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 |
---|---|
44823 | I then observed to my friends that the commandant would expect some present from us-- such was the custom-- and what should it be? |
44823 | Then an old Indian, finding that his plot was exposed, ran down to the beach, hailing the boats:"Where you go?" |
44823 | if this is not little Sammy Forman,"and, hugging and kissing me, added,"Why, do n''t you remember Charley Morgan? |
18184 | Granting that they may have been acquainted with the animal, the question arises, what proof is there that they actually were? |
18184 | It may be asked why if the Mound- Builders and the mastodon were contemporaneous, have no traces of the ivory tusks ever been exhumed from the mounds? |
31907 | (?)--1/3.] |
31907 | 394.--Pot: Arkansas(?).--1/3.] |
31907 | 395.--Pot: Arkansas(?).--1/3.] |
31907 | 397.--Pot: Arkansas(?).--1/3.] |
31907 | 399.--Pot: Alabama(?).--1/3.] |
31907 | 400.--Pot: Arkansas(?).--1/3.] |
31907 | 401.--Pot: Arkansas(?).--1/3.] |
31907 | 402.--Pot: Arkansas(?).--1/3.] |
31907 | 447.--Arkansas(?).--1/3.] |
31907 | Cups: Arkansas(?).--1/3.] |
27394 | _ Who hath heard such a thing? 27394 Is it extraordinary that people thus exposed should be attacked by violent maladies? 27394 It may be asked,If Arkansas be so fine a country, why has it not been settled faster?" |
27394 | Mounds of earth are found in every country on the globe, of all forms and sizes; and why should they not exist in the western valley? |
27394 | Shall the earth be made to bring forth in one day? |
27394 | Under such circumstances, can it be surprising that many were sick, and that many died? |
27394 | Who hath seen such things? |
27394 | With such management, is it surprising that our cows and steers are much inferior to those of the old States? |
27394 | Would it not be more wonderful that such a careless prodigality of life could pass with impunity? |
27394 | or shall a nation be born at once?_"Isaiah, LXVI. |
44268 | And fightings and gougings? |
44268 | And where do you live? |
44268 | Have you ladies on board your vessel? |
44268 | How do you like Kentucky? |
44268 | How far are you come to day? |
44268 | Part of the deer, which you know you could not have got without our assistance? |
44268 | They are immensely great, and wonderfully powerful people; ar''nt they? |
44268 | Was not I a fool? |
44268 | Well,interrupted the judge impatient of the delay;"what have you to say against the charge? |
44268 | What do you want, gentlemen? |
44268 | You do n''t live in Cincinnati, I guess, do you? |
44268 | Dick is a fine gouger-- the second turn-- John down-- and both thumbs in his eyes.--I presume you have races in Pennsylvania?" |
44268 | The wounded man seating himself, asked again,"What part do you choose?" |
8476 | ''Now, do you know what boat that was?'' |
8476 | ''Was she going fast?'' |
8476 | ''Yes, you did-- DIDN''T you?'' |
8476 | 13 say? |
8476 | Are they going to peg all the banks? |
8476 | But what does the river care for a stone wall? |
8476 | GOING TO BE A YEAR GETTING THAT HOGSHEAD ASHORE?'' |
8476 | Is dat so? |
8476 | Presently someone asked--''Any boat gone up?'' |
8476 | Says enough to knock THEIR little game galley- west, do n''t it? |
8476 | What do you reckon that is for? |
8476 | Where did you go when you went to see that battle?'' |
8478 | ''Cover it? |
8478 | ''How many cards?'' |
8478 | ''Oh, it DID, did it? |
8478 | ''Oh, that''s your little game, is it? |
8478 | ''What have you got?'' |
8478 | As they left the table, Cincinnati said--''But you have to have custom- house marks, do n''t you? |
8478 | Had he yielded at last? |
8478 | How do you manage that?'' |
8478 | Tell''m apart? |
8478 | There now-- what do you say? |
8478 | What had he gone below for?--His bag of coin? |
8478 | Would n''t their eyes bug out, to see''em handled like that?--wouldn''t they, though?'' |
8478 | You ai n''t a- going out to Californy for fun, nuther am I-- it''s business, ai n''t that so? |
8478 | you mean to say you''re going to cover it?'' |
8481 | ''A dark and dreadful one?'' |
8481 | ''Account for it? |
8481 | ''How do you account for it?'' |
8481 | ''Is that so?'' |
8481 | ''Which one?'' |
8481 | ''Why did n''t you see them Roman soldiers that stood back there in a rank, and sometimes marched in procession around the stage?'' |
8481 | And what did the husband do? |
8481 | At last he said in a low voice--''My little friend, can you keep a secret?'' |
8481 | Do all whom you send from Hartford serve their Master as well? |
8481 | I asked him various questions; first about a mate of mine in Sunday school-- what became of him? |
8481 | I met him on the street the next morning, and before I could speak, he asked--''Did you see me?'' |
8481 | Some talk followed--''Why-- what should make you suspect that it is n''t genuine?'' |
8481 | Well, when you come to look at it all around, and chew at it and think it over, do n''t it just bang anything you ever heard of?'' |
8480 | Are you happy? |
8480 | Do all the good people go to your place? |
8480 | How do you amuse yourself? |
8480 | How long have you been in the spirit land? |
8480 | Is not this true? |
8480 | Then this one has actually forgotten the date of its translation to the spirit land? |
8480 | Very well, then, when did you pass away? |
8480 | Well, then, what year was it? |
8480 | What do you drink? |
8480 | What do you eat there? |
8480 | What do you read? |
8480 | What do you smoke? |
8480 | What do you talk about? |
8480 | What else? |
8480 | When did you die? |
8480 | When your friends in the earth all get to the spirit land, what shall you have to talk about then?--nothing but about how happy you all are? |
8480 | Where are you? |
8480 | Would you like to come back? |
8480 | Would you say that under oath? |
8475 | ''An alligator boat? |
8475 | ''Are they so thick as to be troublesome?'' |
8475 | ''Ca n''t you drink it?'' |
8475 | ''Did they actually impede navigation?'' |
8475 | ''Do you ever get aground on the alligators now?'' |
8475 | ''First time you have ever been West?'' |
8475 | ''Has she got any of her trip?'' |
8475 | ''Is this the first time you were ever in a pilot- house?'' |
8475 | ''Well, then, why do they still keep the alligator boats in service?'' |
8475 | ''What for?'' |
8475 | ''Where are you from?'' |
8475 | For instance--''Do you see that little boulder sticking out of the water yonder? |
8475 | Going to be all day? |
8475 | He paid first- class wages; but said I, What''s wages when your reputation''s in danger? |
8475 | He said--''What is a person to do here when he wants a drink of water?--drink this slush?'' |
8475 | How do criminals manage to keep a brand- new ALIAS in mind? |
8475 | Reputation''s worth everything, ai n''t it? |
8475 | So I was thinking, when the pilot asked--''Do you know what this rope is for?'' |
8475 | Well, I let you, did n''t I? |
