
33619 | Then the colonists themselves, Mr. Jackson, have taken but little share in the fighting so far? |
33619 | Then you have travelled a good deal, sir? |
33619 | Those are the Straits of Magellan, are they not? |
33619 | Was he with you when you heard the shots fired, Bob? |
33619 | We have fine weather for our start, have we not? 33619 What about the wounded?" |
33619 | What are we to do next? |
33619 | What are you going to roof it with, Wilfrid? |
33619 | What do we want shutters for, Wilfrid? |
33619 | What do you do, sir? |
33619 | What do you hear, old fellow? |
33619 | What do you mean? |
33619 | What do you say, Ryan? |
33619 | What do you say, ladies and gentleman? |
33619 | What do you think? |
33619 | What is all this about? |
33619 | What is it, Ponto? |
33619 | What is it, Wilfrid? |
33619 | What is it, sir? |
33619 | What is the evil of going in? |
33619 | What is the excitement about on shore? |
33619 | What is the news? |
33619 | What is this that I have heard about a new religion that has been started among the Maoris? |
33619 | What is to be done with it? |
33619 | What time did you get in last night? |
33619 | What will they do next, do you think? |
33619 | What would you have done if I had sailed away for England without ever mustering up courage to speak to you, Marion? |
33619 | Where are they now? |
33619 | Where is Wilfrid? |
33619 | Which course shall we take now, do you suppose? 33619 Which is he, Wilfrid?" |
33619 | Who is there? |
33619 | Why do you think of New Zealand more than Canada, Wil? |
33619 | Why is that? |
33619 | Why not? |
33619 | Why we have been steering straight for the guns, have we not? |
33619 | Why, Mr. Atherton, is it you? |
33619 | Why, my dear boy, what should we be fit for in the colonies more than here? |
33619 | Why, were you both lost? |
33619 | Why, what is this? |
33619 | Why? |
33619 | Would not you think, mother,Marion appealed,"that Mr. Atherton by his talk was somewhere about eighty and that I was quite a child?" |
33619 | Would you let us have a boat, captain? |
33619 | Yes, but who are we going to fight? |
33619 | You fired the alarm- signal, did you not? |
33619 | You have got him, I suppose? |
33619 | You have seen nothing of your father and the other two men, Jack? |
33619 | You went with us from Japan to Singapore, did you not? |
33619 | And how is Sampson?" |
33619 | And now shall we take a walk round the place?" |
33619 | And now, what do you think we had better do? |
33619 | And now, what is it all about? |
33619 | And now, what is it that happened here yesterday?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | Atherton?" |
33619 | But first I must ask you, Did any of your boats return on board late?" |
33619 | By the way, are you a good shot with the rifle, Wilfrid?" |
33619 | Could n''t they get some creepers to run up and hide these ugly logs? |
33619 | Did n''t he drop his club sharp? |
33619 | Did you, mother?" |
33619 | Do not you think so?" |
33619 | Do you see anything of them?" |
33619 | Do you see, there-- just in a line with that big tree at the other end of the clearing? |
33619 | Do you think that there are any of them still in the bush on the other side?" |
33619 | Everything is ready; shall I call them in?" |
33619 | Have all your party got away?" |
33619 | He chatted for a few minutes on ordinary subjects, and then Mrs. Renshaw said:"Is anything the matter, Mr. Mitford? |
33619 | How about water?" |
33619 | How have you done?" |
33619 | How were they going to stop up the crevices between the logs? |
33619 | How would you do that? |
33619 | I suppose nobody inclines to go on shore again to- night?" |
33619 | I suppose you are going out to settle?" |
33619 | I suppose you do n''t know yet whether you are a good sailor or not?" |
33619 | In another minute to his joy he heard Mr. Atherton''s voice shouting,"Where are you, Wilfrid? |
33619 | Langston''s?" |
33619 | Mitford?" |
33619 | Mr. Allen, will you go forward into the bows, and keep a sharp look- out for rocks?" |
33619 | Mr. Atherton said;"and now what is the news?" |
33619 | Mr. Rawlins, will you send down the stewards to help? |
33619 | Mr. Ryan stood up in the stern of his boat as soon as they were within hailing distance and shouted--"How has it gone with you?" |
33619 | Mr. Ryan, will you get the cutter into the water after breakfast? |
33619 | Now, are you both ready? |
33619 | Now, ladies, I will take him by the shoulders; will you take him by the feet, Mrs. Renshaw; and do you, Mrs. Sampson, support his head? |
33619 | Renshaw?" |
33619 | Renshaw?" |
33619 | Renshaw?" |
33619 | Renshaw?" |
33619 | Renshaw?" |
33619 | Ryan?" |
33619 | Ryan?" |
33619 | South of Cape Horn or through the Straits?" |
33619 | Suppose we shake hands, Renshaw? |
33619 | Surely you can never have brought them all with you?" |
33619 | The chief''s first words were,"Have you taken the place?" |
33619 | The question is whether it will be safe to trust a man on shore with these scoundrels?" |
33619 | There is nothing wrong, I hope?" |
33619 | They still have slavery in Brazil, do they not? |
33619 | This weather is perfection, is it not?" |
33619 | Was it to be painted or to remain as it was? |
33619 | Was there going to be a floor, or was the ground inside going to be raised to the level of the door- sill? |
33619 | We have been very close friends for the last three years, have n''t we? |
33619 | We shall miss you awfully when you do go; shall we not, Marion?" |
33619 | Well, Jack, so you heard our signal?" |
33619 | Well, how have you succeeded?" |
33619 | What brings you back so early? |
33619 | What do my father and mother say? |
33619 | What do you say, Wilfrid?" |
33619 | What do you say, lads?" |
33619 | What do you say?" |
33619 | What do you think of my proposal, lads?" |
33619 | What do you think we had better do now?" |
33619 | What is Mr. Mitford''s opinion on the subject?" |
33619 | What was the roof going to be made of? |
33619 | When did he expect to get it finished, and when would they be ready to come in? |
33619 | When do you think you will get it ready, Watson?" |
33619 | Where are your friends?" |
33619 | Where are your natives?" |
33619 | Where have you hidden yourself?" |
33619 | Where is he?" |
33619 | Where were the windows and doors coming from? |
33619 | Who do you fancy, Mrs. Renshaw? |
33619 | Why have I stopped so long? |
33619 | Why should n''t I think as much of him as you do?" |
33619 | Why were the walls made so thick? |
33619 | Why, ever since I have known you it seems to me that-- that--""That you have loved me, Marion; is it possible?" |
33619 | Why, there must be thirty acres of natural clearing here?" |
33619 | Why, where did you get all the things? |
33619 | Wilfrid shouted as they approached the house;"have you been losing yourselves in the bush?" |
33619 | Will the rest of you please continue to pass things along to add to the height of our barricade? |
33619 | Will you see that the door leading out on to the waist is securely barricaded, and place two or three men there? |
33619 | You remember that I saved the ship then?" |
33619 | You see that piece of bark slashed off the trunk of that tree? |
33619 | are they cannibals?" |
33619 | are you going home?" |
33619 | do you see? |
33619 | or do you already begin to regret your bargain?" |
21316 | ''Bliged to? 21316 A sound? |
21316 | About being cannibals? 21316 About me, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Afraid I shall scold him, eh? |
21316 | Afraid of them being kind? |
21316 | Afraid these would drug you so that I could steal the boat? |
21316 | Afraid to go in? |
21316 | Afraid, sir? 21316 After we had gone to bed?" |
21316 | Again? |
21316 | All loaded? |
21316 | All primed? |
21316 | Am I too heavy, Jem? |
