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 |
---|---|
2775 | Did n''t you know? |
2775 | Do n''t you know,she said, in her clear hard voice,"do n''t you know that I''m an Irish Catholic?" |
2775 | Do n''t you see? |
2775 | Do you know who that is? |
2775 | I thought,Nancy said,"I never imagined.... Are n''t marriages sacraments? |
2775 | It''s your opinion that there are no other lines that count? |
2775 | Well,I answered gaily,"you''re not going to accuse him of not being a good husband, or of not being a good guardian to your ward?" |
2775 | Am I never to have a chance?" |
2775 | And have I, I wonder, given the due impression of how his life was portioned and his time laid out? |
2775 | And is n''t it incredible that during all that time Edward and Leonora never spoke a word to each other in private? |
2775 | And is n''t it odd to think that if your wife had n''t been my husband''s mistress, you would probably never have been here at all?" |
2775 | And so her eyes asked:"Is this man trustworthy in money matters; is he likely to try to play the lover; is he likely to let his women be troublesome? |
2775 | And then Leonora opened her eyes and said almost coldly:"And you? |
2775 | And then, as we all properly stage- managed our bewilderment, she continued:"Do n''t you know that is why we were all called Protestants? |
2775 | And what chance had I against those three hardened gamblers, who were all in league to conceal their hands from me? |
2775 | And what could they have done better, or what could they have done that could have been worse? |
2775 | And why? |
2775 | And, if one does n''t know as much as that about the first thing in the world, what does one know and why is one here? |
2775 | And, one ghastly hot day, he suddenly heard himself say to Leonora:"I say, could n''t we take Mrs Maidan with us to Europe and drop her at Nauheim?" |
2775 | And, when she had calmed him down with Eau de Mélisse, she said:"Look here, my friend, how much money have you left? |
2775 | Anyhow, she and they tied me pretty well down � and Jimmy, of course, that dreary boy � what in the world did she see in him? |
2775 | Are n''t they indissoluble? |
2775 | At what, then, does it all work out? |
2775 | But I know that when I came out of it she was saying:"Oh, where are all the bright, happy, innocent beings in the world? |
2775 | But how can she have known what she knew? |
2775 | But then, who would not have been mistaken with Edward? |
2775 | By what trick of mania could not he let her be as good to him as Mrs Basil was? |
2775 | Could n''t you lend me three hundred or so?" |
2775 | Did the girl love Edward, or did n''t she? |
2775 | Did you ever read Mrs Markham? |
2775 | Do n''t you think you will get married?" |
2775 | Do you intend to let me pull things together? |
2775 | Do you know the story? |
2775 | Do you understand that, whilst she was Edward''s mistress, she was perpetually trying to reunite him to his wife? |
2775 | Edward, of course, wavered in his demeanour, What else could he do? |
2775 | Five thousand dollars? |
2775 | Florence, I remember, received me with a chalk- pale face and the exclamation:"Have those old cats been saying anything against me?" |
2775 | For I ask myself unceasingly, my mind going round and round in a weary, baffled space of pain � what should these people have done? |
2775 | For as I''ve said what do I know even of the smoking- room? |
2775 | For that of the bath attendant? |
2775 | For what purpose? |
2775 | For who in this world can give anyone a character? |
2775 | For whose benefit did she do it? |
2775 | Good God, are all these fellows monstrous idiots, or is there a freemasonry between all of them from end to end of the earth?... |
2775 | Good God, what did they all see in him? |
2775 | Have you ever seen a retriever dashing in play after a greyhound? |
2775 | He did nothing more than grunt:"And then?" |
2775 | How could I have known that, during all the years of our married life, that little brown flask had contained, not nitrate of amyl, but prussic acid? |
2775 | How could he arouse anything like a sentiment, in anybody? |
2775 | How could she have got to know it? |
2775 | How could you buy me from my husband? |
2775 | How could you? |
2775 | How dare you?" |
2775 | How do you know that you are even Colonel Rufford''s daughter?" |
2775 | How does one put in one''s time? |
2775 | How in the world should I get it? |
2775 | How is it possible to have achieved nine years and to have nothing whatever to show for it? |
2775 | How the deuce did they do it, those unflinching blue eyes with the direct gaze? |
2775 | How the devil � how the devil do they do it? |
2775 | I wonder what he made of it? |
2775 | If he could love some one else than Leonora, her fierce unknown heart suddenly spoke in her side, why could it not be herself? |
2775 | In memoria aeterna erit...."But what were they? |
2775 | Is all this digression or is n''t it digression? |
2775 | Is he, above all, likely to babble about my affairs?" |
2775 | Is it possible that such a luckless devil should be so tormented by blind and inscrutable destiny? |
2775 | Is n''t that a story? |
2775 | Is n''t that the queer thought? |
2775 | Is n''t there any heaven where old beautiful dances, old beautiful intimacies prolong themselves? |
2775 | Is the whole thing a folly and a mockery? |
2775 | It certainly was n''t playing the game, was it now?" |
2775 | It ran something like:"Oh, Mrs Ashburnham, how could you have done it? |
2775 | Leonora called out:"How dare you? |
2775 | Madness? |
2775 | No, she acted wrongly.... And yet, poor thing, is it for me to condemn her � and what did it matter in the end? |
2775 | Oh, how could you? |
2775 | Once she said:"If you can believe that of Maisie Maidan, as you say you do, why can not you believe it of me?" |
2775 | Or are we meant to act on impulse alone? |
2775 | Or have I in the least succeeded in conveying that he was all those things and had all those virtues? |
2775 | Or thinks all the time for the matter of that? |
2775 | Permanence? |
2775 | Predestination? |
2775 | Queer, is n''t it? |
2775 | She knew that one was commanded not to commit adultery � but why, she thought, should one? |
2775 | She said to me with a certain fierceness:"It is determined that we sail at four this afternoon? |
2775 | She said:"What are you doing so late?" |
2775 | She used to exclaim:"Well, if you knew it, why have n''t you told it all already to Captain Ashburnham? |
2775 | Stability? |
2775 | Ten?" |
2775 | The just? |
2775 | The unjust? |
2775 | Three weeks before Colonel Powys had written to Colonel Ashburnham:"I say, Harry, could n''t your Edward marry one of my girls? |
2775 | To point what lesson? |
2775 | What could she say? |
2775 | What did he want? |
2775 | What did he want? |
2775 | What do they call it? |
2775 | What earthly chance? |
2775 | What had I to regret? |
2775 | What is one to think of humanity? |
2775 | What right had Nancy to be young and slender and dark, and gay at times, at times mournful? |
2775 | What right had she to be exactly the woman to make Leonora''s husband happy? |
2775 | What then, should they have done? |
2775 | What would Nancy have made of Edward if she had succeeded in living with him; what would Edward have made of her? |
2775 | What would you have? |
2775 | What''s the matter? |
2775 | What, in the name of God, should they have done? |
2775 | Whatever''s the matter?" |
2775 | Where better could one take refuge? |
2775 | Where better? |
2775 | Where''s happiness? |
2775 | Who in this world knows anything of any other heart � or of his own? |
2775 | Who knows? |
2775 | Who knows? |
2775 | Who the devil knows? |
2775 | Who the devil knows? |
2775 | Why are you all in the dark?" |
2775 | Why ca n''t people have what they want? |
2775 | Why does one do things? |
2775 | Why should I hinder him? |
2775 | Why should not her type have its turn in his heart? |
2775 | You are not lying about having taken berths?" |
2775 | of the passers- by? |
2775 | she said,"do n''t you see what''s going on?" |
2992 | Do you see,they would say,"this madam marchioness who gives herself such glorious airs? |
2992 | ( To the Masters) Do you think I look good? |
2992 | ( To the two masters) What say you of my liveries? |
2992 | ) MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: How was that? |
2992 | ACT FOUR SCENE III( Covielle, disguised; Monsieur Jourdain, Lackey) COVIELLE: Sir, I do n''t know if I have the honor to be known to you? |
2992 | ACT THREE SCENE IV( Count Dorante, Monsieur Jourdain, Madame Jourdain, Nicole) DORANTE: My dear friend, Monsieur Jourdain, how do you do? |
2992 | ACT THREE SCENE XIV( Monsieur Jourdain, Lackey) MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: What the devil is this? |
2992 | Among friends, does one stop at these sorts of scruples? |
2992 | And a lover who is the most faithful and passionate of lovers? |
2992 | And can I do less for a lord who calls me his dear friend? |
2992 | And do you see anything more impertinent than those women who laugh all the time? |
2992 | And do you want yourself laughed at everywhere? |
2992 | And should n''t reason be the mistress of all our activities? |
2992 | And what fantasies are you getting into your head that your husband spends his money, and that it is he who is giving this entertainment to Madame? |
2992 | And would it cost you anything to accommodate yourself to his fantasies? |
2992 | And would n''t you do the same thing for me, if the occasion offered? |
2992 | And you( to Nicole), do you know what you must do to say U? |
2992 | Are we ourselves of the line of St. Louis? |
2992 | Are you dressed for a masquerade, and is this a time to go masked? |
2992 | Are you going to show me your little skit? |
2992 | Are you mocking me? |
2992 | Are you of an age to dance in ballets? |
2992 | Are you playing in a comedy? |
2992 | But do n''t you see that Monsieur Jourdain, Madame, eats all the pieces of food you have touched? |
2992 | CLEONTE: Are you sure you''re not deceiving me, Lucile? |
2992 | CLEONTE: Covielle, can one see anything to equal this perfidy of the ungrateful Lucile? |
2992 | CLEONTE: How? |
2992 | CLEONTE: Is it not wishing it when you do n''t wish to clear up my suspicions? |
2992 | CLEONTE: What are you laughing at? |
2992 | CLEONTE: What do you want? |
2992 | CLEONTE: What is it? |
2992 | CLEONTE: What? |
2992 | CLEONTE: What? |
2992 | COVIELLE: And I, Covielle, am the interpreter? |
2992 | COVIELLE: And that, Monsieur, of the treacherous Nicole? |
2992 | COVIELLE: Are n''t you making this up? |
2992 | COVIELLE: Are we going to give in to this? |
2992 | COVIELLE: Do n''t you make a fool of yourself by taking it seriously with a man like that? |
2992 | COVIELLE: Her, sir? |
2992 | COVIELLE: How, if you find her so perfect? |
2992 | COVIELLE: I, sir? |
2992 | COVIELLE: She is always serious... CLEONTE; Would you have grinning playfulness, constant open merriment? |
2992 | COVIELLE: What? |
2992 | COVIELLE: Who even thinks of that? |
2992 | COVIELLE: Yes? |
2992 | COVIELLE: You know that the son of the Grand Turk is here? |
2992 | COVIELLE: Your dear Covielle, little hussy? |
2992 | Could I receive an order more charming, a favor more precious? |
2992 | Covielle, who would have recognized you? |
2992 | DANCING MASTER: And can taking a bad step result from anything but not knowing how to dance? |
2992 | DANCING MASTER: How you must bow to salute a marchioness? |
2992 | DANCING MASTER: How? |
2992 | DANCING MASTER: Is it something new? |
2992 | DANCING MASTER: May I see it? |
2992 | DANCING MASTER: Sheep? |
2992 | DANCING MASTER: What? |
2992 | DORANTE: And Madame Jourdain there, how is she? |
2992 | DORANTE: Are you joking? |
2992 | DORANTE: Do you remember well all the money you have lent me? |
2992 | DORANTE: How is she getting on? |
2992 | DORANTE: Mademoiselle, your daughter, where is she that I do n''t see her? |
2992 | DORANTE: What are you laughing at? |
2992 | DORANTE: What are you saying, Madame Jourdain? |
2992 | DORANTE: What would n''t one do to be a great lady? |
2992 | DORANTE: What? |
2992 | DORANTE: What? |
2992 | DORANTE: Where then is His Turkish Highness? |
2992 | DORANTE: Will that inconvenience you, to give me the amount I say? |
2992 | DORANTE: Would n''t you like to come with her one of these days to see the ballet and the comedy they are putting on at court? |
2992 | DORIMENE: But you do n''t mention that every day I am gradually preparing myself to receive too great proofs of your passion? |
2992 | DORIMENE: What is it? |
2992 | DORIMENE: What is she trying to say with all this? |
2992 | DORIMENE: What? |
2992 | Did n''t he tell me so? |
2992 | Did n''t you see the demonstration? |
2992 | Do n''t you care what people think of you when you are got up like that? |
2992 | Do n''t you see that he is a fool? |
2992 | Do you know what Cacaracamouchen means? |
2992 | Do you see? |
2992 | Do you think the suit is going to look good on me? |
2992 | Do you want me to refuse a man of this station, who spoke about me this morning in the King''s bedchamber? |
2992 | FENCING MASTER: What? |
2992 | FIRST LACKEY: Sir? |
2992 | FIRST LACKEY: What do you wish, Sir? |
2992 | FIRST MAN: But, shepherdess, can I believe That it will not be deceitful? |
2992 | For example, do you know what are you speaking just now? |
2992 | Gentlemen, must you act this way? |
2992 | Has n''t my suit come yet? |
2992 | Have n''t you read the learned treatise that Seneca composed on anger? |
2992 | How can it hurt you to listen to him? |
2992 | I wish you to die? |
2992 | I''d like to know what you think you''re going to do with a Dancing Master, at your age? |
2992 | I''m asking if you know what the words are that you are saying here? |
2992 | I''m asking you: what is it that I''m speaking to you this minute, what is it? |
2992 | Is it verse that you wish to write her? |
2992 | Is n''t it an honor for me to lend money to a man of that condition? |
2992 | Is n''t it pretty? |
2992 | Is there anything more base and more shameful than this passion, which turns a man into a savage beast? |
2992 | LUCILE: Are you mute, Cleonte? |
2992 | LUCILE: Is it my fault? |
2992 | LUCILE: Is n''t it true, Cleonte, that this is the cause of your resentment? |
2992 | LUCILE: To me, father? |
2992 | LUCILE: What grief possesses you? |
2992 | LUCILE: What''s the matter Cleonte? |
2992 | LUCILE: Where are you going? |
2992 | LUCILE: Who told you that? |
2992 | LUCILE: You are going to die, Cleonte? |
2992 | Listen... Now... how does it go? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: A marchioness? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: And Nicole? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: And this lord, what does he do for you? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: And was n''t your father a merchant just like mine? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: Are n''t we both descended from good bourgeois families? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: Do n''t you intend, one of these days, to go to school and have yourself whipped at your age? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: Has he lost his mind? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: How''s that? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: Is it that you''re learning to dance for the time when you''ll have no legs to dance on? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: Like what? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: My daughter consents to marry a Turk? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: Prose? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: She can forget Cleonte? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: To the son of the Grand Turk? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: Very well, what of Jourdain? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: Well? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: What animal is that? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: What are you trying to say with your Mamamouchi? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: What are you trying to say with your talk of gentleman? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: What are you trying to say? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: What ceremony then? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: What do you want to tell me? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: What does that mean? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: What in the world is all that? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: What jargon is this? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: What now? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: What? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN: Which is to say what? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN:( Aside) Well, did n''t I predict it? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN:( To Nicole) What can they talk about so much? |
2992 | MADAME JOURDAIN:( To Nicole) Will he never go? |
2992 | MASTER TAILOR: Do you want to put on your suit? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: And do people of quality learn music, too? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: And when one speaks, what is that then? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: And you knew him as a gentleman? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Are there things as curious about them as about these? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Are these shepherds too? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: But did anyone ever see such a hussy as that, who laughs in my face instead of receiving my, orders? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: But it''s quite another thing, if you have seen O, and D, D, and F, F. MADAME JOURDAIN: What is all this rigmarole? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: But, of all those ways, which is the best? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Ca n''t I even ask her how she likes it? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Cacaracamouchen means"My dear soul?" |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Cacaracamouchen? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Did I have to tell you that? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: He''s coming here? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: How did she judge it? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: How is that? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: How was that? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: How''s that? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: I ask again, will you be quiet? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: In this way then, a man, without courage, is sure to kill his man and not be killed himself? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Is that all? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Is that what people of quality do? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Is this to make her believe our story? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Mamamouchi?'' |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Me, Madame? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Me? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Me? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Morality? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: My father? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: My son- in- law, the son of the Grand Turk? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Of my late father? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: See? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: So many things in two words? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: That will be gallant, yes? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: The people of quality wear the flowers upside down? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: The perruque and the plumes: are they correct? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: The son of the Grand Turk said that of me? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: The son of the Grand Turk? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: There is nothing but prose or verse? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: To kiss me? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Well, the... What- do- you- call it? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: What are these three operations of the mind? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: What are you laughing about? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: What can I do? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: What did you call me? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: What did you say? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: What does it say, this morality? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: What does the hussy mean by this? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: What is it called? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: What is this logic? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: What kind of little baggage is this? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: What''s it about, this physics? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: What''s this? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: What? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: What? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Where''s the interpreter to tell him who you are and to make him understand what you say? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Who''s everyone, if you please? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Why always as shepherds? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Why not? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Why, should I shut my door to everyone for your sake? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Why? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Will you be quiet, impertinent woman? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Will you be quiet? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: You are not going to stop? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: You knew him very well? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN:"Marababa sahem"means"Ah, how I am enamored of her"? |
2992 | MONSIEUR JOURDAIN:( To the Dancing Master) Are you crazy to quarrel with him, who knows tierce and quarte, and who can kill a man by demonstration? |
2992 | MUSIC MASTER: And if all men learned music, would n''t that be a means of bringing about harmony and of seeing universal peace in the world? |
2992 | MUSIC MASTER: Do you wish to see our pieces? |
2992 | MUSIC MASTER: Does not war result from a lack of agreement between men? |
2992 | MUSIC MASTER:( To Pupil) Is it done? |
2992 | Madame Jourdain, do you oppose such good fortune as that? |
2992 | Madame, is it possible that you should have taken such a sweet decision in my favor? |
2992 | Madame, what did you take Monsieur Jourdain for? |
2992 | Madame, where are you going? |
2992 | NICOLE: Do you want to kill someone? |
2992 | NICOLE: Have you lost your voice, Covielle? |
2992 | NICOLE: I say U. MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Yes, but, when you say U, what do you do? |
2992 | NICOLE: Oh Well, U. MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: What do you do? |
2992 | NICOLE: Well then, what? |
2992 | NICOLE: What bad humor holds you? |
2992 | NICOLE: What caprice is this? |
2992 | NICOLE: What does all this do for us? |
2992 | NICOLE: What would you have me do, sir? |
2992 | NICOLE: What''s the matter with you, Covielle? |
2992 | NICOLE: What? |
2992 | NICOLE: Yes, sir? |
2992 | PHILOSOPHY MASTER: And where then will philosophy be? |
2992 | PHILOSOPHY MASTER: Do n''t you know some principles, some basics of the sciences? |
2992 | PHILOSOPHY MASTER: Do you want only prose? |
2992 | PHILOSOPHY MASTER: Should that disturb you? |
2992 | PHILOSOPHY MASTER: Then what do you want me to teach you? |
2992 | PHILOSOPHY MASTER: What''s happening? |
2992 | PHILOSOPHY MASTER: Where would it please you for us to begin? |
2992 | PHILOSOPHY MASTER: Would you like to learn morality? |
2992 | PHILOSOPHY MASTER: Would you like to learn physics? |
2992 | SCENE II( Monsieur Jourdain, Two Lackeys, Music Master, Dancing Master, Pupil, Musicians, and Dancers) MONSIEUR JOURDAIN: Well gentlemen? |
2992 | SECOND LACKEY: Sir? |
2992 | Sir, is Madame Jourdain decrepit, and does her head already shake with palsy? |
2992 | Speak then, what is this? |
2992 | That is the way never to be killed, and is n''t it fine to be assured of what one does, when fighting against someone? |
2992 | They say that you want to give your daughter in marriage to a someone in a Carnival costume? |
2992 | Treat a lover in this way? |
2992 | Was it for this pretty affair, Monsieur Husband, that you were so eager to send me to dinner at my sister''s? |
2992 | What business brings you here? |
2992 | What does that come to? |
2992 | What fly has bitten those two? |
2992 | What is all of this? |
2992 | What is it we are both saying, what language is it that we are speaking right now? |
2992 | What is wrong, Madame Jourdain? |
2992 | What is your plan, and what do you want to do with this assemblage of people? |
2992 | What little skit? |
2992 | What would you like to learn? |
2992 | What''s that? |
2992 | What''s this, what''s this, husband, this outfit you have on there? |
2992 | What''s this? |
2992 | What''s this? |
2992 | What''s wrong with you? |
2992 | What? |
2992 | When I say,"Nicole, bring me my slippers, and give me my nightcap,"that''s prose? |
2992 | Where are you going? |
2992 | Where the devil has he gone? |
2992 | Where to find her? |
2992 | Who has bundled you up like that? |
2992 | Who would have thought? |
2992 | Why should n''t you be all my happiness from today onward? |
2992 | Will it be fine? |
2992 | Would you like me to teach you logic? |
2992 | You quarrel with her for obeying me? |
2992 | You refuse His Turkish Highness as your son- in- law? |
2992 | You thrust your lips out and bring your lower jaw to your upper jaw: U, see? |
2992 | You understand that, and you doubtless know Latin? |
2992 | You''re going to give it to him again? |
27575 | A great deal? |
27575 | Am I not a member of the consulting commission? |
27575 | And give me----"Will he never go? |
27575 | And how do you think I can ride when I have n''t got a habit? |
27575 | And how''s the little woman? |
27575 | And since when? |
27575 | And who would be surprised at it, gentlemen? 27575 Are we ready? |
27575 | Are you a Christian? |
27575 | Are you deaf? |
27575 | Are you going? |
27575 | Are you ill? 27575 Are you in love?" |
27575 | Are you looking for anything? |
27575 | Are you sure? |
27575 | Are you the doctor? |
27575 | Are you waiting for him for your gentlemen''s dinner? |
27575 | At any rate, you have some walks in the neighborhood? |
27575 | But is it ever found? |
27575 | But what can I do? |
27575 | But where are we going? |
27575 | But why,asked Bovary,"does that gentleman persecute her?" |
27575 | Can I see the doctor? |
27575 | Can he suspect anything? |
27575 | Can you not guess? |
27575 | Dancing? |
27575 | Did I know I should accompany you? |
27575 | Did you think you''d got a virgin? |
27575 | Do I love you-- love you? 27575 Do you feel unwell?" |
27575 | Do you feel unwell? |
27575 | Do you know what your wife wants? |
27575 | Do you love me? 27575 Do you not know that there are souls constantly tormented? |
27575 | Do you think so? |
27575 | Does this amuse you? |
27575 | Everything is ready? |
27575 | For,said he to Emma,"what risk is there? |
27575 | From your husband? 27575 Have n''t they tortured you enough already? |
27575 | Have you any business to attend to? |
27575 | Have you been to the opera? |
27575 | Have you carefully weighed your resolution? 27575 Have you given her warning for good?" |
27575 | Have you your pistols? |
27575 | How are you? |
27575 | How are you? |
27575 | How could that be possible? |
27575 | How have I displeased her? |
27575 | How much are they? |
27575 | How so? |
27575 | How will he live at Paris? 27575 I? |
27575 | If I told her all my fortune is lost? 27575 In what way? |
27575 | Is it because you are going away? |
27575 | Is she making fun of me? |
27575 | It is at the Hôtel de Provence, is it not, that you will wait for me at mid- day? |
27575 | It is indigestion, no doubt? 27575 Léon?" |
27575 | Music? 27575 No; why?" |
27575 | Now how am I to sign? |
27575 | Oh, what does that matter? |
27575 | So you are at Rouen? |
27575 | The doctor is not here? |
27575 | Then you are giving it up? |
27575 | These first warm days weaken one most remarkably, do n''t they? 27575 Thus we,"he said,"why did we come to know one another? |
27575 | To be sure,replied Homais;"but what can you expect? |
27575 | Unless,he added, turning to his wife,"you would like to stay alone, pussy?" |
27575 | Well, is she there? |
27575 | Well, what the deuce do I care for that? |
27575 | What are you looking for? |
27575 | What can I do for you, Monsieur le Curé? |
27575 | What cheese? |
27575 | What does it matter? |
27575 | What does it matter? |
27575 | What is a Christian? |
27575 | What is it? |
27575 | What is that for? |
27575 | What is the matter with you? |
27575 | What is the matter? |
27575 | What is to become of me? 27575 What news?" |
27575 | What recreation? |
27575 | What surprises you in that? 27575 What''s the matter with Père Tellier? |
27575 | What''s the meaning of that? |
27575 | What, indeed? |
27575 | What? |
27575 | What? |
27575 | What? |
27575 | Where is Catherine Leroux? |
27575 | Where is the curé? |
27575 | Where were you brought up? |
27575 | Wherever are you? 27575 Who told you?" |
27575 | Why did he go back to the Bertaux now that Monsieur Rouault was cured and that these folks had n''t paid yet? 27575 Why did n''t you bring her?" |
27575 | Why do n''t you tell master? |
27575 | Why these festoons, these flowers, these garlands? 27575 Why, do you smoke?" |
27575 | Why, have n''t you ever seen anything? |
27575 | Why, what? |
27575 | Why,asked the chemist,"should she excommunicate actors? |
27575 | Why,he went on,"allow oneself to be intruded upon by others? |
27575 | Why? 27575 Why?" |
27575 | Why? |
27575 | Why? |
27575 | Why? |
27575 | Why? |
27575 | Will you leave me alone? |
27575 | Will you take something? 27575 Would you be so good,"said the lady,"as to pick up my fan that has fallen behind the sofa?" |
27575 | Yes, I am a Christian? |
27575 | You are forgetting nothing? |
27575 | You are going on a journey? |
27575 | You have n''t loved any others? |
27575 | You here? 27575 You play?" |
27575 | Your music subscription is out; am I to renew it? |
27575 | Yours devotedly?'' 27575 ''Your friend?'' 27575 A glass of wine? |
27575 | A thimbleful of_ cassis_? |
27575 | After this, what do the names"romanticism"or"classicism"signify? |
27575 | Again, is it not the agriculturist who fattens, for our clothes, his abundant flocks in the pastures? |
27575 | And as soon as they were alone,"Why do n''t you accept Monsieur Boulanger''s kind offer?" |
27575 | And coming closer to him:"What ill could come to me? |
27575 | And for what? |
27575 | And for whom? |
27575 | And how is Monsieur Bovary?" |
27575 | And if he confessed that he had not thought of her, there were floods of reproaches that always ended with the eternal question:"Do you love me?" |
27575 | And what about Monsieur Binet? |
27575 | And what else was there? |
27575 | And what importance has it in sculpture, for example, or in painting? |
27575 | And where? |
27575 | And who knows? |
27575 | And why had he come back? |
27575 | And why not? |
27575 | And yet, why should my heart be so heavy? |
27575 | And you?" |
27575 | And, gentlemen, is it even necessary to go so far for examples? |
27575 | Are they not the one beautiful thing on the earth, the source of heroism, of enthusiasm, of poetry, music, the arts, of everything, in a word?" |
27575 | As he was to finish reading there, why not set out at once? |
27575 | But how tell an undefinable uneasiness, variable as the clouds, unstable as the winds? |
27575 | But the tradesman cried out that she was wrong; they knew one another; did he doubt her? |
27575 | But what does Monsieur Bovary think of it?" |
27575 | But what does agriculture matter to you? |
27575 | But what, then, made her so unhappy? |
27575 | But, inversely, if all art is concentrated upon the representation, what matters the subject? |
27575 | By what means? |
27575 | CRITICISMS On Romantic Literature in France MISCELLANY Quidquid volueris? |
27575 | Can it be? |
27575 | Did not love, like Indian plants, need a special soil, a particular temperature? |
27575 | Do n''t I know all about it?" |
27575 | Do they think the prefect will be glad to dine down there under a tent like a gipsy? |
27575 | Do you know me? |
27575 | Do you know that I count the hours? |
27575 | Do you know to what an abyss I was dragging you, poor angel? |
27575 | Do you think about it? |
27575 | Do you understand anything about it?" |
27575 | Does a name matter? |