8475 | What''s it for?'' |
8475 | When I had gone about twenty- three miles, and made four horribly crooked crossings--''''Without any rudder?'' |
8475 | Where now is the once wood- yard man? |
7196 | AIN''T it gay? |
7196 | Say-- boys, do n''t say anything about it, and some time when they''re around, I''ll come up to you and say,''Joe, got a pipe? 7196 Say? |
7196 | That''s just the way with me, hain''t it, Huck? 7196 Well, the things is ours, anyway, ai n''t they?" |
7196 | Well, we''ll let the cry- baby go home to his mother, wo n''t we, Huck? 7196 Well, what would you do?" |
7196 | What makes the candle blow so? |
7196 | What sail''s she carrying? |
7196 | What would the boys say if they could see us? |
7196 | Who? |
7196 | And when we tell''em we learned when we was off pirating, wo n''t they wish they''d been along?" |
7196 | Do n''t you remember, Huck,''bout me saying that?" |
7196 | Do n''t you remember, Huck? |
7196 | How''d you feel to light on a rotten chest full of gold and silver-- hey?" |
7196 | How''d you get around it?" |
7196 | Now I wonder what?" |
7196 | Poor thing-- does it want to see its mother? |
7196 | Presently Huck said:"What does pirates have to do?" |
7196 | Then a guarded voice said:"Who goes there?" |
7196 | We''ll stay, wo n''t we, Huck? |
7196 | We''ll stay, wo n''t we?" |
7196 | What right had the friendless to complain? |
7196 | You like it here, do n''t you, Huck? |
7196 | You''ve heard me talk just that way-- haven''t you, Huck? |
53648 | Again-- I have been enquired of, what can a man do to make property in Texas? |
53648 | As a last resort,( could a virtuous woman think so?) |
53648 | Better take property or life; for what of value has a man left when deprived of his"good name?" |
53648 | Can the result be doubtful? |
53648 | I have been frequently asked, what particular spot in Texas is the most desirable for an emigrant to settle in? |
53648 | Is Texas a desirable place for a northern man? |
53648 | Is it not in accordance with the christian religion, if a brother offend, to go_ privately to him_, and tell him his fault? |
53648 | Is this denied? |
53648 | It has often been asked, who built these mounds, and for what purpose were they erected? |
53648 | Shall I be asked to particularize? |
53648 | The clerk would sing out,"Wood- pile, wood- pile, where are the wooders?" |
53648 | The rider checked his horse and said, who''s there? |
53648 | What rational man would think of it? |
53648 | What would the people of the several States say to this? |
53648 | What, then, is the conclusion of the whole matter? |
53648 | Who are the inhabitants of Illinois? |
53648 | Who built them? |
53648 | Who will be the biographer of_ Sam Patch_? |
8473 | ''How much water is there in it?'' |
8473 | ''Is n''t it easier in toward shore than it is out here in the middle?'' |
8473 | ''Know how to RUN it? |
8473 | ''Who IS I? |
8473 | ''Who wants you to get it? |
8473 | ''You think so, do you?'' |
8473 | And who was it that had the dashing presumption to do that? |
8473 | Are you acting under a law of the concern?'' |
8473 | Bixby?'' |
8473 | By and by the watchman came back and said--''Did n''t that lunatic tell you he was asleep, when he first came up here?'' |
8473 | Did n''t you KNOW there was no bottom in that crossing?'' |
8473 | Do you mean to say that you do n''t know as much as they do?'' |
8473 | Do you think there is any danger?'' |
8473 | Finally one of the managers bustled up to him and said--''Who IS you, any way? |
8473 | How much will it be?'' |
8473 | I laid in the lead, set the boat in her marks, came ahead on the engines, and said--''It was a fine trick to play on an orphan, WASN''T it? |
8473 | I suppose you know the next crossing?'' |
8473 | Just then the night watchman happened in, and was about to happen out again, when he noticed Ealer and exclaimed--''Who is at the wheel, sir?'' |
8473 | Presently he ventured to remark, with deference--''Pretty good stage of the river now, ai n''t it, sir?'' |
8473 | So they stepped into the association rooms, and the secretary soon satisfied the captain, who said--''Well, what am I to do? |
8473 | W----, do n''t that chute cut off a good deal of distance?'' |
8473 | Well, is n''t there water enough in it now to go through?'' |
8473 | Who IS I? |
8473 | Who is you? |
8473 | Who is your other pilot?'' |
8473 | Why?'' |
8473 | is there no way to save him?'' |
8471 | ''Did it have its hair parted?'' |
8471 | ''Edward, did the child look like it was choked?'' |
8471 | ''Have you got the papers for them statistics, Edmund?'' |
8471 | ''Him? |
8471 | ''How did you get dry so quick?'' |
8471 | ''Say, Edward, do n''t you reckon you''d better take a pill? |
8471 | ''Say-- what did they do with the bar''l?'' |
8471 | ''WHO was shedding tears?'' |
8471 | ''Well, Aleck, where did you come from, here?'' |
8471 | ''Well, never mind how it could cry-- how could it KEEP all that time?'' |
8471 | ''What are you after here? |
8471 | ''What was the brand on that bar''l, Eddy?'' |
8471 | ''Who are you?'' |
8471 | Been dead three years-- how could it cry?'' |
8471 | But what did you hide for?'' |
8471 | Crippled them how, says you? |
8471 | Going to heave it clear astern? |
8471 | Honest, now, do you live in a scow, or is it a lie?'' |
8471 | How can you tell it''s an empty bar''l?" |
8471 | How long have you been aboard here?'' |
8471 | I says--''"What''s that?" |
8471 | Looky- here; if we let you off this time, will you keep out of these kind of scrapes hereafter?'' |
8471 | Naturally the question suggests itself, Why did these people want the river now when nobody had wanted it in the five preceding generations? |
8471 | To steal?'' |
8471 | What IS your name?'' |
8471 | What did you come aboard here, for? |
8471 | What was it to me that he was soiled and seedy and fragrant with gin? |
8471 | What''s your name?'' |
8471 | You look bad-- do n''t you feel pale?'' |
8471 | says Bob;''was it Allbright or the baby?'' |
8474 | ''Are you aware that this boat was plowing down the river fully five minutes with no one at the wheel?'' |
8474 | ''Did it knock him down?'' |
8474 | ''Did n''t YOU hear him?'' |
8474 | ''Did you follow it up? |
8474 | ''Did you pound him much?--that is, severely?'' |
8474 | ''Did you strike him first?'' |
8474 | ''Do you know that that is a very serious matter?'' |
8474 | ''Hard?'' |
8474 | ''Pounded him?'' |
8474 | ''What did you do?'' |
8474 | ''What with?'' |
8474 | ''What you standing there for? |
8474 | ''Where was you born?'' |
8474 | AIN''T it now? |
8474 | After a pause--''Where''d you get them shoes?'' |
8474 | Brown?'' |
8474 | Did n''t Henry tell you to land here?'' |
8474 | Did you do anything further?'' |
8474 | Do n''t you hear me? |
8474 | Give him a good sound thrashing, do you hear? |
8474 | Going to run over that snag?'' |
8474 | I said,"It''s my nature; how can I change it?" |