21316 | Am I, Mas''Don? 21316 Amongst the sharks?" |
21316 | An emigrant, eh? 21316 And broke your ribs, and we thought you were dead? |
21316 | And he has not been back? |
21316 | And he is now safely locked up? |
21316 | And he says,` What''s the matter?'' |
21316 | And him too? |
21316 | And how came you to be in the office to see it? |
21316 | And how often is there a post goes out for England? |
21316 | And let us have all our trouble for nothing? 21316 And shall you give us up?" |
21316 | And so you do do that sort of thing? |
21316 | And suppose I do get out of them, what about you? |
21316 | And suppose you''re hurt; what am I to say to your mother? 21316 And the shark?" |
21316 | And the sharks, Jem? |
21316 | And the sharks, my lad? |
21316 | And then about that other part, old chap-- cannibalism? 21316 And then one of they chaps came and give you a crack on the head?" |
21316 | And then,''spose he has us out in the woods at his mercy like, how then? |
21316 | And they did not eat you? |
21316 | And we are to stop with three such men as these? |
21316 | And what about the pot, Jem? |
21316 | And what are you going to do? |
21316 | And what good would that do, Jem? |
21316 | And what then? |
21316 | And what''ll your mother do? |
21316 | And when are we coming back, sir? |
21316 | And you do n''t believe that I ever was your enemy? |
21316 | And you said nothing just now? |
21316 | And you stood it? |
21316 | And you will go? |
21316 | And you will not be so stern with him? |
21316 | And you wo n''t go, sir? |
21316 | And you would n''t get away because I could n''t? |
21316 | And-- and take charge of the yard, sir? |
21316 | And--? 21316 Any one there?" |
21316 | Are the boats very far away? |
21316 | Are they bringing some more poor wretches on board, Jem? |
21316 | Are they coming to attack us, Jem? |
21316 | Are they-- are they right away, Jem? |
21316 | Are we nearly there, sir? |
21316 | Are you badly wounded? |
21316 | Are you coming up here, sir? |
21316 | Are you going to keep the yard open all the evening, Jem? |
21316 | Are you going to prefer the opinion of the men of the yard to mine, dear? |
21316 | Are you hurt, Jem? |
21316 | Are you hurt, Jem? |
21316 | Are you hurt? |
21316 | Are you hurt? |
21316 | Are you in much pain, Jem? |
21316 | Are you, sir? 21316 Arn''t come arter me, then?" |
21316 | Arn''t gone to tell them where we are, have he, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Arn''t hurt, are you, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Arn''t it being a bit obstinate like, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Arn''t it good? |
21316 | Arn''t it? 21316 Arn''t seen a ghost, have you?" |
21316 | Arn''t the road wide enough for you? |
21316 | Arn''t there? 21316 Arn''t you going to take them, too?" |
21316 | Ask him what? |
21316 | Asleep? |
21316 | At Norfolk Island, sir? |
21316 | Ay, to be sure,he said;"why do n''t you take a light from him?" |
21316 | Ay? 21316 Beat them off? |
21316 | Because here comes a boat after us.--Hear the skipper? |
21316 | Because we''re going to make a run for it before long, eh, my pakeha? |
21316 | Been for a walk, Don? |
21316 | Believe it, my lad? 21316 Better, sir? |
21316 | Better? 21316 Better?" |
21316 | Bit? 21316 Breakfast? |
21316 | Breakfast? 21316 Broken? |
21316 | But I ought not to have deserted uncle? |
21316 | But Ngati?--where is Ngati? |
21316 | But are n''t we soon going ashore? |
21316 | But are you in much pain now? |
21316 | But ca n''t we send a letter home, sir? |
21316 | But here we are, and-- what''s that there noise? |
21316 | But is that true? |
21316 | But my mother? |
21316 | But my uncle-- my mother, what will they think? |
21316 | But s''pose they find us out? 21316 But shall we be beaten?" |
21316 | But shall we come across any hot baths by- and- by? |
21316 | But sure-_lie_ Miss Kitty do n''t? |
21316 | But that noise you made? |
21316 | But the men on sentry? |
21316 | But the others? 21316 But there will not be much fighting, will there-- I mean real fighting?" |
21316 | But what about your shoulder? |
21316 | But what are we to do? |
21316 | But what is a pakeha? |
21316 | But what shall I do? |
21316 | But what''s to become of me, sir? 21316 But where are they? |
21316 | But where are they? |
21316 | But why do they want us with them? |
21316 | But why, Jem? |
21316 | But you are a lifer, and have run away, have n''t you? |
21316 | But you do n''t think the poor lad met such a fate as you hinted at? |
21316 | But you think he has run away? |
21316 | But you will let me send a message to them at home? |
21316 | But you will let me send word home? |
21316 | But you''ll leave the ship, mate? |
21316 | But you''ll try and fetch him back, sir? |
21316 | But your mother do n''t, sir? |
21316 | But, if it breaks, what shall I say to little Sally? |
21316 | But-- but, that man? |
21316 | But-- it don''t-- it do n''t mean any games, does it? |
21316 | Ca n''t you find the candle? |
21316 | Ca n''t you open it more? |
21316 | Ca n''t you stand, Jem? |
21316 | Can I bear your weight? 21316 Can I do anything for you?" |
21316 | Can I do it? |
21316 | Can I help? |
21316 | Can I manage it? 21316 Can I? |
21316 | Can they see us? |
21316 | Can we do it? 21316 Can we do it? |
21316 | Can you bear me if I try to open it, Jem? |
21316 | Can you bear my weight, Jem? |
21316 | Can you bring your guns along the valleys and up into the mountains? |
21316 | Can you do that? |
21316 | Can you hear me, Jem? |
21316 | Can you manage it, Jem? |
21316 | Can you manage to get over? |
21316 | Can you reach out far enough for me to come between you and the rock? |
21316 | Can you show us a safe anchorage? |
21316 | Can you walk? |
21316 | Chance? 21316 China?" |
21316 | China? |
21316 | Come home, sir? |
21316 | Come, I like that, Mas''Don; arn''t I had enough to make me think of''em? |
21316 | Come, Jem, who''s stealing some one else''s ideas now? |
21316 | Come, Mas''Don,he said, cheerily,"going to work all night?" |
21316 | Cooking? 21316 Could it have been a man going on all fours?" |
21316 | Could n''t we make some matches, Jem? |
21316 | Could n''t we make some matches? 21316 Could n''t yer get on without yer best man i''th''yard?" |
21316 | Could we get down here? |
21316 | Could you manage to walk as far as the village? 21316 Could you, though?" |
21316 | Cutoff? |
21316 | Dead? |
21316 | Dear lad, dear lad; how are you now? |
21316 | Deserting? |
21316 | Did I think of two ropes? |
21316 | Did I, lad? 21316 Did n''t I tell you it was peace?" |
21316 | Did n''t know I was coming out to look after you, did you, young Don? |
21316 | Did n''t think of a rope, did you? |
21316 | Did you desert from His Majesty''s sloop? |
21316 | Did you ever see such a young ruffian? |
21316 | Did you fight Mike in the yard one day? |
21316 | Did you see Miss Kitty last night? |
21316 | Did you speak, Josiah? |
21316 | Did you, Mas''Don? 21316 Did you, though, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Do I know? 21316 Do I look like a sheep, Mas''Don?" |
21316 | Do I want to commit murder? 21316 Do I want what?" |
21316 | Do n''t I tell you I''ll walk? |
21316 | Do n''t I tell you? 21316 Do n''t feel tired, do you?" |
21316 | Do n''t we? 21316 Do n''t what, Mas''Don?" |
21316 | Do n''t you feel like fighting now? |
21316 | Do n''t you hear? |
21316 | Do n''t you wish you may get it, old chap? |
21316 | Do what? |
21316 | Do you charge the boy too, sir? |
21316 | Do you dare climb down? |
21316 | Do you feel as if they were, Jem? |
21316 | Do you hear me, Don? 21316 Do you hear me?" |
21316 | Do you hear, you scoundrels? |
21316 | Do you hear? |
21316 | Do you know these men? |
21316 | Do you know what a bosun''s mate is, my lad? |
21316 | Do you mean the ship, or here with the boat? |