27575 | Emma continued,"And what music do you prefer?" |
27575 | For he certainly is her father, is n''t he-- the ugly little man with a cock''s feather in his hat?" |
27575 | For how should we clothe ourselves, how nourish ourselves, without the agriculturist? |
27575 | For whose sake, then, was she virtuous? |
27575 | Had she not suffered enough? |
27575 | Had they nothing else to say to one another? |
27575 | Has form indeed all the importance in literature that Flaubert claimed for it? |
27575 | Have I any? |
27575 | Have I done right? |
27575 | Have I not my house to look after, my husband to attend to, a thousand things, in fact, many duties that must be considered first?" |
27575 | He added,"Shall I pick some? |
27575 | He asked himself--"Where shall we meet? |
27575 | He continued:"And what should I do here, gentlemen, pointing out to you the uses of agriculture? |
27575 | He rose to go; and as if the movement he made had been the signal for their flight, Emma said, suddenly, assuming a gay air--"You have the passports?" |
27575 | He said:"What was the matter with you? |
27575 | He went on--"And you''re out so early?" |
27575 | Her husband, was he not something belonging to her? |
27575 | Hippolyte looked at him with eyes full of terror, sobbing--"When shall I get well? |
27575 | Homais went on:"Do you think that to be an agriculturist it is necessary to have tilled the earth or fattened fowls oneself? |
27575 | How had she lost it? |
27575 | How many years is it since you approached the holy table? |
27575 | How then had he been able to explain, and in such language, the number of things that he could not have said so well before? |
27575 | How was it that she-- she, who was so intelligent-- could have allowed herself to be deceived again? |
27575 | How weak I am, am I not? |
27575 | How? |
27575 | How?" |
27575 | I ask myself, where is he? |
27575 | I give to humanity what it gives to me--_indifference!_"Is not the link between Flaubert''s"indifference"and his conception of art evident here? |
27575 | I have been ill.""Seriously?" |
27575 | I love you so that I could not live without you, do you see? |
27575 | I may count on you, may I not, and quickly?" |
27575 | I shall be something in your thought, in your life, shall I not?" |
27575 | Is he not in love?" |
27575 | Is it dread of the unknown? |
27575 | Is it my fault? |
27575 | Is it not the agriculturist? |
27575 | Is it not time to cry that the blind shall see, the deaf hear, the lame walk? |
27575 | Is one animal or plant more interesting than another to the naturalist? |
27575 | Is there a single sentiment it does not condemn? |
27575 | It is extremely curious, is it not?" |
27575 | It is oxalic acid, is n''t it?" |
27575 | Monsieur Boulanger, you are deserting us?" |
27575 | No, you do not, do you? |
27575 | Of what had they spoken when it lay upon the wide- manteled chimneys between flower- vases and Pompadour clocks? |
27575 | Oh, why had not she, like this woman, resisted, implored? |
27575 | Or did she wish by a sort of voluptuous stoicism to feel the more profoundly the bitterness of the things she was about to leave? |
27575 | Or later, when he studied medicine, and never had his purse full enough to treat some little work- girl who would have become his mistress? |
27575 | Or rather----? |
27575 | Rodolphe had drawn nearer to Emma, and said to her in a low voice, speaking rapidly:"Does not this conspiracy of the world revolt you? |
27575 | Shall we ever have the means to send him to a public school, to buy him a practice, or to start him in business? |
27575 | She even asked herself why she detested Charles; if it had not been better to have been able to love him? |
27575 | She nodded her head in assent; then a quarter of an hour later--"Are you going out to- night?" |
27575 | She repeated:"Where are the horses? |
27575 | She said to her child,"Is your stomach- ache better, my angel?" |
27575 | Should we not change the name of this to"egotism"or"insensibility?" |
27575 | That''s a good sign is n''t it?" |
27575 | The Viscount''s? |
27575 | The chemist went on--"Who asked you to come? |
27575 | The effect of habits left? |
27575 | Then he asked himself what would become of her-- if she would be married, and to whom? |
27575 | Then he attacked him through his vanity:--"Are n''t you a man? |
27575 | Then she would have to be sent to a boarding- school; that would cost much; how was it to be done? |
27575 | Then suddenly--"So you love him?" |
27575 | Then turning on his chair:"Any news at home?" |
27575 | Then, bethinking himself,"But you were asking me something? |
27575 | Then, do n''t you think that perhaps her imagination should be worked upon?" |
27575 | Then, when he was at the door,"By the way, do you know the news?" |
27575 | Thus, as a precaution, what is to prevent you from saying morning and evening a''Hail Mary, full of grace,''and''Our Father which art in heaven''? |
27575 | To- morrow, at six o''clock?" |
27575 | Until now what good had he had of his life? |
27575 | Was it for this, however, that his visits to the farm formed a delightful exception to the meagre occupations of his life? |
27575 | Was it the better to deceive them both? |
27575 | Was this a good, and in this discovery was there not more of injury than of gain? |
27575 | What chance willed it? |
27575 | What do you think?" |
27575 | What do you wish?" |
27575 | What does it matter? |
27575 | What friends? |
27575 | What help is to be hoped for, what consolation, what solace?" |
27575 | What prevented him? |
27575 | What prevented it?" |
27575 | What restrained her? |
27575 | What should they decide? |
27575 | What was it that thus set so far asunder the morning of the day before yesterday and the evening of to- day? |
27575 | What was it? |
27575 | What was the extraordinary catastrophe that had transformed her? |
27575 | What was the good of playing? |
27575 | What was the good? |
27575 | What was this Paris like? |
27575 | What was to be done since she rejected all medical treatment? |
27575 | What were they doing now? |
27575 | Where are the horses? |
27575 | Where are the horses?" |
27575 | Where could she find it? |
27575 | Where should he go to practise? |
27575 | Where the devil does she come from? |
27575 | Where, indeed, is to be found more patriotism than in the country, greater devotion to the public welfare, more intelligence, in a word? |
27575 | Wherever did this fat fellow pick her up?" |
27575 | Whither hurries this crowd like the waves of a furious sea under the torrents of a tropical sun pouring its heat upon our heads?" |
27575 | Who cares for me?" |
27575 | Who is to prevent me?" |
27575 | Who provides our means of subsistence? |
27575 | Who supplies our wants? |
27575 | Who would hear her? |
27575 | Whose was it? |
27575 | Why cry out against the passions? |
27575 | Why did I ever know you? |
27575 | Why did he always offer a glass of something to every one who came? |
27575 | Why did the doctor''s wife give the clerk presents? |
27575 | Why had she not seized this happiness when it came to her? |
27575 | Why not end it all? |
27575 | Why not have kept hold of it with both hands, with both knees, when it was about to flee from her? |
27575 | Why were you so beautiful? |
27575 | Why, for example, should not your husband relieve poor Hippolyte of the''Lion d''Or''? |
27575 | Why? |
27575 | Why? |
27575 | Why?" |
27575 | Will he get used to it?" |
27575 | Will you promise me?" |
27575 | With me?" |
27575 | Would any one believe that a simple sternutation could produce such ravages on a quadrupedal organism? |
27575 | Would she never issue from it? |
27575 | Would they not have a right to apply to the police if the librarian persisted all the same in his poisonous trade? |
27575 | Would this misery last forever? |
27575 | Yes; but how get rid of her afterwards?" |
27575 | You here?" |
27575 | always busy at what? |
27575 | and through what deplorable madness had she thus ruined her life by continual sacrifices? |
27575 | and your friends?" |
27575 | for what? |
27575 | he repeated,"How did you manage to come? |
27575 | replied the good fellow, quite astonished,"does n''t he prescribe something for you?" |
27575 | she answered,"what does it matter?" |
27575 | she asked herself;"but with whom? |
27575 | she went on;"because you are leaving what is dear to you-- your life? |
27575 | what was the good? |
27575 | what would you have done if you had had to go into the army, to go and fight beneath the standard? |
27575 | who knows?" |
27575 | who knows?" |
27575 | why did I marry?" |
27575 | will you leave off?" |
27575 | you did n''t know it? |
27575 | you here?" |
27575 | you think so?" |
7279 | (_ To the_ TWO MASTERS) Do you think I look well so? |
7279 | (_ To the_ TWO MASTERS) What do you think of my liveries? |
7279 | (_ To_ NICOLE) And you, do you even know what you must do to say_ u_? |
7279 | A Mahometan? |
7279 | A bow to a marchioness? |
7279 | A marchioness? |
7279 | Again? |
7279 | Ah, Madam, is it possible that you should have come to such a kind determination in my favour? |
7279 | All people of quality wear the flowers bottom upwards? |
7279 | Anabaptist?] |
7279 | Anabatista? |
7279 | And Mrs. Jourdain, how does she do? |
7279 | And Nicole? |
7279 | And could I do less for a lord who calls me his dear friend? |
7279 | And for what, Madam, do you take Mr. Jourdain? |
7279 | And for what, then, do you count philosophy? |
7279 | And from whence can proceed the false step if it is not from ignorance of the art of dancing? |
7279 | And if all men learnt music, would not this be the means of keeping them in better harmony, and of seeing universal peace reign in the world? |
7279 | And that it is I, Covielle, who am the interpreter? |
7279 | And this lord, what does he do for you? |
7279 | And to that, Sir, of that hussy Nicole? |
7279 | And what are we the better for all this? |
7279 | And what have physics to say for themselves? |
7279 | And what may this logic be? |
7279 | And when we speak, what is that, then? |
7279 | And who may everybody be, please? |
7279 | And you know him to have been a nobleman? |
7279 | Are the wig and feathers as they should be? |
7279 | Are these shepherds also? |
7279 | Are we not both descended from good, simple tradesmen? |
7279 | Are we ourselves descended from St. Louis? |
7279 | Are you acting a comedy? |
7279 | Are you dumb, Cléonte? |
7279 | Are you laughing at me? |
7279 | Are you mad to go and quarrel with a man, who understands tierce and quart, and knows how to kill another by demonstrative reason? |
7279 | Are you not deceiving me, Lucile? |
7279 | Are you not imposing upon me? |
7279 | Are you of an age to be dancing ballets? |
7279 | Are you ready to show me your little drollery? |
7279 | Ballet in? |
7279 | Bestow upon me, father? |
7279 | Bramina? |
7279 | But did you ever see such a hussy? |
7279 | But of all these ways, which is the best? |
7279 | But what does this mean? |
7279 | But what? |
7279 | But why should I? |
7279 | But, Lady, dare I trust that promise blest? |
7279 | Can anything be compared, Covielle, to the perfidy of the ungrateful Lucile? |
7279 | Coffita? |
7279 | Como chamara? |
7279 | Como chamara? |
7279 | Could I ever receive an order more flattering, a favour more precious? |
7279 | Covielle, who would have known you again? |
7279 | Dice, Turque, qui star quista? |
7279 | Did I not guess right? |
7279 | Did I not tell you so? |
7279 | Did you ever see such impudence? |
7279 | Did you not see plainly the demonstration of it? |
7279 | Do I? |
7279 | Do friends stand upon such scruples? |
7279 | Do people of quality have concerts? |
7279 | Do people of rank learn music also? |
7279 | Do you intend to kill anybody? |
7279 | Do you mean to learn dancing for the time when you ca n''t stand on your legs any longer? |
7279 | Do you not see that all this is done to fit in with the fancies of your husband? |
7279 | Do you not see that he is infatuated with one idea, and would it have cost you much to fall in with his gentility? |
7279 | Do you quite remember how much you have lent me? |
7279 | Do you receive me in that way? |
7279 | Do you see how wrong you were, wife? |
7279 | Do you see? |
7279 | Do you see? |
7279 | Do you think my clothes fit me well? |
7279 | Do you want anything, Sir? |
7279 | Does not war arise from a want of concord between them? |
7279 | Eh? |
7279 | Eh? |
7279 | Eh? |
7279 | For instance, do you know what_ Cacaracamouchen_ means? |
7279 | For shame, gentlemen; how can you thus forget yourselves? |
7279 | Fronista? |
7279 | Had you not better go to school one of these days, and get the birch, at your age? |
7279 | Has Mrs. Jourdain grown decrepit, and does her head already shake on her shoulders? |
7279 | Has he not said so? |
7279 | Has my suit of clothes not come yet? |
7279 | Have you any principles, any rudiments of science? |
7279 | Have you finished? |
7279 | Have you lost your senses that you go and deck yourself out like this, and do you wish to be the laughing- stock of everybody wherever you go? |
7279 | Have you lost your tongue, Covielle? |
7279 | Have you not read the learned treatise which Seneca composed on anger? |
7279 | He is coming here? |
7279 | Hey? |
7279 | Hold your tongue, will you? |
7279 | How can you if you think her so perfect? |
7279 | How do you call me? |
7279 | How does it begin? |
7279 | How does she get on? |
7279 | How does she like it? |
7279 | How is he called?] |
7279 | How is it called? |
7279 | How is that? |
7279 | How much does all this come to? |
7279 | How so? |
7279 | How? |
7279 | Hussita? |
7279 | I should like to know, for instance, what you mean to do with a dancing master at your age? |
7279 | I suppose that, to please you, I ought to shut my door against everybody? |
7279 | I was taught a very pretty one quite lately; stop a moment... ahem... What is it? |
7279 | I, Madam? |
7279 | I, Sir? |
7279 | I? |
7279 | Indeed? |
7279 | Is Jourdain a good Turk? |
7279 | Is he Anabaptist? |
7279 | Is he a pagan?] |
7279 | Is it anything new? |
7279 | Is it my fault? |
7279 | Is it not a great honour to lend money to a man of his position? |
7279 | Is it not true, Cléonte; is not this the cause of your vexation? |
7279 | Is it not wishing it, to refuse to clear up my suspicions? |
7279 | Is it verse you wish to write to her? |
7279 | Is not that a wicked slander? |
7279 | Is that all? |
7279 | Is there anything as curious in them as in these? |
7279 | It is for this fine piece of business, Sir, that you showed such anxiety to pack me off to my sister; was it? |
7279 | It is to deceive her, is it not? |
7279 | It''ll be fine? |
7279 | Lamb? |
7279 | Luterana? |
7279 | Madam, stop, I pray; where are you going? |
7279 | Mahametana? |
7279 | Mahametana? |
7279 | May I know...? |
7279 | May I not just ask her how she likes it? |
7279 | Me? |
7279 | Mi star muphti, Ti qui star si? |
7279 | Moffina? |
7279 | Moral philosophy? |
7279 | Morista? |
7279 | Mr. Jourdain, my dear friend, how do you do? |
7279 | Mrs. Jourdain, you oppose yourself to such an honour as this? |
7279 | My daughter consents to marry a Turk? |
7279 | My father? |
7279 | Non star forfanta? |
7279 | Non star forfanta? |
7279 | Now, is n''t it pretty? |
7279 | Of the late nobleman my father? |
7279 | Prose? |
7279 | Puritana? |
7279 | Shall I teach you logic? |
7279 | Shall we surrender after this? |
7279 | She can forget Cléonte? |
7279 | So many things comprised in two words? |
7279 | Star bon Turca Giourdina? |
7279 | Star pagana? |
7279 | Still, you might amplify the thing a little? |
7279 | That is the way never to be killed; and is it not a fine thing to be quite safe when one fights against anybody? |
7279 | That which I am now speaking to you, what is it? |
7279 | That will be gallant; will it not? |
7279 | The fair are false; no prayers their heart can move, And who will love when they inconstant prove? |
7279 | The son of the Grand Turk said that of me? |
7279 | The son of the Grand Turk? |
7279 | There is nothing but prose or verse? |
7279 | This song seems to me rather dismal; it sends one to sleep; could you not enliven it a bit here and there? |
7279 | Ti non star furba? |
7279 | Ti non star furba? |
7279 | To kiss me? |
7279 | To the end of the world? |
7279 | To the son of the Grand Turk? |
7279 | Was it necessary to say that? |
7279 | Was not your father a tradesman as well as mine? |
7279 | We both have plenty to do now; have we not? |
7279 | Well, what was the reason for such a welcome? |
7279 | Well, what? |
7279 | Well, what? |
7279 | Well? |
7279 | Well? |
7279 | Well? |
7279 | Well? |
7279 | Well? |
7279 | What I do? |
7279 | What a change? |
7279 | What ails you, Covielle? |
7279 | What are they, these three operations of the mind? |
7279 | What are you laughing at? |
7279 | What are you laughing at? |
7279 | What are you laughing at? |
7279 | What are your intentions? |
7279 | What business have you to speak to me, you? |
7279 | What can I do? |
7279 | What can be the matter with you, Mrs. Jourdain? |
7279 | What can be the matter with you? |
7279 | What can it be? |
7279 | What can this be? |
7279 | What can you possibly mean with your_ mamamouchi_? |
7279 | What ceremony? |
7279 | What could I do? |
7279 | What do you say? |
7279 | What do you say? |
7279 | What do you say? |
7279 | What do you say? |
7279 | What do you wish to learn? |
7279 | What does all this mean? |
7279 | What does all this mean? |
7279 | What does it say, this moral philosophy? |
7279 | What does that mean? |
7279 | What does that mean? |
7279 | What does the hussy mean? |
7279 | What fit of bad temper has got hold of you? |
7279 | What has happened to both of them? |
7279 | What is all this absurd stuff? |
7279 | What is all this jargon? |
7279 | What is going on? |
7279 | What is it you do? |
7279 | What is it you mean by your nobleman? |
7279 | What is it, Cléonte? |
7279 | What is it, Sir? |
7279 | What is it? |
7279 | What is it? |
7279 | What is it? |
7279 | What is the matter, gentlemen? |
7279 | What is the meaning of all this? |
7279 | What is there to prevent you from making me supremely happy? |
7279 | What kind of a beast is that? |
7279 | What little drollery? |
7279 | What on earth can they have to say together? |
7279 | What the deuce does it all mean? |
7279 | What then? |
7279 | What trouble afflicts you? |
7279 | What will not one do to be a grand lady? |
7279 | What would you have me teach you then? |
7279 | What would you say then if you had seen_ o_, and_ da, da_, and_ fa, fa_? |
7279 | What, Jourdain? |
7279 | What? |
7279 | What? |
7279 | What? |
7279 | What? |
7279 | What? |
7279 | Whatever is all this? |
7279 | When I say,"Nicole, bring me my slippers, and give me my night- cap,"is that prose? |
7279 | Where are you going, then? |
7279 | Where are you going? |
7279 | Where can he have lost his senses? |
7279 | Where can his Turkish highness be? |
7279 | Where is the interpreter, to tell him who you are, and to make him understand what you say? |
7279 | Where is your daughter, that I have not seen her? |
7279 | Where then can I go to entertain you, Madam, since, to avoid remarks being made, you will see me neither at your own house nor at mine? |
7279 | Who dreams of such a thing? |
7279 | Who told you such a thing? |
7279 | Who trussed you up in this manner? |
7279 | Who would ever have thought it? |
7279 | Why always shepherds? |
7279 | Why not? |
7279 | Why should this offend you? |
7279 | Why, husband, what do you possibly mean by this strange get- up? |
7279 | Why, the... what do you call it? |
7279 | Why, what does this mean? |
7279 | Why? |
7279 | Will he never go? |
7279 | Will it be inconvenient to you to lend me what I say? |
7279 | Will you allow me to see what it is? |
7279 | Will you be silent? |
7279 | Will you be silent? |
7279 | Will you hold your tongue? |
7279 | Will you learn moral philosophy? |
7279 | Will you leave off? |
7279 | Will you look at our two compositions? |
7279 | Will you put on your coat? |
7279 | With what would you like to begin? |
7279 | Would it hurt you to hear him? |
7279 | Would you like to learn physics? |
7279 | Would you not like one of these days to come with her to see the ballet and the play which are being acted at court? |
7279 | Would you prefer an unrestrained gaiety, a perpetual liveliness? |
7279 | Yes; but when you say_ u_, what is it you do? |
7279 | Yes; what do you do when you say_ u_? |
7279 | You are going to die, Cléonte? |
7279 | You knew him well? |
7279 | You only wish for prose? |
7279 | You refuse his Turkish highness for a son- in- law? |
7279 | You understand this, and you have no doubt a knowledge of Latin? |
7279 | You will oblige me greatly; may I know what business brings you here? |
7279 | Zuinglista? |
7279 | Zurina? |
7279 | [ A Brahmin? |
7279 | [ A Capht?] |
7279 | [ A Hussite? |
7279 | [ A Lutheran?] |
7279 | [ A Puritan?] |
7279 | [ A Zwinglian?] |
7279 | [ How is he called? |
7279 | [ Nor be a thief?] |
7279 | [ Nor be a thief?] |
7279 | [ Say, Turk, who is this? |
7279 | [ Thou wilt not be a knave?] |
7279 | [ Thou wilt not be a knave?] |
7279 | _ Cacaracamouchen_ means,"My dear love"? |
7279 | _ Cacaracamouchen_? |
7279 | _ Mamamouchi_? |
7279 | a Mahometan?] |
7279 | a Moffian? |
7279 | a Moor? |
7279 | a Phronist?] |
7279 | a Zurian?] |
7279 | anabatista? |
7279 | and can you find anything more unpleasant than those women who giggle at everything? |
7279 | and do you also...? |
7279 | and what do you mean to do with all this assembly of people? |
7279 | and what have you got there? |
7279 | and would you not do for me the very same thing if the opportunity presented itself? |
7279 | are you going to give him that also? |
7279 | not at all? |
7279 | that is to say,"Have you not seen a beautiful young girl who is the daughter of Mr. Jourdain, a nobleman of Paris?" |
7279 | that we are imposing upon him under this disguise, and that it is Cléonte himself who is the son of the Grand Turk? |
7279 | we are conscious of what we have done? |
7279 | where seek her? |
7279 | where the deuce is he gone? |
7279 | you have in hand, and is this carnival time? |
7279 | you scold her because she is obedient to me? |
46909 | ''Our Father, who art in heaven,''what does that mean? |
46909 | And what was he doing before that? |
46909 | Are you crazy with your cocoanut? 46909 Are you ill?" |
46909 | Are you unwell? |
46909 | Barberou, I believe? |
46909 | But if the father is an idiot? |
46909 | But if we see metaphors everywhere, what will become of the facts? |
46909 | Care of what? |
46909 | Do you believe,said Bouvard,"that he composed the''Pentateuch''?" |
46909 | Do you understand it? |
46909 | Do you wish to defend the emperors? |
46909 | For stains? |
46909 | Good? |
46909 | Have you read him? |
46909 | How can we distinguish them from the genuine ones? 46909 How do you know whether He sets them aside?" |
46909 | How do you make out that God spoke? |
46909 | How? |
46909 | However, sir, the morality of the Gospel? |
46909 | I? 46909 If this drama is not a success, might not the erection of a public monument to his literary talent[ Bouilhet''s] be looked upon with disfavour?" |
46909 | Is n''t she pretty? |
46909 | Marriage having been established by Jesus Christ----Pécuchet stopped him:"In which Gospel? |
46909 | On whom does her infallibility depend? |
46909 | Once again, who affirms it? |
46909 | Perhaps there was at the bottom a little yellow colour caused by humidity? |
46909 | Perhaps they needed family life-- the care of a mother? |
46909 | Since the flesh is accursed, how is it that we are bound to thank God for the boon of existence? |
46909 | So you are at these fooleries? |
46909 | Their country? |
46909 | Well, it discharges you-- what next? |
46909 | Well? |
46909 | What do you say? |
46909 | What is it they want, these creatures? |
46909 | What is the meaning of that word? 46909 What proportion must be observed between the fear indispensable to the salvation and the hope which is no less so?" |
46909 | What would you have? |
46909 | What? |
46909 | Where is the sign of grace? |
46909 | Where was their father?'' 46909 Why do you groan during mealtime?" |
46909 | Why do you wish to define it? 46909 Why foolery?" |
46909 | Why is it wrong? |
46909 | Why this novel, this drama? 46909 Why? |
46909 | Why?--eh?--why? |
46909 | You are witnesses, are you not? |
46909 | You will accompany me? |
46909 | You? |
46909 | Your prudent Apollo, no doubt, passed through the stock exchange to reach the Parnassus? 46909 ''Mid all that I have seen and known,--peoples and thrones, loves, glories, sorrows, virtues-- what have I ever loved? 46909 ''s dragoons regarded decency? |
46909 | ***** What didst thou say? |
46909 | A gentleman who asked me, on my voyage:"What kind of museums have they in Egypt? |
46909 | A mark of submission towards the Church? |
46909 | A matter of the proprieties? |
46909 | A voice rejoined:"Where would be the harm?" |
46909 | Admire here one of the polite ways of Providence which would be hard to believe: in whose house have I lodgings? |
46909 | After Cannes, does not one usually return to Paris? |
46909 | After such a scandal, why keep a young girl so corrupted? |
46909 | Also, why did they adopt the children of a convict? |
46909 | Am I imaginative? |
46909 | Am I not good, eh? |
46909 | Am I right? |
46909 | And Sainte- Beuve-- do you see him? |
46909 | And about_ La Servante_? |
46909 | And how goes the volume of verse? |
46909 | And of whom is he the pupil? |
46909 | And then, why encumber ourselves with so many souvenirs? |
46909 | And what besides all this? |
46909 | And what devil possessed him to induce him to seek such a subject? |
46909 | And what kind of philosophy? |
46909 | And you, dear master, what has become of you and yours? |
46909 | And you, good muse, dear colleague in all( colleague comes from_ colligere_, to bind together), have you worked well this week? |
46909 | And, after all, what risk would they run? |
46909 | Are there not two worlds entirely distinct? |
46909 | Are to suffer and to think the same thing, then? |
46909 | Are we in the twilight or in full dawn? |
46909 | Are we to assume that there are as many stomachs in the stomach as there are varieties of taste? |
46909 | Are you amusing yourself? |
46909 | Are you in Paris, Nohant, or where? |
46909 | Are you pleased? |
46909 | Besides, has not research been exhausted? |
46909 | Besides, how do you know? |
46909 | Besides, what does one failure prove? |
46909 | But does a previous injustice authorise subsequent wrongs? |
46909 | But have you not noticed of how little value is the correspondence of the great men of that time? |
46909 | But how can unjust men understand the cruelty of such a refusal? |
46909 | But others-- have they also been solved? |
46909 | But the other? |
46909 | But what amusement could be provided for them? |
46909 | But what is the use of living if one may not indulge in dreams? |
46909 | But where shall you be? |
46909 | But who did not love her? |
46909 | But"Chic,"that modern religion, what would become of that? |
46909 | Can you guess what occupies me at present? |
46909 | Certain natures suffer not so much, and people without nerves are happy; but of how many things are they not deprived? |
46909 | Corneille a celebrity? |
46909 | Could it be that an intelligent country would cause these billows of blood? |
46909 | Could it be that the children had no idea of justice? |
46909 | Did he regret in the last years of his life that he had not followed the common route? |
46909 | Did he think there would be as much interest taken in them as there was later in his own? |
46909 | Did not one of your colleagues of the Academy of Rouen, at the meeting of Aug. 7th, 1862, praise Louis Bouilhet in flattering terms? |
46909 | Do I make verses? |
46909 | Do they mean to arrest Victor? |
46909 | Do you base your changeable faith and your flexible probity on the mobility of the weather?" |
46909 | Do you believe-- yes or no?" |
46909 | Do you employ your preservatives, impure man? |
46909 | Do you keep yourself informed as to the works of Renan? |
46909 | Do you know that in the last number of the_ Review_ our friend Leconte was very badly treated? |
46909 | Do you know what I found out to- day from his photographs? |
46909 | Do you know whither the sadness of all this has led me, and what I should like to do? |
46909 | Do you know, my boy, what I have had to endure to give you the extreme pleasure of watching, lyre in hand, which way the winds blow? |
46909 | Do you not feel the perturbation of your soul, although its outward covering seems calm and happy? |
46909 | Do you not find that, since''89, we struggle with trifles? |
46909 | Do you not suppose that the soul of a Veronese imbibes colour like a piece of stuff plunged into the boiling vat of a dyer? |
46909 | Do you remember when we wrote_ Solus ad solum_? |
46909 | Do you think you may die on the way? |
46909 | Do you understand? |
46909 | Do you wish it?" |
46909 | Do you wish me to speak of myself, my dear Edmond? |
46909 | Dost thou complain,--thou, the most fortunate creature under heaven? |
46909 | Dost thou repine, who some day in thy turn shalt disappear forever, after thou hast crushed the universe beneath thy horse''s feet? |
46909 | Ezekiel devouring a book has nothing extraordinary in it; do we not speak of devouring a pamphlet, a newspaper? |
46909 | First objection( I use the words as they were printed):"Can the committee modify the intention and substitute a fountain for a tombstone? |
46909 | HAVE you still your tooth? |
46909 | HOW goes it, dear old master? |
46909 | Had Victor obeyed a sentiment of honour or of revenge? |
46909 | Have I told you what a curate of Trouville said one day after I had dined with him? |
46909 | Have we any time to write?" |
46909 | Have you had a good laugh at the fast ordered by Her Majesty Queen Victoria? |
46909 | Have you read it, and what do you think of it? |
46909 | Have you read the third philippic of Sainte- Beuve? |
46909 | Have you received my letter? |
46909 | He has written this of me:"Can no one persuade M. Flaubert not to write any more?" |
46909 | Hear ye the fanfares, whose sound reached even to Ostia; the clapping of the hands, the cries of joy? |
46909 | How about Houssaye? |
46909 | How about the_ Botanique_? |
46909 | How comes on the_ Fracasse_? |
46909 | How goes_ La Jeune Bourgeoise_? |
46909 | How is it to be solved? |
46909 | How is your health? |
46909 | How long do you remain at Cannes? |
46909 | How you love her, do you not? |
46909 | How? |
46909 | I say to myself; Is art worth so much trouble, so much weariness for me, so many tears for her? |
46909 | I should much like to know, and with many details, why Saulcy refused Leconte''s article; what are the motives alleged? |
46909 | I suppose''tis from the house below you were just coming?" |
46909 | I, A MYSTERIOUS being, dear master? |
46909 | IS THIS handsome conduct, dear master? |
46909 | If it had been intended for one of the capitalists of our district, whose fortune runs into the millions, would you have refused it? |
46909 | If the exceptions themselves are not true, what are we to put any reliance on?" |
46909 | If the genuine ones, given as proofs, have themselves need of proofs, why perform them?" |
46909 | If the value of a martyr depends on the doctrine, how could he serve to demonstrate its existence?" |
46909 | If your good men have a hundred feet, your mountains should be twenty miles high; and what is the ideal if it is not a magnifying? |
46909 | Ignatius?" |
46909 | Is genius, after all, only a refinement of pain, that is to say, a meditation of the objective through the soul? |
46909 | Is it because you are a great"man"or simply a charming being? |
46909 | Is it expedient to teach them languages? |
46909 | Is it not possible that I might dine with you? |
46909 | Is it on this account that the illustrious Turgan calls me"the major?" |
46909 | Is it understood, then-- Saturday? |
46909 | Is it you?" |
46909 | Is my request indiscreet? |
46909 | Is that agreeable? |
46909 | Is that all, sir?" |
46909 | Is there anything new to say about that young person? |
46909 | Is this a coincidence, or is it because when I was eighteen years old I read only Montaigne during a whole twelvemonth? |
46909 | Is this not a great defect? |
46909 | Is this presumption on my part,--an excessive sympathy that I feel for you? |
46909 | It is not kind to say I do not think of my"old troubadour;"of what else should I think? |
46909 | Look through your telescope, do you not see Guizot waning and Thiers coming to light? |
46909 | M. de Mahurot seemed satisfied with it, and Madame de Noares said to him:"You will remember my_ protégés_?" |
46909 | Many times, in the stillness of night, will he look vainly for his friend''s shadow, ready to question him:"Am I doing right? |
46909 | May I expect you the day after to- morrow? |
46909 | Must I die, now? |
46909 | Must I give up my days of feasting and delight, my spectacles, my triumphs, my chariots and the applause of multitudes? |
46909 | Must it not be from his worship of the true? |
46909 | My head troubles me too much for me to continue now, and besides, what more can I say? |
46909 | Nevertheless, while I was looking at the poor Pouchet, who was in torture, shaking like a reed in the wind, do you know what came up before me? |
46909 | No doubt there were impediments? |