8474 | Now came this shriek--''Here!--You going to set there all day?'' |
8474 | ORDERS, is it? |
8474 | Then--''What''s your name?'' |
8474 | Two minutes later--''WHERE in the nation you going to? |
8474 | What was you doing down there all this time?'' |
8474 | When the leads had been laid in, he resumed--''How long you been on the river?'' |
8474 | Where you going NOW? |
8474 | You going to hold her all day? |
8474 | going to be all DAY getting that hatful of freight out?'' |
8474 | why did n''t you tell me we''d got to land at that plantation?'' |
23155 | Are you going to murder me? |
23155 | Come,said Grayson, producing materials for writing;"here are pen, ink, and paper: are you willing to write as I dictate?" |
23155 | Do you, indeed? |
23155 | Have you no other''signs of promise''? |
23155 | Is it possible,said she, with some asperity,"that you already care so little for me as to enrol yourself for an absence of six months?" |
23155 | It''s Elwood''s horse, is n''t it? |
23155 | Spread out earth''s holiest records here, Of days and deeds to reverence dear: A zeal like this, what pious legends tell? |
23155 | What do you mean? |
23155 | What for? |
23155 | What_ did_ you mean then? |
23155 | When was he stolen? |
23155 | Whiskey is a pleasant drink, after all, is n''t it? |
23155 | Wo n''t anything else satisfy you but a written certificate? |
23155 | Yes, they are,answered Elwood quickly;"and we are here to know whether you intend to obey the authorities, and leave the country?" |
23155 | [ 49] What had become of this immense population? 23155 And Napoleon, was he aught but an abridgment of the French nation, the sublimate andproof"essence of French character? |
23155 | And if a deadly hatred of the Indian took possession of his heart, who shall blame him? |
23155 | And what more perfect correspondence could be conceived between the moral and intellectual and the physical outlines? |
23155 | In this juncture, what measures does he take? |
23155 | Strengthen his fortifications, and prepare for war, as the men of other nations had done? |
23155 | Such is the wife and mother of the pioneer, and, with such influences about him, how could he be otherwise than honest, straightforward, and manly? |
23155 | The Indian has no humor, no romance-- how could he possess poetical feeling? |
23155 | They were equal to the times in which they lived.--Had they not been so, how many steamboats would now be floating on the Mississippi? |
23155 | We come, finally to the question of the Indian''s fate: What is to become of the race? |
23155 | What was Cromwell but_ the Englishman_, not only of his own time, but of all times? |
23155 | What wonder is it, then, if he was a prime favorite with all the women, or that his advent, to the children, made a day of jubilee? |
23155 | What, then-- to apply the principle-- is the state of this sentiment in the Indian? |
23155 | When Stone manifested some anxiety on the subject, she turned suddenly upon him and demanded--"You do not think our marriage legal, then?" |
23155 | that''s it, is it? |
7193 | Did n''t you want to go in a- swimming, Tom? |
7193 | Hang the boy, ca n''t I never learn anything? 7193 Like it? |
7193 | No-- is that so? 7193 Oh come, now, you do n''t mean to let on that you LIKE it?" |
7193 | Oh, you think you''re mighty smart, DON''T you? 7193 Powerful warm, warn''t it?" |
7193 | Well why do n''t you DO it then? 7193 Well why do n''t you DO it? |
7193 | Well why do n''t you? |
7193 | Well, you SAID you''d do it-- why do n''t you do it? |
7193 | What do I care for your big brother? 7193 What''s gone with that boy, I wonder? |
7193 | What, a''ready? 7193 Why, ai n''t THAT work?" |
7193 | Ah, how would she feel then? |
7193 | Ai n''t he played me tricks enough like that for me to be looking out for him by this time? |
7193 | Ben said:"Hello, old chap, you got to work, hey?" |
7193 | But my goodness, he never plays them alike, two days, and how is a body to know what''s coming? |
7193 | But of course you''d druther WORK-- wouldn''t you? |
7193 | Do n''t you wish you could? |
7193 | Does a boy get a chance to whitewash a fence every day?" |
7193 | He said:"May n''t I go and play now, aunt?" |
7193 | He wondered if she would pity him if she knew? |
7193 | How much have you done?" |
7193 | Now do n''t you see how I''m fixed? |
7193 | Or would she turn coldly away like all the hollow world? |
7193 | Said she:"Tom, it was middling warm in school, warn''t it?" |
7193 | See?" |
7193 | Then Tom said:"What''s your name?" |
7193 | Then she had a new inspiration:"Tom, you did n''t have to undo your shirt collar where I sewed it, to pump on your head, did you? |
7193 | Tom contemplated the boy a bit, and said:"What do you call work?" |
7193 | Was the sacred presence there? |
7193 | What IS that truck?" |
7193 | What do you keep SAYING you will for? |
7193 | What you been doing in there?" |
7193 | Why do n''t you DO it? |
7193 | Would she cry, and wish that she had a right to put her arms around his neck and comfort him? |
7193 | You think you''re SOME, now, DON''T you? |
47262 | ''Ca n''t you drink it?'' 47262 How about the narrow escapes, Captain?" |
47262 | How do you follow a hall at home in the dark? 47262 How much trip before last?" |
47262 | How on earth am I going to learn it, then? |
47262 | Was it worse than going into battle? |
47262 | Why do they not go out and pick out the best men and hire them in a business- like and Christian- like manner? |
47262 | (? |
47262 | And the bankers? |
47262 | Are they clean? |
47262 | But the one question he had to answer, and answer quickly, was:"Will you take it?" |
47262 | But why was n''t it thought of fifty years ago? |
47262 | Chapter XIV_ Early Pilots_"How did the first steamboats find their way up the hundreds of miles of water heretofore unbroken by steam- driven wheel?" |
47262 | Had she a"Texas", or no"Texas"? |
47262 | Had she trimmings on her smokestack, or about the pilot house, and if so of what description? |
47262 | He said:"''What is a person to do here when he wants a drink of water? |
47262 | His answer to the query as to"what is the man in the little house on top of the boat doing?" |
47262 | How could this banker who had come among them for their good, have acquired this money by any other than legitimate transactions? |
47262 | How did he become possessed of all this wealth? |
47262 | How far can you see by such a light? |
47262 | It may be and was asked by Eastern people, unused to river life,"Why do the men submit to such treatment? |
47262 | Then, when his chief asks suddenly:"How much water was there on the middle crossing at Beef Slough last trip"? |
47262 | Was it the savings of years? |
47262 | Was she a side- wheel or stern- wheel? |
47262 | Was she large or small? |
47262 | Were the outside blinds painted white, red, or green? |