21316 | Do you not hear me, Don? |
21316 | Do you not understand, my good woman, that my son has not been home all night? |
21316 | Do you think any of the men here would try to escape with us? |
21316 | Do you think he''ll take my message, Jem? |
21316 | Do you think if we got away in the woods, we could manage to live, Jem? |
21316 | Do you think it possible to go down? |
21316 | Do you think it will be cowardly to leave these poor creatures in the power of the enemy? |
21316 | Do you think we shall escape? |
21316 | Do you want to commit murder, Jem? |
21316 | Do you want to fight, then? |
21316 | Do you, Jem? |
21316 | Do? 21316 Do?" |
21316 | Do? |
21316 | Do? |
21316 | Does he think this here''s the rigging of a ship, and want us to set sail? |
21316 | Does it hurt you very much? |
21316 | Does it pain you very much? |
21316 | Does it, sir? |
21316 | Don, my boy, what foolish obstinate fit is this which has come over you? |
21316 | Drinking? |
21316 | Drop? 21316 Dull? |
21316 | Eh, mates? |
21316 | Eh? 21316 Eh? |
21316 | Eh? 21316 Eh?" |
21316 | Eh? |
21316 | Eh? |
21316 | Eh? |
21316 | Eh? |
21316 | Eight guineas? 21316 Escape, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Escape? 21316 Escaped from the Maoris, and then from a party of men you think were runaway convicts?" |
21316 | Faces a alley, eh? |
21316 | Feel anything-- of what? |
21316 | Feel better, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Feel better, now? |
21316 | Feel scared, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Fib? 21316 First chance?" |
21316 | Flogged? |
21316 | For doing a kind act? 21316 Found''em?" |
21316 | Gammon, eh? |
21316 | Gentlemen, p''r''aps, on your travels? |
21316 | Getting tired, Jem? |
21316 | Give in? 21316 Give you up? |
21316 | Go? 21316 Go? |
21316 | Go? 21316 Going to fight on our side?" |
21316 | Going? 21316 Good to eat?" |
21316 | Got a light, mate? |
21316 | Got him? |
21316 | Got no money, my lad? 21316 Guy?" |
21316 | Had n''t I better go first, and try the rope, Jem? |
21316 | Had n''t you better have your breakfuss? |
21316 | Hail sooner? |
21316 | Has he ever-- been at war? |
21316 | Has that ugly- looking chap Ramsden been telling tales about us? |
21316 | Has the candle gone out, Jem? 21316 Have I, Jem? |
21316 | Have n''t made up your minds to come and join us? |
21316 | Have n''t we got enough ready, Jem? |
21316 | Have they been rowing-- I mean paddling-- all night, Jem? |
21316 | Have we done right, Jem? |
21316 | Have we scared them off? |
21316 | Have you thought any more about what you said you heard last night? |
21316 | Have-- have I been ill, Jem? |
21316 | Have-- have you seen Don this morning? |
21316 | He wo n''t be up to any games, will he? |
21316 | Header? |
21316 | Hear that, Jem? 21316 Hear that, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Hear that? |
21316 | Hear you? 21316 Heard? |
21316 | Heavy? 21316 Here, I say, what''s the good of our coming there?" |
21316 | Here, I''m a- coming, arn''t I? |
21316 | Here, can you come to me and untie this? |
21316 | Here, what are you doing of? |
21316 | Here, what yer doing? 21316 Here, what yer going to do?" |
21316 | Here, what''s your hurry, my lads? |
21316 | Hot? 21316 How are they to know that you will not be treacherous?" |
21316 | How are we to get away again? |
21316 | How are you now, Jem? |
21316 | How came all this here? |
21316 | How can I fetch them back? 21316 How can I tell?" |
21316 | How can I, when he''s sticking on like a rat? |
21316 | How can any one sleep at a time like this? |
21316 | How can we go? |
21316 | How come I in the office to see it? |
21316 | How could I get away when they had caught you? |
21316 | How could we help it? |
21316 | How did I come here? 21316 How do you feel? |
21316 | How do you know? |
21316 | How do you know? |
21316 | How is it you speak good English? |
21316 | How long will she last before she comes down? |
21316 | How should we find you? |
21316 | How was I to know that this was a foreign out- door kitchen? |
21316 | How''s that, sir? |
21316 | How, Mas''Don? |
21316 | How? 21316 How?" |
21316 | Hullo, Jem, you here? |
21316 | Hullo, lad? |
21316 | Hungry? 21316 Hungry?" |
21316 | Hurt, Jem? |
21316 | Hurt, mate? |
21316 | Hurt, my lad? 21316 Hurt? |
21316 | Hurt? 21316 Hurt? |
21316 | I arn''t a horse, am I? |
21316 | I do n''t know; why? |
21316 | I mean much knocked about? 21316 I s''pose they''ll give us something to eat when we get there, eh?" |
21316 | I say, Mas''Don, did our ugly swim last night send you half mad? |
21316 | I say, Mas''Don, though, it''s a bad job being caught; but the rope was made strong enough, warn''t it? |
21316 | I say, did you ever hear the story of the pot and the kettle? |
21316 | I say, have you got anything to eat? |
21316 | I say, lads, you saw me bring that big one down? |
21316 | I suppose you do n''t want to come home, eh? |
21316 | I wonder whether they really could fight if there was a row? |
21316 | I''ll, Mas''Don? 21316 I''m pretty sure I arn''t broke, Mas''Don; but feel just as if I was cracked all over like an old pot, and that''s werry bad, you know, arn''t it? |
21316 | I? 21316 I? |
21316 | If I let go and dropped, how far should I fall? |
21316 | If you please, sir--"Well, if you please what? |
21316 | Ill use me, Don? |
21316 | In irons? |
21316 | Is he better? |
21316 | Is he dead? |
21316 | Is he going to drown me, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Is he going to take us across this tumbling river, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Is it bad news, then? |
21316 | Is it dark enough? |
21316 | Is it much furder, indeed? 21316 Is it not your own fault, my darling?" |
21316 | Is it now? 21316 Is n''t it an awful place?" |
21316 | Is n''t this nearest one Ngati''s canoe, Jem? |
21316 | Is the water so hot as that? |
21316 | Is there time? |
21316 | Is there, my lad? 21316 Is this true, young man?" |
21316 | It is true then, my lads, you deserted your ship? |
21316 | Jem, are you mad? |
21316 | Jem, are you there? |
21316 | Jem, do you think you could make a dash of it as soon as they open the door? |
21316 | Jem, my lad, do n''t you know where you are? |
21316 | Jem, what are you saying? 21316 Jem,"he said,"shall we ever see our dear old home again?" |
21316 | Kill them? |
21316 | Killed''em? 21316 Kitty not in her room? |
21316 | Know where we went wrong, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Know, sir? 21316 Knowing what you do, Jem?" |
21316 | Larfin''? 21316 Light? |
21316 | Like fruit? |
21316 | Like it? 21316 Lindon, what have you to say to this?" |
21316 | Lively? |
21316 | Look at him, Mas''Don? 21316 Look here,"he exclaimed in a hoarse voice;"what nonsense is this?" |
21316 | Look like it, Mas''Don? 21316 Look sharp, we want to get rid of these cords; where''s your knife?" |
21316 | Lots of''em would desert,Jem said one night, as he lay in his hammock so close to Don''s that they touched,"only--""Well, only what?" |
21316 | Mad? 21316 Made you be sailors, eh, whether you would or no?" |
21316 | Magistrates!--my boy? |
21316 | Magistrits? 21316 Matter? |
21316 | Matter? |
21316 | May I come in? |
21316 | May they come aboard, sir? |
21316 | Me, sir? 21316 Me, sir?" |
21316 | Me? 21316 Mean to go, Master Don?" |
21316 | Mean what? |
21316 | Mean, my lad? 21316 Mean? |
21316 | Might it be a war canoe coming to try and capture the ship? |
21316 | More do I; but what can we do? 21316 More to the left, warn''t it, mate?" |
21316 | More, Jem? |
21316 | Mrs Wimble, did you sweep up this room to- day? |
21316 | Mrs Wimble? |
21316 | Must? 21316 My dear Laura, do you think I have not worries enough without your coming here?" |
21316 | My legs? |
21316 | Nearly there? 21316 Nearly there? |