46909 | Now that they had learned to read and write, what should they be taught? |
46909 | Now, what do you remember from yesterday?" |
46909 | O Rabelais, where is thy vast mouth? |
46909 | Of obstructing your public by- ways? |
46909 | Of what use is all this effort, perhaps to arrive only at mediocrity in the end? |
46909 | Of what use is it? |
46909 | On the other hand, is it not stupid? |
46909 | One day Victorine asked,"How is it that wood burns?" |
46909 | Passing to the Middle Ages, shall we compare the epics of the twelfth century, the comic and the morality plays? |
46909 | Perhaps irony might have success with him? |
46909 | Perhaps they were distressed by it? |
46909 | Pierre?" |
46909 | Poetry, is n''t it? |
46909 | Pécuchet at first talked about indifferent subjects, then, having slipped out the word"martyr":"How many do you think there were of them?" |
46909 | Science furnished a subject for sarcasms on his part:"Will it make an ear of corn sprout, this science of yours? |
46909 | Shall I have a letter from you on awakening? |
46909 | Shall I have the courage to live absolutely alone in a solitary place? |
46909 | Shall you be in Paris from the first of August to the 25th? |
46909 | Shall you remain at Nohant? |
46909 | Should it be Nôtre Dame de Fourviers, de Chartres, d''Embrun, de Marseille, or d''Auray? |
46909 | Since his time, what has been done? |
46909 | Sometimes I would stop him and ask:"Was he good?" |
46909 | Suppose his birthplace were unknown( history is not always decisive on this point),--what would you do? |
46909 | That would have been a great compliment, eh? |
46909 | The Bovary? |
46909 | The justice of the peace made him sit down; then, addressing himself to the gamekeeper:"Do you persist in your declarations?" |
46909 | The third was an invective to"An author who sold his poems": Why seek a famished passion to revive? |
46909 | Then why not erect it in the street, house, or even room where he was born? |
46909 | There creaks a pump which wets your legs; two boys are rinsing decanters; a parrot repeats from morning till night:"Have you breakfasted, Jacko?" |
46909 | There is a certain ingenuousness about them, but why call the_ sperchius_,_ sperkhios_? |
46909 | They say that_ Cadio_ is being rehearsed at the Porte Saint- Martin( are you very sorry, you and Chilly?). |
46909 | This is all very easy to say in cold blood, is it not? |
46909 | Under what constellation were you born, to have united in your person qualities so diverse, so numerous, and so rare? |
46909 | Vindex revolts, my legions fly, my women flee in terror? |
46909 | WHAT a charming article, my dear Théo, and how can I thank you for it? |
46909 | WHAT has become of you? |
46909 | Was it not enough that a thing was true and beautiful? |
46909 | Was it only chance that had kept them from death? |
46909 | Was it possible for them really to have such recreations? |
46909 | Was it possible? |
46909 | Was it their fault if they owed their birth to a convict father? |
46909 | Was not Ronsard forgotten before Sainte- Beuve? |
46909 | Was that a good way, after all? |
46909 | Was this a hygienic measure? |
46909 | We understand each other well, do we not? |
46909 | What are we coming to?" |
46909 | What are you doing now? |
46909 | What are you doing? |
46909 | What are you writing? |
46909 | What can this phrase in your letter this morning mean in speaking of De Lisle? |
46909 | What care should one take sometimes, in expressing an opinion on things of this world, not to risk being considered an imbecile later? |
46909 | What could anyone say after you? |
46909 | What could he laugh at, then? |
46909 | What could he laugh at? |
46909 | What do we know?" |
46909 | What do you intend to do next? |
46909 | What do you intend to do this evening? |
46909 | What do you think of_ Salammbô_? |
46909 | What does the form of belief matter? |
46909 | What good is there in discussing, replying to, and angering him? |
46909 | What good will it do? |
46909 | What has become of the good Leconte,--is he progressing with his Celtic poem? |
46909 | What has he out of the ordinary? |
46909 | What have we? |
46909 | What hurricane has hurled us into this abyss? |
46909 | What is your price? |
46909 | What must I do? |
46909 | What news of your wife? |
46909 | What shall you do now? |
46909 | What tempest soon shall bear us away towards the forgotten planets whence we came? |
46909 | What was that? |
46909 | What was the gentleman"who has special charge of the fine arts"afraid of? |
46909 | What was to be done? |
46909 | What were they to do? |
46909 | What would he not do to raise my spirits when I was sad or ill? |
46909 | What''s this here?" |
46909 | What, then, was the Emperor occupying his time with? |
46909 | When shall I be able to do so? |
46909 | When shall we meet again? |
46909 | When wilt Thou cease creating? |
46909 | When, Lord, shall thy great trumpet sound? |
46909 | Whence come the black moods that sometimes sweep over us? |
46909 | Whence comes this seduction of the past? |
46909 | Where are there any prostitutes like Fantine, convicts like Valjean, and politicians like the stupid donkeys of the A, B, C? |
46909 | Where are we? |
46909 | Where did it come from? |
46909 | Where has the rage for philosophic prose conducted him? |
46909 | Where is his rival to be found? |
46909 | Where is the bishop who asks a benediction from a convention? |
46909 | Where is the factory that turns away a girl because she has a child? |
46909 | Where now was the ardent desire of knowing quickly the thought that springs from the brain of a friend? |
46909 | Where shall we see each other? |
46909 | Where shall you be at five minutes before midnight? |
46909 | Where were those beautiful years of youth? |
46909 | Where will they lead us? |
46909 | Where will you stop? |
46909 | Where would you find readers? |
46909 | Where, then, is the inspiration?" |
46909 | Wherefore a public administration? |
46909 | Who asked you to defend them? |
46909 | Who is there that has not made a parody on the mediocre? |
46909 | Who speaks in rhymes? |
46909 | Why are we here? |
46909 | Why can you not understand that it would be very painful to me to go to Mantes? |
46909 | Why do you persist in irritating my nerves by saying that a field of cabbages is more beautiful than a desert? |
46909 | Why have you made me fall in love with the mistresses of Louis XV.? |
46909 | Why have you not sent me any news of yourself, you rascal? |
46909 | Why is she at Versailles? |
46909 | Why is this so? |
46909 | Why not confess that we desire none at all? |
46909 | Why seek you me in the dust?" |
46909 | Why was I afraid that it would not be long? |
46909 | Why? |
46909 | Will Madame your mother devote herself always to the occupations of Thalia? |
46909 | Will all the subscribers accept the substitution?" |
46909 | Will that be convenient and agreeable? |
46909 | Will you be kind enough to inform yourself discreetly of the state of the case when you are in Paris? |
46909 | Will you believe me when I tell you that the ignoble realism you find in my story, the reproduction of which disgusts you, revolts me quite as much? |
46909 | With what shall we sustain ourselves, then, if pride fails us, and what man can feel more of that for his mother than yourself? |
46909 | Would you believe that even while following his coffin, I realised keenly the grotesqueness of the ceremony? |
46909 | You practical? |
46909 | You try to be polite to a scamp like that? |
46909 | Yours?" |
46909 | [ A] Who is this Mrs. Opie? |
46909 | _ What is the condition of their public libraries?_"And when I demolished his illusions, he was desolate. |
46909 | and St. Bartholomew? |
46909 | and the massacres of the Albigenses? |
46909 | and the revocation of the Edict of Nantes?" |
46909 | and where have you found out these nice things?" |
46909 | do not the wheels smoke yet? |
46909 | of rhetoric?" |
46909 | shall I sleep in my turn? |
46909 | the champagne? |
46909 | two thousand?" |
46909 | where was the faith in each other? |
2084 | And are you still as fond of music as ever, Mr Pontifex? |
2084 | And do n''t you like Beethoven? |
2084 | And how is So- and- so? |
2084 | And now let me ask you what answer you have made to this question hitherto? 2084 And pray, where do you consider modern music to begin?" |
2084 | And what do you want, Alice? |
2084 | And what shall it be to drink? |
2084 | And what you think of it? |
2084 | And what,resumed Pryer,"does all this point to? |
2084 | And wo n''t you come too? |
2084 | And you do not find this letter,said I,"affect the conclusion which you have just told me you have come to concerning your present plans?" |
2084 | And you have told your governess about this? |
2084 | Are you quite sure that you have not made any mistake in all this? |
2084 | But how-- if the testimony of the Bible fails? |
2084 | But surely you believe the Bible when it tells you of such things as that Christ died and rose from the dead? 2084 By faith in what, then,"asked Ernest of himself,"shall a just man endeavour to live at this present time?" |
2084 | CAN''T I? |
2084 | Can anything,''said the publisher,"be conceived more impracticable and imprudent?" |
2084 | Could you like,she wrote to him not long ago,"the thoughts of a little sea change here? |
2084 | Do n''t you love the smell of grease about the engine of a Channel steamer? 2084 Do you, or do you not believe that you will one day stand before the Judgement Seat of Christ? |
2084 | Does he write comedy? |
2084 | Goodness gracious,I exclaimed,"why did n''t we sport the oak? |
2084 | Have you considered your prospects on leaving prison? 2084 Have you never really been near us for all these years? |
2084 | How are my father and mother? |
2084 | How can she know how much we think of our darling? |
2084 | How in the name of reason can I be asked to eat a mutton chop? |
2084 | How,everyone asked,"did they manage to live?" |
2084 | I do n''t like long engagements, Mr Allaby, do you? |
2084 | Is n''t that rather dreadful?--Don''t you think you rather--she was going to have added,"ought to?" |
2084 | It may be said that the truth of these statements has been denied, but what, let me ask you, has become of the questioners? 2084 John,"said my hero, gasping for breath,"are you sure of what you say-- are you quite sure you really married her?" |
2084 | Lor''now,said she,"has he really? |
2084 | Mrs Skinner,he exclaimed jauntily,"what are those mysterious- looking objects surrounded by potatoes?" |
2084 | My dear father,I answered,"what did he do? |
2084 | Of course he would buy Joey a living, and make large presents yearly to his sister-- was there anything else? 2084 Oh, Master Ernest,"said Susan,"why did you not come back when your poor papa and mamma wanted you? |
2084 | Papa,said Ernest, after we had left the house,"Why did n''t Mrs Heaton whip Jack when he trod on the egg?" |
2084 | Perhaps; but is it not Tennyson who has said:''''Tis better to have loved and lost, than never to have lost at all''? |
2084 | Pontifex,said Dr Skinner, who had fallen upon him in hall one day like a moral landslip, before he had time to escape,"do you never laugh? |
2084 | Shall I cut it out? |
2084 | Shall it be brandy and water? 2084 Then do n''t you like them?" |
2084 | There, Ernest, do you hear that? 2084 Tum,"said Ernest, at once;"is that better?" |
2084 | Well now,she exclaimed,"dear, dear me, and is that manuscript? |
2084 | What can it matter to me,he says,"whether people read my books or not? |
2084 | What can there be in common between Theobald and his parishioners? |
2084 | What care I,said he to me one day,"about being what they call a gentleman?" |
2084 | What do you mean? |
2084 | What has being a gentleman ever done for me except make me less able to prey and more easy to be preyed upon? 2084 What is this horrid Government going to do with Ireland? |
2084 | What will you take for supper, Dr Skinner? |
2084 | Why not take a little shop yourself? |
2084 | Why so? |
2084 | Why, Ellen,said he,"what nonsense you talk; you have n''t been in prison, have you?" |
2084 | Why, my dear fellow, can you really be ignorant? 2084 Will being a gentleman,"he said,"bring me money at the last, and will anything bring me as much peace at the last as money will? |
2084 | Writes for the stage, does he? |
2084 | ''When only would he leave his position? |
2084 | A legal right, yes, but had he a moral right? |
2084 | Alethea smiled and said,"I must not say anything to that, must I?" |
2084 | All the boys were fond of her, and was he, Ernest, to tell tales about her? |
2084 | And how should he best persuade his fellow- countrymen to leave off believing in this supernatural element? |
2084 | And mamma held me out at arm''s length and said,''Is he Mr Pontifex''s child, Mrs Burne, or is he mine?'' |
2084 | And what is instinct? |
2084 | Are they in reality anything else than literary Struldbrugs? |
2084 | As for not being able to afford marriage, how did poor people do? |
2084 | Besides why should I? |
2084 | Besides, had she not diverted his attention from herself to his approaching dinner? |
2084 | Besides, where were these poor girls to go? |
2084 | Besides, who but a prig would set himself high aims, or make high resolves at all? |
2084 | But if so, what ground was there on which a man might rest the sole of his foot and tread in reasonable safety? |
2084 | But put this on one side; if the man were to be violent, what should he do? |
2084 | But tell me how is my mother?" |
2084 | But what good could he have done if he had? |
2084 | But what was the meaning of the words''pregnant with serious consequences to yourself''? |
2084 | But what were the feelings of Theobald and Christina when the village was passed and they were rolling quietly by the fir plantation? |
2084 | But who can love any man whose liver is out of order? |
2084 | But why had they not treasured up the water after it was used? |
2084 | But would Christ have fled? |
2084 | Can a man who died thus be said to have died at all? |
2084 | Can anyone do much for anyone else unless by making a will in his favour and dying then and there? |
2084 | Could Giotto or Filippo Lippi, think you, have got a picture into the Exhibition? |
2084 | Could any advantage be meaner than the one which Ernest had taken? |
2084 | Could any amount of immorality have placed him in a much worse one? |
2084 | Could anything be more idolatrous? |
2084 | Could he not turn his having lost all into an opportunity? |
2084 | Could it be for any other reason than that he did not want to see it, and if so was he not a traitor to the cause of truth? |
2084 | Could not God do anything He liked, and had He not in His own inspired Book told us that He had done this? |
2084 | Damn you, Gelstrap, how dare you be so infernally careless as to leave that hamper littering about the cellar?" |
2084 | Day after day went by, and what was he doing? |
2084 | Did he get an answer? |
2084 | Did not a good wife rather help matters than not? |
2084 | Did the other boys do so? |
2084 | Did there lurk a threat under these words-- though it was impossible to lay hold of it or of them? |
2084 | Did you ever meet one of them, or do you find any of their books securing the respectful attention of those competent to judge concerning them? |
2084 | Do we see them or hear of them? |
2084 | Do you always look so preternaturally grave?" |
2084 | Do you approve of these Wesleyans? |
2084 | Do you think so? |
2084 | Do you, or do you not believe that you will have to give an account for every idle word that you have ever spoken? |
2084 | During this same absence what had Mrs Goodhew and old Miss Wright taken to doing but turning towards the east while repeating the Belief? |
2084 | Ernest felt that his visits, so far from comforting Mr Brookes, made him fear death more and more, but how could he help it? |
2084 | Ernest was annoyed and surprised, for had not his father and mother been wanting him to be more religious all his life? |
2084 | Granted, but what is this if it is not Christ? |
2084 | Had he not been afterwards Senior Wrangler, First Chancellor''s Medallist and I do not know how many more things besides? |
2084 | Had he not taken I do n''t know how many University Scholarships in his freshman''s year? |
2084 | Had not Christina less than two hours ago promised solemnly to honour and obey him, and was she turning restive over such a trifle as this? |
2084 | Have they been able to hold what little ground they made during the supineness of the last century? |
2084 | Have you anything more to say?" |
2084 | Have you, gentle reader, ever loved at first sight? |
2084 | Having settled then that he was to tell a lie, what lie should he tell? |
2084 | He asked himself, what were they? |
2084 | He believes her; he has a natural tendency to believe everything that is told him, and who should know the facts of the case better than his wife? |
2084 | He could draw a little, but could he to save his life have got a picture into the Royal Academy exhibition? |
2084 | He had been saved from the Church-- so as by fire, but still saved-- but what could now save him from his marriage? |
2084 | He had got the lad-- a pudding- headed fellow-- by the ear and was saying,"What? |
2084 | He had not gone outside Mrs Jupp''s street door, and yet what had been the result? |
2084 | He has done his best, but what does a fish''s best come to when the fish is out of water? |
2084 | He winced, but said"No, not if it helps you to tell your story: but do n''t you think it is too long?" |
2084 | How can a sheep dog work a flock of sheep unless he can bite occasionally as well as bark? |
2084 | How can any boy fail to feel an ecstasy of pleasure on first finding himself in rooms which he knows for the next few years are to be his castle? |
2084 | How can he find out his strength or weakness otherwise? |
2084 | How can we get this without express training? |
2084 | How could he get the school shop- keepers into trouble by owning that they let some of the boys go on tick with them? |
2084 | How could he hope ever to grow up to be as good and wise as they, or even tolerably good and wise? |
2084 | How did their household differ from that of any other clergyman of the better sort from one end of England to the other? |
2084 | How far, in fact, did admiration for the orthodox tragedians take that place among the Athenians which going to church does among ourselves? |
2084 | How had he come to get into debt? |
2084 | How if, as soon as Ernest came in, the tailor were to become violent and abusive? |
2084 | How is she ever to get safe back to Clapham Junction? |
2084 | How long again is the esteem and sympathy of friends likely to survive ruin? |
2084 | How many times did he call upon his father? |
2084 | How was it possible that these things could be taught too early? |
2084 | How was it that all the clever people of Cambridge had never put him up to this simple rejoinder? |
2084 | How, again, would he take the news of his son''s good fortune? |
2084 | How, indeed, is it likely to come unless to those who either are born with interest, or who marry in order to get it? |
2084 | I expect you have n''t forgotten that day, have you?" |
2084 | I said:"But who will listen? |
2084 | I should have given him more pocket- money if I had not known this-- but what is the good of giving him pocket- money? |
2084 | If the priest is not as much a healer and director of men''s souls as a physician is of their bodies, what is he? |
2084 | If they did happen, is it reasonable to suppose that you will make yourselves and others more happy by one course of conduct or by another? |
2084 | In an evil moment he had mentioned Towneley''s name at Battersby, and now what was the result? |
2084 | In what respect had they differed from their neighbours? |
2084 | Is it about love?" |
2084 | Is it moral for a man to have brought such things upon himself? |
2084 | Is it not generous of him? |
2084 | Is n''t there a lot of hope in it?" |
2084 | Is not this enough? |
2084 | Is there a single teacher or preacher in this great University who has not examined what these men had to say, and found it naught? |
2084 | Is there one of your fathers or mothers or friends who does not see through them? |
2084 | It is high time you learned to say''come,''why, Joey can say''come,''ca n''t you, Joey?" |
2084 | Marry beneath her and be considered a disgrace to her family? |
2084 | Master Ernest, whatever can you be meaning?" |
2084 | Might he not even yet do so to- morrow morning if he were so minded? |
2084 | Might he not have apprenticed both his sons to greengrocers? |
2084 | Might he not, if he too sought the strength of the Lord, find, like St Paul, that it was perfected in weakness? |
2084 | Might not his opportunity be close upon him if he looked carefully enough at his immediate surroundings? |
2084 | Must not people take their chances in this world? |
2084 | Nevertheless, what right had Theobald to complain? |
2084 | No doubt, but how-- considering how stupid, idle, ignorant, self- indulgent, and physically puny he was? |
2084 | Now, Ernest, be pleased to tell me whether this appalling story is true or false?" |
2084 | Of course they must be, for if they had not been, would they not have been bound to warn all who had anything to do with them of their deficiencies? |
2084 | Oh, why, why, why, could not people be born into the world as grown- up persons? |
2084 | Or were not they rather compelling him to keep out-- outside their doors at any rate? |
2084 | Presently Ernest said,"May we give you back this"( showing the halfpenny)"and not give you back this and this?" |
2084 | Reader, did you ever have an income at best none too large, which died with you all except 200 pounds a year? |
2084 | Remain at home and become an old maid and be laughed at? |
2084 | Run away? |
2084 | She smiled and said demurely,"Have they not Moses and the prophets? |
2084 | Should he have had the courage to break away even from his present curacy? |
2084 | Should he say he had been robbed? |
2084 | So that is really manuscript?" |
2084 | Study, to do him justice, he had never really liked, and what inducement was there for him to study at Battersby? |
2084 | Surely you believe this?" |
2084 | Take the cuckoo again-- is there any bird which we like better?" |
2084 | Then came an even worse reflection; how if he had fallen among material thieves as well as spiritual ones? |
2084 | Then came the question-- horrid thought!--as to who was the partner of Ellen''s guilt? |
2084 | Then how could he be himself wrong in trying to act up to the faith that he and Towneley held in common? |
2084 | Then, gathering strength, he said in a low voice:"Mother,"( it was the first time he had called her anything but"mamma"?) |
2084 | Then, when all had sat down, Mr Hawke addressed them, speaking without notes and taking for his text the words,"Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me?" |
2084 | They had heard nothing but what they had been hearing all their lives; how was it, then, that they were so dumbfoundered by it? |
2084 | This was all very fine, but what was Ernest to do? |
2084 | To whom did he call? |
2084 | To whom had he owed money at any time? |
2084 | Was George Pontifex one of Fortune''s favoured nurslings or not? |
2084 | Was he doing this? |
2084 | Was he not a Christian? |
2084 | Was he not fallen himself? |
2084 | Was he not head- master of Roughborough School? |
2084 | Was he really doing everything that could be expected of him? |
2084 | Was he to drive them from house to house till they had no place to lie in? |
2084 | Was it a prudent thing to attempt so much? |
2084 | Was it for this that he had been generous enough to offer to provide Ernest with decent clothes in which to come and visit his mother''s death- bed? |
2084 | Was it for this that when Christina had offered to let him off, he had stuck to his engagement? |
2084 | Was it not then taking rather a mean advantage of the Apostle to stand on his not having actually forbidden it? |
2084 | Was it possible that she might not be going to henpeck him after all? |
2084 | Was it, could it be, her own son, her darling Ernest? |
2084 | Was there any hope of salvation for her either in this world or the next after such unnatural conduct? |
2084 | Was there not an elder brother? |
2084 | Was this the little lad who could get sweeties for two- pence but not for two- pence- halfpenny? |
2084 | Was this, then, the end of his six years of unflagging devotion? |
2084 | We know so well what we are doing ourselves and why we do it, do we not? |
2084 | Were they not intended to produce all the effect of a threat without being actually threatening?" |
2084 | What boy would not take kindly to almost anything with such assistance? |
2084 | What boys, then, owed money to these harpies as well as Ernest? |
2084 | What chance had they against one who, if she had a mind, could put by out of her income twice as much as they, poor women, could spend? |
2084 | What could he do else that would have been of the smallest use to her? |
2084 | What could he do? |
2084 | What culture is comparable to this? |
2084 | What did it all come to, when he did go to see them? |
2084 | What did it all mean? |
2084 | What do one half of our formularies and rubrics mean if not this? |
2084 | What else could he do? |
2084 | What else could she do? |
2084 | What gentleman could stand this air, think you, for a fortnight?" |
2084 | What happened to him? |
2084 | What head of a family ever sends for any of its members into the dining- room if his intentions are honourable? |
2084 | What if circumstances had made his duty more easy for him than it would be to most men? |
2084 | What interest, pray, do you suppose I have that I could get a living for you? |
2084 | What is Christ if He is not this? |
2084 | What is too heavy a price to pay for having duty made at once clear and easy of fulfilment instead of very difficult? |
2084 | What more could parents do than they had done? |
2084 | What opinion can any sane man form about his own work? |
2084 | What other things? |
2084 | What precedents did not Abraham, Jephthah and Jonadab the son of Rechab offer? |
2084 | What should I not have done if I had had one half of your advantages? |
2084 | What should a boy of his age know about the''Messiah''? |
2084 | What should he do? |
2084 | What was his position? |
2084 | What was the noblest life that perished there? |
2084 | What was''business''? |
2084 | What whisper had ever been breathed against his moral character? |
2084 | What wonder, then, that his imagination should fail to realise the changes that eight years must have worked? |
2084 | What, then, it may be asked, is the good of being great? |
2084 | When should he learn to love his Papa and Mamma as they had loved theirs? |
2084 | Where are they now? |
2084 | Where one could live two could do so, and if Ellen was three or four years older than he was-- well, what was that? |
2084 | Where then was the weak place in George Pontifex''s armour? |
2084 | Where was he to draw the line? |
2084 | Where, where, he asked himself, was it all to end? |
2084 | Which did he now think was most likely to have taken the juster view of life and things, and whom would it be best to imitate, Towneley or Pryer? |
2084 | Who can blame her? |
2084 | Who can wonder at him or do anything but pity him? |
2084 | Who could blame them? |
2084 | Who could hurt him more than he had been hurt already? |
2084 | Who knows but he might meet Lord Lonsford himself, or at any rate some of Lord Lonsford''s other descendants?" |
2084 | Who so fit to be consulted if any difficulty about parish management should arise? |
2084 | Who so_ integer vitae scelerisque purus_, it was asked, as Mr Pontifex of Battersby? |
2084 | Who such a happy mixture of the sincere uninquiring Christian and of the man of the world? |
2084 | Who then should he take first? |
2084 | Who was not to be envied, and if envied why then respected, if Theobald was not enviable? |
2084 | Who would be just good enough to live in the same house with him, and who just not good enough? |
2084 | Whom had he to consult but himself now? |
2084 | Whose friendship have you chosen? |
2084 | Whose ox had he taken, whose ass had he taken, or whom had he defrauded? |
2084 | Why did he see in a moment that it was a bad one now, though he had been unable to see it when he had taken it from Pryer? |
2084 | Why do you think so?'' |
2084 | Why had he felt tacitly rebuked as soon as he had met Towneley? |
2084 | Why had he never treated his sisters in this way? |
2084 | Why might he not stand and preach as he saw the Dissenters doing sometimes in Lincoln''s Inn Fields and other thoroughfares? |
2084 | Why should I complain of being among the mediocrities? |
2084 | Why should she? |
2084 | Why should the generations overlap one another at all? |
2084 | Why then should it have been upon them, of all people in the world, that this tower of Siloam had fallen? |
2084 | Why, Lord love the man, whatever is the matter with him?" |
2084 | Why, then, do I insist upon them? |
2084 | Why? |
2084 | With what shops did they get into debt? |
2084 | Would he greet him as though nothing had happened, or would he be cold and distant? |
2084 | Would his father meet him at the station? |
2084 | Yes, but a fallen one? |
2084 | Yet had he not on the whole tried to find out what the ways of God were, and to follow them in singleness of heart? |
2084 | Yet what happened? |
2084 | Yet which of us in his heart likes any of the Elizabethan dramatists except Shakespeare? |
2084 | how can you say so? |
2084 | why, why, why, are there no harbours of refuge for grown men who have not yet lost them?" |
2084 | you too shun me, Ellen?" |
4734 | ''A couple of miles?'' |
4734 | ''A lady in the case?'' |
4734 | ''A perfectly lawful burglary?'' |
4734 | ''A thousand?'' |
4734 | ''AND MEANTIME I''M SUPPOSED TO BE DYING, AM I?'' |
4734 | ''And ca''st drive it, lad?'' |
4734 | ''And do you mean to tell me that a will like that is good in law?'' |
4734 | ''And he took you out in a boat?'' |
4734 | ''And how am I going to dispose of it when I''ve got it?'' |
4734 | ''And if I DO see those roses,''he went on,''I shall take upon myself to drop in for tea, may I?'' |
4734 | ''And is n''t it extraordinary?'' |
4734 | ''And may I ask just how old you are?'' |
4734 | ''And she accepted you at once?'' |
4734 | ''And she never married?'' |
4734 | ''And supposing you are n''t there?'' |
4734 | ''And the other sister-- Mrs Colclough?'' |
4734 | ''And the other sister?'' |
4734 | ''And what be the news?'' |
4734 | ''And what''s YOUR game?'' |
4734 | ''And where are you going to now?'' |
4734 | ''And who is Annie Brett?'' |
4734 | ''And you are cured?'' |
4734 | ''Annie BRETT?'' |
4734 | ''Annie? |
4734 | ''Anti- social, is it? |
4734 | ''Are you going to town early?'' |
4734 | ''Are you there? |
4734 | ''Are you, my pet? |
4734 | ''At Ilam?'' |
4734 | ''Better not say anything about this to Miss-- to Annie, eh?'' |
4734 | ''Better take your dust- coat off, had n''t you?'' |
4734 | ''But how shall you manage to get away, darling?'' |
4734 | ''But what--?'' |
4734 | ''But where, you cuckoo, sitting there like that?'' |
4734 | ''But why didst- na''give in and kiss him, and smack his face for him?'' |
4734 | ''But why--?'' |
4734 | ''But you do n''t mean to tell me she''s never--''I was just going to exclaim, but I did not, I said:''And it''s her sister who is Mrs Colclough?'' |
4734 | ''But you''ll stop with us, of course?'' |
4734 | ''But, my dear,''Stephen protested,''you know--''''Will you lend me half- a- sovereign?'' |
4734 | ''But, really, uncle, it was so absurd of Harold, was n''t it?'' |
4734 | ''By the way,''said Mr Brindley,''you used to know Simon Fuge, did n''t you?'' |
4734 | ''Ca n''t she turn him over neater than that?'' |
4734 | ''Ca n''t we do anything?'' |
4734 | ''Cafe?'' |
4734 | ''Can you stop me from having a headache tomorrow?'' |
4734 | ''Cheerful, is n''t it?'' |
4734 | ''Come along in, will you?'' |
4734 | ''Curious, ai n''t it?'' |
4734 | ''Did n''t I say as I should get it, Bob?'' |
4734 | ''Did n''t he take you out in a boat?'' |
4734 | ''Did n''t you know he was a painter?'' |
4734 | ''Did the water run over his mouf? |
4734 | ''Did they not deserve it? |
4734 | ''Did you get the Sinfonia Domestica, Ol?'' |
4734 | ''Did you have a comfortable journey down?'' |
4734 | ''Did you know him?'' |
4734 | ''Did you think I collected postage- stamps?'' |
4734 | ''Do n''t you know? |
4734 | ''Do n''t you remember old Fuge that kept the Blue Bell at Cauldon?'' |
4734 | ''Do you ever see the Manchester Guardian?'' |
4734 | ''Do you know the limerick--"There was a young woman of Bosley"?'' |
4734 | ''Do you often see the Gazette?'' |
4734 | ''Do you suppose,''he said,''as I have n''t had plans o''your castle ever since it was built? |
4734 | ''Do you think so, uncle?'' |
4734 | ''Do you think so?'' |
4734 | ''Do you?'' |
4734 | ''Ever been caught before?'' |
4734 | ''Feel better now, do n''t you?'' |
4734 | ''Figure?'' |
4734 | ''From the British Museum?'' |
4734 | ''GIVE you for doing the job?'' |
4734 | ''GIVE you? |
4734 | ''Germany?'' |
4734 | ''Had n''t you better go?'' |
4734 | ''Harold''s grandfather, not mine?'' |
4734 | ''Have you got that newspaper in your pocket, Mr Loring?'' |
4734 | ''He ran with you all the way to the station, did n''t he?'' |
4734 | ''How big is the lake?'' |
4734 | ''How came he to go with you?'' |