47262 | What conditions determine the speed of two boats, all observable terms being equal? |
47262 | What did the young steamboatman see on his voyage from Cairo to Galena in 1823? |
47262 | What is a captain for, if not to run his boat, no matter if everybody else is against him? |
47262 | What man is there among the whites who would not fight under such circumstances? |
47262 | What was the sound of her whistle and bell? |
47262 | What would an old- time bartender have thought of that? |
47262 | When the boy had begun to take on airs as a pilot, his chief suddenly fired the question:"What is the shape of Walnut Bend?" |
47262 | Why do they not throw the mate into the river?" |
47262 | drink this slush?'' |
8482 | ''And the boy knew it?'' |
8482 | ''Brothers,''said the leader,''has never any one of you, when fasting, dreamed of some friendly spirit who would aid you as a guardian?'' |
8482 | ''Dashed who in pieces-- her parents?'' |
8482 | ''Do you still travel with it?'' |
8482 | ''Everything about what?'' |
8482 | ''Have n''t you the least idea?'' |
8482 | ''Is that so?'' |
8482 | ''No, indeed,''said one of the others,''do you not know we were all killed, and that it is our sister who has brought us to life?'' |
8482 | ''Very drunk?'' |
8482 | ''Who is a great manito?'' |
8482 | ''Wish you may die in your tracks if you have?'' |
8482 | A citizen asked,''Do you remember when Jimmy Finn, the town drunkard, was burned to death in the calaboose?'' |
8482 | And above Winona you''ll have lovely prairies; and then come the Thousand Islands, too beautiful for anything; green? |
8482 | And what will become of you? |
8482 | But what can you do? |
8482 | Do you know how the man came to be burned up in the calaboose?'' |
8482 | How can I give what I would have done with so much pleasure? |
8482 | I do n''t mean HIS act, I mean yours: would you be a murderer for letting him have that pistol?'' |
8482 | I said, with admiration--''Why, how in the world did you ever guess it?'' |
8482 | I said--''What is the matter?'' |
8482 | Is she the maiden of the rock?--and are the two connected by legend?'' |
8482 | Now, is that boy a murderer, do you think?'' |
8482 | Presently he asked--''Are you going to give him up to the law?'' |
8482 | Quick-- out with it-- what did I say?'' |
8482 | The burden of my thought was, How much did I divulge? |
8482 | The chief, looking around, and observing the woman, after some time said to the man who came with her:''Who have you got there? |
8482 | The man was drunk?'' |
8482 | Well, would it be murder?'' |
8482 | What became of Winona?'' |
8482 | What was to be done''? |
8482 | Why? |
8482 | in this town?'' |
8482 | profit? |
8482 | who can this be he is leading us to?'' |
8482 | who is a manito? |
7147 | Had not the French a right both of prior discovery and prior settlement? |
7147 | Very much obliged? |
7147 | When did La Salle settle? |
7147 | And the future? |
7147 | And the product? |
7147 | Are there arts worthy freedom and a rich people? |
7147 | Are there athletes? |
7147 | Are there crops of fine youths and majestic old persons? |
7147 | Are there perfect women to match the generous material luxuriance? |
7147 | As to the proclamation, Parkman asks, what now remains of the sovereignty it so pompously announced? |
7147 | But who are the people who are to control? |
7147 | Is there a great moral and religious civilization-- the only justification of a great material one? |
7147 | Is there a pervading atmosphere of beautiful manners? |
7147 | Is this colorless, insipid"social consistency"the best wine that the valley can offer of its early vintages? |
7147 | Is this what democracy, undefiled of aristocratic conditions and traditions, has produced? |
7147 | Mistakes, disappointments, crudities, infidelities? |
7147 | Only those who are living and of electoral age and other qualification? |
7147 | Shall they be praised the more that they did not for a century venture beyond the sources of those streams? |
7147 | The first question of that western valley is,"Who is he?" |
7147 | Was its name indeed to be written only in the water which their canoes traversed? |
7147 | What claim has the past as against the needs of industry in the present? |
7147 | What shall I say of his wealth? |
7197 | And Joe? |
7197 | And me, too? |
7197 | And me? |
7197 | And then-- and then-- well I wo n''t be certain, but it seems like as if you made Sid go and-- and--"Well? 7197 Are you sure you did, Tom?" |
7197 | Auntie, what have I done? |
7197 | Benjamin Rogers, did you tear this book? |
7197 | DID you kiss me, Tom? |
7197 | Did you? 7197 Gracie Miller?" |
7197 | How could I know you was looking at anything? |
7197 | I did come-- didn''t you see me? |
7197 | Joseph Harper, did you? |
7197 | Oh, may I come? |
7197 | Oh, you do, do you? 7197 Say, now, would you, if you''d thought of it?" |
7197 | Susan Harper, did you do this? |
7197 | Well, try to recollect-- can''t you? |
7197 | What bark? |
7197 | What did you come for, then? |
7197 | What did you kiss me for, Tom? |
7197 | Would you, Tom? |
7197 | And then what? |
7197 | But it ai n''t reasonable; because, why did n''t you tell me, child?" |
7197 | Did you dream any more?" |
7197 | Did you? |
7197 | I wo n''t ever, ever do that way again, as long as ever I live-- please make up, wo n''t you?" |
7197 | That''s something, ai n''t it?" |
7197 | The first composition that was read was one entitled"Is this, then, Life?" |
7197 | The master scanned the ranks of boys-- considered a while, then turned to the girls:"Amy Lawrence?" |
7197 | Then he spoke:"Who tore this book?" |
7197 | Tom thought,"Oh, hang her, ai n''t I ever going to get rid of her?" |
7197 | Tom was so stunned that he had not even presence of mind enough to say"Who cares, Miss Smarty?" |
7197 | Well? |
7197 | What did I make him do, Tom? |
7197 | What did I make him do?" |
7197 | What did he say, Tom?" |
7197 | What did you dream?" |
7197 | When is it going to be?" |
7197 | Where did you sit?" |
7197 | Who''s going to give it?" |
7197 | You going to have all the girls and boys?" |
7197 | You holler''nough, do you? |
7197 | you bad girl, why did n''t you come to Sunday- school?" |
7200 | And kill them? |
7200 | Ca n''t let me in, Tom? 7200 Have the which?" |
7200 | Hey, Huck!--you hear that? |
7200 | Huck, I would n''t want to, and I DON''T want to-- but what would people say? 7200 Is it far in the cave? |
7200 | NOW where''s your Number Two? 7200 Now, Tom, hain''t you always ben friendly to me? |
7200 | Secret about what, Sid? |
7200 | Sid, was it you that told? |
7200 | Sid, what ails Tom? |
7200 | Tom, have you got on the track of that money again? |
7200 | Tom-- honest injun, now-- is it fun, or earnest? |
7200 | Well, what? |
7200 | What orgies? |
7200 | What''s a ransom? |
7200 | What''s that? |
7200 | Why? |
7200 | Will you, Tom-- now will you? 7200 YOU followed him?" |