21316 | Next, sir? 21316 Nice place to go to sleep standing up, Mas''Don.--Think he''ll come?" |
21316 | No one else? |
21316 | No press- gang waiting for us down at the bottom here, Mas''Don? |
21316 | No signs of them, Mr Jones? |
21316 | No, Jem; are you? |
21316 | No, my lad; were you? |
21316 | No; do you? |
21316 | Nobody would ha''cared? 21316 Noo Zealand, eh?" |
21316 | Not hurt? |
21316 | Not of our white faces, Jem? 21316 Not such trouble as this, my lad? |
21316 | Not with pearl- ash or soda? |
21316 | Nothing, Jem? |
21316 | Now I appeal to Master Don: was it me, sir, as was late? 21316 Now a bit o''bread and butter, Mas''Don?" |
21316 | Now did you ever hear such a aggrawatin''woman? |
21316 | Now do I look like one? |
21316 | Now then, is it to be quietly? |
21316 | Now then, where did you get them? |
21316 | Now you: are you ready? |
21316 | Now, are you coming into shelter? |
21316 | Now, then, is that boat going to be all night? |
21316 | Now, then, where''s that there ship? |
21316 | Now, what''s the use o''your talking like that? 21316 Now,"said Don laughing,"do you call that an ostrich?" |
21316 | Obstacles? |
21316 | Obstinate? 21316 Of what?" |
21316 | Oh, Mas''Don, are you going to stand this? 21316 Oh, do you?" |
21316 | Oh, have we? |
21316 | Oh, is it? 21316 Oh, is it? |
21316 | Oh, she was, was she? |
21316 | Oh, that''s it, is it? |
21316 | Oh, then you mean to fight, do you? |
21316 | Oh, this is a friend, is it? |
21316 | Oh, yes,said Jem drily;"we could get down easy enough; only the thing is, how should we be when we did get down?" |
21316 | Ostrich? |
21316 | Over? 21316 Paid? |
21316 | Patient? 21316 Pay for the boathook?" |
21316 | Picked this up on the floor, Lindon? |
21316 | Please,''m, would you mind coming here? |
21316 | Plenty of powder and ball? |
21316 | Post? 21316 Pot?" |
21316 | Pressed? |
21316 | Proud and stubborn, eh, Laura? |
21316 | Put them down, will yer? |
21316 | Rather what? |
21316 | Ready, Jem? |
21316 | Ready? |
21316 | Real? |
21316 | Rum game, arn''t it? |
21316 | Same as you have, Mike Bannock? 21316 Say, Mas''Don, do n''t you feel as if you''d like a cup o''tea?" |
21316 | Say, Mas''Don, do you mean it now? |
21316 | Say, Mas''Don, how do they cook their food? |
21316 | Say, Mas''Don, they wo n''t hang us, will they, if they ketches us? |
21316 | Say, Mas''Don, think we can trust him? |
21316 | Say, Mas''Don,he whispered,"did you hear oars?" |
21316 | Say, mate, what are they? |
21316 | See anything, Mr Jones? |
21316 | See that, Mas''Don? 21316 See them?" |
21316 | See? 21316 Seems rum, do n''t it?" |
21316 | Shall I ask him that, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Shall I call them back, sir? |
21316 | Shall I send up, Josiah? |
21316 | Shall us, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Shall we beat them off? |
21316 | Shall we dive? |
21316 | Shall we get him aboard, and keep him? |
21316 | Shall you be fit? |
21316 | Shall you? |
21316 | Sheep? 21316 Should n''t be too tempting for''em, eh? |
21316 | Should you? 21316 Sleep? |
21316 | Sleep? 21316 Smell? |
21316 | So bad as that? |
21316 | Some one knocked him down? |
21316 | Somebody calling you, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Sorry? 21316 Sorry? |
21316 | Sorry? |
21316 | Stand, sir? 21316 Stood it?" |
21316 | Stoopid? 21316 Stoopid? |
21316 | Stops your breath? 21316 Storm, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Sulky, eh? 21316 Surely you will not take them as prisoners, sir?" |
21316 | Take whom-- the Maoris? 21316 Take yer hat off, ca n''t yer?" |
21316 | Tell on them? |
21316 | Thankye, sir, I''m glad of that; and if I might make so bold, sir, about Master Don--"What do you wish to say, man? |
21316 | That all? |
21316 | That is n''t his name, is it? |
21316 | That''s a pretty good scar, is n''t it? 21316 That''s easy enough to say, Jem; but what way is there?" |
21316 | That''s it, is it? |
21316 | That''s what I''m doing, Jem, but-- do you think it''s much further? |
21316 | That''s your game, is it? 21316 The captain?" |
21316 | The women and children, Jem? |
21316 | Then how came you to be a sailor boy? 21316 Then how shall we know, my lad? |
21316 | Then indeed, Josiah, you do not think Lindon guilty? |
21316 | Then it is going to be quite a savage battle, Jem? |
21316 | Then it is not true? |
21316 | Then it must be a werry pretty sight indeed; eh, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Then it''s war, is it? |
21316 | Then that was a lie? |
21316 | Then that was a war- party we saw? |
21316 | Then they''ll have to do it sharp, for it''s morning now, though it''s so dark down here, and I thought we were moving; ca n''t you feel? |
21316 | Then what shall we do? |
21316 | Then why did n''t you at last, too? 21316 Then why did n''t you say so? |
21316 | Then why did you scold him? |
21316 | Then why do n''t you eat it, man? |
21316 | Then you are not a savage? |
21316 | Then you are not wounded? |
21316 | Then you do n''t believe it, Jem? |
21316 | Then you would n''t go with me, Jem? |
21316 | There, Mas''Don,whispered Jem,"hear that?" |
21316 | There, what did I tell you? |
21316 | They can understand English, then? |
21316 | Think as Mrs Wimble picked up any of the money, sir? |
21316 | Think he''s insensible, or only shamming? |
21316 | Think it is real danger, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Think it is them, Jem? |
21316 | Think it''s my ribs? 21316 Think it''s safe to begin again?" |
21316 | Think not, Jem? |
21316 | Think not, Jem? |
21316 | Think so, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Think so, sir? |
21316 | Think that''s fire? |
21316 | Think there''s any big snakes here? 21316 Think there''s much more on it to come down?" |
21316 | Think they heared it, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Think they suspect anything, Jem? |
21316 | Think they''ll send to look for us, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Think they''re in yonder, mate? |
21316 | Think? 21316 Thinking you''d like to go right away, Master Don?" |
21316 | This do, sir? |
21316 | Threatening, eh? |
21316 | Through there, Jem? |
21316 | Time? 21316 Tired, Jem? |
21316 | Tired? 21316 To be cooked?" |
21316 | To come and fetch you away, my lad? 21316 To- night, Jem? |
21316 | Tomati Paroni,said Don thoughtfully;"is that New Zealand for Tom-- Tom--?" |
21316 | Tomati, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Took a bundle? |
21316 | Toward shore, Jem, or out to sea? |
21316 | Uncle, you wo n''t believe what he says? |
21316 | Very mellow apple? |
21316 | Very well then, Mas''Don; the question is this-- Will you or wo n''t you? |
21316 | Want eat? |
21316 | Want to pay me what you owes me, master? |
21316 | Want, sir? |
21316 | Was I? 21316 Was it?" |
21316 | Was n''t that the man who had us shut up here? |
21316 | Wash off? 21316 We could n''t slip out yet, Jem?" |
21316 | We must climb back, Jem, as-- Look here, would these trees bear us? |
21316 | Well, I know that,cried Jem;"and what''s the good of a button being on, if it comes off directly you touch it? |
21316 | Well, I-- well, of all-- there!--why, Mas''Don, did you feel that way? |
21316 | Well, Jem, what do you say? |
21316 | Well, but do n''t you see, it would have looked so bad to say,` I got that eye a- fighting?'' 21316 Well, but do we want to save''em, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Well, do n''t you know what that means? |
21316 | Well, do you call that nonsense? |
21316 | Well, home''s where you settle, arn''t it? 21316 Well, how do we know as we should n''t be killed? |
21316 | Well, my lads,he said,"how are the sore places?" |
21316 | Well, my lads,said a hearty voice just then;"how long are you going to play at being old women? |