4734 | ''How came the will to be in the post?'' |
4734 | ''How did it end?'' |
4734 | ''How did it get here?'' |
4734 | ''How do we know? |
4734 | ''How do we know?'' |
4734 | ''How do you do, Mr Loring?'' |
4734 | ''How do, Bob? |
4734 | ''How do, Bob?'' |
4734 | ''How do, Bob?'' |
4734 | ''How do, Pow?'' |
4734 | ''How do, missis?'' |
4734 | ''How do?'' |
4734 | ''How do?'' |
4734 | ''How do?'' |
4734 | ''How exasperating?'' |
4734 | ''How long is it, Ol?'' |
4734 | ''How many children have you?'' |
4734 | ''How much didst say this traction- engine had cost thee?'' |
4734 | ''How much shall I give to the boy for the horse and trap, uncle?'' |
4734 | ''How much?'' |
4734 | ''How often have I told you the top part is never easiest? |
4734 | ''How old art?'' |
4734 | ''How would you like to commit a burglary that was not a crime?'' |
4734 | ''I expect you''ve heard Strauss''s Sinfonia Domestica, Mr Loring, up in the village?'' |
4734 | ''I say, Vera,''he demanded, in a low, slightly inimical tone,''have you taken a sovereign out of the empty drawer in your toilet- table?'' |
4734 | ''I suppose burgling does n''t pay very well, does it?'' |
4734 | ''I suppose it will be in the papers?'' |
4734 | ''I suppose you could n''t put it off for a couple of hours one night, May?'' |
4734 | ''I suppose you knew him?'' |
4734 | ''I suppose you know Simon Fuge is dead?'' |
4734 | ''I suppose you''ll admit she WAS wearing white roses in her hat?'' |
4734 | ''I suppose you''ll have to go back to the Works at once?'' |
4734 | ''I suppose your sister knew him pretty well?'' |
4734 | ''In London?'' |
4734 | ''In Manchester?'' |
4734 | ''Is Ned Walklate still at th''Rose and Crown?'' |
4734 | ''Is he?'' |
4734 | ''Is it in the paper?'' |
4734 | ''Is it, indeed?'' |
4734 | ''Is this Mrs Hall''s?'' |
4734 | ''It must be somewhere about,''I said; and to Mrs Colclough:''I suppose you knew him pretty well?'' |
4734 | ''It will avoid the necessity for another-- so much-- you understand?...'' |
4734 | ''Life''s very complex, ai n''t it, Bob?'' |
4734 | ''Louisa,''she demanded of the parlourmaid,''where is your master?'' |
4734 | ''Machine going all right?'' |
4734 | ''Maud, what are you doing?'' |
4734 | ''Me and Annie? |
4734 | ''My hall?'' |
4734 | ''News?'' |
4734 | ''No steam?'' |
4734 | ''No?'' |
4734 | ''Nor-- anything?'' |
4734 | ''Not in the Five Towns, I trust?'' |
4734 | ''Now, Bob,''an amicable voice shrieked femininely up from the ground- floor,''am I to send the soup to the bathroom or are you coming down?'' |
4734 | ''Now, then, what about these two sisters?'' |
4734 | ''Oh, I''m too late, am I?'' |
4734 | ''Oh, did he?'' |
4734 | ''Oh, is it?'' |
4734 | ''Please, Mrs Dawson wants to know if Mrs Durance can kindly lend her half- a- dozen knives and forks?'' |
4734 | ''Ready?'' |
4734 | ''Seems queer him dying at San Remo in September, does n''t it?'' |
4734 | ''Shall we go down to the drawing- room and have tea, eh?'' |
4734 | ''Shall you be at chapel next Sunday morning?'' |
4734 | ''She is n''t absolutely dying, I find,''said Charlie, turning to Vera:''You are going to the dance after all-- aren''t you?'' |
4734 | ''She is n''t the same sort of person, is she?'' |
4734 | ''So he''s been quarrelling with ye, Maud?'' |
4734 | ''So ye''n been married a year?'' |
4734 | ''So ye''ve come back?'' |
4734 | ''So you have special trains in these parts?'' |
4734 | ''So you''re paying a visit to Bursley, uncle?'' |
4734 | ''Stephen, what on earth are you thinking of? |
4734 | ''Steve,''she said,''are we friends?'' |
4734 | ''Stolen?'' |
4734 | ''Stuck, eh?'' |
4734 | ''Talking of Simon Fuge,''I said determined to satisfy my curiosity,''who WERE the two sisters?'' |
4734 | ''That''s not you, Tobias?'' |
4734 | ''That''s our little affected cry that we start for our milk, is n''t it?'' |
4734 | ''The Birmingham Gazette?'' |
4734 | ''The St Luke''s lot?'' |
4734 | ''The one about the hayrick?'' |
4734 | ''Then I must stay here alone?'' |
4734 | ''Then why are you in such a stew to be rid of it?'' |
4734 | ''Then why did you tell me just now you had n''t taken it?'' |
4734 | ''Then you want to defend, Harrisford? |
4734 | ''There''s an illuminated manuscript of that name in the Imperial Library of Vienna, is n''t there?'' |
4734 | ''Tonight?'' |
4734 | ''Trifle, then?'' |
4734 | ''Was Miss Brett ever Simon Fuge''s mistress?'' |
4734 | ''Was that in the Gazette? |
4734 | ''We do n''t like clothes, do we?'' |
4734 | ''We do n''t like it, do we? |
4734 | ''We do n''t like our face wiped, do we?'' |
4734 | ''Well, then, why dunna''ye stand out o''th''wee and let them get in as wants to?'' |
4734 | ''Well, tomorrow night?'' |
4734 | ''Well, why do n''t you stop up one night and steal it yourself, and then burn it?'' |
4734 | ''Well,''said Mr Bittenger to Vera, at length,''what age should you give me?'' |
4734 | ''Well?'' |
4734 | ''What ARE you getting at?'' |
4734 | ''What IS Mr Colclough?'' |
4734 | ''What about the mumps, wife?'' |
4734 | ''What are they for?'' |
4734 | ''What are we to do?'' |
4734 | ''What are you doing?'' |
4734 | ''What are you going to give me for the job?'' |
4734 | ''What be that?'' |
4734 | ''What do they say about him?'' |
4734 | ''What do they think of Fuge down here?'' |
4734 | ''What do you THINK of Gladstone down here?'' |
4734 | ''What do you expect?'' |
4734 | ''What do you mean, uncle?'' |
4734 | ''What do you think of my new hat, Felix?'' |
4734 | ''What dost think of it, Bob?'' |
4734 | ''What if it is Christmas Eve?'' |
4734 | ''What is it?'' |
4734 | ''What on earth made you think so?'' |
4734 | ''What price this for a dog?'' |
4734 | ''What shall I do?'' |
4734 | ''What should you have done in my place?'' |
4734 | ''What sort of a man was he?'' |
4734 | ''What time did you get up this morning?'' |
4734 | ''What two sisters?'' |
4734 | ''What''s th''maning o''this eclipse as you''m treating us to?'' |
4734 | ''What''s that got to do with it? |
4734 | ''What''s that place?'' |
4734 | ''What''s the figure?'' |
4734 | ''What''s the meaning of this?'' |
4734 | ''What''s this?'' |
4734 | ''What''s up these days?'' |
4734 | ''What''s up wi''Maud?'' |
4734 | ''What, down at the Tiger?'' |
4734 | ''What, the Signal?'' |
4734 | ''What-- the women, you mean?'' |
4734 | ''What? |
4734 | ''What? |
4734 | ''What?'' |
4734 | ''What?'' |
4734 | ''What?'' |
4734 | ''What?'' |
4734 | ''When can you do it?'' |
4734 | ''When did YOU last see him?'' |
4734 | ''When did you propose to her?'' |
4734 | ''When was that?'' |
4734 | ''When''s next train Derby way?'' |
4734 | ''When?'' |
4734 | ''Where are you going, Ol?'' |
4734 | ''Where be going?'' |
4734 | ''Where did he die?'' |
4734 | ''Where is it?'' |
4734 | ''Where''s he gone to?'' |
4734 | ''Where''s the mater?'' |
4734 | ''Where?'' |
4734 | ''Which?'' |
4734 | ''Whisky?'' |
4734 | ''Who is it?'' |
4734 | ''Who the dagger is Simon Fuge?'' |
4734 | ''Who''d have thought of that? |
4734 | ''Who''s Simon Fuge?'' |
4734 | ''Who?'' |
4734 | ''Why do I owe you sixpence?'' |
4734 | ''Why not?'' |
4734 | ''Why would n''t you let me into the dining- room?'' |
4734 | ''Why, it''s ages since--''''And what d''ye reckon ye''n gotten here?'' |
4734 | ''Why?'' |
4734 | ''Why?'' |
4734 | ''Why?'' |
4734 | ''Wife,''said Mr Brindley, without giving her time to greet me,''what do you think he''s just asked me?'' |
4734 | ''Will you lend me half- a- sovereign?'' |
4734 | ''Will you?'' |
4734 | ''Wilt come down- stairs?'' |
4734 | ''Wo n''t it do tomorrow, my pet?'' |
4734 | ''Would n''t you, Mr Loring?'' |
4734 | ''Would you like to see her?'' |
4734 | ''Would you prefer Christmas Day? |
4734 | ''Yes, dearest?'' |
4734 | ''Yes, it''s dreadful having our face washed, is n''t it?'' |
4734 | ''Yes?'' |
4734 | ''You are n''t by any chance buying it?'' |
4734 | ''You are n''t going to buy another hat, are you?'' |
4734 | ''You carry me down- stairs, unky?'' |
4734 | ''You do n''t expect us to listen, do you?'' |
4734 | ''You do n''t mean to say he''s dead?'' |
4734 | ''You do n''t mean to say-- you and mother--?'' |
4734 | ''You have n''t had supper yet, I expect?'' |
4734 | ''You''ve not ORDERED it?'' |
4734 | ''Young?'' |
4734 | ''Younger than Miss Brett?'' |
4734 | A coincidence, of course, nothing else? |
4734 | And Sidney said he was awfully sorry, and had no notion how matters stood, and could he do anything for Horace? |
4734 | And how soon would Robert have the right to come along and say HIS say? |
4734 | And then to Horace, in a curt tone:''What is it?'' |
4734 | And they responded laconically--''How do, Bob?'' |
4734 | And was he not the father of his native borough? |
4734 | And what did he know he was''right''about? |
4734 | And what did she get in return? |
4734 | And''How do, little''un?'' |
4734 | Are you coming up?'' |
4734 | As Mr Brindley passed into the interior of the car, he said laconically to two men who were smoking on the platform--''How do, Jim? |
4734 | But could she be expected to go about a murder deliberately like that? |
4734 | But did Stephen show the slightest concern? |
4734 | But do you suppose I could continue with Wordsworth in the train? |
4734 | But how could she warn him? |
4734 | But how?'' |
4734 | But it''s a presentation portrait, and so I can''t-- you see, Mr Smith?'' |
4734 | But let me have one of the beds in your spare room, will you? |
4734 | But supposing that Vera had not interfered, what would have happened? |
4734 | But what could Horace do? |
4734 | But what could he do? |
4734 | But what then? |
4734 | But what then? |
4734 | But would either of them be the first to express that curiosity? |
4734 | But you do n''t expect us to show it, do you? |
4734 | But, look here, bright star, this gadding about is all very well, but what about those precious kids of yours? |
4734 | Can you come now?'' |
4734 | Can you roll one?'' |
4734 | Can''st spare a minute?'' |
4734 | Could it be expected of her that she should yield? |
4734 | Could one dine alone in Jermyn Street or Panton Street without this fine piquant evening commentary on the gross newspapers of the morning? |
4734 | Did it?'' |
4734 | Did she not dress solely and wholly to please him? |
4734 | Didst think I was going to trust mysen i''that thing o''yours again? |
4734 | Do n''t I?'' |
4734 | Do n''t you find it very close? |
4734 | Do n''t you know what I mean?'' |
4734 | Do n''t you understand that uncle has only this minute told me that he MUST have brandy?'' |
4734 | Do you hear what he says, Stephen?'' |
4734 | Do you imagine anyone cared a twopenny damn for Perkins''s Wedgwood ware?'' |
4734 | Do you know what it is? |
4734 | Do you know, my man, that people come all the way from Manchester, and even London, to see that portrait?'' |
4734 | Do you mind? |
4734 | Dost understand?'' |
4734 | Eh, Maria?'' |
4734 | Eh? |
4734 | Eh? |
4734 | Further, was not Sidney''s sad condition slowly killing his mother? |
4734 | Had he not been three times mayor of his native borough? |
4734 | Have a drop o''green, Ol?'' |
4734 | He ran away from home once, did n''t he, and his mother had a port- wine stain on her left cheek? |
4734 | How are you?'' |
4734 | How are you?'' |
4734 | How do, Jo?'' |
4734 | How many firsts has he won, doctor?'' |
4734 | How old were you?'' |
4734 | How on earth had he learnt that she had bought it? |
4734 | How was he going to explain the tepidity, the desertion, the long sin against love of ten years? |
4734 | I''ve never explained to you why I''m chairman of the Management Committee, have I? |
4734 | IV''But whatever made you do it, dearest?'' |
4734 | If Colclough makes money and chooses to go to Paris and get the best motor- car he can, why in Hades should n''t his wife ride in it? |
4734 | If he is fond of music and can play like the devil, that is n''t his sister- in- law''s fault, is it? |
4734 | If she suits him, what''s the matter?'' |
4734 | If the difference in the situations of the two sisters did n''t strike you as very extraordinary, what did you mean?'' |
4734 | If this was not love- making on a sofa, what could be? |
4734 | In short, how was he going to explain the inexplicable? |
4734 | Is he?'' |
4734 | Is it sleepy? |
4734 | Is she going to keep them? |
4734 | Is that you, Buchanan? |
4734 | Is that you, Buchanan? |
4734 | Is the sandman throwing sand in your eyes? |
4734 | It would have been rather difficult, would n''t it? |
4734 | It''s not one o''them Fuge brothers saggar- makers at Longshaw, is it?'' |
4734 | John demanded, furious; and, simultaneously, Robert demanded:''What in Hades are YOU doing here?'' |
4734 | Like to come in and see the museum for a minute? |
4734 | Mr Brindley greeted her, and to his wife,''How do, missis? |
4734 | Mrs Penkethman, is that you?'' |
4734 | Now, what are you getting at, governor? |
4734 | Of course, I can talk to you now with perfect freedom, ca n''t I? |
4734 | Old Sandman at it? |
4734 | Robert took the slate and wrote on it:''What is Liversage coming about?'' |
4734 | Sarah-- my housekeeper, thou know''st--''''Not dead?'' |
4734 | See that?'' |
4734 | See?'' |
4734 | She could n''t have written like that, could she?'' |
4734 | Simple Simon?'' |
4734 | Simply an encouragement to lie on the seats and spit on the ceiling, is n''t it? |
4734 | So Liversage was obliged at length to say--''I reckon I''d better read you the will, eh?'' |
4734 | So Vera approached her husband, and said, with an enchanting, innocent smile--''Lend me half- a- sovereign, will you, doggie?'' |
4734 | So that''s the Wedgwood Institution, is it?'' |
4734 | So this is it, is it? |
4734 | Supper ready?'' |
4734 | Suppose he forgot those belongings on the rack? |
4734 | Suppose we have it opened now, eh? |
4734 | Suppose, sublimely careless, he descended from the train and left them there? |
4734 | Surely Stephen would come upstairs to inquire about her health, her indisposition? |
4734 | Surely he might have borrowed money from Sidney? |
4734 | THE MURDER OF THE MANDARIN I''What''s that you''re saying about murder?'' |
4734 | That''s surely something of Fuge''s, is n''t it?'' |
4734 | The next morning, at breakfast, Cheswardine demanded--''Getting pretty hard up, are n''t you, Maria?'' |
4734 | Then what does she expect them to do?'' |
4734 | They seem to have thought quite a lot of him in London, then?'' |
4734 | Uncle Dan?'' |
4734 | Was he not about to see Roger''s tub? |
4734 | Was not the mere suspicion of this enough to kill any mother? |
4734 | Was not the whole northern half of the county dotted and spangled by his benefactions, his institutions, his endowments? |
4734 | We will come tomorrow, wo n''t we, auntie?'' |
4734 | We''ll play the first movement of the G minor? |
4734 | We''se a little Hottentot, are n''t we?'' |
4734 | Well, what do you THINK of it? |
4734 | Well, you will say, credit, in other words, tick? |
4734 | Well, you will say, what is a guinea to a dainty creature with a hundred a year? |
4734 | Well, you will say, why could n''t she blandish and cajole Stephen for a sovereign or so? |
4734 | What are they going to do?'' |
4734 | What are you going to do, Oliver?'' |
4734 | What could Stephen say in depreciation of this gift from their oldest and best friend? |
4734 | What could the Five Towns know about art? |
4734 | What did he die of?'' |
4734 | What did you think of those cigars? |
4734 | What do you take me for? |
4734 | What do you think of me as a stepfather?'' |
4734 | What dreadful weather we''re having, are n''t we?'' |
4734 | What in thunder do you mean by having nothing in tonight about Simon Fuge''s death? |
4734 | What is it?'' |
4734 | What will Bittenger think?'' |
4734 | What would they say of his death? |
4734 | What''s his lady friend like?'' |
4734 | When she''s robbed them of their living, what does she expect them to do? |
4734 | Who can tell what was passing in the breast of Mr Brindley? |
4734 | Who do you suppose is going to keep this symphony together-- you or me?'' |
4734 | Who is it?'' |
4734 | Who knows? |
4734 | Who the devil was Simon Fuge?'' |
4734 | Who told you?'' |
4734 | Why could n''t you tell me before?'' |
4734 | Why should I not have had what I did not object to having? |
4734 | Why should the Countess of Chell want to rob a lot of respectable young ladies of their living? |
4734 | Why the devil could n''t you stop in Scotland and edit papers there?'' |
4734 | Will you come, Mr Loring? |
4734 | Yet would it be better? |
4734 | You do n''t suppose this is our usual tipple, do you?'' |
4734 | You do n''t want me to box, really?'' |
4734 | You may ask, Why did he not explain the situation to Sidney? |
4734 | You may go into a theatre when it is empty and dark; but did you ever go into a private bar that was empty and dark? |
4734 | You think he might keep the other sister? |
4734 | You understand?'' |
4734 | You''ve got a couple of his etchings, have n''t you?'' |
4734 | You''ve got the will, then?'' |
4734 | did you?'' |
4734 | exclaimed Mr Blackshaw, and then turning to his visitors,''Did you hear that?'' |
4734 | what do you think of that?'' |
4734 | whispered his mother,''getting seepy? |
46240 | 24? |
46240 | A bit of a blow, is n''t it? |
46240 | A good job? |
46240 | And Beckett? |
46240 | And do n''t you ever want to pitch all the ledgers into the dustbin and burn the stools? |
46240 | And how could he go? |
46240 | And leave me? |
46240 | And throwing up a good situation? |
46240 | And what about yourself? |
46240 | And what do you think I think about it? |
46240 | And when''s that madman lodger of yours going, eh? |
46240 | And where would you run to? |
46240 | And you could n''t write them? |
46240 | And you have the evenings, and they give you Saturday morning at Molesey''s as you get on, do n''t they? |
46240 | And you, too, Mag? |
46240 | Anything wrong? |
46240 | Anything you want? |
46240 | Are n''t there a thousand reasons? |
46240 | Are n''t we dreadfully late, Mrs. Massey? |
46240 | Are n''t you ever sick of the thing, Leslie? |
46240 | Are n''t you ever tired of what you are doing? |
46240 | Are n''t you surprised to see me here? |
46240 | Are n''t you well? |
46240 | Are they scorched? |
46240 | Are you going by''bus? |
46240 | Are you going over the wall? |
46240 | Are you never coming back? |
46240 | Are you ready, Mr. Tennant? |
46240 | Are you sick of everything? |
46240 | Are you sure there are enough? |
46240 | Because-- why, how can he? |
46240 | But I ought to feel like you always, did n''t I? |
46240 | But if he threw up his job, I thought, why should n''t I? |
46240 | But that-- we could n''t afford that, could we? |
46240 | But then the hours are not so very long, are they? |
46240 | But who would n''t have a little risk instead of that beastly hole every day for years? |
46240 | But why did n''t you ask for a choice? |
46240 | But wo n''t you miss the 8.15? |
46240 | But, I say, is it really true? |
46240 | But_ are_ you? |
46240 | Ca n''t any of you see my point-- or wo n''t you? |
46240 | Ca n''t she help the man who wants to make a better thing of life? |
46240 | Ca n''t you balance a cup on your knee? |
46240 | Ca n''t you find a seat, Charles? |
46240 | Ca n''t you guess? |
46240 | Canada? |
46240 | Charley gets tired of it sometimes-- don''t you, dear? |
46240 | Charley here wants some tea, and Lil will have to see he gets it, wo n''t you, Lil? |
46240 | Charley-- are you there? |
46240 | Charley-- why should you? |
46240 | Coming to the station? |
46240 | Did I ever say more, Lil? |
46240 | Did Robinson come back? |
46240 | Did he give you a £ 5 note? |
46240 | Did it? |
46240 | Did n''t you like Molesey''s? |
46240 | Did n''t you notice? |
46240 | Did you quarrel? |
46240 | Did you speak, dear? |
46240 | Did you? |
46240 | Did you? |
46240 | Do I look like it? |
46240 | Do n''t I? |
46240 | Do n''t be so touchy-- can''t you see I''m talking to you for your good? |
46240 | Do n''t you ever get sick of it? |
46240 | Do n''t you ever want to see anything more of the world-- did you ever have that feeling? |
46240 | Do you expect work to be pleasant? |
46240 | Do you mean it? |
46240 | Do you mean you are just going out because you want a change? |
46240 | Do you suppose I like plumbing? |
46240 | Do you think I ever did? |
46240 | Do you think he''ll ever get tired of it? |
46240 | Do you think so? |
46240 | Do you think this great event could go off without me? |
46240 | Do you want to take Lil with you? |
46240 | Do you? |
46240 | Docking? |
46240 | Does anybody ever like work? |
46240 | Does n''t anybody but a Socialist ever have an idea? |
46240 | Eh? |
46240 | Father asleep? |
46240 | Fenwick? |
46240 | Finished gardening already, dear? |
46240 | Get over it? |
46240 | Gladys Vancouver? |
46240 | Go with who? |
46240 | Going to church, mother? |
46240 | Gone away for the week end? |
46240 | Got a crib? |
46240 | Got a fortune? |
46240 | Got any friends there? |
46240 | Got the hump? |
46240 | Green peas in that patch? |
46240 | Green peas? |
46240 | Had a tiff? |
46240 | Has Mr. Tennant? |
46240 | Has n''t he made things different himself? |
46240 | Have a change?--Do something with your hands? |
46240 | Have n''t I gone backwards and forwards to the city every day of my life since I was sixteen and am I crazed because I suggest it''s a bit monotonous? |
46240 | Have n''t you had a letter? |
46240 | Have you ever felt a desire to kick your hat into the fire? |
46240 | Have you ever heard of any girl, throwing up a good match, who was n''t dead serious? |
46240 | Have you ever thought that I''m really marrying you to get out of the shop? |
46240 | Have you got a good appointment, Mr. Tennant? |
46240 | Have you got some more hot water? |
46240 | Have you got that map, Tennant? |
46240 | Have you got your ring, dear? |
46240 | Have you? |
46240 | Have you? |
46240 | He looks so lifeless, do n''t you think? |
46240 | He must have got something to go to? |
46240 | He takes her face between his hands.__ Was_ it the watch? |
46240 | He''d say--"And where do I come in?" |
46240 | He''s been putting Charley up to this, I suppose? |
46240 | He''s going to be married? |
46240 | He''s going to get married? |
46240 | He''s got the sack, I suppose? |
46240 | He''s leaving you? |
46240 | How could I? |
46240 | How does that feel? |
46240 | How far on the Continong can you go in a fortnight, Lil? |
46240 | How goes the garden? |
46240 | How many trains_ have_ you missed? |
46240 | I do n''t want to desert Lily-- she''s my wife and I''m proud of it-- but because I married, am I never to strike out in anything? |
46240 | I have n''t been up to much in the company line lately, have I? |
46240 | I heard of a man who''s going Monday-- a man I know-- and it came over me all at once, why should n''t I go too? |
46240 | I never said anything of the kind-- I never thought of such a thing, I-- MRS. M._ Do_ you want to go away with that man? |
46240 | I never said, did I, that I was going away? |
46240 | I say, Maggie, you do n''t mind my coming, do you? |
46240 | I say, do n''t you think it''s fine of Mr. Tennant to throw up everything and take the risk? |
46240 | I say, have I got the sack? |
46240 | I say, will you tell Mrs. Wilson? |
46240 | I say-- must we have two? |
46240 | I suppose you think you''re an authority on the land question''cause you grow sweet peas? |
46240 | I suppose you''re doing it cheaper? |
46240 | I thought you went for the"Argus"? |
46240 | I''m afraid Charley does n''t like music very much-- do you, dear? |
46240 | I''m not a scoundrel just because I''ve got an idea, am I? |
46240 | I-- MRS. M. Do you or do you not want to go? |
46240 | If I went abroad-- suppose it, for instance-- I should n''t have you, should I? |
46240 | If I_ did?_ What are you talking about? |
46240 | If I_ did?_ What are you talking about? |
46240 | If you do n''t the birds will-- and if they do n''t the worms will-- and-- how can you expect anything to grow in that garden? |
46240 | In here? |
46240 | In time? |
46240 | Is a soldier to be the only kind of man, that a woman''s going to encourage? |
46240 | Is he up? |
46240 | Is he? |
46240 | Is it important? |
46240 | Is it? |
46240 | Is my husband there, Mrs. Wilson? |
46240 | Is n''t he an idiot? |
46240 | Is n''t it because I know a little what your life is going to be? |
46240 | Is n''t she dreadful? |
46240 | Is n''t she lucky? |
46240 | Is n''t she surprised? |
46240 | Is she better? |
46240 | Is that how you told him last night? |
46240 | Is there a fire? |
46240 | Is there? |
46240 | It was n''t very expensive? |
46240 | It was so nice of Mr. Leslie to come in like that, was n''t it? |
46240 | It would have been rather silly of him, would n''t it? |
46240 | It''s a bit risky, is n''t it? |
46240 | It''s a bit rough on him, but I could n''t help it, could I? |
46240 | It''s no good being cross about it, dear, is it? |
46240 | It''s not that at all-- but, are you satisfied to be a clerk all your life? |
46240 | It''s rather a lot, is n''t it? |
46240 | Jealous, is she? |
46240 | Leave England? |
46240 | Live with_ us,_ dear? |
46240 | MRS. M. Are you alone? |
46240 | MRS. M. Have you just noticed that? |
46240 | MRS. M. I suppose you and Charley have quarrelled? |
46240 | MRS. M. I suppose you''ve quarrelled? |
46240 | MRS. M. Is he? |
46240 | MRS. M. Then what is it? |
46240 | MRS. M. Then what made Charley think of it at all? |
46240 | MRS. M. To see him off? |
46240 | MRS. M. Two? |
46240 | MRS. M. Walter would like to hear something, would n''t you, Walter? |
46240 | MRS. M. What next? |
46240 | MRS. M. What''s come over you lately? |
46240 | MRS. M. What? |
46240 | MRS. M.[_ scandalised._] How could she? |
46240 | MRS. M.[_ sitting up energetically._] Reduced it? |
46240 | MRS. M.[_ with a resignation of despair._] Then you do want-- to go and leave her? |
46240 | Maggie, how can you? |
46240 | May we interrupt? |
46240 | More than any other man you''d ever seen? |
46240 | More than everything and everybody? |
46240 | Must you really? |
46240 | My dear girl, why not? |
46240 | My wife need n''t go to her father for protection from me? |
46240 | None? |
46240 | Not too tired for that, are you? |
46240 | Now is n''t she surprised? |
46240 | Now we shall be able to follow your travels, sha n''t we? |
46240 | Of course-- it''s the only thing--_ The door opens and voices can be heard outside, laughing._ Who''s this coming? |
46240 | Oh, he''s going to the Colonies? |
46240 | Oh, that''s it, is it? |
46240 | Oh, well, what was the good of going? |
46240 | Oh-- er-- how can I, Mag? |
46240 | Only I thought-- it''s a pity to miss-- You do n''t want Mr. Tennant to go, do you, dear? |
46240 | Or what? |
46240 | Percy''s awfully smitten, is n''t he? |
46240 | Rather cold in the Park, is n''t it? |
46240 | Ready? |
46240 | Running away from Walter? |
46240 | Scratch, scratch, scratch, and nothing in the end, mind you? |
46240 | Shall I have pages, Mum? |
46240 | Shall I take your hat and coat? |
46240 | Shall we ask the Leslies for whist to- night? |
46240 | Shall we ask the Leslies for whist? |
46240 | Shall we go up? |
46240 | She brings back with her a tray, with cloth, etc., and prepares for tea on a small table._ MRS. M. Have you got another lodger? |
46240 | She stops._ MRS. M. That''s such a nice tune, do n''t you think, Walter? |
46240 | She''s so sweet, is n''t she? |
46240 | Sit down under it? |
46240 | So he was over Daisy Mallock and Ruby Denis-- and who''s the other girl with the hair? |
46240 | Stay, of course-- what else is there? |
46240 | Suppose I had thrown it up and gone to Canada for a lark? |
46240 | Suppose we all stopped work when we did n''t like it? |
46240 | Supposing I did, eh? |
46240 | Sydney? |
46240 | Tea? |
46240 | Tennant? |
46240 | Tennant? |
46240 | The hair? |
46240 | The old chap was quite excited, asked me to write-- how''s that? |
46240 | The watch, was it? |
46240 | Then what is it? |
46240 | Then why did n''t you try something else, Daddy? |
46240 | They do n''t all fail, then? |
46240 | Think of that? |
46240 | This way? |
46240 | Thrown up a safe job? |
46240 | Tired of what? |
46240 | To leave us? |
46240 | Want a job? |
46240 | Was n''t a rise, I suppose? |
46240 | Was n''t cheerful company, was he? |
46240 | We generally go along so regularly, do n''t we? |
46240 | Well, anyhow, you''re in luck-- aren''t you? |
46240 | Well, are n''t they? |
46240 | Well, suppose it was true, would n''t it be better than going without telling you? |
46240 | Well-- dinner ready? |
46240 | Well? |
46240 | What about the carrots? |
46240 | What about yourself? |
46240 | What about? |
46240 | What about? |
46240 | What are they? |
46240 | What are you doing? |
46240 | What are you going for then? |
46240 | What are you saying? |
46240 | What can I do? |
46240 | What could I do? |
46240 | What could I tell him, that would make him more pleased than anything else? |
46240 | What d''ye mean? |
46240 | What d''ye think he was telling me the other day? |
46240 | What d''ye think of that? |
46240 | What did I say? |
46240 | What did I tell you? |
46240 | What did Molesey say? |
46240 | What did mother say? |
46240 | What did they want to give''em all to_ him_ for? |
46240 | What do you know about sheltered seats and glass houses? |
46240 | What do you mean? |
46240 | What do you mean? |
46240 | What do you think I said? |
46240 | What do you think, dear? |
46240 | What do you think--? |
46240 | What do you want to do? |
46240 | What else can I do? |
46240 | What else can she do? |
46240 | What else could he do? |
46240 | What else could it mean? |
46240 | What else? |
46240 | What for? |
46240 | What for? |
46240 | What for? |
46240 | What for? |
46240 | What generally happens when people are married? |
46240 | What have you been saying to Charley, Lil? |
46240 | What is it? |
46240 | What is it? |
46240 | What on earth can a bally clerk do with a spade? |
46240 | What things, dear? |
46240 | What time shall you be home? |
46240 | What were they after? |
46240 | What would you really think of me if I did? |
46240 | What''d they say? |
46240 | What''re you talking about? |
46240 | What''s a Board? |
46240 | What''s he got it all for? |
46240 | What''s it got to do with you? |
46240 | What''s she got to worry about? |
46240 | What''s she got to worry over you about? |
46240 | What''s that to do--? |
46240 | What''s that? |
46240 | What''s the good of sticking on here all our lives? |
46240 | What''s the good of talking? |
46240 | What''s the good of that? |
46240 | What''s the good of that? |
46240 | What''s the matter, dear? |
46240 | What''s the matter? |
46240 | What''s the matter? |
46240 | What''s the time? |
46240 | What''s this? |
46240 | What''s to hinder me leaving? |
46240 | What''s up? |
46240 | What''s up? |
46240 | What''s up? |
46240 | What''ve you done with Foster, Mag? |
46240 | What? |
46240 | What? |
46240 | What? |
46240 | What_ do_ you think, Maggie? |
46240 | Whatever can_ they_ do? |
46240 | Whatever for? |
46240 | Whatever for? |
46240 | Whatever made you think of that? |
46240 | Where am I to put it?--on the floor? |
46240 | Where did I put my cap? |
46240 | Where is it? |
46240 | Where to? |
46240 | Where''s Charley? |
46240 | Where''s Charley? |
46240 | Where''s he going? |
46240 | Where''s the Bobby? |
46240 | Who wants''em at meals? |
46240 | Who''s Poppy, dear? |
46240 | Who''s talking about Canada? |
46240 | Why ca n''t you? |
46240 | Why did I ever go into the beastly office? |
46240 | Why did n''t you come into the front room? |
46240 | Why did n''t you quite? |
46240 | Why did you tell him_ now?__ LILY goes out, a little indignant.__ CHARLEY enters from kitchen, dressed for the office._ MAGGIE. |
46240 | Why does n''t the girl sing when she''s asked? |
46240 | Why ever should he be? |
46240 | Why not peaches? |
46240 | Why not? |
46240 | Why not? |
46240 | Why not? |
46240 | Why should I do such a thing? |
46240 | Why should I? |
46240 | Why should n''t I? |
46240 | Why should n''t somebody risk something sometimes? |
46240 | Why should n''t you? |
46240 | Why, how could you? |
46240 | Why? |
46240 | Why? |
46240 | Why? |
46240 | Why? |
46240 | Why? |
46240 | Will you open the door, Maggie? |
46240 | Wo n''t you come in here to- night? |
46240 | Wo n''t you stay and have supper? |
46240 | Would n''t you just love to go out and try your luck? |
46240 | Would she? |
46240 | Would you like to hear it now? |
46240 | Yes, is n''t he? |
46240 | Yes-- and think of all your people? |
46240 | Yes? |
46240 | You are really going on your luck? |
46240 | You do get so cross when you argue-- don''t you, dear? |
46240 | You do n''t ask who the lady is? |
46240 | You do n''t expect me to laugh all the time, do you? |
46240 | You do n''t expect_ them,_ until the last minute, do you? |
46240 | You do n''t mean to suggest, I hope, that we ought to_ like_ our work, do you? |
46240 | You do n''t say so? |
46240 | You do n''t think we shall have any, do you? |
46240 | You here, Mag? |
46240 | You here-- all alone? |
46240 | You really think so? |
46240 | You surely do n''t ask me to come and wish good luck to an ass? |
46240 | You wo n''t be able to have the greenhouse, now, will you, dear? |
46240 | You''ll have breakfast now, dear, wo n''t you? |
46240 | You''ll have some, wo n''t you, Maggie? |
46240 | You''ll stay to supper, wo n''t you? |
46240 | You''re catching the 10.15, are n''t you? |
46240 | You''re not in love with_ him,_ I hope? |
46240 | You''re ready for breakfast, are n''t you? |
46240 | You-- er-- busy? |
46240 | [_ A pause._] Did you ever go abroad? |