7200 | ''UNDER THE CROSS,''hey? |
7200 | Ai n''t you and the widow good friends?" |
7200 | And who''ll we rob?" |
7200 | Are you strong enough?" |
7200 | But do you see that white place up yonder where there''s been a landslide? |
7200 | Did n''t you let me go for a pirate?" |
7200 | Did this drop fall patiently during five thousand years to be ready for this flitting human insect''s need? |
7200 | Do n''t you remember you was to watch there that night?" |
7200 | Do you see that? |
7200 | Got bricks in it?--or old metal?" |
7200 | Has everything a purpose and a mission? |
7200 | Injun Joe was believed to have killed five citizens of the village, but what of that? |
7200 | Just as they were about to move on, the Welshman stepped out and said:"Hallo, who''s that?" |
7200 | Now, what''s that for? |
7200 | Oh, good- licks; are you in real dead- wood earnest, Tom?" |
7200 | Say-- ain''t this grease and clay, on your clothes?" |
7200 | Tom Sawyer''s Gang-- it sounds splendid, do n''t it, Huck?" |
7200 | Tom poured the mass of yellow coin upon the table and said:"There-- what did I tell you? |
7200 | What do you want to be afraid for?" |
7200 | What was the matter with you, Tom?" |
7200 | What''s all this blow- out about, anyway?" |
7200 | When do you say?" |
7200 | When you going to start the gang and turn robbers?" |
7200 | Will you go in there with me and help get it out?" |
7200 | You would n''t do that, now, WOULD you, Tom?" |
7200 | You would n''t shet me out, would you, Tom? |
7200 | and has it another important object to accomplish ten thousand years to come? |
7200 | and leave the treasure?" |
7200 | what do you want to slope for?" |
8472 | ''Do n''t KNOW?'' |
8472 | ''Do you give it as an order?'' |
8472 | ''How on earth am I ever going to learn it, then?'' |
8472 | ''Indeed? |
8472 | ''Learn a new set, then, every year?'' |
8472 | ''Now do n''t you see the difference? |
8472 | ''Pretty square crossing, an''t it?'' |
8472 | ''What DO you know?'' |
8472 | ''What''s the name of the NEXT point?'' |
8472 | ''Why?'' |
8472 | ''Why?'' |
8472 | ''Yes, but suppose the leads lie? |
8472 | ''You did n''t? |
8472 | ''You-- you-- don''t know?'' |
8472 | And does n''t he sometimes wonder whether he has gained most or lost most by learning his trade? |
8472 | Are not all her visible charms sown thick with what are to him the signs and symbols of hidden decay? |
8472 | Are there many of them?'' |
8472 | Did n''t I tell you that a man''s got to know the river in the night the same as he''d know his own front hall?'' |
8472 | Did you ever know of a boat following a bend up- stream at this stage of the river?'' |
8472 | Do you see that stump on the false point?'' |
8472 | Do you see where the line fringes out at the upper end and begins to fade away?'' |
8472 | Does he ever see her beauty at all, or does n''t he simply view her professionally, and comment upon her unwholesome condition all to himself? |
8472 | Have I got to learn the shape of the river according to all these five hundred thousand different ways? |
8472 | He opened on me after this fashion--''How much water did we have in the middle crossing at Hole- in- the- Wall, trip before last?'' |
8472 | How am I ever going to tell them apart?'' |
8472 | How do you reckon I can remember such a mess as that?'' |
8472 | How high was the bank along here last trip?'' |
8472 | Is the river rising or falling?'' |
8472 | Meet any boats?'' |
8472 | Mr. Bixby said to the mate:--''Upper end of the plantation, or the lower?'' |
8472 | One day he said--''What is the height of that bank yonder, at Burgess''s?'' |
8472 | One day he turned on me suddenly with this settler--''What is the shape of Walnut Bend?'' |
8472 | One visitor said to another--''Jim, how did you run Plum Point, coming up?'' |
8472 | Presently he turned on me and said:--''What''s the name of the first point above New Orleans?'' |
8472 | So he began--''Do you see that long slanting line on the face of the water? |
8472 | The voice of the invisible watchman called up from the hurricane deck--''What''s this, sir?'' |
8472 | We are drawing-- how much?'' |
8472 | What are you standing up through the middle of the river for?'' |
8472 | What did you suppose he wanted to know for?'' |
8472 | What do you start out from, above Twelve- Mile Point, to cross over?'' |
8472 | What do you suppose I told you the names of those points for?'' |
8472 | What does that signify?'' |
8472 | Why, what could you want over here in the bend, then? |
8472 | Will it keep the same form and not go fooling around?'' |
8472 | an''t the new cub turned out yet? |
40143 | But what shall I say of his riches? 40143 So you will not give them to me?" |
40143 | Where are all your Illinois warriors, and where are the sixty Frenchmen that you said were among them? |
40143 | ''And how would you have me tell you,''said I,''when you never tell me what you mean to do?'' |
40143 | --_Lettre de la Salle, 22 Août, 1682_( 1681? |
40143 | --_Lettre( à Thouret? |
40143 | And in what spirit did he embrace these designs? |
40143 | And now, while I am speaking, could we not put your old men to death, while your young warriors are all gone away to hunt? |
40143 | As La Salle surveyed this scene of havoc, one thought engrossed him: where were Tonty and his men? |
40143 | But how was La Salle employed in the following year? |
40143 | But were not the Illinois jealous? |
40143 | But what did this new Paraguay mean? |
40143 | But where was the"Griffin"? |
40143 | Did he bend before the storm? |
40143 | Do n''t you know that this man is impenetrable, and that there is no knowing what he thinks of one? |
40143 | Do you not see that when we first came among you, and your camp was all in confusion, we could have killed you without needing help from the Iroquois? |
40143 | Had they not been deluded by lies? |
40143 | Here, then, was the town; but where were the inhabitants? |
40143 | His colony had sprung up, as it were, in a night; but might not a night suffice to disperse it? |
40143 | How can it be that I do not talk with them? |
40143 | If he told the truth, why did he skulk away in the dark? |
40143 | Marie.--The Mystery of La Salle: he discovers the Ohio; he descends the Illinois; did he reach the 19 Mississippi? |
40143 | Marie.--The Mystery of La Salle: he discovers the Ohio; he descends the Illinois; did he reach the Mississippi? |
40143 | Motantees(? |
40143 | Of what avail to plant a colony by the mouth of a petty Texan river? |
40143 | Pah- Utahs(? |
40143 | Pahoutet( Pah- Utahs? |
40143 | The Wisconsin, the Illinois, the Ohio, the Des Moines(? |
40143 | The extracts given in the foregoing chapter are from La Salle''s long letters of 29 Sept., 1680, and 22 Aug., 1682( 1681?). |
40143 | Through what regions did it flow; and whither would it lead them,--to the South Sea or the"Sea of Virginia;"to Mexico, Japan, or China? |