21316 | Well, of course, I know that; but what does it mean? |
21316 | Well, that part arn''t tempting, is it, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Well, we are n''t cats, Mas''Don, are we? 21316 Well, well, what?" |
21316 | Well, what could it have been? 21316 Well, what happened?" |
21316 | Well, what is it? |
21316 | Well, what is it? |
21316 | Well, what of that? 21316 Well, what of that?" |
21316 | Well, what sort of a place is it, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Well, who said we were n''t? |
21316 | Well,said the bluff man,"why do n''t you get up? |
21316 | Well? |
21316 | Well? |
21316 | Well? |
21316 | Well? |
21316 | Well? |
21316 | Well? |
21316 | Well? |
21316 | Well? |
21316 | Were you hit, Jem? |
21316 | What am I to say to the old lady? |
21316 | What am I to say to you, Don, if you talk like this? |
21316 | What are they a- saying on, Mas''Don? 21316 What are we going to do now?" |
21316 | What are you going to do, Jem? |
21316 | What are you muttering about? |
21316 | What are you whispering about, youngster? |
21316 | What at, Mas''Don? 21316 What birds?" |
21316 | What can I do? 21316 What can that be, Jem?" |
21316 | What cheer, messmates? 21316 What d''yer mean? |
21316 | What did he say to you? |
21316 | What did they say? |
21316 | What did you think it was, then? |
21316 | What do you mean, Ngati? |
21316 | What do you mean? |
21316 | What do you mean? |
21316 | What do you mean? |
21316 | What do you mean? |
21316 | What do you mean? |
21316 | What do you mean? |
21316 | What do you say to escaping without spears? |
21316 | What do you think of that, Jem? |
21316 | What does he mean by that? |
21316 | What does he mean? |
21316 | What does it mean? 21316 What does that mean?" |
21316 | What for, Jem? |
21316 | What for? |
21316 | What for? |
21316 | What for? |
21316 | What for? |
21316 | What for? |
21316 | What for? |
21316 | What has Uncle Jos been saying to you, mother? |
21316 | What have you done with the rest? |
21316 | What have you got there? |
21316 | What is it, Mas''Don? |
21316 | What is it, sir? |
21316 | What is it? 21316 What is it?" |
21316 | What is it? |
21316 | What is the matter? |
21316 | What is? |
21316 | What island did you say, sir? |
21316 | What made you say that? |
21316 | What next, Jem? |
21316 | What of that? 21316 What of that?" |
21316 | What of that? |
21316 | What paying will make up for what we go through? |
21316 | What shall I do? 21316 What shall I do? |
21316 | What shall I say? |
21316 | What shall us do? |
21316 | What shall us do? |
21316 | What shall we do then? |
21316 | What shall we do, Jem? 21316 What shall we do?" |
21316 | What ship''s that? |
21316 | What should I ha''done? |
21316 | What time did Master Lindon come home? |
21316 | What to? |
21316 | What was it made on? |
21316 | What was it, then? |
21316 | What was you dreaming about, Mas''Don? |
21316 | What will they do? |
21316 | What would you do? |
21316 | What yer been doing of? |
21316 | What yer do that for? |
21316 | What yer doing that for? |
21316 | What yer mean with your ugly job? |
21316 | What yer thinking''bout, Mas''Don? |
21316 | What''s all over? |
21316 | What''s he doing now? |
21316 | What''s it got to do with me? 21316 What''s it got to do with you?" |
21316 | What''s made him so late? 21316 What''s matter, mate?" |
21316 | What''s that mean, Mas''Don? |
21316 | What''s that to you? |
21316 | What''s that, Jem? |
21316 | What''s that? |
21316 | What''s that? |
21316 | What''s the good o''your going first? 21316 What''s the good, sir? |
21316 | What''s the matter, Jem? |
21316 | What''s the matter, Mas''Don? |
21316 | What''s the matter? |
21316 | What''s the matter? |
21316 | What''s the matter? |
21316 | What''s the matter? |
21316 | What''s the matter? |
21316 | What''s the matter? |
21316 | What''s the use o''calling yourself a fool, Mas''Don, when you means me all the time? 21316 What''s to be done next? |
21316 | What''s to be done, Mas''Don? |
21316 | What''s utu? |
21316 | What, after taking all this trouble? 21316 What, and be a miserable coward? |
21316 | What, being ironed, sir? 21316 What, brimstone? |
21316 | What, can you see your way to escape? |
21316 | What, do n''t you know what it all means, Mas''Don? |
21316 | What, for my nephew? |
21316 | What, get him out? 21316 What, his slave?" |
21316 | What, in getting away from being slaves aboard ship? 21316 What, like it is at Bath?" |
21316 | What, me? 21316 What, me? |
21316 | What, not to meet your own wife? |
21316 | What, old Ramsden? 21316 What, on that little island? |
21316 | What? 21316 What? |
21316 | What? 21316 What? |
21316 | What? 21316 What?" |
21316 | What? |
21316 | What? |
21316 | What? |
21316 | What? |
21316 | What? |
21316 | What? |
21316 | What? |
21316 | What? |
21316 | When everybody believes me guilty? |
21316 | When? |
21316 | Where am I? |
21316 | Where are the boats? |
21316 | Where are the enemy, Jem? |
21316 | Where are the men from the ship? |
21316 | Where are they taking us? |
21316 | Where are they? |
21316 | Where are you going, Jem? |
21316 | Where are you hurt, Jem? |
21316 | Where are you shovin''to, mate? |
21316 | Where are you? |
21316 | Where are you? |
21316 | Where can he be going now? |
21316 | Where did you know him? |
21316 | Where do you feel in pain, Jem? |
21316 | Where is Jem? |
21316 | Where is Ngati? |
21316 | Where shall we hide? |
21316 | Where shall we put''em, sir? |
21316 | Where''bouts-- where''bouts, sir? |
21316 | Where''s Mas''Don? |
21316 | Where, Jem? |
21316 | Where? 21316 Where? |
21316 | Where? |
21316 | Whereabouts was it? |
21316 | Which, begging your pardon, sir, you do n''t think now as--"Well? |
21316 | Who are you? 21316 Who could it be?" |
21316 | Who was there after you? |
21316 | Why did you say that, Jem? |
21316 | Why do n''t you give''em the word, and have me pressed? |
21316 | Why do n''t you jump? |
21316 | Why do n''t you lock- up and come in to tea? |
21316 | Why do you not speak? |
21316 | Why do you say that? |
21316 | Why not now, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Why not, my lad? 21316 Why not, sir? |
21316 | Why not? 21316 Why not?" |
21316 | Why not? |
21316 | Why, Jem,he said,"have I been asleep?" |
21316 | Why, Mas''Don, that there do n''t mean a fight, do it? |
21316 | Why, if this is so easy, Mas''Don,said Jem,"why could n''t we get right among the trees and make for the woods?" |
21316 | Why, what do you mean, Jem? |
21316 | Why, what should an Englishman speak? |
21316 | Why, who told you that, my lad? |
21316 | Why, who''d ever believe him i''preference to you? |
21316 | Why, you are never going to turn tail? |
21316 | Why, you do n''t mean to give us up, do you? |
21316 | Why? 21316 Why?" |
21316 | Why? |
21316 | Why? |
21316 | Why? |
21316 | Will it bear us, Jem? |
21316 | Will that there pattern all over your face and chest wash off? |
21316 | Will the rain hurt the rope? |
21316 | Will they go on feeding us like this? |
21316 | Will they kill us if we stay? |
21316 | Will they take us aboard ship? |
21316 | Will you be quiet, Sally? 21316 Will you have this lad, sir, to carry a spare gun for you?" |
21316 | Will you take a bit of good advice, my lad? |
21316 | Will you take my message? |
21316 | Without you? |
21316 | Wo n''t have one too, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Wo n''t you come up and have some rum? |
21316 | Wo n''t you feel frightened, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Wonder where they''ll take us? |
21316 | Would n''t you like to go up there, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Would they give us a candle, Jem, do you think, if I was to knock? |
21316 | Would you mind pulling the bell-- werry gently? 21316 Wretch? |
21316 | Ye- es, I think so, Mas''Don; only arn''t there no other way? |