46240 | [_ Argumentatively._] It''s the only thing to do-- there''s no other way-- I say, Freddy, you''ll stand by me? |
46240 | [_ He strips off his coat and turns back his shirt sleeves to display his arms._] How''s that? |
46240 | [_ Irritably._] What did you want to start this for, Lil? |
46240 | [_ Looks at him for a second._] Charley-- will you-- after all? |
46240 | [_ Pause._] I suppose Leslie had something to say about me? |
46240 | [_ Rousing._] Well-- going out? |
46240 | [_ She puts up her face and they kiss hurriedly._] Did I hear Mr. Tennant with you? |
46240 | [_ To SYBIL._] Here-- are you sure she was crying? |
46240 | [_ Turning._] Is Charley going, or is n''t he, Lil? |
46240 | [_ a little short of breath._] Where''s that fool? |
46240 | [_ absently._] Does she? |
46240 | [_ abstractedly-- sitting on a corner of the table._] Why not? |
46240 | [_ aggrieved._]_ I_ start it? |
46240 | [_ anxiously._] What''s the matter with them? |
46240 | [_ anxiously._] You do n''t love_ him?_ MAGGIE. |
46240 | [_ appearing at opening and smiling demurely._] Mrs. Wilson says-- Oh, Mr. Wilson, have you been fighting? |
46240 | [_ astonished._] Hook it? |
46240 | [_ chuckling._] You have, have you? |
46240 | [_ coming forward a little._] Where''s Charley? |
46240 | [_ coming forward._] Why did n''t he quite? |
46240 | [_ coming over to her._] What? |
46240 | [_ coming towards him._] Who said anything about fighting? |
46240 | [_ crossing to fireplace._] Why should a young man be bound down to one trade all his life? |
46240 | [_ crossly._] What''s the matter with him? |
46240 | [_ excitedly._] But why not? |
46240 | [_ excitedly._] You''re going to marry Mr. Foster? |
46240 | [_ fiercely._] I haven''t-- not an idea of one-- but why should that hinder? |
46240 | [_ finally he looks at the TWO, then at the clock; poking the fire, then humming a little._] Have you seen the"Argus,"Mag? |
46240 | [_ glancing round._] What is it? |
46240 | [_ going to her and turning her face towards him._] I say, Lil, are n''t you ever dull here? |
46240 | [_ his attention taken from his grievance._] What, in this weather? |
46240 | [_ impatiently._] Do n''t I say so? |
46240 | [_ interrupting._] Is she worrying over me? |
46240 | [_ interrupting._] Yes, and suppose you failed? |
46240 | [_ just understanding._] You mean he''s left us together? |
46240 | [_ lowering his voice._] Look here, old chap, suppose I come too? |
46240 | [_ lying back comfortably in his chair._] Going away Sunday? |
46240 | [_ much surprised._] Are you really? |
46240 | [_ picking up a paper off the table._] Here, is this yours? |
46240 | [_ quickly._] Who was that? |
46240 | [_ quite undisturbed._] Tennant? |
46240 | [_ sceptically._] How did he do that? |
46240 | [_ shaking hands with TENNANT._] How do you do? |
46240 | [_ sharply._] Why am I crazed, as you call it? |
46240 | [_ sighing._] So it''s no good, then, saying anything? |
46240 | [_ sitting up very straight and looking angry._] What''s all this, Charley? |
46240 | [_ startled._] What? |
46240 | [_ stooping over her._] Lil, dear, you''re not crying over_ that,_ are you? |
46240 | [_ stretching a little and smiling._] Is n''t it gorgeous? |
46240 | [_ struck with astonishment._] You''re not going to marry Walter? |
46240 | [_ studying TENNANT seriously._] Do? |
46240 | [_ suddenly beginning to laugh._] Can you see me? |
46240 | [_ surprised, but not particularly interested._] What on earth for? |
46240 | [_ surprised._] With her? |
46240 | [_ timidly._] Did Mr. Fenwick bring bad news? |
46240 | [_ to CHARLEY._] Well, I say, what''s the matter with it? |
46240 | [_ to CHARLEY._] Well, Wilson, how is it? |
46240 | [_ to FOSTER._] Have you had tea? |
46240 | [_ to TENNANT._] Are you going to emigrate? |
46240 | [_ to TENNANT._] Have some more? |
46240 | [_ trying to realise the situation._] Do you mean you''ve left Molesey''s? |
46240 | [_ turning away a second, and then turning back._] Is that true? |
46240 | [_ turning on them fiercely._] For heaven''s sake, ca n''t you listen fair? |
46240 | [_ turning round sharply._] What? |
46240 | [_ turning to look at him._] What''s up? |
46240 | [_ turning._] So you''re not going after all? |
46240 | [_ turns to FOSTER._] Did you ever have any? |
46240 | [_ uneasily._] What do you mean? |
46240 | [_ walking up and down._] What are you going to do? |
46240 | [_ waving his pipe towards TENNANT._] What d''ye think_ he''s_ going to do? |
46240 | [_ who is practically lying over the map._] Not fruit- farming then? |
46240 | [_ with a burst of laughter._] Let''em go to Portman Square, you say? |
46240 | [_ with a sort of defiance._] Why should I? |
46240 | [_ with little interest._] To Foster? |
46240 | _ CHARLEY jumps up and TENNANT folds up the map._ Looking at the plans? |
46240 | _ CHARLEY nods gloomily-- he walks to garden door._ Where''s your ambition, dear? |
46240 | _ Enter MAGGIE._ How''s the poor dear? |
46240 | _ Is_ it important? |
46240 | _ LILY goes out._[_ To TENNANT._] Are n''t you just frightfully excited? |
46240 | _ Re- enter CHARLEY._ Where''s the business? |
46240 | _ They sit in silence.__ TENNANT re- enters, and goes into inner room._ I say, Charley, what did you start on? |
46240 | _ You_ are quite free to do as you like, are n''t you, Mr. Tennant? |
46240 | _ You_ do n''t like it, do you? |
46240 | to- day? |
35485 | A criminal case? |
35485 | A very early departure? 35485 Ah, do n''t you understand, Isabel,"he said,"that doubles our degradation? |
35485 | Ah, then, you will marry me, dearest Isabel? 35485 And did she recognize you?" |
35485 | And do you think my presence would enliven you? |
35485 | And how do you like my young kinsman? |
35485 | And how is your doom to be brought about, Roland? |
35485 | And so you like the people at Camberwell? |
35485 | And yet you love me? |
35485 | Are you mad, Roland? |
35485 | Be this Muster Gilbert''s the doctor''s? |
35485 | Better than Byron''s? |
35485 | Bread and marmalade and cold tea''s capital,he said;"you''ll try some, George, wo n''t you? |
35485 | But am I to send your name, or not, Isabel? |
35485 | But are you going that way? |
35485 | But where are you going? |
35485 | But why not, Izzie? |
35485 | But why not, Jeff? |
35485 | But why, in that case, should she meet the man secretly, at such an hour, while her husband is lying ill? |
35485 | But you like writing? |
35485 | But_ has_ she been seen to meet him? |
35485 | Can you suggest one? |
35485 | Dear Isabel, you will marry me, wo n''t you? 35485 Did I stare at her?" |
35485 | Did I? 35485 Did n''t I?'' |
35485 | Did you ever look in a British atlas for Graybridge- on- the- Wayverne? |
35485 | Did you really ask me to luncheon? |
35485 | Do you ever think of your mother, Roland? 35485 Do you know Mordred?" |
35485 | Do you know the value of such kindness as his? 35485 Do you think you shall be well enough to see him presently, poor lassie?" |
35485 | Does it matter much who painted it, if it is only beautiful? |
35485 | Does it wear well? 35485 For the penny public? |
35485 | For whom else should it be? 35485 George,"said Isabel, gently, when she had seen all the rooms,"did you never think of re- furnishing the house?" |
35485 | Had you any idea that Roland intended to leave his money in this manner? |
35485 | Have you seen anything of your friends lately- that Graybridge surgeon and his wife, whom we met one day last summer at Mordred? |
35485 | He is very ill-- your husband-- is ill? |
35485 | I am unhappy because I have lost her,he thought;"but should I have been happy with her, if I had married her? |
35485 | I dare say you are fond of pictures? |
35485 | I dare say your friend and his wife were very happy? |
35485 | I did not know until this morning that he was so very ill. Do you think he will die? |
35485 | I say, Sophronia, were n''t you surprised to see Mr. Lansdell in the gallery? |
35485 | I shall see you sometimes,she said, with timid hesitation,--"I shall see you sometimes, sha n''t I, when you come home from town? |
35485 | I should like to sit up- stairs,he whispered, dropping a half- crown into her hand;"can you put me somewhere up- stairs?" |
35485 | I suppose you often stroll as far as Thurston''s Crag? |
35485 | I think we shall be able to show him a thing or two before he goes back to Midlandshire, eh, Samuel? |
35485 | I think you know something of my friend Roland,Mr. Raymond repeated;"eh, my dear?" |
35485 | I''ve told her how I love her; and-- and you like her, Jeff, do n''t you? |
35485 | If this young man is so brilliant at one- and- twenty,people had said to one another,"what will he be by the time he is forty- five?" |
35485 | Is he a nice fellow? |
35485 | Is he very ill? |
35485 | Is it funny? |
35485 | Is n''t it a pity he do n''t marry his cousin, Lady Gwendoline, and settle down like his pa? |
35485 | Is tea ready? |
35485 | Is that the best teapot you''re a- having your teas out of? 35485 Is there any truth in it, Raymond?" |
35485 | Is this acting, Mrs. Gilbert? 35485 Is what true, Roland?" |
35485 | Is your father at home? |
35485 | Isabel,he said at last,"have you ever thought what your life is to be, always, after this parting to- day? |
35485 | It has been predicted to you? |
35485 | It is not for yourself, then, that you want this money? |
35485 | Izzie,cried George Gilbert suddenly,"what''s the matter?" |
35485 | Melancholy- looking objects, are they not? |
35485 | Miss Binks? |
35485 | My darling,he said,"I am very punctual, am I not? |
35485 | No,faltered the Doctor''s Wife,"it is not for my step- mother, but----""But it is for some member of your family?" |
35485 | Of course I did n''t know then that I loved you, Isabel-- oh, may I call you Isabel? 35485 Of what faith? |
35485 | Oh, do you think he will die? |
35485 | Oh, tell me the truth,she whispered, imploringly;"do they think that he will die?" |
35485 | Oh, the doctor? 35485 Oh, what, what can they think me?" |
35485 | Oh, why do you let me read to you, if you do n''t care for the poetry? |
35485 | Raymond, is this true? |
35485 | Shall I send for him? |
35485 | Shall I take them away? |
35485 | Shall we go into the garden? |
35485 | She was very fond of Mr. Gilbert, I suppose,--very much in love with him? |
35485 | There is a strange man staying in Nessborough Hollow-- well; what then? |
35485 | There''s a suicide, then, in your story? |
35485 | They''re not so interesting as Sterne''s donkey, are they, Mrs. Gilbert? 35485 Too many?" |
35485 | We''ll teach him a little life, eh, SAMUEL? |
35485 | Well, young''un,the boy answered, disdainfully,"how do_ you_ find yourself?" |
35485 | What am I to him? |
35485 | What can I discover that I do not already know? 35485 What can possibly have induced him to invite those people to Mordred? |
35485 | What can such a despicable wretch as I am ever be to him? 35485 What did Lansdell say? |
35485 | What do I care about new carpets? |
35485 | What do I think to who, Master Jarge? |
35485 | What do you call a combination story? |
35485 | What do you think of her, Jeff? |
35485 | What is it, Izzie? |
35485 | What is it? |
35485 | What reports? |
35485 | What should I wait for? 35485 What the deuce is the matter with you, Lansdell?" |
35485 | What wo n''t do? |
35485 | What''s it all about, Sigismund? |
35485 | What''s the matter? |
35485 | When are you going abroad again? |
35485 | When was this? |
35485 | Where? |
35485 | Why not? |
35485 | Why should I be so eager to see this man? |
35485 | Why should it not be discussed? |
35485 | Why should n''t I marry at once, Jeff? |
35485 | Why, Izzie,he said,"what_ have_ you been doing with yourself?" |
35485 | Will this parting be a new grief to her, a shadowy romantic sorrow, like her regret for drowned Shelley, or fever- stricken Byron? 35485 Will you come and gather some flowers, Izzie?" |
35485 | Will you come and see my pictures at once? 35485 With whom? |
35485 | Would I please to see any one? |
35485 | Would you please to see any one, sir? |
35485 | Yes; do you want him? |
35485 | You are coming with us, I suppose, Roland? |
35485 | You are going abroad, sir? |
35485 | You are going? |
35485 | You are not angry with me? |
35485 | You have been very much shocked by your husband''s death? |
35485 | You have come back with the intention of remaining, then, Roland? |
35485 | You knew him-- you knew Mr. Roland Lansdell when he was a boy? |
35485 | You mean that she does n''t love me? |
35485 | You seem very much at home with her? |
35485 | You were very fond of him, I suppose? |
35485 | You''d like to walk, I suppose, George? |
35485 | You''re going to marry her, Master Jarge? |
35485 | You''ve been worried, papa? |
35485 | Your daughter? |
35485 | Your husband-- does he know about this person who asks for money from you? |
35485 | ''And you''ll swear to him, if necessary?'' |
35485 | ''Do n''t they?'' |
35485 | ''You need n''t have pounced upon me so precious sharp,''he said, rather sulkily;''I was n''t going to bolt with it, was I?'' |
35485 | ''You think you could recognize this man with the black whiskers?'' |
35485 | Again, had she not known all along that Roland Lansdell would go away, and that all her bright dreams and fancies must go with him? |
35485 | Ah, how should those common people understand, when even you do not, Roland? |
35485 | Ah, if you knew how I have travelled night and day; if you knew how I have languished for this hour, and for the sight of----"For the sight of what? |
35485 | Ah, is there any kind of death that can ever make me forget you? |
35485 | Ah, what more likely, what more proper, if it came to that? |
35485 | Am I to accept my dismissal, and bid you good afternoon, and put up patiently with having been made the veriest fool that ever crossed this bridge?" |
35485 | Am I to find that it is only the old story after all-- falsehood, and trick, and delusion? |
35485 | Am I to send the envelopes or not?" |
35485 | An omen of what? |
35485 | And Beatrice Portinari, and Viola, and Leila, and Gulnare, and Zelica, what of them? |
35485 | And how much did she think of George Gilbert all this time? |
35485 | And is it any wonder, therefore, if to this romantic girl the calamity that had so suddenly befallen her seemed like a dream? |
35485 | And so you like all that dreamy, misty stuff?" |
35485 | And then in the next moment he thought how, if that look in her pale face were real, and she was really striving to be good,--how then? |
35485 | And then, again, why should she withdraw from the engagement? |
35485 | And was not the name of the knight Roland--_his_ name? |
35485 | And what do you think, Isabel?" |
35485 | And yet-- and yet--"And yet what? |
35485 | Are none of the wonderful things that happen to women ever to happen to you? |
35485 | Are not reformed drunkards the dullest and most miserable of mankind? |
35485 | Are you never to be Charlotte Corday, and die for your country? |
35485 | Are you only an innocent child, after all, or the wiliest coquette that ever lived? |
35485 | Be you she?" |
35485 | Besides, was there not some glory, some delight, in trying to be good? |
35485 | But did she forget Roland Lansdell all this time? |
35485 | But do you think he could ever be happy with that woman? |
35485 | But was her romantic attachment to Roland Lansdell laid down at the new altar she had found for herself? |
35485 | But what good could come of such a meeting? |
35485 | But why should I go abroad?" |
35485 | But why should he have written to her? |
35485 | But you call yourself Sigismund now?" |
35485 | But you have come home for good now? |
35485 | But you know something about my friend Roland, I think, do n''t you, Isabel?" |
35485 | By the bye, how do you mean to finish the day, Raymond?" |
35485 | Ca n''t you see the Vicar''s face, as he looks round at Burchell, and knows that his secret is discovered? |
35485 | Came back? |
35485 | Can you doubt the purity of my love-- the truth, the honesty of my intentions? |
35485 | Can you doubt what would have happened had I come home a year earlier than it was my ill fortune to come? |
35485 | Could he be dying? |
35485 | Could it be true? |
35485 | Could she do more for him than that? |
35485 | Did he despise her very much? |
35485 | Did her head still ache? |
35485 | Did n''t I see it from the first?" |
35485 | Did not D''Alembert retire from the world and all its troubles into the peaceful pleasures of geometry? |
35485 | Did not Fagin think about the broken rail when he stood in the dock, and wonder who would mend it? |
35485 | Did not Goethe seek relief from some great sorrow in the study of a new language? |
35485 | Did not Napoleon snub Madame de Staël? |
35485 | Did not Rousseau declare that the first man who enclosed a lot of ground and called it''mine''was the enemy of the human race? |
35485 | Did she wish to be like these people? |
35485 | Did such kindness ever bear any fruit but anguish and misery and mortification? |
35485 | Did you ever hear of any good coming of it? |
35485 | Did you observe her eyes?" |
35485 | Do I ever say anything new, or think anything new, or do anything for which any human creature has cause to say, Thank you? |
35485 | Do n''t you know the sort of thing? |
35485 | Do not the actors live after the play is done, and the curtain has fallen? |
35485 | Do you ever think of her as a living presence, conscious of your sorrows, compassionate of your sins? |
35485 | Do you imagine that you could keep any secret from Graybridge? |
35485 | Do you know that already that unhappy girl''s name is compromised? |
35485 | Do you know that he is an infidel, and outrages his friends by opinions which he does not even care to conceal? |
35485 | Do you know that his name has been involved with the names of married women before to- day? |
35485 | Do you know what my cousin''s life has been? |
35485 | Do you remember that day in the garden when you first saw her? |
35485 | Do you remember the garden- scene in''Romeo and Juliet,''Izzie? |
35485 | Do you think I was n''t fly, then? |
35485 | Do you think I would n''t rather be the author of the''Vicar of Wakefield''than of''Colonel Montefiasco?'' |
35485 | Do you think Saturday will suit you and the Doctor, Mrs. Gilbert? |
35485 | Do you think you can come?" |
35485 | Does she make puddings, and sew on buttons, and fill up the holes in your stockings with wonderful trellis- work? |
35485 | Does this kind of thing usually grow old, I wonder?" |
35485 | During all those solemn watches did any bad thoughts enter her mind? |
35485 | Gilbert?" |
35485 | Gilbert?" |
35485 | Gilbert?" |
35485 | Gilbert?" |
35485 | Gilbert?" |
35485 | Give me the light, ca n''t you?" |
35485 | Had he any right to come into that holy place? |
35485 | Had he any right to come there and trouble this girl in the midst of her struggle to forget him? |
35485 | Had he done anything wicked? |
35485 | Had he fled his country, like Byron? |
35485 | Had he not been thinking of her and of her pleasure at the very moment when she had upbraided him for his lack of interest in the Alien? |
35485 | Had he not said something to that effect? |
35485 | Had he not witnessed the martyrdom of Stephen, and had yet been unmoved? |
35485 | Had her conduct been shameless and unwomanly, and would he remember her only to despise her? |
35485 | Had not her life been altogether one long fever since Roland Lansdell''s advent in Midlandshire? |
35485 | Had not her whole life been bounded by a magic circle, of which Roland Lansdell was the resplendent centre? |
35485 | Had not the enclosure of the cheque in that cruel letter been almost an insult? |
35485 | Had she not coolly and deliberately rejected his love-- his devotion, so earnestly and solemnly offered to her? |
35485 | Had she not counted upon his departure? |
35485 | Had she not gone there constantly, long ago, when Mr. Lansdell was lounging in Grecian Islands, and eating ices under, the colonnades of Venice? |
35485 | Had she not heard him tell Mr. Raymond that he should spend the winter in Paris? |
35485 | Had she not left him to his despair and desolation, with no better comfort than the stereotyped promise that she would"think of him?" |
35485 | Had she not lived her life, and was she not entitled to be a heroine for ever and ever by reason of her love and despair? |
35485 | Had she not seen the last of Mr. Sleaford in Nessborough Hollow, whence he was to depart for Wareham station at break of day? |
35485 | Had she not worn it in one of their meetings at Thurston''s Crag? |
35485 | Have I ever been happy in my life, or is there such a thing as happiness upon this unequally divided earth? |
35485 | Have some bread and marmalade?" |
35485 | Have you any consciousness of the mischief you''re doing? |
35485 | Have you no feeling for that poor honest- hearted fellow who has judged you by his own simple standard, and has trusted you implicitly? |
35485 | Have you no sense of truth or honour? |
35485 | Have you noticed Isabel''s eyes? |
35485 | He was in love, passionately, earnestly in love, with a foolish sentimental little woman, whose best charm was-- what? |
35485 | He''s a good fellow-- a very noble- hearted, high- minded young fellow; but--"But what? |
35485 | Her heart was perpetually beating out the four syllables of that simple sentence: Would he be there? |
35485 | His wasted life; the good things he might have done upon this earth? |
35485 | How can it matter what becomes of me, if you are happy?" |
35485 | How could these people read her heart, or understand her love for Roland Lansdell? |
35485 | How do you mean, Izzie?" |
35485 | How should she ever see such places? |
35485 | How was she to endure her existence? |
35485 | How was she to endure it? |
35485 | How would_ they_ spend the evening,--they who were not going to weep with Mr. Benjamin Webster, or Miss Sarah Woolgar? |
35485 | I have heard----""What? |
35485 | I mystify you, do n''t I, my darling, by all this rambling talk? |
35485 | I think the salad- dressing and the champagne- nippers are the legitimate things to forget, are they not? |
35485 | If Isabel Gilbert was the creature she was represented to be,--and he could not doubt his authority,--what could it matter to him how low she sank? |
35485 | If a man ca n''t have a niche in the Walhalla, is n''t it something to have his name in big letters in the play- bills on the boulevard? |
35485 | If he stooped from his high estate to smile upon her, was he not entitled to her deepest gratitude, her purest devotion? |
35485 | Is it any one from-- from Lowlands?" |
35485 | Is it inspiration or animal magnetism which gives this power to some special persons? |
35485 | Is it slow to be dangling from a housetop with a frayed rope slipping through your hands and seventy feet of empty space below you? |
35485 | Is it slow to go down into subterranean passages, with a dark lantern and half- a- dozen bloodhounds, in pursuit of a murderer? |
35485 | Is it true? |
35485 | Is it your step- mother? |
35485 | Is n''t it better for a man to do his best in the style that is natural to him than to do badly in another man''s line of business? |
35485 | Is there any woman in all the world capable of caring a little for such a worn- out wretch as I?" |
35485 | Is there anything wrong? |
35485 | Is this show of surprise and indignation a little comedy, which you play when you want to get rid of your lovers? |
35485 | It makes one feel as if one could never go back to the world again, does n''t it?" |
35485 | It said so plainly,"Do you think anything that can happen henceforward upon this earth could ever seem strange to me?" |
35485 | It sounds like a flower, does n''t it?" |
35485 | It sounds well; does n''t it? |
35485 | It was an eternal parting: for had he not told her to go away from him-- to leave him for ever? |
35485 | Joanna of Naples, is n''t it? |
35485 | Lansdell?" |
35485 | Lansdell?" |
35485 | Might he not learn the depth of her love, the strength of her regret, by that one look of recognition? |
35485 | Might not a walk across Mount Cenis cure him of his foolish love for Isabel Gilbert? |
35485 | Never mind your flowers now, Roland; it''s a very charming bouquet, but you do n''t suppose Mrs. Gilbert is going to carry it about all day? |
35485 | Of course I do n''t make Aureola,--I call my Jeannie''Aureola;''rather a fine name, is n''t it? |
35485 | Oh, had he been fooled by his own vanity? |
35485 | Oh, was there even the remotest chance that he would be there? |
35485 | Oh, what was it, Isabel? |
35485 | Oh, why, why did you come here?" |
35485 | Or had the cruel arrow shot home already; was my destiny sealed even then? |
35485 | Or was it a black cat, or a gentleman usher, or a skeleton; or all three?" |
35485 | Or would he read and not care? |
35485 | Poor little childish creature, who could wonder at her foolish sentimentality? |
35485 | Shall I bring you Lamartine''s''Girondists''as well? |
35485 | Shall I live to write gossiping old letters and collect china? |
35485 | Shall we have to put back the clock for an hour, in order to foil the designs of your impalpable foe? |
35485 | She forgot all about the interview at Graybridge; what_ could_ she remember in that room, except that_ he_ was ill? |
35485 | She thought of him, and she thought what her life might have been-- if---- If what? |
35485 | Should he go and stand by the gate, to make sure of seeing her as she came in? |
35485 | That she-- that Isabel has been seen with some stranger?" |
35485 | The blue- eyed heroes were out of fashion now, for was not_ he_ dark of aspect? |
35485 | Then, after a little pause, she said, shyly:"Thurston''s Crag is a pretty place; shall we go there?" |
35485 | There''s nothing so very queer about me, is there? |
35485 | These books do n''t make you happy, do they, Izzie?" |
35485 | They were Mr. Raymond''s nieces? |
35485 | They were very difficult: how was she to render even such a simple sentence as"My own Clotilde?" |
35485 | This is Thursday; shall we say Saturday for my picnic? |
35485 | Was Dante degraded by his love for Beatrice? |
35485 | Was Isabel alone, and going to walk back? |
35485 | Was November the winter? |
35485 | Was all this affectation, or was it only simple childish reality? |
35485 | Was he not a hero, and would he not inevitably have courted that or any other peril? |
35485 | Was he not there, talking to her and advising her? |
35485 | Was it all settled, then, so suddenly-- with so little consideration? |
35485 | Was it not a reopening of all the old wounds? |
35485 | Was it not a reversal of the story of Diana and Endymion? |
35485 | Was it not always so? |
35485 | Was it not an act of pure philanthropy to clear some of the sentimental mistiness out of that pretty little head? |
35485 | Was it not the condescension of a demigod, who smiles upon some earthly creature? |
35485 | Was it one of the servants? |
35485 | Was it only idle curiosity, as I believed, that took me there? |
35485 | Was it only prettiness, or was it something more, even in spite of the brown dress? |
35485 | Was it real, that exalted expression of the pale still face? |
35485 | Was it so very strange, this sudden conversion? |
35485 | Was it strange that, all at once, Isabel Gilbert should open her ears to the sublime story, which, in one shape or other, she had heard so often? |
35485 | Was it strange, then, that Isabel Gilbert, so dangerously susceptible of every influence, should be touched and melted by Mr. Colborne''s eloquence? |
35485 | Was it that he wished to occupy Mrs. Gilbert''s mind, and to force her to some slight exertion? |
35485 | Was it the same grove? |
35485 | Was it to be for ever and for ever like this? |
35485 | Was it true-- could it be true-- that all this inexpressible happiness was to be his? |
35485 | Was it wrong to think of him? |
35485 | Was n''t it a pity that he was drowned?" |
35485 | Was n''t she engaged to a Mr. Lansdell ever so long ago, and then to the Marquis of Heatherland? |
35485 | Was not Lady Gwendoline the very incarnation of all her own foolish dreams of the beautiful? |
35485 | Was not Mr. George Gilbert a rising man in Graybridge? |
35485 | Was not all the world before him, and all creation designed for his pleasure? |
35485 | Was not the first Mrs. Gilbert specially happy to have died young? |
35485 | Was not_ he_ by her side, talking to her every now and then? |
35485 | Was not_ he_ dead? |
35485 | Was she anything to him, or was that musical lowering of his voice common to him when he spoke to women? |
35485 | Was she at Graybridge still? |
35485 | Was she in a consumption? |
35485 | Was she leading the old quiet life, sitting in that shabby parlour, where he had sat by her side? |
35485 | Was she not trying to be good now, and was not goodness incompatible with the perusal of Shelley''s poetry on a Sunday? |
35485 | Was she not trying to be good; and did not all Mr. Colborne''s sermons inculcate self- sacrifice and compassion, tenderness and pity? |
35485 | Was she pretty? |
35485 | Was there anything upon earth denied him, except the ignis- fatuus light of this woman''s black eyes? |
35485 | Was there not a minute description of Lord Thurston''s oak in the very first chapter? |
35485 | Was there to be nothing in her life, then? |
35485 | Was this feminine affectation, provincial Rosa- Matilda- ism? |
35485 | Was this generous? |
35485 | Was this meek young man the Byronic hero they had pictured? |
35485 | Was this the author of"Colonel Montefiasco, or the Brand upon the Shoulder- blade?" |
35485 | Was_ she_ amongst them? |
35485 | Were his thoughts far away in some foreign city with dark- eyed Clotilde? |
35485 | Were their lives so much the better because they scorned the gentle guidance of the apron- string? |
35485 | Were there any of those Beings whose manners and customs her books described to her, but whose mortal semblances she had never seen? |
35485 | Were there any princes in the world? |
35485 | Were there not three volumes of courtship to be gone through first? |
35485 | Were they very happy? |
35485 | What a lovely morning, is it not? |
35485 | What construction can I put upon her conduct of last night except one-- except one? |
35485 | What could I not make of such a girl as that? |
35485 | What could Isabel Gilbert do? |
35485 | What could Mrs. Gilbert say, except that she would be delighted to go home with them? |
35485 | What could any one do for such a husband as this? |
35485 | What could be more intensely proper than this country walk with her mother''s late partial boarder? |
35485 | What could she say to him? |
35485 | What did Mr. Smith make of all his lofty privileges? |
35485 | What did William Jeffson want more than this? |
35485 | What did he know of her? |
35485 | What did he mean by flying at me about Isabel, I wonder; and how does he come to know her? |
35485 | What did he think of during those two long hours in which he sat in the churchyard waiting for the afternoon service? |
35485 | What did he think of? |
35485 | What did it matter to him what_ he_ was like? |
35485 | What did it matter whether she was in love with Sir Reginald Glanville or Mr. Roland Lansdell? |
35485 | What did it matter, then, if she was fluttered and dazed and intoxicated by his presence? |
35485 | What did it matter? |
35485 | What did it matter? |
35485 | What did it signify if the solid earth became empyrean air under this foolish girl''s footsteps? |
35485 | What did she see? |
35485 | What do you mean? |
35485 | What does her past life matter to us if her head''s well balanced? |
35485 | What if it was to be so? |
35485 | What is impossible in a universe where there are such stars? |
35485 | What is the use of me, Gwendoline? |
35485 | What is to become of me, Gwendoline? |
35485 | What more than sweet smiles and gentle looks could the most exacting husband demand? |
35485 | What motive had he in seeking out this stranger staying at a rustic public- house? |
35485 | What odds will you give me against Mr. Tomlinson''s brown colt, Vinegar Cruet, for the Conventford steeple- chase?" |
35485 | What purpose could she have in coming to that house, save one? |
35485 | What relation should she meet alone, secretly, late at night, in such a place as Nessborough Hollow? |
35485 | What right had he to interfere in a wicked woman''s low intrigue? |
35485 | What romance had ever been written that was equal to this story; this perpetual fiction, with a real hero dominant in every chapter? |
35485 | What should I want with so much money?" |
35485 | What should he do with himself? |
35485 | What should there be amiss with me, who never had a day''s illness in my life? |
35485 | What was he thinking of? |
35485 | What was her husband better than a tradesman, when there could be this question of accounts and payment between him and Roland Lansdell? |
35485 | What was it to him that Isabel Sleaford was so near? |
35485 | What was it to him that there was every prospect of a speedy dissolution, unless----? |
35485 | What was medical science worth, if it was powerless to save this one sick man? |
35485 | What was she but a frivolous, helpless creature, fluttering and trembling like a leaf when she essayed to do any little service for the invalid? |
35485 | What was she doing? |
35485 | What was she to him, that he should think of her, or be fluttered by the thought that she was within his reach? |
35485 | What was she to him, that he should trouble himself about her, and bring universal scorn upon his name, perhaps, by some low tavern brawl? |