40143 | What did he do after he left the two priests? |
40143 | What manner of man was he who could conceive designs so vast and defy enmities so many and so powerful? |
40143 | What manner of men were these who had pierced the secret places of the wilderness to riot in mutual slaughter? |
40143 | What now remains of the sovereignty thus pompously proclaimed? |
40143 | What was this purpose? |
40143 | What were the Jesuits doing? |
40143 | Who could doubt that these strangers were Chinese or Japanese? |
40143 | Why did he not show himself by day? |
40143 | [ 171] FOOTNOTES:[ 163]_ Lettre de La Salle à un de ses associés_( Thouret? |
40143 | [ 200] Why had he not told it before? |
40143 | [ 205] Such being the case, what faith can we put in the rest of Hennepin''s story? |
40143 | [ 288] But why did he not examine it? |
8477 | ''Ah-- stabbed, do you mean?'' |
8477 | ''Brandy? |
8477 | ''Carried the WHOLE town away?-banks, churches, jails, newspaper- offices, court- house, theater, fire department, livery stable EVERYTHING?'' |
8477 | ''Dead?'' |
8477 | ''Failed to escape?--caught in the act and shot?'' |
8477 | ''Go ashore where?'' |
8477 | ''How, then?'' |
8477 | ''Napoleon?'' |
8477 | ''No? |
8477 | ''Serious? |
8477 | ''Well, by---?'' |
8477 | ''Why does he mix such elaborate and picturesque drinks for the nigger hands on the boat?'' |
8477 | ''Why, hang it, do n''t you know? |
8477 | And where so many are saying their say, shall not the barkeeper testify? |
8477 | But if he wait? |
8477 | Ca n''t a man go ashore at Napoleon if he wants to?'' |
8477 | Can you divine what my first thought was? |
8477 | Could you have endured an hour of it, do you think? |
8477 | Did I appeal to the law-- I? |
8477 | Does it quench the pauper''s thirst if the King drink for him? |
8477 | From them might not almost anybody reproduce for himself the life of that time in Vicksburg? |
8477 | Good liquors? |
8477 | How accomplish this, do you say? |
8477 | How strangely things repeat themselves, after long years; for MY hands were tied, that night, you remember? |
8477 | I said--''Come, what is all this about? |
8477 | I said--''What, then-- didn''t he escape?'' |
8477 | If he make ten voyages in succession-- what then? |
8477 | On the other boats? |
8477 | Presently the poet inquired--''Are you going to send it to him right away?'' |
8477 | Rogers said--''Who would have had ANY if it had n''t been for me? |
8477 | So I inquired about this thing; asked what resulted usually? |
8477 | Take a look behind you-- up- stream-- now you begin to recognize this country, do n''t you?'' |
8477 | The captain laughed; but seeing that I was not in a jovial mood, stopped that and said--''But are you serious?'' |
8477 | This man had kept a diary during-- six weeks? |
8477 | Three hours--? |
8477 | What happened, then?'' |
8477 | What was my idea in this nonsense? |
8477 | What, you can not? |
8477 | You give a nigger a plain gill of half- a- dollar brandy for five cents-- will he touch it? |
8477 | Your teeth chatter-- then why can not you shout? |
8477 | profit?'' |
47351 | ''Do you think so, sir?'' 47351 And what books have you read?" |
47351 | And what use will you make of their language? |
47351 | How long have you read law? |
47351 | Whither is the white man going? |
47351 | Why do you go among the Indians? |
47351 | Why does the paleface travel such unknown roads? 47351 Will you not take the oath?" |
47351 | And what more, pray, could be done than this to advance the interests of the United States hereabouts? |
47351 | And where were the millions of money, the men, and the arms to come from that should prevent final annihilation? |
47351 | But that was not the vital question; the vital question was, Could it grow? |
47351 | But there was a very important question to be settled immediately; did Kentucky belong to Virginia or was it independent? |
47351 | Could it mock the European doctrine that, in time, mountains inevitably become boundaries of empires? |
47351 | Could the New Englanders do equally well? |
47351 | Could the new master, this infant Republic,"one nation to- day, thirteen to- morrow,"do better? |
47351 | Did they know too well the herculean toils that such work demanded? |
47351 | How free now would they be? |
47351 | If a short road was practicable, why not a long one? |
47351 | In the many expeditions to the westward of the Alleghanies in America what commanders turned their attention later to the regions subdued? |
47351 | Is it not of interest that the famed Cumberland Road was not built to connect two large Eastern cities, or a seaport or river with a city? |
47351 | Maryland hesitated; could Baltimore be connected by canal with the Potomac Valley? |
47351 | Shall not a more appropriate token of our esteem replace the little slab that now marks that hallowed grave? |
47351 | The question was raised,"Shall we take our prisoners to Pittsburg, or kill them?" |
47351 | Was it to hinder or help the occupation of the land on the part of rival spirits? |
47351 | Was it to strengthen or weaken America''s claim to the empire of Oregon? |
47351 | Were those dreams true? |
47351 | What if other national roads proposed-- through the South and northward from Washington to Buffalo-- should demand equally large sums? |
47351 | What if the fund produced from the sales of land was not sufficient to build the road? |
47351 | What was its political status? |
47351 | Which party would Congress listen to if the public treasury was not in a position to satisfy both applicants? |
47351 | Who before him ever had the temerity to suggest that ships would descend the Ohio River and sail for foreign ports? |
47351 | Would he like the country? |
47351 | Would he want the other members of the family to emigrate there too? |
47351 | Would he wish to stay in the West? |
47351 | Yet against what human motive may not the accusation of self- interest be cast? |
9153 | Good, said I; but why bring you the Calumet of Peace to me? 9153 Why,"continued he, with an air of displeasure,"did the French come into our country? |
9153 | After both the old men are fully rested, they rise, and the bridegroom and bride appearing before them, they ask them, if they love each other? |
9153 | After this example, can one hope for labour from negroes, who very often are in want of necessaries? |
9153 | Are there any Mines, say they, in this province? |
9153 | Before they came, did we not live better than we do, seeing we deprive ourselves of a part of our corn, our game, and fish, to give a part to them? |
9153 | Besides, added they, had Biainville received our enemies, should we go to demand them? |
9153 | But the crystal sand, which is pernicious to the sight by its whiteness, might it not be adapted for making some beautiful composition or manufacture? |
9153 | But the physicians of this Chief, who visited him every day, asked the Frenchman what time the cure would take? |