21316 | Yes, I heared you say so twice; but what does it mean? |
21316 | Yes, Jem,said Don drily;"and how are you going to get them there?" |
21316 | Yes, and in a quarter of an hour we can be there; that is, if you can walk fast? |
21316 | Yes, but how, Jem? 21316 Yes, do you know anything about them?" |
21316 | Yes, if you shout quite close? |
21316 | Yes, of course; but I say, my lad, I do n''t look so rum as you, do I? |
21316 | Yes, sir; and can she speak to you a minute? |
21316 | Yes, that''s the way to look at it, Jem; but it''s a miserable world, is n''t it? |
21316 | Yes, yes, we know that,said Uncle Josiah sternly;"but how did you know?" |
21316 | Yes, yes,exclaimed Don impatiently;"why not now?" |
21316 | Yes,said Don gloomily;"the window is unfastened, and the way clear, but where''s the rope?" |
21316 | Yes; and what did you make of that? |
21316 | Yes; but the canoe-- where is the canoe? |
21316 | Yes; did I not speak plainly? 21316 Yes; why not? |
21316 | Yes? |
21316 | Yes? |
21316 | You are not going to keep us, sir? |
21316 | You are quite certain, Wimble? |
21316 | You are quite sure? |
21316 | You are sure that you have seen no more, Lindon? |
21316 | You charge him here with stealing money from your desk? |
21316 | You did go to sleep, did n''t you? |
21316 | You do n''t? |
21316 | You do not think-- after what I said? |
21316 | You do? |
21316 | You feel better now, do n''t you? |
21316 | You have felt like that, Jem? |
21316 | You have not been keeping that scoundrel Bannock? |
21316 | You know we were taken by the press- gang last night? |
21316 | You like being a sailor then, Jem? |
21316 | You mean making game of you? |
21316 | You mean we should fall to the bottom? |
21316 | You mean you hurt him? |
21316 | You own, then, that you had my money, sir? |
21316 | You saw all that, eh? |
21316 | You see''em? |
21316 | You were n''t a sailor, were you? |
21316 | You''ll take my message? |
21316 | Young? 21316 Your bundle, my dear?" |
21316 | Your head bad? 21316 Your skipper''ll come to me to- morrow if he do n''t think you''re drowned, or-- I say, did you feel anything of''em?" |
21316 | ` Suppose you did''? |
21316 | ` There was a man in Bristol city, Fol de rol de--''"Say, Mas''Don, think there''s any monkeys here? |
21316 | ''Member that big case as was too wide to come into the lower warehouse?" |
21316 | ''Member when I fell down and the tub went over me?" |
21316 | ''Nother cup, sir? |
21316 | ''Sides, how could they ha''got on the floor?" |
21316 | A place full of foul air?" |
21316 | A whisper like that, my lad? |
21316 | After they''d tied us prisoners all up and shut up all the women and children in the big_ whare_, what do you think they did?" |
21316 | Ah, I do n''t know about me; but you could get right away, slide down the rope, get the gig up alongside--""When it''s swinging from the davits, Jem?" |
21316 | Am I master here?" |
21316 | Am I right?" |
21316 | And I say, young Lavington, what have you been doing to your face? |
21316 | And break our legs, or sprain our ankles, and be caught? |
21316 | And now what are you going to do?" |
21316 | And so you have made a bed of it, eh? |
21316 | Are they giving you a hot bath?" |
21316 | Are we in the big cellar?" |
21316 | Are we to shoot if they do attack?" |
21316 | Are you asleep? |
21316 | Are you coming down?" |
21316 | Are you getting on all right?" |
21316 | Are you going to charge him, master?" |
21316 | Are you much hurt?" |
21316 | Are you?" |
21316 | Are you?" |
21316 | Arn''t going to tie us up, are you?" |
21316 | Arn''t he comic? |
21316 | Arn''t it time us two did something?" |
21316 | Be fine, would n''t it?" |
21316 | Being ordered about, and drilled, and sent aloft in rough weather, and all the time my Sally thousands o''miles away? |
21316 | Bit tired, lad?" |
21316 | Boots or shoes this morning?" |
21316 | But I say, Mas''Don, there arn''t many chaps in Bristol as could have failed down like that without breaking theirselves, is there?" |
21316 | But I say, mate, where''s your fighting tools? |
21316 | But I say; what''s it mean? |
21316 | But did n''t you tell''em as you did n''t?" |
21316 | But do you want to break the poor boy''s ribs? |
21316 | But that was no moment for studying trifles; and what were waistcoat buttons to liberty? |
21316 | But they ca n''t see us, can they?" |
21316 | But what did he say-- the skipper would forget it by to- morrow?" |
21316 | But what in particular?" |
21316 | But what''s quarter of a hour? |
21316 | But, look here, how do you feel now?" |
21316 | But, look here; what''s all this yaller stuff?" |
21316 | But, mother, you found my bundle?" |
21316 | Ca n''t you see we''re seven to one?" |
21316 | Can we depend on Ngati? |
21316 | Can you fight, Mas''Don?" |
21316 | Can you hear anything?" |
21316 | Can you see it now?" |
21316 | Can you see the men, marines?" |
21316 | Can you see the shore?" |
21316 | Can you shake hands?" |
21316 | Can you walk?" |
21316 | Charge me?" |
21316 | China?" |
21316 | Cocky, how did you get your beak bent that way? |
21316 | Could we break it down?" |
21316 | Could you run away by yourself?" |
21316 | D''yer hear? |
21316 | Dear me, are you? |
21316 | Did Bannock say he should stay away to- day?" |
21316 | Did he hear? |
21316 | Did he hurt you?" |
21316 | Did he know? |
21316 | Did my nephew Lindon come to the yard last night?" |
21316 | Did n''t know that was the arm chest, did you?" |
21316 | Did n''t want to speak to me, eh? |
21316 | Did n''t you hear the gun?" |
21316 | Did n''t you know?" |
21316 | Did n''t you understand him when he spoke?" |
21316 | Did you ever see such a miserable sneak?" |
21316 | Did you ever see such a rum one in your life?" |
21316 | Did you find any money on the floor?" |
21316 | Did you hear him?" |
21316 | Did you hear me holler?" |
21316 | Did you see him run, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Did you see what they did?" |
21316 | Do n''t I tell you it''ll be all right?" |
21316 | Do n''t you understand?" |
21316 | Do you give in?" |
21316 | Do you hear?" |
21316 | Do you hear?" |
21316 | Do you know how I feel?" |
21316 | Do you know them''s men''s irons you''ve got on?" |
21316 | Do you know what that means?" |
21316 | Do you know what you were going to do when the captain knocked you backwards?" |
21316 | Do you not hear me?" |
21316 | Do you see?" |
21316 | Do you think he''s dead?" |
21316 | Do you think it likely?" |
21316 | Do you?" |
21316 | Does it hurt, my lad? |
21316 | Don exclaimed suddenly,"why not now?" |
21316 | Don twisted his head round, caught Jem by the shoulder, and favoured him with the same buzzing sensation as he whispered,--"What are you going to do?" |
21316 | Don, my boy, why do you not speak, and beg your uncle''s forgiveness?" |
21316 | Eh, Ngati? |
21316 | Eh, Ngati?" |
21316 | Eh, Ngati?" |
21316 | Eh? |
21316 | Eh? |
21316 | Eh?" |
21316 | Faces a alley, eh? |
21316 | Feel better now, do n''t you?" |
21316 | For England? |
21316 | For saving my poor mother from trouble and anxiety?" |
21316 | Fun''it?" |
21316 | Getting tired of it?" |
21316 | Go to his help?" |
21316 | Going, sir?" |
21316 | Got any tobacco, mate?" |
21316 | Guilty? |
21316 | HOW TO ESCAPE? |
21316 | HOW TO ESCAPE? |
21316 | Ha''you been there all the time?" |
21316 | Has he come back?" |
21316 | Has n''t he brushed it up in a point? |
21316 | Have I been a- dreaming? |
21316 | Have another?" |
21316 | Have you dropped anything?" |
21316 | Have you seen it?" |
21316 | He says,` Am I hurt?'' |
21316 | Head hurt much?" |
21316 | Hear that noise?" |
21316 | Hear what he said to the fust lufftenant; this was the worst part of the coast, and the people were ready to rob and murder and eat you?" |