35485 | What was the use of a ten- pound note spent upon splendour in Murlington, when the honeymoon was to close in degradation such as this? |
35485 | What was there left in all the universe now that he was gone? |
35485 | What would be the good of that? |
35485 | What would be the use of such a change? |
35485 | What''ll you take?" |
35485 | What''s the consequence? |
35485 | What''s the row? |
35485 | What, in Heaven''s name, is Mr. Raymond''s motive for taking her up? |
35485 | When did a matchmaker ever create anything but matrimonial confusion and misery? |
35485 | When had they left his mind, except for that brief interval of passion during which his mind had been a chaos? |
35485 | Whenever is he at home at this time of day?" |
35485 | Where did that twopenny- halfpenny blown- glass sugar- basin come from? |
35485 | Where''s the Britannia metal as I gave thirteen- and- six for seven year ago? |
35485 | Where''s your husband?" |
35485 | Who ate a plum- dumpling yesterday for dinner, and asked for more? |
35485 | Who can calculate the arrangements of the Giaour or Sir Reginald Glanville? |
35485 | Who ever heard of penny numbers being funny? |
35485 | Who ever quotes any passage from the works of Guilbert de Pixà © rà © court, or remembers his name? |
35485 | Who is this person who wants money of you? |
35485 | Who shall tell the bitter sinful story of his grief and passion? |
35485 | Who should come there that day except a stranger? |
35485 | Who was that person?" |
35485 | Who was the Alien? |
35485 | Who would not wish to be great? |
35485 | Who''s the honest- hearted fellow? |
35485 | Why ca n''t people be reasonable, and take life wisely? |
35485 | Why do n''t he come home?''" |
35485 | Why had he ever invited her to Mordred? |
35485 | Why had she come to him at such a time? |
35485 | Why should I have everything in this world? |
35485 | Why should I not have a career like other men, and try like them to be of some use to my species? |
35485 | Why should I not love him; as we love the stars, that are so beautiful and so distant from us? |
35485 | Why should I not worship him as Helena worshipped Bertram, as Viola loved Zanoni? |
35485 | Why should he be ashamed, or humiliated, or degraded? |
35485 | Why should he care? |
35485 | Why should he lament the innocent idol of his dreams? |
35485 | Why should he not enjoy this innocent pleasure of a rustic ramble with simple country- bred people and children? |
35485 | Why should he not marry? |
35485 | Why should not Lady Gwendoline avail herself of her special right? |
35485 | Why should she not bestow this other half of her nature upon whom she chose? |
35485 | Why should she not end her sorrows for ever in the glassy pool, so deep, so tranquil? |
35485 | Why was it that his heart yearned for this woman''s presence? |
35485 | Why, Izzie, what''s the matter? |
35485 | Why, you''re not surprised, are you, Jeff? |
35485 | Will Christie and Manson sell my pictures when I am dead? |
35485 | Will any woman have pity upon me and marry me, and transform me into a family man, with a mania for short- horned cattle and subsoil- drainage? |
35485 | Will she marry that good, sheepish country surgeon, who has fallen in love with her? |
35485 | Will you give me a light for my cigar?" |
35485 | Will you meet me here two days hence,--on Wednesday, at three o''clock? |
35485 | Will you take what you want?" |
35485 | Will you try and think of her as she really is, Gwendoline,--not as these Graybridge people see her,--and be kind to her when I am dead and gone? |
35485 | Would Edith Dombey have been perpetually dropping things? |
35485 | Would George give her a new silk dress? |
35485 | Would Mr. Lansdell do anything of that kind? |
35485 | Would he be there? |
35485 | Would he ever come? |
35485 | Would he go now? |
35485 | Would he linger to meet her and speak to her? |
35485 | Would he read a paragraph in the newspapers some morning at breakfast, and break a blood- vessel into his coffee- cup? |
35485 | Would he remember the sunny afternoon, and the things he had said to her? |
35485 | Would she be found floating on the stream, with weeds of water- lilies tangled in her long dark hair? |
35485 | Would she look pretty when she was dead? |
35485 | Would the master of Mordred Priory have been stricken with any sense of shame if he had met George Gilbert? |
35485 | Would the sight of the wicked squire''s dark reproachful face undo all the work of these two months? |
35485 | Would you have any objection to walk over yonder and see him, Isabel, or shall I call him here?" |
35485 | Would_ he_ be sorry when he heard of her death? |
35485 | You are going almost immediately?" |
35485 | You can remember that?" |
35485 | You have no other Christian name?" |
35485 | You know Gwendoline? |
35485 | You talked some time since of going away from Midlandshire-- from England; do you still think of doing so?" |
35485 | You will try to be patient, wo n''t you, my dear? |
35485 | You will, wo n''t you, Isabel? |
35485 | You''ll come down to dinner, eh?" |
35485 | You''ll go on and show Mrs. Gilbert the Murillo in the next room, Raymond? |
35485 | You''ll use the old work- box, wo n''t you, Izzie?" |
35485 | and was it likely that the family of his rival should have any indulgence for the shortcomings of his pale- faced wife? |
35485 | and was it strange that she should go there now? |
35485 | and what''s the nature of the business altogether?" |
35485 | and who''s the foolish woman? |
35485 | asked Mr. Lansdell, with a dash of fierceness in the sudden change of his tone;"why should I go? |
35485 | could I swear I was not short- sighted? |
35485 | cried Mr. Lansdell, with a strident laugh;"had we not better leave_ his_ name out of the question? |
35485 | cried Roland, turning in his low easy- chair, and staring at the solemn face of his valet;"who should want to see me at such a time of night? |
35485 | cried Roland,"can you misunderstand me so utterly? |
35485 | did she ever think that she might be free to marry Roland Lansdell if the surgeon''s illness should terminate fatally? |
35485 | did they know that she had a free admission to the upper boxes of the Adelphi, and envy her? |
35485 | exclaimed Mrs. Gilbert;"oh, Lady Gwendoline, how can you say that_ he_ is vain? |
35485 | have you any knowledge of the bottomless pit of sin, and misery, and shame, and horror that you are digging before that foolish woman''s feet?" |
35485 | have you no feeling for him, Roland?"'' |
35485 | he mused,"will anybody ever fathom her fancies or understand her dreams? |
35485 | if I should know him without his whiskers? |
35485 | it is a foolish fever, is it not? |
35485 | muttered Mr. Raymond;"was n''t there something to that effect in the''Alien?'' |
35485 | my dear Roland, have I not already told you that my authority is the common Graybridge gossip?" |
35485 | not even the common instinct of a gentleman? |
35485 | or buried a fellow- creature in a cave, like Mr. Aram? |
35485 | sadly think, of thee-- When the shadows darken on the misty lea, Imogen, And the low light dies behind the sea?'' |
35485 | said Lady Gwendoline;"and what do you think of his wife, Roland? |
35485 | she was an improper person, was n''t she? |
35485 | that''s Mr. Gilbert, is it not?" |
35485 | then they were his poor cousin Rosa Harlow''s children, of whom he had heard so much from that dear good Raymond? |
35485 | was it a put- off, or what?" |
35485 | was it real, or had she begun a new flirtation, a little platonic sentimentalism in favour of the popular preacher? |
35485 | what am I good for? |
35485 | what can they say of me? |
35485 | what can they say?" |
35485 | what good am I there more than I am here?" |
35485 | what if she was to meet him now, and the story was appointed to begin to- day,--this very day,--and all her life henceforth was to be changed? |
35485 | what is there for me to do there better than here? |
35485 | when? |
35485 | where?" |
35485 | whether I could swear to the colour of his waistcoat? |
35485 | whether I had been plucked at Oxford? |
35485 | whether I should be able to recognize an acquaintance whom I had only seen once in twenty years? |
35485 | whether I usually devoted my leisure time to travelling about with detective officers? |
35485 | whether I was short- sighted? |
35485 | whether any member of my family had ever been in a lunatic asylum? |
35485 | who shall forbid me to grasp my treasure?" |
35485 | why should we not plan a bright life of happiness and fidelity? |
35485 | why was it? |
35485 | why, what is there that is n''t possible if you go back to the time of the Plantagenets? |
35485 | will she be sorry when she reads it?" |
35485 | with whom?" |
35485 | would I be kind enough to read a verse or so from a diamond edition of the works of Thomas Moore? |
35485 | would he go away at once? |
35485 | you and George are both looking as spooney as-- is it, eh?--yes, it is: is n''t it? |
35485 | you will marry me, my own darling, my beautiful wife?" |
3817 | ''Having?'' 3817 Also ran:''Michael Mont''?" |
3817 | And if I do not? |
3817 | And love everybody? |
3817 | And married? |
3817 | And the daughter? |
3817 | And what if it were? |
3817 | And when are you going? |
3817 | And wo n''t you sit down? |
3817 | Any Post- Impressionists? |
3817 | Are n''t you sorry for them? |
3817 | Are you a partner? |
3817 | Are you facing it, Jo? 3817 Are you going to do what I say?" |
3817 | As advertisement? |
3817 | Baronight,repeated Soames;"what may that be?" |
3817 | But do n''t you believe in survival, Dad? |
3817 | But suppose they were engaged? |
3817 | But what is one''s business, sir? 3817 But what''s the use of keepin''fit?" |
3817 | But why not tell them? 3817 But you''ll admit, sir, that the sense of property is dying out?" |
3817 | Ca n''t I do anything for your head, Mother? |
3817 | Ca n''t the dead past bury its dead? |
3817 | Ca n''t we get a carriage to ourselves? |
3817 | Can I get you anything? |
3817 | Can you see any connection between a sucking baronet and publishing? |
3817 | Come in,he said;"have you had tea?" |
3817 | Could I see Jon here to- morrow on his way down to Holly''s? 3817 Did Profond ever get off?" |
3817 | Did he sell it? |
3817 | Did it win? |
3817 | Did n''t she spoil your life too? |
3817 | Did n''t you ever make love? |
3817 | Did n''t you hear, Father? 3817 Did you come down to tell him that?" |
3817 | Did you look pretty natural as you went out? |
3817 | Did you pump Holly? |
3817 | Did you think I dropped my handkerchief on purpose? |
3817 | Did you? 3817 Do you feel your head, darling?" |
3817 | Do you know so much about them? |
3817 | Do you know,said Fleur,"that we''re getting farther off, not nearer? |
3817 | Do you mind sculling? |
3817 | Do you really mean that marriage--? |
3817 | Do you remember that I was not half your age? |
3817 | Do you remember,he said, halting in front of her,"what you were when I married you? |
3817 | Do you think he ought to have a man about him? |
3817 | Do you think you ought to leave Father? |
3817 | Does he know anything about pictures? |
3817 | Does he leave his bed? |
3817 | Does he take any interest in things generally? |
3817 | Does your firm work on those lines? |
3817 | Eh? |
3817 | Euripides? 3817 Father, what is it?" |
3817 | Feud? 3817 Fleur, do you know anything you have n''t told me?" |
3817 | For how long? |
3817 | For what? |
3817 | Forsyte? 3817 Forsyte? |
3817 | Go? |
3817 | Has Fleur got her summer dresses? |
3817 | Has he got style? |
3817 | Has he said anything important? |
3817 | Has n''t anybody cut in? |
3817 | Has young Mont been bothering you again? |
3817 | Have n''t you ANY romance in you? 3817 Have you done anything to stop Jon writing to me, Father?" |
3817 | Have you got everything you want? |
3817 | Have you got money? |
3817 | Have you seen him since? |
3817 | He gives me up? 3817 He rather cottons?" |
3817 | He''s awfully dear and unselfish-- don''t you think, Jon? |
3817 | Help? 3817 How are YOU?" |
3817 | How are you? |
3817 | How can I get over to the other side? |
3817 | How can you tell what I should think? 3817 How d''you know?" |
3817 | How did he look? |
3817 | How do you do? |
3817 | How do you mean,said Francie,"fatal?" |
3817 | How is he? |
3817 | How''s the stud? 3817 How''s your wife?" |
3817 | How? |
3817 | How? |
3817 | How? |
3817 | I ca n''t, Father; how can I-- just because you say that? 3817 I know, from Grandfather''s portrait; who painted that?" |
3817 | I never let go,she said;"do you?" |
3817 | I pay cash,he said;"how much?" |
3817 | I say, has it struck you? |
3817 | I suppose the doctor comes? |
3817 | I wonder if he will understand, even now, Jolyon? 3817 I wonder what''s coming?" |
3817 | I''m not likely to see you again,he said slowly:"Will you shake hands,"his lip quivered, the words came out jerkily,"and let the past die?" |
3817 | I, sir? 3817 I? |
3817 | I? |
3817 | If you know,he said coldly,"why do you plague me?" |
3817 | In Surrey,he muttered;"not far from Richmond, Why?" |
3817 | In what? |
3817 | Is Father like him? |
3817 | Is it the first time you see that, my friend? 3817 Is n''t he a great cat?" |
3817 | Is n''t it jolly? |
3817 | Is n''t there any place,cried Jon,"in all this beastly London where we can be alone?" |
3817 | Is she alive? |
3817 | Is that all you have to say? |
3817 | Is that all,murmured Fleur,"from a bad parent?" |
3817 | Is that all? |
3817 | Is that all? |
3817 | Is that chap,said Soames,"really going to the South Seas?" |
3817 | Is the house there? |
3817 | Is there anything you want for him? 3817 Is there anything you would like left out?" |
3817 | It''s Jon Forsyte''s mother, is n''t it? 3817 It''s ever so romantic and silly? |
3817 | It''s queer, is n''t it? 3817 It''s supposed to be satiric, is n''t it?" |
3817 | It''s what you appear to be doing,he said:"Do you realise whose daughter she is?" |
3817 | Jack,cried Imogen, enchanted,"what do you keep fit for?" |
3817 | Just,replied Jolyon, puffing the mild cigarette to which he was reduced,"as Mr. Paul Post puts his art, eh? |
3817 | Life- interest-- anticipation-- divert interest-- absolute discretion...and said:"What trustees? |
3817 | Like what, dear? |
3817 | May I give you some? |
3817 | Miss Fleur is walking up, sir, by the towing- pathWalking all those miles? |
3817 | Ninety? 3817 No tea?" |
3817 | Not a bit like Holly or me, is he? |
3817 | Not nice, is it? |
3817 | Not young Mr. Nicholas? 3817 Of all things in the world, do n''t you think caution''s the most awful? |
3817 | R- restive? |
3817 | Rather fine, I think,he said;"do you want to sell it?" |
3817 | Really and truly? 3817 Satiric? |
3817 | Shall I take you round the house, sir, while I send Cook to break it to him? |
3817 | Shall I tell you,she said,"what would give him pleasure?" |
3817 | Shall we go down to tea? |
3817 | Shall we go round the gallery? |
3817 | She wants to spoil our lives, just because--"Yes, of what? |
3817 | She? |
3817 | Six weeks? 3817 Stuff? |
3817 | Sugar? 3817 Suppose the more is accepted?" |
3817 | Tar- brush? |
3817 | That Belgian chap? 3817 That was before he married Mother, was n''t it?" |
3817 | The younger generation does n''t think as you do, sir; does it, Fleur? |
3817 | Then why DON''T you tell him? 3817 Then why do you yacht?" |
3817 | This is just what''s really wanted, Jon, to convince them, do n''t you see? 3817 This is rather sudden,"said Fleur calmly;"do you often do it?" |
3817 | Timothy? 3817 To Jon?" |
3817 | To- day''s the twenty- third of May,said Fleur;"on the ninth of July I shall be in front of the''Bacchus and Ariadne''at three o''clock; will you?" |
3817 | To- morrow? 3817 Too awkward?" |
3817 | Try buying pictures on that system; said Soames,"an offer accepted is a contract-- haven''t you learned that?" |
3817 | Twenty years is a long time,muttered Soames,"outside our family, who''s likely to remember?" |
3817 | Uncle Soames and your dad-- bit awkward, is n''t it? |
3817 | Uncle Timothy,he said again,"is there anything I can do for you? |
3817 | Val Dartie? 3817 Val having Holly, too, is a sort of plaster, do n''t you know?" |
3817 | Was he? |
3817 | Well, and what did they say to you? |
3817 | Well, are n''t you? |
3817 | Well, my dear,he said,"the war has n''t changed Robin Hill, has it? |
3817 | Well, what do you want ME to do? |
3817 | Well, what was it then? |
3817 | Well,he said in the street,"whom did you meet at Imogen''s?" |
3817 | Well,she said,"what are you going to do?" |
3817 | Well? |
3817 | Well? |
3817 | Well? |
3817 | Well? |
3817 | Well? |
3817 | Were you in the war? |
3817 | Were you married to Father, when he was alive? |
3817 | What DID you do with him? |
3817 | What DO you care for? |
3817 | What about Mr. Valerius, now he''s come home? |
3817 | What am I to do, if you wo n''t, Father? |
3817 | What am I to say to her when I go back? |
3817 | What are you going to do to- morrow, Mother? |
3817 | What are you going to do? |
3817 | What babies? |
3817 | What boy? 3817 What can it be?" |
3817 | What color? |
3817 | What d''you mean by that? |
3817 | What did SHE want? |
3817 | What did you hear? |
3817 | What did you put on that thing for? 3817 What did you want to see me about?" |
3817 | What did you-- what could you have done in those old days? |
3817 | What do you mean? |
3817 | What do you say, Mrs. Forsyde; do n''t you think human nature''s always the same? |
3817 | What do you think of that Belgian fellow, Profond? |
3817 | What do you think of this? |
3817 | What do you want for it? |
3817 | What does that chap Profond do in England? |
3817 | What else is there to do? |
3817 | What happens to this house? |
3817 | What have you told him? |
3817 | What house? |
3817 | What is a man''s instinct compared with a mother''s? |
3817 | What is it? 3817 What is the good of talking?" |
3817 | What is your wish? |
3817 | What made you ask her? |
3817 | What made you think that? |
3817 | What on earth will she do out there? |
3817 | What people? |
3817 | What shall I make my cheque for? |
3817 | What should you want to know about such things, at your age? |
3817 | What sort of a quarrel? |
3817 | What was he? |
3817 | What were you at his age, dear? |
3817 | What would happen if I were to go in? |
3817 | What''s her husband like? 3817 What''s his wife like now?" |
3817 | What''s that? |
3817 | What''s the matter? 3817 What? |
3817 | What? |
3817 | What? |
3817 | What? |
3817 | Where is Robin Hill, Father? |
3817 | Where is he-- your son? |
3817 | Where is he? |
3817 | Where will you put him, Soames? |
3817 | Where''s your seat? 3817 Where?" |
3817 | Where? |
3817 | Who said you were to keep it up? |
3817 | Who told you that? 3817 Who were those?" |
3817 | Who''s that? |
3817 | Who, do you think, has been to see you, Dad? 3817 Who?" |
3817 | Who? |
3817 | Whose child are you? |
3817 | Whose child is he? 3817 Why did n''t you tell me before?" |
3817 | Why did you tell Fleur about that business? |
3817 | Why do you keep me on tenterhooks like this, putting me off and off? |
3817 | Why do you want to know? |
3817 | Why not? 3817 Why not?" |
3817 | Why not? |
3817 | Why not? |
3817 | Why should it, Mother? 3817 Why, Jon, where did you spring from?" |
3817 | Why-- why was n''t I with him? |
3817 | Why? 3817 Why? |
3817 | Why? |
3817 | Why? |
3817 | Why? |
3817 | Will it make you any happier,she said suddenly,"if I promise you not to see him for say-- the next six weeks?" |
3817 | Will you some tea, gnadiges Fraulein? |
3817 | Will you want money? |
3817 | Will you write to me? |
3817 | With whom? |
3817 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
3817 | Wo n''t you wait and see Father? |
3817 | Would he remember me? 3817 Would you hook me?" |
3817 | Yes, dear? |
3817 | Yes, sir,murmured Michael Mont,"what do you keep fit for?" |
3817 | Yes, sir; do you? |
3817 | Yes,said Soames quietly,"why did you? |
3817 | Yes? |
3817 | You didn''t--? |
3817 | You do n''t oppose it? |
3817 | You do n''t propose to live with them? |
3817 | You do n''t really bar me, do you? |
3817 | You do n''t? |
3817 | You have n''t seen, then? |
3817 | You saw that fellow''s death, I suppose? |
3817 | You think so? |
3817 | You''re not going to buy THAT, Father? |
3817 | You''ve seen Father? |
3817 | You--? |
3817 | You? 3817 Your name''s Fleur, is n''t it? |
3817 | Yours? 3817 ''He piles up his money for me,''she thought;''but what''s the use, if I''m not going to be happy?'' 3817 ''I wonder what that chap''s doing at this moment?'' 3817 ''Is it because of me?'' 3817 ''Now, what does she mean by that?'' 3817 ''Or because of Profond?'' 3817 ''Suppose I tell him,''she thought;''would n''t it really be safer?'' 3817 ''What now?'' 3817 ''What will Mother do?'' 3817 ''Why did n''t they tell me the first thing,''he thought,''the day I first saw Fleur? 3817 ''Why does n''t she come?'' 3817 A family feud? 3817 A little dashed, Jon had answered:But do n''t you think it''s a good scheme, Dad?" |
3817 | A voice behind her said:"Will she stay the course?" |
3817 | A voice said cheerfully:"Bit thick, is n''t it, sir?" |
3817 | Again, then, would it not be better to tell him? |
3817 | Ah, why could one not put happiness into Local Loans, gild its edges, insure it against going down? |
3817 | Already? |
3817 | Among the ring of buyers round the Mayfly filly who had won her race, Monsieur Profond said:"You goin''to bid?" |
3817 | And a thought came to him: When Timothy died-- why not? |
3817 | And he had yielded-- what was the good of opposing it? |
3817 | And how are YOU, sir? |
3817 | And in God''s name-- why? |
3817 | And since? |
3817 | And suddenly the girl said:"I wish you''d tell me why our families do n''t get on?" |
3817 | And the ten thousand, all animated by one hope, were asking each other one question:"Where are you lunching?" |
3817 | And when he took a resolution which went counter, he did it with the minimum of defiance-- not like the Age, is it? |
3817 | And why? |
3817 | And yet as one grew old-- was there anything but what was ghost- like left? |
3817 | And yet without speaking of them how make Jon understand the reality, the deep cleavage, the ineffaceable scar? |
3817 | And yet-- what could one do? |
3817 | Annette put down the cake she was fingering, and, looking up through darkened lashes, said:"Shall I give Maman any message?" |
3817 | Are n''t you well?" |
3817 | Are there many Forsytes besides those in the Red Book?" |
3817 | Are we cousins?" |
3817 | Are you a good liar?" |
3817 | As you say, why want to know more? |
3817 | At the question,"Well, old man, how did the great Goya strike you?" |
3817 | Battersea? |
3817 | Besides, my dear boy, what''s the harm?" |
3817 | But could he hate Jon''s mother and yet keep her photograph? |
3817 | But had that been his fault? |
3817 | But if I''m to keep it up?" |
3817 | But if they had not told him, should she not-- could she not get him for herself-- get married to him, before he knew? |
3817 | But it was rather breaking through the feud, was n''t it?" |
3817 | But the Peace knocked that; shares seem off, do n''t they? |
3817 | But to what were they to hold on in this modern welter of the"democratic principle"? |
3817 | But what could he have said? |
3817 | But what does it matter? |
3817 | But what would they be worth, if these maniacs once began to milk capital? |
3817 | But what''s all that to do with you? |
3817 | But when she laughed, his arm stole back again; and Fleur began to sing:"O who will o''er the downs so free, O who will with me ride? |
3817 | But why did n''t Fleur come? |
3817 | But would she answer? |
3817 | But you know there''s a feud between our families?" |
3817 | But, inwardly, where was she? |
3817 | Buy them and stick them in a lumber- room? |
3817 | By the way, that chap Profond, Mother, is he all right?" |
3817 | Ca n''t you believe me?" |
3817 | Chelsea? |
3817 | Choking back the words:"He was never married before"; she said:"Well, what about her?" |
3817 | Could civilisation be built on any other? |
3817 | Could fear go with a smile? |
3817 | Could it turn out well? |
3817 | Could there be men who looked on women as their property? |
3817 | Did Father know that he called her mother"Annette"? |
3817 | Did Fleur know of that, too? |
3817 | Did Jolyon wear a plate? |
3817 | Did he know any one except himself who would have been such a flat? |
3817 | Did she put her foot into it?" |
3817 | Did she understand? |
3817 | Did she want his consolation? |
3817 | Did that do anybody harm? |
3817 | Did that woman wear a plate? |
3817 | Did the ghost of that grand passion linger in some corner of his heart? |
3817 | Did you ever go to see old Timothy?" |
3817 | Do n''t we GET anything for the old Forsytes? |
3817 | Do n''t you SEE, Jon?" |
3817 | Do n''t you bless the day that gave you a French mother, and a name like yours?" |
3817 | Do n''t you see that he''s brought satire into sculpture? |
3817 | Do you believe in it?" |
3817 | Do you know that Jolyon''s boy is staying with Val and his wife?" |
3817 | Do you like it?" |
3817 | Do you mind calling me M. M. and letting me call you F. F.? |
3817 | Do you still think it a happy release?" |
3817 | Do you think you can possibly be happy with this girl?" |
3817 | Do you want any cigarettes, Jon?" |
3817 | Do you want to do away with it?" |
3817 | Does your dad ride?" |
3817 | Enough to make it better to tell him? |
3817 | Everything-- do you understand?" |
3817 | Expression? |
3817 | For one wild moment the thought had come to Soames:''Why should n''t I buy it back? |
3817 | Forty?" |
3817 | Given him up, and why? |
3817 | Glancing slyly round at him, she said:"Did you notice how beautifully she asked herself?" |
3817 | Had Annette come in? |
3817 | Had Fleur cooked her own goose by trying to make too sure? |
3817 | Had he ever really loved HER? |
3817 | Had he not in connection therewith, this very day, perused his Will and Marriage Settlement? |
3817 | Had he rushed down to the coppice-- his old hunting- ground? |
3817 | Had he taken the knock that Val had spoken of? |
3817 | Had her Aunt Winifred, or Imogen, or Val Dartie and his wife, been talking? |
3817 | Had she chosen wrong? |
3817 | Had she gone up? |
3817 | Had the Forsytes become less individual, or more Imperial, or less provincial? |
3817 | Had they told Jon-- had her visit to Robin Hill forced them to tell him? |
3817 | Has anything happened to YOU?" |
3817 | Has that boy been told?" |
3817 | Have a liqueur?" |
3817 | Have you any of yours for me to see?" |
3817 | Have you come about Jon?" |
3817 | Have you got a''Baronetage''here?" |
3817 | Have you seen your mother?" |
3817 | He heard the boy laugh, and say eagerly:"I say, Mum, is this one of Auntie June''s lame ducks?" |
3817 | He makes Velasquez stiff, do n''t you think?" |
3817 | He said:"Whom have you got at''The Shelter''next week?" |
3817 | He stooped and whispered:"I say, d''you remember the rat?" |
3817 | He touched Fleur''s arm, and said:"Well, have you had enough?" |
3817 | He touched the dress she had taken off, and asked:"What have you been doing?" |
3817 | Help her-- how could he help her? |
3817 | Her father answered:"Matter? |
3817 | Her mother did, perhaps? |
3817 | His mother said quietly:"Wo n''t you come up and have tea?" |
3817 | His mother, he had thought, was examining the potted stocks between the polled acacias, when her voice said:"Is that your favourite Goya, Jon?" |
3817 | His reply shot out of his smile like a snipped bread pellet:"D''you remember, in Frazer, the tribe that buries the bride up to the waist?" |
3817 | How are we to understand each other in a matter like this, eh?" |
3817 | How are you? |
3817 | How could he know what men who had such faces thought and did? |
3817 | How could he look natural with Italy hanging over him? |
3817 | How could he tell? |
3817 | How could she say such things just as they were going to part? |
3817 | How could you have them without mutual ownership? |
3817 | How dared he have anything to break, and yet how dared he break it? |
3817 | How deal with it-- how sway and bend things to her will, and get her heart''s desire? |
3817 | How do you like him, Father?" |
3817 | How do you think Fleur looks?" |
3817 | How leave her there? |
3817 | How on earth had the fellow known that he wanted to sell that picture? |
3817 | How was he to know, when he wanted Irene so violently, and she consented to be his, that she would never love him? |
3817 | How would she treat him at this last moment of her girlhood? |
3817 | How''s Mrs. Val Dartie? |
3817 | I am the impediment-- the just cause and impediment-- isn''t that the jargon? |
3817 | I feed a small lot of babies out in my mother''s country; but what''s the use? |
3817 | I hate being slow about things, do n''t you?" |
3817 | I live at Mapledurham; where do you?" |
3817 | I say, can you stand this spiritualistic racket? |
3817 | If Irene broke such laws, what does it matter?" |
3817 | If he and her mother-- how would that affect her chance? |
3817 | If one had to miss a meal, what comfort in the knowledge that many others had to miss it too? |
3817 | If they had told him, what would he do? |
3817 | If they prove to be really fond of each other, why should they be made unhappy because of the past?" |
3817 | If you let Gradman off his chair, would he bite the cook? |
3817 | Is he better?" |
3817 | Is it true that he divorced her, and she married Jon Forsyte''s father?" |
3817 | Is it true?" |
3817 | Is it your own? |
3817 | Is n''t it a bore? |
3817 | Is n''t it, Fleur?" |
3817 | Is n''t that delicious?" |
3817 | Is n''t there a small thing I can do for you?" |
3817 | Is she here?" |
3817 | Is there anything between you and Jon? |
3817 | Is there anything new?" |
3817 | Is there anything you''d like to say?" |
3817 | Is your father in?" |
3817 | It is n''t fair to us to let old things spoil our happiness, is it?" |
3817 | It is n''t fair to-- Why not?" |
3817 | It was after the young man had whistled before a Whistler, with the words:"D''you think he ever really saw a naked woman, sir?" |
3817 | It was only when leaving that he added:"So they''re not selling the Bolderby Old Crome, after all?" |
3817 | It was-- for him-- a surprising thing to do, and he said rather anxiously:"What will you have?" |
3817 | It''s no good hiding our heads under our wings, is it?" |
3817 | Jolly day, is n''t it?" |
3817 | Jolyon''s face twitched, and he said with painful slowness:"Better than your mother, Jon?" |
3817 | Jon said quickly:"What''s the matter between him and my father?" |
3817 | Jon stammered:"Feud? |
3817 | Just a roadman, flinging to the moon his song? |
3817 | Just his cry:''How long?''" |
3817 | Just the watchman, telling his dateless tale of safety? |
3817 | Land''s an awful bore in these days, do n''t you think?" |
3817 | Like to buy one of my screws?" |
3817 | May I go upstairs?" |
3817 | May-- may I leave this with you?" |
3817 | Mont?" |
3817 | Mr. Forsyde well? |
3817 | Not Euripides?" |
3817 | Now, have I ever given you reason to doubt my love for you, or my word?" |
3817 | Of course, if he was very fond of her, that would have made him pretty mad, would n''t it?" |
3817 | Of what? |
3817 | One doesn''t--""Why not?" |
3817 | Only, was n''t she engaged to Fleur''s father first?" |
3817 | Only-- Mother-- if-- if I wanted to stay out somewhere-- America or anywhere, would you mind coming presently?" |
3817 | Or was it simply that one hated Germans?... |
3817 | Ought I-- now I''ve just begun? |
3817 | Right up to the time of the rupture in their relations he had been wo nt to perch there-- had he now reached such a moment with his own son? |
3817 | Rum game, business, is n''t it? |
3817 | See?" |
3817 | Shall I take up the matter of that nuisance in Old Compton Street? |
3817 | Shall we get up early to- morrow morning and go for a walk before breakfast and have it out? |
3817 | She had burnt her boats; but what did it matter, if she got him? |
3817 | She had set it going-- what comfort could she get from that? |
3817 | She had taken the bit between her teeth, but could she make him take it too? |
3817 | She ought, of course, to be delighted, but what was there to be delighted at? |
3817 | She reached up, twisted off a blossom, and, twirling it in her fingers, said:"I suppose I can call you Jon?" |
3817 | She said almost defiantly:"That old story-- was it so very dreadful?" |
3817 | She said softly:"Why do n''t you like those cousins, Father?" |
3817 | She sat there without speaking till he said:"What is it, my love?" |
3817 | She saw that he knew she was putting him off, and added:"Have you heard anything of Fleur?" |
3817 | She was taking Profond''s defection with curious quietude; or was his"small"voyage just a blind? |
3817 | She went to sleep, thinking that he would suffer horribly if anybody hurt him; but who would hurt him? |
3817 | Should he speak to her? |
3817 | Should n''t he have a shot? |
3817 | Slipping her hand under his arm, she said:"Who was that?" |
3817 | So Winifred would go back, would she, and put up with Dartie all over again? |
3817 | So it was coming here too, was it? |
3817 | So it was like this-- was it?... |
3817 | Soames said icily:"So you admit it?" |
3817 | Soames?" |
3817 | Soames?" |
3817 | Subduing a natural irritation, he said:"Are you a judge of pictures?" |
3817 | Surely it would n''t be too awkward for you to see her just this once-- now that Jon''s father is dead?" |
3817 | The Mayfly strain-- was it any better than any other? |