9153 | But they are not settled there as yet; and who could hinder us from making advantageous settlements in that country? |
9153 | But ye yourselves, said I, whence are ye come? |
9153 | But you will say, Why do they not? |
9153 | Can one expect fidelity from a man, who is denied what he stands most in need of? |
9153 | For the planks of ships, there is no want of oak; but might not very good one be made of cypress? |
9153 | Have the French two hearts, a good one today, and tomorrow a bad one? |
9153 | Have they not{ 77} already done so to one of our young men; and is not death preferable to slavery?" |
9153 | Have you forgot the way; or is my house disagreeable to you? |
9153 | Here he paused a while, and after taking breath, proceeded thus:"What wait we for? |
9153 | How ought we then to value such rich and healthful countries on the Missisippi? |
9153 | I accordingly called to him, and said,"We were formerly friends, are we no longer so?" |
9153 | I am not capable of changing, why then are you changed?" |
9153 | I asked the deputies, what they would have? |
9153 | If the English build ships in their colonies{ 180} from which they draw great advantages, why might not we do the same in Louisiana? |
9153 | If we view these nations with an eye to commerce, what advantages might not be derived from them, as to furs? |
9153 | If you ask those masters, why they bestow so much pains upon beasts? |
9153 | In what respect, then, had we occasion for them? |
9153 | Ought we to continue tributaries to them in this respect, when we can so easily do without them? |
9153 | Shall we suffer the French to multiply, till we are no longer in a condition to oppose their efforts? |
9153 | The bridegroom then addresses the bride;"Will you have me for your husband?" |
9153 | The sentinel enquired, who commanded the vessel? |
9153 | Was it for their guns? |
9153 | Was it for their white, blue, and red blankets? |
9153 | We go to the East- Indies for the rice we consume in France; and why should we draw from foreign countries, what we may have of our own countrymen? |
9153 | We have done so; is not this true? |
9153 | What can we then believe of those stories that have been told us of the crocodile? |
9153 | What commerce might not be made with Silk? |
9153 | What occasion then had we for Frenchmen? |
9153 | What will the other nations say of us, who pass for the most ingenious of all the Red- men? |
9153 | When he enters the hut, the old man on the part of the bridegroom says to him in their language,_ are you there?_ to which he answers,_ yes_. |
9153 | When you enter into their hut, they welcome you with the word of salutation, which signifies"Are you there, my friend?" |
9153 | Why then wait we any longer? |
9153 | Would it not be more suitable and more useful, to devise means of drawing the same commodities from our own colonies? |
9153 | and if they are willing to take one another for man and wife? |
9153 | or, if we did, would they be given up? |
7199 | Can you find the way, Tom? 7199 Could you see the rags by the light of the cigars?" |
7199 | Do it NOW? 7199 Do you remember this?" |
7199 | How''ll she ever know? |
7199 | How? |
7199 | I wonder how long we''ve been down here, Tom? 7199 Joe Harper, have you seen my Tom this morning?" |
7199 | Kill? 7199 Lordy, what did you do? |
7199 | Say, Tom, did you see that box? |
7199 | Tom, it might be dark then-- would they notice we had n''t come? |
7199 | Well, Becky? |
7199 | What!--what''d you see, Tom? |
7199 | What''s the row there? 7199 When did you see him last?" |
7199 | When would they miss us, Tom? |
7199 | Why, who are you? |
7199 | Yes,with a startled look--"didn''t she stay with you last night?" |
7199 | Your Becky? |
7199 | And company there? |
7199 | And why should he give it up, he reasoned-- the signal did not come the night before, so why should it be any more likely to come to- night? |
7199 | But what could she be crying about? |
7199 | But what did give you that turn? |
7199 | But why do n''t you want it known?" |
7199 | But you could n''t see what they were like, in the dark, lad, I suppose?" |
7199 | By- and- by somebody shouted:"Who''s ready for the cave?" |
7199 | Did he wake up?" |
7199 | Did you hear that?" |
7199 | Do n''t you see, now, what''s the matter with that ha''nted room?" |
7199 | Do you understand that? |
7199 | HORSEWHIPPED!--do you understand? |
7199 | Huck started up in bed, wild- eyed:"What? |
7199 | If she bleeds to death, is that my fault? |
7199 | Maybe ALL the Temperance Taverns have got a ha''nted room, hey, Huck?" |
7199 | Now, where you going to sleep?" |
7199 | Now-- this way-- now you see, do n''t you?" |
7199 | The old man promised secrecy once more, and said:"How did you come to follow these fellows, lad? |
7199 | Then Becky reflected a moment and said:"But what will mamma say?" |
7199 | Then he said:"Becky, can you bear it if I tell you something?" |
7199 | They found none, but captured a bulky bundle of--"Of WHAT?" |
7199 | Was it Tom Sawyer that found it?" |
7199 | Was there any use? |
7199 | Was there really any use? |
7199 | Were they looking suspicious?" |
7199 | What do you want?" |
7199 | What was it?" |
7199 | What were YOU expecting we''d found?" |
7199 | Who said anything about killing? |
7199 | Who''d''a''thought such a thing? |
7199 | Who''s banging? |
7199 | Why call Tom now? |
7199 | Why did n''t you come and wake me?" |
7199 | Why not give it up and turn in? |
7199 | Why, what''s the MATTER with you?" |
7199 | You go back and watch that long, will you?" |
7199 | Your mother wo n''t know, and so what''s the harm? |
12068 | ''What regiment do you belong to?'' 12068 Ah, I beg your pardon; but what is your impression of Fort Donelson?" |
12068 | Are you sure of that? |
12068 | Battle sure to come off-- is it? |
12068 | But how is it when a negro, by working nights or Saturdays, manages to make something for himself? |
12068 | Can you tell me on which days he gave you each ticket? |
12068 | Certainly we are,responded another;"but who will represent us?" |
12068 | Come back here,said the officer;"what do you mean by this?" |
12068 | D-- n your friends,said the guerrilla leader;"I suppose they are Yankees?" |
12068 | Did you earn all these this week? |
12068 | Do you dislike the Black Republicans very much? |
12068 | Do you see that young man crossing the street toward----''s store? |
12068 | How did you cross the river, gentlemen? |
12068 | How do you know? |
12068 | How far are you firing? |
12068 | If it was given to them,I asked,"was it not theirs to sell?" |
12068 | Is it possible? |
12068 | Is the plan arranged? |
12068 | No,we responded;"what is it?" |
12068 | That is very true; but how was it at Shiloh? |
12068 | Them round things? 12068 Then why ai n''t you killed, too, you d----d coward?" |