21316 | Here we are safe, but I must say you''re the wussest swimmer I ever met.--Here, what are they going to do?" |
21316 | Here, Lavington, what about that boathook? |
21316 | Here, be quiet, will yer? |
21316 | Here, sir, what made you start away like that?" |
21316 | Here, what are you going to do?" |
21316 | Here, why do n''t Ngati stop?" |
21316 | How am I to make him understand? |
21316 | How are we to get it back?" |
21316 | How are we to manage now?" |
21316 | How are you getting on?" |
21316 | How are you getting on?" |
21316 | How are you?" |
21316 | How came he here?" |
21316 | How can you be so absurd?" |
21316 | How can you be so tiresome?" |
21316 | How can you be such an ass?" |
21316 | How dare she leave the gates when her husband is out? |
21316 | How dare you charge him with such a crime?" |
21316 | How dare you wish such a thing? |
21316 | How dare you? |
21316 | How dark it is? |
21316 | How did you come here?" |
21316 | How do we know it is n''t a trap, or that it''s safe to go in?" |
21316 | How is your shoulder?" |
21316 | How long have we been at sea now?" |
21316 | How many more times am I to tell you that I will not have my time wasted over those lying stories of yours? |
21316 | How shall we ask for our clothes?" |
21316 | How soon shall we be ready to cut away?" |
21316 | How was I to know you meant a hot bath? |
21316 | How was it you come?" |
21316 | How''s a man to eat his tea with you going on like that?" |
21316 | How''s your young mate?" |
21316 | How''s yourn?" |
21316 | How?" |
21316 | Hullo, what do you want?" |
21316 | Hurt you much, my lad?" |
21316 | Hurt? |
21316 | I am right, though; you are an escaped convict from Norfolk Island?" |
21316 | I can trust you, ca n''t I?" |
21316 | I daresay you have heard what takes place afterwards, when the Maori tribes have taken prisoners?" |
21316 | I do n''t mind for myself,"groaned Jem, in his despair,"but what will she do?" |
21316 | I have been your friend, have I not?" |
21316 | I said what time did Master Lindon come home?" |
21316 | I saw him go-- out of the window, and he took a bundle with him, and-- and-- what shall I do? |
21316 | I say, Mas''Don, arn''t you hungry?" |
21316 | I say, Mas''Don, how do you feel now?" |
21316 | I say, Mas''Don, what are we going to do? |
21316 | I say, are those burning mountains?" |
21316 | I say, do you think they can understand English?" |
21316 | I say, figgerhead, arn''t there no other way?" |
21316 | I say, if you hear me squeak or crack anywhere, you''ll stop me, wo n''t you?" |
21316 | I say, mate, will he always go off like that when you pull the string?" |
21316 | I say, shall we try it or sha''n''t we?" |
21316 | I say, sir, do I look lively?" |
21316 | I say, that''s gammon, is n''t it?" |
21316 | I say, think there are many of''em about?" |
21316 | I say, why not now?" |
21316 | I say, would you drop if you were me?" |
21316 | I say, you know what they do here? |
21316 | I''ll risk it: will you?" |
21316 | I''m afraid--""They have got ashore and escaped?" |
21316 | If Ramsden could not live in there, how could the escaped men? |
21316 | If it is, why do n''t they give us back our clothes? |
21316 | If it was true, what would happen at the little farm? |
21316 | In the middle of the night?" |
21316 | Is he afraid to face the truth?" |
21316 | Is it any good, Mas''Don?" |
21316 | Is it because of the trouble at the yard?" |
21316 | Is n''t Kitty late?" |
21316 | Is n''t that one stealing out from behind that island?" |
21316 | Is that you? |
21316 | Is what he says true?" |
21316 | It is n''t rotten, is it?" |
21316 | It might break, and then what would your mother say to me? |
21316 | Kitty not been to bed? |
21316 | Know how long we''re going to stop here, Mas''Don?" |
21316 | Let a man walk, ca n''t yer? |
21316 | Letters?" |
21316 | Lie down?" |
21316 | Lindon, am I ever to be able to trust you when business takes me away?" |
21316 | Look here, Mas''Don, shall I stop on for an hour and tell you what I''ve seen in South America?" |
21316 | Look here, my lad, how soon do you think you''ll be strong enough to try and escape?" |
21316 | Lost some one? |
21316 | Mas''Don? |
21316 | Me, miss? |
21316 | Mind me smoking a pipe?" |
21316 | Missing, sir?" |
21316 | My shoulder? |
21316 | Never was in the west country, I suppose? |
21316 | No, my dear sister, can you not see that I mean all this as a lesson for Lindon? |
21316 | No?" |
21316 | Not been home?" |
21316 | Not before?" |
21316 | Not hit, are you?" |
21316 | Not hurt much? |
21316 | Not much hurt, are you?" |
21316 | Now is it likely, Mas''Don? |
21316 | Now then, ready?" |
21316 | Now then, what money have you got on you?" |
21316 | Now then, which way is it?" |
21316 | Now you''re down and I''m up; and what d''yer think o''that, Jem Wimble?" |
21316 | Now, are you going to clap on the hatchways, or am I to report you?" |
21316 | Now, look here, shall us one go down each rope, or both down one?" |
21316 | Now, then, can you tell me whether they''re coming back?" |
21316 | Now, what shall we do?" |
21316 | Now, will you take my advice?" |
21316 | Of course you''ll be at the court to- morrow?" |
21316 | Oh, come, Mas''Don, where''s your pluck? |
21316 | One of the Maoris stole it, and you were afraid to speak?" |
21316 | Ought she to awaken her aunt? |
21316 | Posts like this may keep in Noo Zealanders, but they wo n''t keep in two English chaps, will they?" |
21316 | Press- gang, eh?" |
21316 | Rather pricky, arn''t it?" |
21316 | Ready?" |
21316 | Ready?" |
21316 | Ready?" |
21316 | Rested?" |
21316 | Rob a good master? |
21316 | Run away?" |
21316 | Run for his life, or stay to help his wounded companions, and share their fate? |
21316 | Sailor? |
21316 | Say, Mas''Don, do you ketch hold o''the tree with your hands, or your arms and legs?" |
21316 | Say, does he always look as handsome as that?" |
21316 | Say, shall you give any one a chop if it does come to a fight?" |
21316 | Say, wonder whether there''s any fish in that lake?" |
21316 | See them big birds as we shot at? |
21316 | Shall I send up for her?" |
21316 | Shall I show you where you can anchor?" |
21316 | Shall we begin now, or wait?" |
21316 | Shall we ever see old England again, and if we do, shall I be a cripple in this arm? |
21316 | Shall we give it up, or risk it?" |
21316 | Shall we suck the eggs raw?" |
21316 | Should I?" |
21316 | Shove me into that hot pot, and boil me, would you? |
21316 | Six to one, eh? |
21316 | Smudging it to keep off the flies?" |
21316 | So you''re goin''to desert, both of you, are you? |
21316 | Stop here long?" |
21316 | Stop here with these people, and old Tomati, or go on at once and shift for ourselves?" |
21316 | Strikes me they wo n''t get all the men aboard this time, eh, Mas''Don?" |
21316 | Suppose any of our fellows was to see us like this?" |
21316 | That''s resting you, arn''t it? |
21316 | That''s right, is n''t it?" |
21316 | That''s the truth, is it not?" |
21316 | That''s where they sends the chaps they transports, arn''t it?" |
21316 | The question must have been repeated many times before Don could get rid of the dizzy feeling of confusion and reply,--"Yes; what do you want?" |
21316 | Then where''s that ship o''war now?" |
21316 | Then you arn''t killed?" |
21316 | There, can I say more fairly than that?" |
21316 | They''re not going to, eh?" |
21316 | Think I''m a thief?" |
21316 | Think any of these would come with us?" |
21316 | Think that''s what made her burst?" |
21316 | Think the captain will punish you?" |
21316 | Think the watch''ll see''em?" |
21316 | Think they''ll find us out?" |
21316 | Think we could crawl into the bush from here?" |
21316 | Think we shall be in time?" |
21316 | Think we shall have a storm?" |
21316 | Think you could go to sleep?" |
21316 | Those sacks?" |