3817 | The grin died on the rich curves of his face, and he added:"Have n''t you attorneys invented a way yet of dodging this damned income tax? |
3817 | Then where was she? |
3817 | This is really the same tobacco, then?" |
3817 | Timothy?" |
3817 | To her father:"What''s the matter with Mother?" |
3817 | To her mother she said:"What''s the matter with Father?" |
3817 | To your mother?" |
3817 | Twisting the car sharp round at the gate, he said:"When is young Jon coming?" |
3817 | Up to London without a word to him? |
3817 | Was Jon"touched in the wind,"then, as Val would have called it? |
3817 | Was it Burns who followed the plough, or only Piers Plowman? |
3817 | Was it Fleur thus staring at the water? |
3817 | Was it a message from walking spirit; or but the instinct of his sire living on within him? |
3817 | Was it interesting?" |
3817 | Was not Fleur as self- possessed, quick, glancing, pretty, and hard as the likeliest Muskham, Mont, or Charwell filly present? |
3817 | Was she going to give him trouble-- pain-- give him trouble? |
3817 | Was she mocking, or trying to draw him on? |
3817 | Was she really going to her mother? |
3817 | We ca n''t all see people in the same light, can we? |
3817 | Were they all gathered round this bed? |
3817 | What am I to say to her when I go back?" |
3817 | What are you going to do for a living when it comes? |
3817 | What business had he to gossip? |
3817 | What business has he to be tired of my mother? |
3817 | What chance do you think you have? |
3817 | What could he give her to make amends? |
3817 | What did I come for? |
3817 | What did YOU do in the feud, Father?" |
3817 | What did she want to know for? |
3817 | What did that portend? |
3817 | What did the boy know? |
3817 | What do we care about the past? |
3817 | What do you recommend, sir?" |
3817 | What do you say to leaving him five thousand?" |
3817 | What do you say, Jon?" |
3817 | What do you think about that, sir?" |
3817 | What do you think of Jon?" |
3817 | What do you think of her, Val?" |
3817 | What do you think of people nowadays, Soames?" |
3817 | What does it matter-- all that past-- compared with THIS?" |
3817 | What does your aunt see in him?" |
3817 | What feud?" |
3817 | What had been the previous existences of his father and his mother? |
3817 | What had been wrong with him? |
3817 | What had possessed him to give his card to a rackety young fellow, who went about with a thing like that? |
3817 | What had she picked up? |
3817 | What had they all done in the War? |
3817 | What have you done about that dilapidation notice in Vere Street?" |
3817 | What is he like?" |
3817 | What is he? |
3817 | What is it? |
3817 | What is natural?" |
3817 | What is she like on second thoughts?" |
3817 | What mattered a few supplementary lies? |
3817 | What on earth makes you run a show like this?" |
3817 | What on earth were young men about, deliberately lowering their class with these tooth- brushes, or little slug whiskers? |
3817 | What says the voice-- its clear-- lingering anguish? |
3817 | What shall I do? |
3817 | What shall you do, Soames?" |
3817 | What should be the matter?" |
3817 | What should he do, if she were not back by nightfall? |
3817 | What sound was that? |
3817 | What then? |
3817 | What was Dad looking like that for? |
3817 | What was he grinning at? |
3817 | What was it young Mont had said-- some nonsense about the possessive instinct-- shutters up-- To let? |
3817 | What was it? |
3817 | What was she going to say to him, who had in his heart such things to say to her? |
3817 | What was she seeing among those white camellias? |
3817 | What was she thinking and brooding over into small hours when she ought to have been asleep? |
3817 | What was she thinking of? |
3817 | What was that odious word? |
3817 | What was there objectionable in that? |
3817 | What was there-- what was there in this woman that would not fit into the four comers of his hate or condemnation? |
3817 | What would Fleur say to him? |
3817 | What would she do under this blow? |
3817 | What''s the time? |
3817 | What? |
3817 | Whatever made YOU come here?" |
3817 | When they were installed, Fleur asked suddenly:"Are you going back to Robin Hill? |
3817 | When was he going to see the man who had cured Paul Post? |
3817 | When you were nineteen what would you have thought of YOUR mother if she had done what I have?" |
3817 | When''s the sale?" |
3817 | Where are you goin''to put him? |
3817 | Where are you off to?" |
3817 | Where could he watch, without her seeing him? |
3817 | Where had he got to? |
3817 | Where had she gone? |
3817 | Where had the boy got to? |
3817 | Where have you been?" |
3817 | Where was Annette? |
3817 | Which of them was Timothy''s? |
3817 | Who could tell? |
3817 | Who pays any attention to that sort of thing now? |
3817 | Who''s going to live in a town like that, or with it on his walls?" |
3817 | Whom do I deal with-- Herring''s?" |
3817 | Why ca n''t they exclude fellows like Profond, instead of a lot of hard- working Germans?'' |
3817 | Why could n''t he be self- confident and ready? |
3817 | Why did n''t Fleur come, so that he could get away? |
3817 | Why did n''t he grow the rest of those idiotic little moustaches, which made him look like a music- hall buffoon? |
3817 | Why did n''t you tell me, Father?" |
3817 | Why did that scent so make one ache? |
3817 | Why do you dislike me?" |
3817 | Why do you think it matters so terribly that Jon should know about his mother? |
3817 | Why had she to do all the work to secure their love? |
3817 | Why him?" |
3817 | Why must n''t he say they had met? |
3817 | Why not start to- morrow? |
3817 | Why should he help her to get this boy, who was killing her affection for himself? |
3817 | Why should he mind so long as she was happy? |
3817 | Why should he? |
3817 | Why the deuce could n''t his nephew have stayed out in South Africa? |
3817 | Why- I--""Then make sure of me""Without telling them?" |
3817 | Why?" |
3817 | Why?" |
3817 | Why?" |
3817 | Will they ever really like us?'' |
3817 | Will you get me a quite plain parasol?" |
3817 | Will you see him?" |
3817 | Winifred had gone with Imogen to see a play which some said was allegorical, and others"very exciting, do n''t you know?" |
3817 | With that father?" |
3817 | Without them, how justify this stifling of the boy''s love? |
3817 | Would he ever be able to live down here, not seeing her? |
3817 | Would it be better to rewrite the whole thing, and just say you hated Soames?" |
3817 | Would it not be almost a duty to preserve this house-- like Carlyle''s-- and put up a tablet, and show it? |
3817 | Would she be able to manage Jon? |
3817 | Would she believe he had done his best? |
3817 | Would she help them? |
3817 | Would she never get that affected roll out of her r''s? |
3817 | Would the gentleman state his business, please? |
3817 | Would you like it back, dear?" |
3817 | Would you like?" |
3817 | Yet, was there such a thing as chance? |
3817 | You WERE going home anyway, were n''t you?" |
3817 | You are n''t going to-- to-- hurt me, are you?'' |
3817 | You her brother?" |
3817 | You mean that? |
3817 | You want me to trust you; why do n''t you trust me, Father? |
3817 | You will of course say:''If she did n''t really love him how could she ever have married him?'' |
3817 | Your mother-- she nice and well?" |
3817 | and Jimmy Portugal sniggering, June grew crimson, and suddenly rapped out:"Then why did you ever come? |
3817 | and Mr. Timothy? |
3817 | and who had spoiled her? |
3817 | and why did n''t she come? |
3817 | does n''t he?" |
3817 | he said:"Did you ever know a publisher?" |
3817 | murmured Winifred, concerned;"you''re not taking this to heart? |
3817 | she answered:"Oh, do you like it?" |
3817 | she said;"what is that? |
3817 | that Soames remarked:"What ARE you, Mr. Mont, if I may ask?" |
3817 | thought Jolyon;''what can I say to move him?'' |
3817 | to his preposterous inquiry of Jack Cardigan:"What''s the use of keepin''fit?" |
3817 | what did Prosper Profond represent? |
3817 | what is it?'' |
3817 | what was she? |
3817 | why did I ask you?" |
3817 | why on earth are we born young? |
3817 | yes, he''s a painter-- isn''t he?" |
3817 | you DO?" |
45895 | A fairly long time? 45895 A farewell visit?" |
45895 | A fine property? |
45895 | A piece of cheek, you think, what? 45895 A safe one?" |
45895 | A song? |
45895 | Again? |
45895 | All over? |
45895 | All right? |
45895 | Alone? |
45895 | Am I disturbing you? |
45895 | Am I the first? |
45895 | And about when do you think you will be back? |
45895 | And did you have a piano out there? |
45895 | And did you love him most,asked George,"of all the men you had come across?" |
45895 | And do n''t you remember too that a woman with a little child in her arms took us round the house and garden? |
45895 | And do you know what I took her for? |
45895 | And he never tried again? |
45895 | And how are you getting on--she threw a look at Heinrich--"with your opera?" |
45895 | And how did you manage to get here? 45895 And how have you been all this time, Herr Baron?" |
45895 | And how have you been getting on all this time? 45895 And how is your brother?" |
45895 | And how''s your work getting on, my dear Baron? |
45895 | And is to- day the first time you have had anything like it? |
45895 | And now? |
45895 | And the beating of the heart? |
45895 | And the lady? |
45895 | And the third act? |
45895 | And then I suppose the other dream will begin? |
45895 | And then go off again on your new career? |
45895 | And what actually was there between you, if it is not a rude question? |
45895 | And what comes of deeds? |
45895 | And what did she say? |
45895 | And what did you answer? |
45895 | And what do you mean to do? |
45895 | And what have you been doing all this time, Herr Rapp? |
45895 | And what have you been doing this summer? |
45895 | And what is the news with them? |
45895 | And what prejudices have we got, I should like to know? |
45895 | And when are you going back again? |
45895 | And where are the forty gulden? |
45895 | And where are you going to buy one? 45895 And where are you going?" |
45895 | And where will they send you? |
45895 | And who called me a dilettante, if I may ask? |
45895 | And who won in the end? |
45895 | And whom do you think with? |
45895 | And whom to? |
45895 | And would that be much good? |
45895 | And you''ll write to me, too, Anna... everything... everything... you understand? |
45895 | And you...? |
45895 | And you? |
45895 | And your father was n''t old, was he? 45895 And...?" |
45895 | Anonymous letters? 45895 Are you going into the Isle of Wight again?" |
45895 | Are you going to town to- day? |
45895 | Are you going too, dear? |
45895 | Are you going with them? |
45895 | Are you quite sure about that, Anna? |
45895 | Are you ready packed? |
45895 | Are you really so keen on it? |
45895 | Are you really writing an opera, George? |
45895 | Are you satisfied with Anna? |
45895 | Are you superstitious? |
45895 | As far down South as last spring? |
45895 | At what period? |
45895 | Back again? |
45895 | Besides, what has superstition to do with this matter? |
45895 | But he is surely better, is n''t he? |
45895 | But how do you come to think so seeing that you scarcely know him? |
45895 | But if I ask you, Felician? 45895 But if you... but if you were to take it very seriously... if you asked her point blank... might n''t the young lady perhaps give up her career?" |
45895 | But it''s not a case of anything serious? |
45895 | But of course you know each other? |
45895 | But tell me now, what are you doing here? 45895 But what do you really think of doing, George?" |
45895 | But what''s that got to do with me? |
45895 | But where are you going to? |
45895 | But where did you get the opportunity of seeing him then? |
45895 | But why did you tell me nothing about it? |
45895 | But why the last time? |
45895 | But why? |
45895 | But you would not have any objection to a Court theatre? |
45895 | By the way, have you heard the latest, gentlemen? |
45895 | By whom? |
45895 | Calms you? |
45895 | Can one reassure oneself with certainties in matters of love? 45895 Can she have died, this actress?" |
45895 | Come, Anna, you promised me, did n''t you? |
45895 | Come, Hofrat Wilt? |
45895 | Come, you do n''t believe that yourself-- what are you working at? |
45895 | Dearest, what am I to do? 45895 Did I say anything about doubts?" |
45895 | Did dear little Else perform? |
45895 | Did he know it? |
45895 | Did he tell you anything about her? |
45895 | Did n''t Heinrich tell you, then?... |
45895 | Did n''t we meet each other once this winter at Ehrenbergs''? |
45895 | Did she speak to you about it? |
45895 | Did she succeed then? |
45895 | Did the mother know anything? |
45895 | Did they notice us? |
45895 | Did they try very much to inveigle you? |
45895 | Did you find any letters? 45895 Did you know old Bermann?" |
45895 | Did you recognise her again? |
45895 | Do n''t you know yet,said Leo,"his father is dead?" |
45895 | Do n''t you see? 45895 Do n''t you still remember,"he asked,"that morning when we looked over a summer residence in Grinzing?" |
45895 | Do n''t you think so? |
45895 | Do n''t you think,she said,"that perhaps one might have been some help to you in bearing it?" |
45895 | Do you consider him so jealous? |
45895 | Do you feel in the mood for comedies like that? |
45895 | Do you feel quite all right now? |
45895 | Do you intend to stay much longer in Lugano? |
45895 | Do you know Count Malnitz by any chance? |
45895 | Do you know Herr von Stanzides, Herr Baron? |
45895 | Do you know about the Oskar affair yet? |
45895 | Do you know for a certainty,replied Nürnberger,"that Heinrich''s mistress really killed herself on his account?" |
45895 | Do you know for certain? |
45895 | Do you know how I feel when I hear you talk like that? 45895 Do you know that I had almost imagined....""What?" |
45895 | Do you know that Oskar Ehrenberg is on his way to India or Ceylon? |
45895 | Do you know that man? |
45895 | Do you know what I once heard some one say about you? |
45895 | Do you know what I think? |
45895 | Do you know what I''ve done? |
45895 | Do you know what she looks like? |
45895 | Do you know what that is? 45895 Do you know yet that I found the villa for Anna just before I left?" |
45895 | Do you know you''re very pale? 45895 Do you know, George, whom I got to know this summer?" |
45895 | Do you know,he said gently,"what it was going to be called?" |
45895 | Do you know,said George to Anna,"that these good people are travelling off again to- morrow?" |
45895 | Do you mean by any chance that it is my intention to punish her or avenge myself? 45895 Do you regard that as possible?" |
45895 | Do you still remember, Herr Baron... the classy party on the Sophienalp? |
45895 | Do you think so? 45895 Do you think so? |
45895 | Do you think so? |
45895 | Do you think that will come off? |
45895 | Do you think you''ll remain away all the winter? |
45895 | Do you think,he asked ironically,"he has come here to celebrate his wedding, father?" |
45895 | Does he really understand me better? |
45895 | Does he want to get into the Cabinet? |
45895 | Does she know that you are not thinking of marrying her? |
45895 | Does your child lie there? |
45895 | Dream? |
45895 | Drill? |
45895 | Easily come about? |
45895 | Else, you do n''t seriously think that Anna with her reserved character could so far forget herself as to----"So far forget herself...? 45895 Even supposing Willy Eissler happens to stay in your vicinity?" |
45895 | Expected? 45895 Explanations? |
45895 | Finished with, why so? 45895 For Therese''s honour? |
45895 | For us? |
45895 | Funny, eh? 45895 George, how does a sensible man like you manage to get hold of such metaphysical ideas?" |
45895 | Going so soon, Herr Baron? |
45895 | Going to Ehrenbergs''by any chance? |
45895 | Good gracious, what do they matter to you? 45895 Good gracious, why romantic? |
45895 | Great heavens, who thinks of that? 45895 Has Herr Rosner gone already?" |
45895 | Has she got talent? |
45895 | Has the party allowed you to take a holiday, Herr Stauber? 45895 Has your being in Vienna anything to do with the crisis in the management of the opera?" |
45895 | Have I disputed that, Anna? 45895 Have I ever said that I want to get away from here? |
45895 | Have I spoken to you about my quintette, then? |
45895 | Have n''t I disturbed you, gentlemen? |
45895 | Have you any idea,he asked,"where they will send you?" |
45895 | Have you been composing anything nice, George? |
45895 | Have you been here long? 45895 Have you been out for a walk like that?" |
45895 | Have you been true to me? |
45895 | Have you been up long? |
45895 | Have you composed anything on your trip? |
45895 | Have you done any work this morning? |
45895 | Have you heard anything of Grace since then? |
45895 | Have you left off corresponding with her? |
45895 | He is supposed to be banished from Court,said George,"is n''t he?" |
45895 | Heated?... 45895 Her life? |
45895 | How are you, George dear? |
45895 | How are you, my darling? |
45895 | How do you do, Baron? |
45895 | How do you manage to know that, Else? |
45895 | How do you mean? |
45895 | How is Anna? |
45895 | How is she? |
45895 | How is that? |
45895 | How is your brother? |
45895 | How long have you been here? |
45895 | How many shots were there? |
45895 | How old are you then, Herr Stanzides? 45895 How old is he?" |
45895 | How would it be,said Leo,"if we went on a tour together in the summer?--you, Bermann and I? |
45895 | How would you describe it? |
45895 | How''s old Rosner? |
45895 | I also seem to know him, but who is it? |
45895 | I am very glad to see you again,he said,"I suppose you are here in Vienna on leave?" |
45895 | I mean just this: Did you intend... not to make her your companion for life, but to have a child by her all the same? |
45895 | I say, dear,she said quite lightly and suddenly,"will you often come and visit us?" |
45895 | I should like first to know what you mean by the word? |
45895 | I suppose we shall hear them in the autumn? |
45895 | I suppose you are travelling south? |
45895 | I suppose you probably wo n''t be able to remember that my poor wife was in Meran at the same time as your late mother? |
45895 | I think you were reading something, Heinrich, when I came in? |
45895 | If I were you, George... may I tell you something? |
45895 | If any one here''s to tell me... and even... excuse me... or perhaps you''re baptised...? 45895 If you could save her by doing so, would n''t you forgive her now?" |
45895 | If you will allow me to make a remark, what does the... lady chiefly concerned have to say? |
45895 | In really good form? 45895 In what way am I trying hard?" |
45895 | In what way will the same thing happen to us? |
45895 | In what way...? 45895 Incredible?... |
45895 | Instead of coming out to see you-- eh? |
45895 | Intoxicated?... |
45895 | Is Anna giving lessons again? |
45895 | Is Anna quite out of danger? |
45895 | Is he better, then? |
45895 | Is it long since you heard anything of him? |
45895 | Is it necessary to go to the café? |
45895 | Is it possible...? |
45895 | Is it really you, Fräulein Therese? |
45895 | Is n''t it a fact,asked Heinrich,"that during the whole time you never once thought of the possibility of its ending like this?" |
45895 | Is n''t it lamentable,said Heinrich,"that in the immediate outskirts of Vienna nearly all the inns should be in such a state of neglect? |
45895 | Is n''t it really better if we do n''t see each other till after Easter? |
45895 | Is that what I am in the habit of doing, then? |
45895 | Is that why? |
45895 | Is there nothing else in the telegram? |
45895 | Is there really any point,asked George hesitatingly,"in visiting the grave of a creature that has never lived?" |
45895 | Is your club Christian Socialist or National German? |
45895 | It was n''t necessary to tell her,replied Doctor Stauber,"was it?" |
45895 | It''s true, then? 45895 Jealous? |
45895 | Just think now, is n''t it strange? 45895 Leo Golowski, then?" |
45895 | Let out on bail? |
45895 | Let''s see, first, what your mother writes? |
45895 | Like a Russian student, do n''t you think? |
45895 | Look here now-- you do n''t believe it yourself? |
45895 | Marianne? |
45895 | May I ask you something? |
45895 | May one ask what it is? |
45895 | Me go there? |
45895 | Mind? 45895 More hopefully?" |
45895 | My dear Anna, what is the matter with you to- day? 45895 My dear George, do n''t you see yet that it is not a question of whether I want to forgive her or not? |
45895 | My dear Josef, the Baron visits the house and it will strike him as rather strange...."I? |
45895 | My estate? |
45895 | My friend the Prince?... 45895 My mother, Herr Doctor...?" |
45895 | My quintette? |
45895 | Nailed down already? |
45895 | Never? 45895 No letter for me?" |
45895 | No one here yet? 45895 No, Else, how can you?... |
45895 | No, I am sure they are not lies; some, no doubt, but in a case like this how is one to separate the truth from the lies? |
45895 | No, how could I? |
45895 | No? 45895 None at all?" |
45895 | Not big enough? |
45895 | Not even his novel which made so great a sensation fifteen or sixteen years ago? 45895 Not yet?" |
45895 | Of Grace? |
45895 | Of course I have; do n''t you remember? 45895 Of course you accepted?" |
45895 | Of course your name is Wergenthin- Recco, too,continued Heinrich,"but only George-- and that''s not the same by a long way, is it? |
45895 | Oh, has she been in the café again? |
45895 | Oh, in Berlin? |
45895 | Oh, you mean him, do you? 45895 Oh, you think I mean the Anti- Semites? |
45895 | Oh, you''ve probably lived a great deal but felt... you know what I mean, George? |
45895 | Oh,answered George, blushing a little,"what makes you think that?" |
45895 | On account of your father? |
45895 | On the strength of the few songs of mine which he knows? 45895 Only just got home?" |
45895 | Or is it only because I am in the presence of another man''s grief? 45895 Quite out of the question? |
45895 | Quite right,remarked George, smoking a cigar with his legs comfortably crossed,"have you brought us anything fresh?" |
45895 | Really not? |
45895 | Really, is that so? |
45895 | Really, you? 45895 Really,"said George with a smile,"was n''t Oskar baptised long ago? |
45895 | Really... you thought that? |
45895 | Really? 45895 Really?" |
45895 | Really? |
45895 | Really? |
45895 | Really? |
45895 | Really? |
45895 | Really? |
45895 | Right or left? |
45895 | Rittmeister Ladisc? |
45895 | Shall I be disturbing you? |
45895 | She already knows, then...? |
45895 | Sissy is really so silly.... What are you thinking of, Sissy? 45895 Smart picture, eh?" |
45895 | So I suppose we ca n''t dine together? |
45895 | So it is Stanzides? |
45895 | So it was he, then? |
45895 | So that was why? |
45895 | So the parting is as near as that? |
45895 | So would n''t you like to come part of the way with me, Anna, when I go back again? |
45895 | So you are going back to Vienna as soon as all that? |
45895 | So you are going in the country, near Vienna this year? |
45895 | So you are going to Ehrenbergs''this evening? |
45895 | So you are going to Italy? |
45895 | So you have quite made up your mind? |
45895 | So you live among enemies? 45895 So you seriously mean to retire to your estate?" |
45895 | So you would forgive me? |
45895 | So you''ve been in Germany? |
45895 | So you''ve quite made up your mind? |
45895 | Some woman, I suppose? |
45895 | Sound? 45895 Stanzides?" |
45895 | Still- born? |
45895 | Straight from Vienna? |
45895 | Strange, is n''t it? 45895 Strict?... |
45895 | Studying? |
45895 | Such short leave? |
45895 | Tell me, Else, why do you ask me...? 45895 Tell...? |
45895 | Thank you,she replied gently, and then remarked:"So you came out on your cycle?" |
45895 | That''s to do with the opera plot? |
45895 | The Countess''s Aria? 45895 The experienced platonic lover and the inexperienced rake? |
45895 | The forest was just behind our house with good level roads, was n''t it, papa? 45895 The scene of the third act, of course, will be laid in that hall on the cliff-- don''t you think so? |
45895 | The school for singing? |
45895 | Then he does really exist? |
45895 | Then one would not be making a mistake, Herr Eissler,remarked Nürnberger,"if one attributed the chief part in your life to melancholy memories?" |
45895 | Then you think it''s true? |
45895 | There where the roses are? |
45895 | Therese is between two dangers, she will either talk her head off one fine day...."Or? |
45895 | Thirty- five,said George jestingly;"is n''t that so?" |
45895 | To England? |
45895 | Twenty- seven... thirty- one... thirty- eight.... Well, who''s won the game? |
45895 | Upon my word,said George innocently, and then added casually:"But what''s the matter with Therese? |
45895 | Well whom do you think, mamma? |
45895 | Well, George, how do you like Detmold? |
45895 | Well, George,said Felician gently, and looked at him sideways,"what is up, then? |
45895 | Well, and what did you answer the man? |
45895 | Well, have you composed that song for me yet? |
45895 | Well, he declares that he is going to give up writing to devote himself exclusively to sport...."To sport? |
45895 | Well, if you do understand it?... |
45895 | Well, mamma, what''s the matter? |
45895 | Well, what do you really think about platonic love? 45895 Well, what do you think?" |
45895 | Well, what happened? |
45895 | Well, what? |
45895 | Well, what? |
45895 | Well, who is it then? |
45895 | Well, who knows? 45895 Well, whom do you think I met?" |
45895 | Well, why do n''t you do it? |
45895 | Well-- and Florence? |
45895 | Well...."Are you in favour of my marrying? |
45895 | Well? |
45895 | Well? |
45895 | Well? |
45895 | Well? |
45895 | Well? |
45895 | Well? |
45895 | Well? |
45895 | Well? |
45895 | Well? |
45895 | Well? |
45895 | Well? |
45895 | Were n''t you at Auhof either? |
45895 | Were you satisfied? |
45895 | Were you so clumsy? |
45895 | What affair? |
45895 | What am I to advise you? |
45895 | What an idea? 45895 What an idea?" |
45895 | What are you crying for, dear? 45895 What are you looking at him for?" |
45895 | What are you thanking me for, George? 45895 What are you thanking papa for?" |
45895 | What cynicism are you suppressing? |
45895 | What did I answer? 45895 What did Therese really tell you about Doctor Berthold?" |
45895 | What did she tell you then? |
45895 | What did you do in the evening? |
45895 | What did you dream about? |
45895 | What do you know about his gifts? |
45895 | What do you know about it? 45895 What do you know, my child?" |
45895 | What do you mean by a light heart? |
45895 | What do you mean by politics? |
45895 | What do you mean, the other dream? |
45895 | What do you mean? |
45895 | What do you mean? |
45895 | What do you mean? |
45895 | What do you think of that? |
45895 | What do you think, Skelton? |
45895 | What does he mean? |
45895 | What dreams? |
45895 | What for? |
45895 | What have you been doing, then? |
45895 | What have you got there? |
45895 | What interesting conversation are we interrupting? |
45895 | What is always on their lips? |
45895 | What is it? |
45895 | What is it? |
45895 | What is it? |
45895 | What is it? |
45895 | What is it? |
45895 | What is it? |
45895 | What is it? |
45895 | What is that? |
45895 | What is the matter with you? |
45895 | What is the matter? |
45895 | What is the point? |
45895 | What is there so much to talk over? |
45895 | What is there to forgive? |
45895 | What is this? |
45895 | What is your set? 45895 What kind of a club are you in then, old chap?" |
45895 | What kind of a figure do I cut? |
45895 | What kind of things? |
45895 | What makes you have doubts about Stanzides''existence, Fräulein? |
45895 | What makes you think of that? |
45895 | What more does he write? |
45895 | What news did they tell you? |
45895 | What shall it be? |
45895 | What should I know? 45895 What subject do you mean?" |
45895 | What was it all about then? |
45895 | What was_ Tristan_ like? |
45895 | What will you say to her? |
45895 | What words? |
45895 | What''he''do you mean? |
45895 | What''s he got to do on the Rhine? |
45895 | What''s in the telegram? |
45895 | What''s that? |
45895 | What, also in Weissenfeld? |
45895 | What, charmed? |
45895 | What, did n''t you notice? |
45895 | What, do you really know something? |
45895 | What, to- day, Sunday? |
45895 | What, you are going away? |
45895 | What,said Leo,"is it supposed to be a Sicilian melody?" |
45895 | What? |
45895 | What? |
45895 | What? |
45895 | What? |
45895 | What? |
45895 | When are you going then, Felician? |
45895 | When can I come back? |
45895 | When does our boat leave to- morrow? |
45895 | When is she coming to see me, then? |
45895 | Where are you going to swing your bâton? |
45895 | Where can I take you? |
45895 | Where have you put the telegram? 45895 Where to?" |
45895 | Where''s Leo Golowski to get fifty thousand gulden from? |
45895 | Which Anna? |
45895 | Which one? |
45895 | Which way are you going? |
45895 | Which you ca n''t miss? |
45895 | Who accompanied her, then? |
45895 | Who did? 45895 Who except me?" |
45895 | Who is doing the libretto for you? |
45895 | Who is it that always goes there? |
45895 | Who is it, then? |
45895 | Who is there, except you, who can at a time like this stand by her... ought to, in fact? |
45895 | Who knows if he will ever come back to Vienna at all? |
45895 | Who knows if it is not that very faculty of self- deception which you have developed more strongly than any other as the years went by? |
45895 | Who knows if you would discover it,remarked George,"even though it did come once in a way quite near you? |
45895 | Who knows what the future will bring forth? |
45895 | Who knows,said George reflectively,"if you wo n''t be regarded as right-- in a thousand years? |
45895 | Who knows? 45895 Who says so? |
45895 | Who thought so? |
45895 | Who told her? |
45895 | Who''s told you we''re going to England? 45895 Who, we?" |
45895 | Who? |
45895 | Why are n''t you at any rate as straight with me as I am with you? 45895 Why are you so considerate all of a sudden?" |
45895 | Why are you so hard? |
45895 | Why are you so stern with me to- day? |
45895 | Why are you so surprised, Breitner? |
45895 | Why are you so surprised? |
45895 | Why are you surprised? |
45895 | Why better? |
45895 | Why did n''t you come to Auhof this year? 45895 Why did n''t you come to Weissenfeld?" |
45895 | Why did n''t you expect to find him in good spirits? 45895 Why did you say,"she inquired,"that you could have had as much happiness as a hussar riding- master? |
45895 | Why do n''t you speak? |
45895 | Why do you always keep bothering about those people? 45895 Why do you say libellers? |
45895 | Why do you smile, George? 45895 Why do you wonder so much, my dear madam? |
45895 | Why is it a sad business? |
45895 | Why is it more likely? |
45895 | Why not? 45895 Why not? |
45895 | Why not? 45895 Why not?" |
45895 | Why not? |
45895 | Why not? |
45895 | Why not? |
45895 | Why not? |
45895 | Why not? |
45895 | Why should n''t he? 45895 Why should n''t it come off?" |
45895 | Why strange? |
45895 | Why talk about it, my dear Baron, if it''s not practicable? 45895 Why, how can he go on living?" |
45895 | Why, you do n''t think, surely, I promised her marriage? |
45895 | Why.... Why do you take to flight? |
45895 | Why? 45895 Why?" |
45895 | Will this suit you? |
45895 | Will you accompany me? |
45895 | Will you give us the pleasure, Baron,said Demeter,"of lunching with us to- day at the Europe? |
45895 | Will you really? 45895 Willy spoilt me?" |
45895 | Wo n''t you ask Fräulein Therese in both our names if she would n''t care to stay out here for a day or two? 45895 Wo n''t you at any rate come with me for the first act?" |
45895 | Wo n''t you be kind enough--Frau Ehrenberg turned to George--"to play us one or two of your new things?" |
45895 | Wo n''t you come and have supper somewhere with me and Bermann after the theatre? |
45895 | Wo n''t you sit down, Herr Rosner? |
45895 | Wo n''t you take something? |
45895 | Won? 45895 Would it be such a great responsibility?" |
45895 | Would n''t count for me? |
45895 | Would you have been guilty in a case like mine, Heinrich? |
45895 | Would you like that? |
45895 | Would you like to fence a bit? |
45895 | Would you wink, too, if the bullets were flying on both sides? |
45895 | Yes, but why did n''t you simply ask if she...."If she has killed herself? 45895 Yes, what will I say to her?" |
45895 | You attended her? |
45895 | You be quiet now, will you? |
45895 | You been away much longer? |
45895 | You constant, Sissy?... |
45895 | You correspond with her? |
45895 | You expected it, Herr Professor? |
45895 | You have a child? |
45895 | You have not yet answered? |
45895 | You know Corfu? |
45895 | You know him, I suppose? |
45895 | You know what I mean then? 45895 You know what that is? |
45895 | You like solitude? |
45895 | You mean about the contract? |
45895 | You mean because I''ve grown a rich man? 45895 You mean... with that actress, mamma?" |
45895 | You only know him by the initial S? 45895 You play the Mæcenas later on, father Ehrenberg?" |
45895 | You spent the whole day with them? |
45895 | You think so? 45895 You think so?" |
45895 | You think so? |
45895 | You think that because it happened more or less on my account? 45895 You told me...?" |
45895 | You went there just afterwards? |
45895 | You were in the garden? |
45895 | You were in town yesterday? |
45895 | You were n''t very much up at Auhof this year? |
45895 | You were there with your friend? |
45895 | You will tell her? |
45895 | You would like to see it? |
45895 | You''ll be sure to write to me? |
45895 | You''ll drive in with me, Doctor Stauber, wo n''t you? |
45895 | You''ll read me the last act to- morrow, Heinrich? |
45895 | You''re so philosophical to- day, what is it? 45895 You''re speaking about Nürnberger?" |
45895 | You''ve been playing, Anna? |
45895 | You''ve had a look at the things already? 45895 You?" |
45895 | Your brother? |
45895 | Your father is ill, is n''t he? |
45895 | ''Hallo, Doctor, wo n''t you have a drink with me?''" |
45895 | Above all, have I ever said that I liked living among Jews? |
45895 | Adventure...? |
45895 | After all, do you deserve any credit...? |
45895 | After all, what did it really come to?... |
45895 | After all, what do you know about him? |
45895 | After what he has gone through?" |
45895 | Allowed? |
45895 | Am I never to see it again? |
45895 | Am I not right?" |
45895 | And Else had cried her eyes out in front of George one morning in the grounds; but had she only been crying about Oskar? |
45895 | And after all, what do political views matter to men who do n''t make politics their career or their business? |
45895 | And as she was obstinately silent he said once more:"Anna, what are you thinking of?" |
45895 | And did he not love Anna to- day better and more deeply than ever? |
45895 | And do you know the object for which he gave me straight away a thousand gulden...? |
45895 | And do you think, father, that that can have the slightest prospect of success? |
45895 | And had he not frequently yearned for her in that fresh town as hotly as though for a woman who had never yet belonged to him? |
45895 | And he asked her disingenuously, as though conscious of running a risk:"What are you thinking of?" |
45895 | And he asked himself: Does she perhaps mean... that that is the reason? |
45895 | And he asked himself:"Was it fated then that it must end like this? |
45895 | And he hazarded the question:"Why do n''t you stay with her?" |
45895 | And he thought: If I could only just keep her as a friend... or win her over again... as a friend... is it possible? |
45895 | And how did they thank him? |
45895 | And how long would it last until one had a home, a real home? |
45895 | And how was one to describe a glance which flashed down from the eyes of a young singer while one looked up to her from the keys...? |
45895 | And if he did do so would he not be right? |
45895 | And is it a crime to prolong them?... |
45895 | And she? |
45895 | And such a handsome man.... Is it true that he was a chemist?" |
45895 | And the child?... |
45895 | And the thought ran through his mind,"Would n''t it be the most convenient thing to marry her?..." |
45895 | And then he added interrogatively,"But did n''t you give singing lessons to Else last year, Fräulein Anna?" |
45895 | And turning to George he asked him in a tone which was only too courteous:"Do n''t you think so too?" |
45895 | And turning with a smile to Demeter she added:"Of course you wo n''t give him away, Herr Oberlieutenant?" |
45895 | And was he ever to see again all that he had left ten days ago? |
45895 | And was he not still ready to do so? |
45895 | And was it really true that he meant to come back again at Easter? |
45895 | And what about the second part of_ Faust_?... |
45895 | And what did he desire, what did he feel himself? |
45895 | And what is courage? |
45895 | And what, after all, does a suicide really mean? |
45895 | And where will Anna be? |
45895 | And who could know after all what verdicts would pass as the correct ones in the future? |
45895 | And who knew? |
45895 | And would n''t one be able to work there, by Jove?" |
45895 | Anna deceive him... was that really possible? |
45895 | Anyway, what do you say to our stopping here?" |
45895 | Anyway-- how are you getting on out there?" |
45895 | Are our relations really in a bad way? |
45895 | Are you going to stand for the Landtag?" |
45895 | As a matter of symbolical politics or actually-- what?" |
45895 | As for what had happened to Oskar... could that have happened in any other town except Vienna? |
45895 | At any rate you will be home before us, wo n''t you?" |
45895 | At any rate, I suppose your wife has told you about our plans for the immediate future... or am I making a mistake...?" |
45895 | At any rate, only the child? |
45895 | At the door he said:"I suppose we shall see each other this evening at the Medical Society?" |
45895 | Bad conscience?... |
45895 | Been singing, too?" |
45895 | Besides, how could one?" |
45895 | But I say, Anna, had n''t you better get something ready for this evening?" |
45895 | But even more solemnly there rang in his ears the unspoken words: What does the most ardent kiss in which body and soul seem to fuse really come to? |
45895 | But had they not all, as it were, gone into thin air? |
45895 | But have n''t I done so already? |
45895 | But he thought with a shiver: Was she cut out at the same time to be the mother of_ my_ children? |
45895 | But how about your own?" |
45895 | But how about your plans for the autumn?" |
45895 | But how did Parliament come to bother about her?" |
45895 | But how did it...?" |
45895 | But how was it that Sissy also had divined the relationship between him and her? |
45895 | But if it were only that? |
45895 | But if that was so, would he not have been bound to have taken some opportunity this afternoon to have said as much to those two men? |
45895 | But is anything wrong?... |
45895 | But look here, why should the island be uninhabited?" |
45895 | But look here, you''ve got to go anyway, have n''t you? |
45895 | But may I stay a bit longer with you? |
45895 | But speaking generally, George, do n''t you think that we regard these matters a little superficially? |
45895 | But suddenly she asked quite unexpectedly and somewhat gently:"How is your child?" |
45895 | But the question is really this, would you have let yourself go into the thing if you had considered the consequences from every point of view?" |
45895 | But the question is whether the complexion it has in the distance is n''t the right one? |
45895 | But till then?" |
45895 | But to go on standing with your clenched fist in your pocket, so to speak-- what''s the point of it? |
45895 | But was accident anything more than a word? |
45895 | But we can talk about these things another time, do n''t you think? |
45895 | But were even the ensuing months dangerous? |
45895 | But what do you think of all this talk about a philosophy of life? |
45895 | But what does it matter?" |
45895 | But what does that prove? |
45895 | But what else is there for me to do? |
45895 | But what is a man to do?" |
45895 | But what is one to do?... |
45895 | But what was the really ghostly element in that dream? |
45895 | But where? |
45895 | But why did he think of him of all people? |
45895 | But why did it affect him so much all of a sudden?... |
45895 | But why should it alter a man''s relationship to the world if he himself has all his wits and senses about him?" |
45895 | But why was he so frightened? |
45895 | But why, why...?" |
45895 | But why? |
45895 | But wo n''t you take off your overcoat? |
45895 | But you do feel, do n''t you? |
45895 | But you really work damned little, do n''t you? |
45895 | But... but perhaps you could manage to dine with... with... us at the Park Hotel, yes? |
45895 | By whom have the Jews been betrayed and deserted? |
45895 | By whom were the Jews left in the lurch?... |
45895 | By- the- bye, who was the gentleman who was up there in the gallery with her?" |
45895 | Ca n''t she have the child with her anyway? |
45895 | Café cronies?" |
45895 | Can I read it?" |
45895 | Can he perhaps be jealous of Felician... on account of Else Ehrenberg? |
45895 | Can it be that you"--and his glance swept her in amazement from top to toe--"are making a political tour?" |
45895 | Classy, eh?" |
45895 | Come,"he added,"is one going to get another chance soon of seeing or reading one of your fine pieces of work?" |
45895 | Could he forgive Anna? |
45895 | Could it really ever end? |
45895 | Could n''t Heinrich see that and feel it just as he did? |
45895 | Could not every one make a mistake, a physician as much as a layman? |
45895 | Could one recount this to one''s mistress in Vienna without her reading something suspicious between the lines? |
45895 | Could you reproach yourself the slightest bit if she really went to her death, through the so- called pangs of despised love? |
45895 | Did Berthold have any idea...? |
45895 | Did George know, by- the- by, that Oskar was travelling with the Prince of Guastalla? |
45895 | Did George understand it too?... |
45895 | Did Heinrich still find the matter so tragi- comic? |
45895 | Did he know that she was here and whom she was with? |
45895 | Did he love solitude?... |
45895 | Did he not love Anna more than he had ever done before? |
45895 | Did he not love her? |
45895 | Did he suffer?... |
45895 | Did n''t we squabble dreadfully, Therese and I? |
45895 | Did n''t you read it?" |
45895 | Did she hope to, I wonder? |
45895 | Did she think again that he was lacking in initiative?... |
45895 | Did the others know what kind of a man he was any better? |
45895 | Did they have any significance? |
45895 | Did you go looking, too?" |
45895 | Did you know that there were such people?" |
45895 | Did you stay there a fairly long time, Herr Bermann?" |
45895 | Did you want me by any chance to be jealous about that letter?" |
45895 | Disgusting, is n''t it?" |
45895 | Do I ask him about his affairs? |
45895 | Do I look upon the whole thing as simply a distraction? |
45895 | Do I love her less? |
45895 | Do n''t you believe me? |
45895 | Do n''t you feel it a strain?" |
45895 | Do n''t you think so? |
45895 | Do n''t you think so?" |
45895 | Do they exert the slightest influence on the policy and moulding of existence? |
45895 | Do we not deserve to? |
45895 | Do you believe me?" |
45895 | Do you come from home, Anna?" |
45895 | Do you know those moods in which all one''s memories near or distant lose, as it were, their oppressive reality? |
45895 | Do you know what I often think?... |
45895 | Do you know what it will probably look like in the end? |
45895 | Do you know what would have to be described? |
45895 | Do you know why I was at Ehrenbergs''then?... |
45895 | Do you know, by the way, whom I had a very interesting conversation with the other day on this very subject?" |
45895 | Do you know, by- the- by, where she lies buried? |
45895 | Do you mean Count Eberhard Malnitz, who had a suite performed a few years ago?" |
45895 | Do you see, for instance, that white one with the white terrace?" |
45895 | Do you seriously think so? |
45895 | Do you still do music together?" |
45895 | Do you still remember Leo Golowski saying about her that she was fated to finish up in respectable life? |
45895 | Do you think I despise the''faithless woman''or that I hate her? |
45895 | Do you think anything like that so absolutely out of the question?" |
45895 | Do you think by any chance, mamma, that George Wergenthin is not?" |
45895 | Do you think that so soon? |
45895 | Do you think, George, that a marriage with you would have been particularly respectable? |
45895 | Does Vienna really exist? |
45895 | Does he forget that I am a German myself...?" |
45895 | Does it all hang together?" |
45895 | Does it ever happen that any one wins? |
45895 | Does she know? |
45895 | Does that suit you?" |
45895 | Ehrenberg answered brusquely:"Did I ever tell you that I intended to emigrate? |
45895 | Engagement? |
45895 | Ever?... |
45895 | Finally he said:"You have no thought of legitimising your relationship?" |
45895 | For how long shall you be away?" |
45895 | George asked again in a lighter tone:"So it was Stanzides?" |
45895 | George asked casually"How long is he staying in Paris?" |
45895 | George asked her jokingly if she did n''t have perhaps the secret intention of going on the stage? |
45895 | George passed his hand over his damp forehead and said to the doctor with a bitter smile:"Is that what you mean by going on nicely?" |
45895 | George was not satisfied:"Why must Ägidius die?" |
45895 | George was silent for a few seconds and suddenly asked, with more emotion than he usually manifested:"Is it he then...?" |
45895 | Go to her? |
45895 | Go to the club and rout out Felician? |
45895 | Good gracious, what have n''t I known since we have known each other?" |
45895 | Had celebrity in these days anything at all to do with honour, and was being ignored and forgotten worth even a single shrug of regret? |
45895 | Had he a right still to think about such things?... |
45895 | Had he been really touched then, as Nürnberger had asserted? |
45895 | Had he ever composed anything better than that wordless song to be sung on the water with its sprightly rocking melody? |
45895 | Had he really got as far as all that already with his good sensible Anna? |
45895 | Had he really spent the whole summer in Vienna? |
45895 | Had his appearance been a great surprise for Anna? |
45895 | Had it not been finished the very second when quite by chance he became a father? |
45895 | Had it not dated far longer back? |
45895 | Had n''t it been in Munich...? |
45895 | Had not the year that had just passed been wonderfully rich and beautiful with its happiness and its grief? |
45895 | Had she not spoken those words of trust and tenderness to him in a twilight church:"I will pray to Heaven that you become a great artist"? |
45895 | Had you any idea of it?" |
45895 | Has n''t she said herself that she will be proud of having a child? |
45895 | Has the same kind of thing really happened to any one else before? |
45895 | Have you anything special on, Baron?" |
45895 | Have you ever heard him speak?" |
45895 | Have you ever read anything of his?" |
45895 | Have you written any more?" |
45895 | He asked her quickly"What does it really mean?" |
45895 | He bore him no grudge at all for it; but why do they always begin to talk about it themselves? |
45895 | He felt troubled and asked her uncertainly:"You''ll allow me, of course, to send you my violin sonata as soon as it is finished? |
45895 | He now began again:"And what will you do in this half- year, while I''m away? |
45895 | He pretended to be surprised,"What''s the matter, child?... |
45895 | He suddenly stood upon a great open meadow where Heinrich Bermann ran up and down and asked him: Are you also looking for the lady''s castle? |
45895 | He then introduced them and said to the lady:"Wo n''t you sit down?" |
45895 | He then went on to ask:"Did you have a pleasant talk with Heinrich? |
45895 | He thought he felt what she was thinking; ca n''t he say anything better than that?... |
45895 | He was healthy, she was healthy, two strong young people.... Could anything like that be really possible? |
45895 | He''s not so very strict?" |
45895 | He... and did he not deceive her in spite of it, or was ready to do so at any moment, which, after all, came to the same thing? |
45895 | Heinrich remained stationary and jerked out with clenched teeth:"Tell me, my dear George, have you not really noticed that I am a coward?" |
45895 | Heinrich still had a sheet of faded yellow paper in his hand when he got up and hailed George with the words,"Well, how goes the country?" |
45895 | His love? |
45895 | How are all the numerous friends of your popular family?" |
45895 | How can I know? |
45895 | How can one contend.... Do you know that I am going to Germany in the autumn as a conductor?" |
45895 | How could she get here?" |
45895 | How could she have an idea either? |
45895 | How do you know?" |
45895 | How long had it been since he had heard Doctor Stauber say those words? |
45895 | How long will this Demeter affair last? |
45895 | How many talks had they not had since? |
45895 | How many tried again if they had failed once? |
45895 | How shall I manage it?... |
45895 | How so?" |
45895 | How were things with me a year ago? |
45895 | How will it all turn out? |
45895 | How will it all turn out? |
45895 | Hypocrite? |
45895 | I am really a more constant nature than you are, am I not?" |
45895 | I just accompanied her....""I suppose you''ll do so again this year?" |
45895 | I promise you that you wo n''t be bored by theoretical conversation like you were once last autumn... do you still remember?" |
45895 | I say, George, I suppose you are probably coming back from the country to- day?" |
45895 | I say, have you heard, Fräulein Else is supposed to be engaged?" |
45895 | I suppose you are going to Anna now? |
45895 | I suppose you are going to sleep soon?" |
45895 | I suppose you''re now going straight out into the country again?" |
45895 | I suppose you''ve read about it, Baron?" |
45895 | I was sitting here on the balcony in my dream, and had it in my arms at the breast....""But what was it, a boy or a girl?" |
45895 | I wonder if I would have told him at all? |
45895 | I wonder if all this would have happened if he had lived?" |
45895 | I wonder if he would be here now if he were still alive? |
45895 | I wonder if my father walked about as nervously as I am doing? |
45895 | I wonder if you''d be in such a hurry, you know, if you were going to keep an appointment with me...? |
45895 | I''ll introduce you as a manager, eh? |
45895 | I''ll just ask the old woman if she has any news.... What do you say?... |
45895 | I''ll play it to you quite gently; would you like me to?" |
45895 | I''m sure that''s going to Prague, do n''t you think so, Herr Bermann?" |
45895 | I''ve written to you about it, have n''t I? |
45895 | I? |
45895 | If she called him would he not go? |
45895 | Impotently? |
45895 | In the prompter''s box, I suppose?" |
45895 | Indeed? |
45895 | Is he any better? |
45895 | Is he really here?" |
45895 | Is her voice all right now?" |
45895 | Is his manner really so excited? |
45895 | Is it simply curiosity?" |
45895 | Is it true, then...? |
45895 | Is she not right in trusting me? |
45895 | Is that right, or is there anything missing?" |
45895 | Is that what you think? |
45895 | It could not hurt her, could it?... |
45895 | It eats up all my strength, it makes me incapable of feeling like a son, like a human being... is n''t it ghastly?" |
45895 | It had rung half like a reproach and half like a warning, and if she herself was so little sure of herself could he trust her implicitly? |
45895 | It is sheer nonsense, is n''t it? |
45895 | It looks just like a little box, does n''t it? |
45895 | It was quite jolly.... What have you got in your hand?" |
45895 | It would be so nice, Doctor, if you could stay; wo n''t you?" |
45895 | It''s not so late then?" |
45895 | It''s rather in the songs that one feels... but feels what?... |
45895 | Joy?... |
45895 | Many perhaps get an inkling, but understand? |
45895 | Murderess? |
45895 | Nevertheless he looked at the doctor again and asked:"Can nothing more be done?" |
45895 | Not a Hofrat-- nor a count-- nor an author-- nor a diabolical female?" |
45895 | Not to enter into negotiations straight away or to take a post, which he would turn out to be unable to fill? |
45895 | Now he was at liberty to knock about the world as he had done before.... Was he really at liberty? |
45895 | Of course you will come and see her?" |
45895 | Of course, you believe, too, that I have had an affair with Stanzides? |
45895 | Oh well, what did he care about the family? |
45895 | Oh yes, the Detmold telegram.... Was it really so lucky? |
45895 | On leave? |
45895 | One of the dancers? |
45895 | One of those yonder, ruminating in the darkness? |
45895 | Only to- day? |
45895 | Or Heinrich, of all people?... |
45895 | Or did she think perhaps"I am really going to succeed, I shall be his wife?..." |
45895 | Or her as well?... |
45895 | Or is it because I am somewhere else, in a strange flat? |
45895 | Or just a dull day? |
45895 | Or like my voyage with Grace across the sea? |
45895 | Or was it after all so fated at the moment when we embraced each other for the first time?" |
45895 | Or was it the mysterious light of some star over the world that had not yet shone for any one except him? |
45895 | Or was the hour of trial so near? |
45895 | Or with a chorus? |
45895 | Perhaps it had been always there, from the very first moment when they had belonged to each other, and even in the moments of their supreme happiness? |
45895 | Perhaps you heard me singing?" |
45895 | Run away?" |
45895 | Sacked? |
45895 | Satisfied?" |
45895 | Shall I sing them to you?" |
45895 | Shall I tell you something, Herr Baron? |
45895 | Shall I tell you something? |
45895 | She''s not ill, is she?" |
45895 | Should he ask for a postponement? |
45895 | Solitude, change of scene, movement: had he not enjoyed a threefold happiness? |
45895 | Stay here? |
45895 | Steps? |
45895 | Suddenly the voice of the woman he loved rang through the darkness again, whispering and mournful:"How long will it take you to forget me?"... |
45895 | Supposing Anna had taken it as a serious declaration or as a kind of wooing? |
45895 | Supposing the actress were now really sitting quietly at home with her mother? |
45895 | Supposing they did all know?... |
45895 | Supposing they did know... do you think that would prevent people from inviting you? |
45895 | That I would prefer to live anywhere else except here? |
45895 | That she deceived you with... what was it now?..." |
45895 | The balcony, the little blue angel between the flowers, the white seat under the pear- tree, where was it all now? |
45895 | The little angel in blue clay between the flower- beds, the verandah with the wooden gable, the silent garden with the currant- and the lilac- bushes? |
45895 | The princess herself? |
45895 | The sage or the fool? |
45895 | The star- gazer yonder? |
45895 | The thought then ran through his mind: Would it not have been more sensible...? |
45895 | The words which she had spoken were still ringing in his ears:"What is there really in letters, however detailed they are?"... |
45895 | Then Leo suddenly turned to George and asked:"And how is his sister getting on with her singing?" |
45895 | Then he added, almost menacingly:"Does it live?" |
45895 | Then he asked hoarsely:"How is she?" |
45895 | Then he said:"Do you know that there is a little summer- house at the top end of the garden? |
45895 | Then he said:"I am afraid I must go into town now; you''ll excuse me, wo n''t you? |
45895 | Then there came the summer, they would be together, and then? |
45895 | Therese quickly said to George:"Of course you do n''t come with us?" |
45895 | Therese, is n''t that so?" |
45895 | This is n''t an opera at all....""What do you mean?" |
45895 | Those are probably the people who are granted the gift of realising straight away.... My mistress has drowned herself, do you see? |
45895 | Those men stealing up the steps yonder? |
45895 | To make a fool of myself once more, no, no, no....""Well, what will you do?" |
45895 | Was George to prove to him that his talent entitled him to be Anna''s lover or her child''s father? |
45895 | Was Nürnberger right again? |
45895 | Was he not afraid, she had asked him, to have it on his conscience that he was making her into a liar? |
45895 | Was he not far more cut out for adventures of that kind than for the quiet life full of responsibilities which he had chosen for himself? |
45895 | Was he not obliged to enlighten her that he had not meant it in that way?... |
45895 | Was he still as sceptical as ever of his seriousness? |
45895 | Was it evening? |
45895 | Was it morning? |
45895 | Was it not almost as though she set more store by his artistic future than by him himself?... |
45895 | Was it not she whom he had always been seeking? |
45895 | Was it possible, then, that she was to be the last woman whom he was to embrace? |
45895 | Was it really all over? |
45895 | Was n''t I a thousand times better off in the little town where I had started a new life, in spite of all my longings?... |
45895 | Was n''t it?" |
45895 | Was not a faint beat of a drum droning out of a corner of the orchestra? |
45895 | Was not even that accident bound to have its cause? |
45895 | Was not that his plain duty? |
45895 | Was not the''cello singing and the violin? |
45895 | Was she spell- bound by excitement? |
45895 | Was that how he had suddenly come to regard the matter? |
45895 | Was that really the same being whom he was to see again in a few hours? |
45895 | Was there a blockhead in the country who could not boast of having been hailed as a genius in some rag or other? |
45895 | Was there any foundation for the rumour that he would be engaged again in active political life in the approaching winter? |
45895 | Was there some law at work in this? |
45895 | Was this morning the first time...? |
45895 | We''re good friends, nothing more-- and even that only at intervals; or do you really think that I''m in love with him, mamma? |
45895 | Well, to- morrow, is n''t it? |
45895 | Well, what''s the news out there?" |
45895 | Well, who knows?" |
45895 | Were not the fools really the geniuses and the geniuses really the fools? |
45895 | Were not, from to- day onwards, his responsibilities more serious than they had ever been? |
45895 | Were there not flutes sounding and oboes and clarionets? |
45895 | What are the contents?" |
45895 | What did he really understand about the whole thing? |
45895 | What did he really want of her? |
45895 | What did she want and what was she ready for?... |
45895 | What did the old man know? |
45895 | What did this young man, who was so mature for his years, really want of him? |
45895 | What did you speak about? |
45895 | What do you know about it, Else? |
45895 | What do you think of my new dress?" |
45895 | What do you want me to do then? |
45895 | What does it all come to, when you still go and leave me quite alone?... |
45895 | What does nervousness really mean? |
45895 | What does she know?... |
45895 | What does the fact that I had a child by you come to? |
45895 | What does the fact that we travelled together for months through strange lands really come to? |
45895 | What does the fact that you cried out in my lap your remorse for your deception? |
45895 | What does the faith of your father mean to you? |
45895 | What had become of me at that moment, so far as she was concerned? |
45895 | What had been the significance of these past months with all their dreams, their troubles and their hopes? |
45895 | What had he anticipated then at that time?... |
45895 | What had he in common with these people? |
45895 | What has ever helped the Jews? |
45895 | What have you got to say to that? |
45895 | What is your home- country, Palestine? |
45895 | What kind of a woman is it who is responsible for taking you away from me this time?" |
45895 | What makes you say that, Herr Eissler? |
45895 | What makes you think that, Fräulein Else?" |
45895 | What makes you think that?" |
45895 | What more am I to ask you to do? |
45895 | What name would it have had? |
45895 | What now...? |
45895 | What now? |
45895 | What should I be doing there?" |
45895 | What should he answer now? |
45895 | What was he probably thinking? |
45895 | What was it? |
45895 | What was passing within her mind?... |
45895 | What was the important thing now? |
45895 | What was the point of it all? |
45895 | What was the point? |
45895 | What would happen?... |
45895 | What would n''t one fall into,"she said,"if one didn''t"--she gave an ironic smile--"have to sacrifice oneself for humanity? |
45895 | What would you say, for example, if I were to go in for a political comedy? |
45895 | What young man is n''t involved in a serious love affair? |
45895 | What''s the good to me of my knowledge of human nature and my splendid intelligence? |
45895 | What''s the good to me of the lights burning in all my storeys? |
45895 | What''s the matter with him? |
45895 | What''s the point? |
45895 | What''s the worst that can happen to you? |
45895 | What''s your impression? |
45895 | What, after all, could he do out here? |
45895 | What, after all, is a child that has n''t yet lived? |
45895 | What_ does_ he want? |
45895 | When are you leaving again?" |
45895 | When will it come into the world? |
45895 | When? |
45895 | Where could you put it during the rehearsals? |
45895 | Where had he heard this last? |
45895 | Where is he getting to again now? |
45895 | Where should we all get to, then? |
45895 | Where was it now? |
45895 | Where will it spend its first years? |
45895 | Whether one does not persuade oneself into believing a lot of rot, if one''s got a part to play in the comedy oneself?" |
45895 | Which one? |
45895 | Who could she be? |
45895 | Who created the Liberal movement in Austria?... |
45895 | Who created the National- German movement in Austria? |
45895 | Who is entitled to complain? |
45895 | Who is it then?... |
45895 | Who knows if I have not spoilt her life?" |
45895 | Who knows if anything will come of it?" |
45895 | Who knows if he would n''t have turned into a kind of Oskar Ehrenberg in Vienna? |
45895 | Who knows if your child''s death could not have been prevented at some moment or other?" |
45895 | Who knows when he will come? |
45895 | Whom did it concern? |
45895 | Why am I so seldom here? |
45895 | Why are you so touchy? |
45895 | Why did I come to Vienna? |
45895 | Why did he not entreat her? |
45895 | Why did he not speak the right words? |
45895 | Why did he want to think of that light which was sun and yet did not shine, that blue in the heights which was heaven and yet did not bless him? |
45895 | Why do I feel so little of that now? |
45895 | Why do I still go on walking with him, he thought, and why does he take it quite for granted that I should? |
45895 | Why do n''t I live out here and work on top on the balcony under the gable, which has a beautiful view on to the Sommerhaidenweg? |
45895 | Why do n''t you live out here?" |
45895 | Why do n''t you say straight away the happiness of creating?" |
45895 | Why does she say that? |
45895 | Why have I seen all these people again? |
45895 | Why is my heart beating? |
45895 | Why not? |
45895 | Why search for reasons? |
45895 | Why should it not happen that Anna should deceive him? |
45895 | Why then reveal his soul to another? |
45895 | Why to- day all of a sudden? |
45895 | Why was he silent, as he sat at the piano and gently struck notes and chords...? |
45895 | Why, he thought, are even the best- bred men usually tactless when they meet people like myself? |
45895 | Why?" |
45895 | Why?... |
45895 | Will Else marry him? |
45895 | Will anything come of the Detmold business? |
45895 | Will it be over when the autumn comes or will it after all last as long or longer than my affair with Anna? |
45895 | Will that suit you?" |
45895 | Will you come?" |
45895 | Wo n''t you come in and have an ice?" |
45895 | Wo n''t you go on reading?" |
45895 | Wo n''t you read it?" |
45895 | Wo n''t you tell me?" |
45895 | Would he ever meet again a person of a similar type? |
45895 | Would he find it more congenial if a party of Polish Jews were to sit here and sing psalms? |
45895 | Would he mind if he knew that you gave it to me to read?" |
45895 | Would it be your duty to give in? |
45895 | Would n''t it really be more sensible to devote another year to study? |
45895 | Would the Rosners be at home on such a beautiful day? |
45895 | Would you like to have a look at the grounds in the meanwhile?" |
45895 | Would you regard yourself as her murderer? |
45895 | Yes, I''ve been going through a bad time, and who knows if there''s a better one in store for me?" |
45895 | Yes, what then? |
45895 | Yes, where had these hours gone to? |
45895 | Yes, who bothered about it? |
45895 | Yes.... What should one do first?" |
45895 | You are not thinking of marrying by any chance?" |
45895 | You can soon find an excuse; besides, whom does it concern? |
45895 | You do n''t mind?" |
45895 | You know him, too, do n''t you, father?" |
45895 | You know of course that Therese is one of the leaders of the Social Democratic Party?" |
45895 | You know of course where the churchyard is? |
45895 | You think you''re capable now of being able to face the... unpleasantness which you ran away from last year?" |
45895 | You''ll excuse me?" |
45895 | [ 1]"Have you finished your quintette?" |
45895 | and had he really only been away from her for ten days? |
45895 | and have you a sleeping- car, my dear Fräulein?" |
45895 | any juster? |
45895 | anything stronger? |
45895 | anything to take away all my fear-- take it away from me for ever? |
45895 | are you also going to Munich by any chance?" |
45895 | he asked keenly,"are you coming with me?" |
45895 | he said to George,"have you really waited for me after all? |
45895 | queried Heinrich,"and you feel no emotion when you hear the word Rhine spoken?" |
45895 | she exclaimed;"but have n''t I come too early?" |
45895 | she inquired,"were n''t you, Prince Karl Friedrich?" |
45895 | she who was at once mistress and comrade, with a serious outlook upon everything in the world, and yet made for every madness and for every bliss? |
45895 | that all this was never, never to come again? |
45895 | thought George, or do I only think it is? |
45895 | thought George,"than I do him, or is it simply another piece of megalomania...?" |
45895 | to have appealed to them? |
45895 | why does n''t she come to see you any more? |
45895 | why should I be the victim? |
45895 | why?" |