21316 | Thought you''d like to hear how we got on?" |
21316 | Understand?" |
21316 | Utu?" |
21316 | Want a passage home?" |
21316 | Want eat?" |
21316 | Want your hot water?" |
21316 | Was any one ever before so unlucky as we are?" |
21316 | Was n''t there no windows opposit''?" |
21316 | Well, Laura, what have you to say to that?" |
21316 | Well, have you any idea of what a bit of madness that would have been here?" |
21316 | Well, how are we to get up?" |
21316 | Well, now, did you ever see the likes of that? |
21316 | Well, p''r''aps it''s what you think is the truth, I say, arn''t it lovely out here? |
21316 | Well, what are you looking at?" |
21316 | Well, what did you hear?" |
21316 | Well, what do you say? |
21316 | Well, what were you going to say?" |
21316 | Well,"he continued as his sister entered hastily,"what does he say?" |
21316 | Well? |
21316 | Were n''t there three?" |
21316 | What are they doing there?" |
21316 | What are you going to do?" |
21316 | What are you going to do?" |
21316 | What chance?" |
21316 | What could he be doing? |
21316 | What d''yer say?" |
21316 | What d''yer want?" |
21316 | What did it all mean? |
21316 | What do you mean? |
21316 | What do you mean?" |
21316 | What do you mean?" |
21316 | What do you say to that?" |
21316 | What do you say?" |
21316 | What do you say?" |
21316 | What does it mean?" |
21316 | What for, my lad?" |
21316 | What for? |
21316 | What is writing to speaking? |
21316 | What magistrits? |
21316 | What of that?" |
21316 | What say?" |
21316 | What shall I do without a husband?" |
21316 | What shall I do?" |
21316 | What shall we do?" |
21316 | What should I say to your wife if you were hurt?" |
21316 | What should he do-- slide down and try to escape, or climb back? |
21316 | What should he do? |
21316 | What should he do? |
21316 | What sound?" |
21316 | What time did he say?" |
21316 | What time would you like your shaving water, sir? |
21316 | What were glorious foreign lands with their wonders to one who would be thought of as a cowardly thief? |
21316 | What will my Sally do? |
21316 | What will my Sally do?" |
21316 | What will she do?" |
21316 | What will they say?" |
21316 | What window was that through which the sun shone brightly, and why was he in that rough loft, in company with a man lying asleep on some sacks? |
21316 | What would Uncle Josiah say? |
21316 | What would happen? |
21316 | What would my Sally ha''said if she know''d I fought our Mike?" |
21316 | What would my Sally say?" |
21316 | What would you do, Mr Gordon?" |
21316 | What would your mother ha''said to me when I carried you home, and told her your head had been scrunched off by a sugar- cask?" |
21316 | What yer doing of? |
21316 | What yer done with them?" |
21316 | What yer going to do?" |
21316 | What''s cooking?" |
21316 | What''s it like, Mas''Don?" |
21316 | What''s that?" |
21316 | What''s that?" |
21316 | What''s the good?" |
21316 | What''s the matter? |
21316 | What''s the matter?" |
21316 | What''s the matter?" |
21316 | What''s the matter?" |
21316 | What''s the matter?" |
21316 | What''s them things like?" |
21316 | What''s up?" |
21316 | What''s your hands for? |
21316 | What, already? |
21316 | What, run away now at once-- desert?" |
21316 | What, since I lay down among the ferns this morning?" |
21316 | What, to do what I said I''d do?" |
21316 | What?" |
21316 | What?" |
21316 | What?" |
21316 | When shall it be-- to- night?" |
21316 | When''s Tomati coming back? |
21316 | Where are they? |
21316 | Where are we?" |
21316 | Where could he be? |
21316 | Where did he say them bags was?" |
21316 | Where is Tomati?" |
21316 | Where is the sergeant? |
21316 | Where was he? |
21316 | Where''s Jem?" |
21316 | Where''s Ngati?" |
21316 | Where''s Norfolk Island, mate?" |
21316 | Where''s your hand?" |
21316 | Which are you going to use?" |
21316 | Who is to eat breakfast?" |
21316 | Who''s that?" |
21316 | Whom have you paid?" |
21316 | Why ca n''t we take it coolly, same as they do?" |
21316 | Why did I ever marry such a man as you?" |
21316 | Why did n''t you hail sooner?" |
21316 | Why did n''t you slither and go?" |
21316 | Why do n''t you speak?" |
21316 | Why do n''t you strike for liberty, my lad, and go and make your fortun''in furren parts?" |
21316 | Why is it so dark? |
21316 | Why not escape now?" |
21316 | Why not start off and run?" |
21316 | Why should he not take advantage of this or some other opportunity, and steal ashore? |
21316 | Why, did n''t I help?" |
21316 | Why, he''s quite a doctor, eh?" |
21316 | Why, what d''yer think I see only yes''day?" |
21316 | Why, what would they do?" |
21316 | Why? |
21316 | Why?" |
21316 | Why?" |
21316 | Will he ever get well again?" |
21316 | Will you come quiet?" |
21316 | Will you get a- top o''my shoulders, or shall I get a- top o''yourn?" |
21316 | Will you go first, or follow me?" |
21316 | Will you go to your room and promise to stay there till breakfast time to- morrow morning, if I give you my word to do the same?" |
21316 | Will you go?" |
21316 | Will you surrender?" |
21316 | Wish one was dead, sir? |
21316 | Wonder how far he went in?" |
21316 | Wonder what shark would be like?" |
21316 | Wonder what she''d say to it?" |
21316 | Wonder where the bullets went?" |
21316 | Wonder whether she''s eating her breakfast?" |
21316 | Wonder whether they''re good to eat? |
21316 | Would you drop?" |
21316 | Would you drop?" |
21316 | Yes: but what''s the matter? |
21316 | You are n''t no worse?" |
21316 | You can shoot, ca n''t you?" |
21316 | You did not lose it?" |
21316 | You did not notice anything, Lindon?" |
21316 | You do mean to go if you get a chance?" |
21316 | You got yourn?" |
21316 | You have n''t got to go again?" |
21316 | You know; the one with a figure- head with its tongue sticking out?" |
21316 | You look as white as-- Why, what now?" |
21316 | You said escape, did n''t you, sir?" |
21316 | You there, Mas''Don? |
21316 | You there, Mas''Don?" |
21316 | You were going to hit him, were n''t you?" |
21316 | You''ll tell her that?" |
21316 | You''re not nervous, are you, Jem?" |
21316 | Your uncle do n''t think you took the money?" |
21316 | Your uncle left me in charge of the yard, and-- what yer sitting on the sugar- barrel for when there''s a''bacco hogshead close by? |
21316 | Your work''s in the yard, is n''t it?" |
21316 | cried Jem sharply,"what yer about? |
21316 | cried Jem, triumphantly;"now, what do you say to that? |
21316 | cried the captain, fiercely,"Where is the lieutenant? |
21316 | cried the old man;"what did I say? |
21316 | cried the trembling woman,"what does this mean? |
21316 | he cried out of the darkness,"where are you? |
21316 | he roared;"do n''t you know as Mas''Don arn''t gone?" |
21316 | he said, with a grim smile,"cleared for action, and guns run out?" |
21316 | he said, with his countenance brightening;"know what these here taste like, Mas''Don?" |
21316 | he said,"what do you think o''them?" |
21316 | he said;"where are our two men?" |
21316 | he whispered,"is that you?" |
21316 | panted Don,"Can we do it?" |
21316 | roared Mike, savagely,"charge me?" |
21316 | said Don angrily;"why, where would you get such savages as these? |
21316 | said Don;"that he''d give me a big gun and plenty of powder?" |
21316 | said Jem cheerily;"come to help?" |
21316 | said Jem, scratching his head;"is that what you call a connundydrum?" |
21316 | said Jem;"do it? |
21316 | said Mike, staring;"how come I in the office to see it?" |
21316 | said that worthy, good- temperedly,"what d''yer think of me, eh? |
21316 | said the officer--"Norfolk Island?" |
21316 | said the old merchant, coldly,"why have you come? |
21316 | thought Don;"try to spear us, or surround and seize us?" |
21316 | whispered Don;"is n''t that Tomati?" |