12068 | Then why should n''t you pay me ten dollars every time I''tend upon the black folks on the plantation? |
12068 | What are you doing here? |
12068 | What are you doing there? |
12068 | What kind of a Union man are you? |
12068 | What''s you- uns come down here to fight we- uns for? |
12068 | What_ are_ you crying for, then? |
12068 | Where did you come from? |
12068 | Where is K----, and where is Colburn? |
12068 | Where were they from? |
12068 | Which one did he give you to- day? |
12068 | Whisky, is n''t it? |
12068 | White people are free, too, ai n''t they? |
12068 | Who comes there? |
12068 | Who will we send? 12068 Will some of you learned ones tell me,"said he,"what is the Latin word for_ true_?" |
12068 | After a little preliminary talk, one of them said:"Are you aware, general, there is no law of the State allowing you to make a cut- off, here?" |
12068 | After a pause, she spoke again:"Did n''t you say the black people are free?" |
12068 | After some desultory conversation, he threw out the question:--"What does martial law do?" |
12068 | An Arkansas colonel was in bed when the order reached him, and lazily asked,"Is that official?" |
12068 | As soon as he could speak, he asked, breathing between, the words--"Have you heard the news?" |
12068 | But, pray, what do you consider the capture of Island Number Ten and the naval battle here?" |
12068 | By- the- way, Mr. K----, how did you come over?" |
12068 | Do you think, if I put them with yours, there is any danger of their straying, on account of being on a strange place?" |
12068 | Does any soldier, who reads this, imagine himself tendering his resignation in the above manner with any prospect of its acceptance? |
12068 | He promptly replied:"The parish of Madison gave a large majority in favor of secession; did it not?" |
12068 | If the deeds of which the Rebels were guilty are characteristic of chivalry, who would wish to be a son of the Cavaliers? |
12068 | Is it not acknowledged everywhere that a man shall be tried by his peers?" |
12068 | K----?" |
12068 | Mysteries of Mule- trading.--"What''s in a Name?" |
12068 | Mysteries of Mule- trading.--"What''s in a Name?" |
12068 | Once I asked a rough- looking farmer,"How far is it to Sand Springs?" |
12068 | Should it banish me from that spot, or should I receive an official censure? |
12068 | Who can resist the questions of a woman, even though she be an uneducated and unkempt Missourian? |
12068 | Who could believe in the existence of a reliable countryman, after that? |
7195 | Do you though? |
7195 | Hucky, do you das''t to go if I lead? |
7195 | Look here, what does this mean? |
7195 | Lord, how is this, Joe? |
7195 | No--''tain''t so, is it? |
7195 | Now, sir, what did you want to treat that poor dumb beast so, for? |
7195 | Then art thou indeed that famous outlaw? 7195 They do, do they?" |
7195 | Tom, what on earth ails that cat? |
7195 | Tom,whispered Huckleberry,"does this keep us from EVER telling--ALWAYS?" |
7195 | What are you talking about? 7195 What did you do it for?" |
7195 | What is it, Huck? |
7195 | What is it, Tom? |
7195 | What is it? |
7195 | What you got on your mind, Tom? |
7195 | What''s the reason he do n''t know it? |
7195 | What''s verdigrease? |
7195 | Which of us does he mean? |
7195 | Who art thou that dares to hold such language? |
7195 | Who''s accused you? |
7195 | Who? 7195 Why did n''t you leave? |
7195 | You DO? |
7195 | After another reflective silence, Tom said:"Hucky, you sure you can keep mum?" |
7195 | By and by their pulses slowed down, and Tom whispered:"Huckleberry, what do you reckon''ll come of this?" |
7195 | Can you pray?" |
7195 | Could it be possible that she was not aware that he was there? |
7195 | D''you reckon he could see anything? |
7195 | D''you reckon he knowed anything?" |
7195 | Did he before?" |
7195 | Did n''t Gracie Miller fall in the kitchen fire and burn herself terrible the very next Saturday?" |
7195 | Did n''t you hear it?" |
7195 | Did you think I''d forget? |
7195 | Do n''t you remember? |
7195 | He saw Injun Joe, and exclaimed:"Oh, Injun Joe, you promised me you''d never--""Is that your knife?" |
7195 | How can he tell?" |
7195 | It''s awful solemn like, AIN''T it?" |
7195 | NOW who can he mean?" |
7195 | S''pose something happened and Injun Joe DIDN''T hang? |
7195 | So he said in a whisper:"Hucky, do you believe the dead people like it for us to be here?" |
7195 | Tell WHAT? |
7195 | Tell me, Joe-- HONEST, now, old feller-- did I do it? |
7195 | Then Tom whispered:"Say, Hucky-- do you reckon Hoss Williams hears us talking?" |
7195 | Think they''ll see us?" |
7195 | Tom thought a while, then he said:"Who''ll tell? |
7195 | We''d drop down dead-- don''t YOU know that?" |
7195 | We?" |
7195 | What did make him act so?" |
7195 | What did you want to come here for?" |
7195 | What had he done? |
7195 | What has that got to do with it?" |
7195 | What if he turned his back, now, and disappeared mysteriously? |
7195 | What is it you''ll tell?" |
7195 | What kin they be up to?" |
7195 | What''ll we do?" |
7195 | What''s that?" |
7195 | Where''bouts is it, Huck?" |
7195 | Who comes here into Sherwood Forest without my pass?" |
7195 | Who does he mean?" |
7195 | Who?" |
7195 | Why do n''t you fall yourself? |
7195 | Why do n''t you fall?" |
7195 | Why had he not been called-- persecuted till he was up, as usual? |
7195 | You WON''T tell, WILL you, Joe?" |
7198 | ''Bout what? |
7198 | Any one with you? |
7198 | Do n''t they come after it any more? |
7198 | Do they hop? |
7198 | Get me to tell? 7198 Have you got one of them papers, Tom?" |
7198 | Huck, have you ever told anybody about-- that? |
7198 | HyroQwhich? |
7198 | Is it under all of them? |
7198 | Never a word? |
7198 | No? |
7198 | Revenge? 7198 Richard? |
7198 | Save it? 7198 Say, Huck, if we find a treasure here, what you going to do with your share?" |
7198 | Talk? 7198 Then how you going to know which one to go for?" |
7198 | Thomas Sawyer, where were you on the seventeenth of June, about the hour of midnight? |
7198 | Well then, how you going to find the marks? |
7198 | Well, I never said I was, did I? 7198 Well, ai n''t you going to save any of it?" |
7198 | Well, what did you say they did, for? |
7198 | Well, what of that? 7198 Well-- if you say so; what''ll we do with this-- bury it again?" |
7198 | Were you anywhere near Horse Williams''grave? |
7198 | Were you hidden, or not? |
7198 | What ai n''t a dream? |
7198 | What is it? |
7198 | What is it? |
7198 | What is the talk around, Huck? 7198 What''ll it be?" |
7198 | What''s a YEW bow? |
7198 | What''s that?. |
7198 | Where''ll we dig? |
7198 | Where? |
7198 | Who hides it? |
7198 | Why, is it hid all around? |
7198 | Why, robbers, of course-- who''d you reckon? 7198 After a pause:Huck, they could n''t anybody get you to tell, could they?" |
7198 | Anyway, what''s her name, Tom?" |
7198 | But anyway they do n''t come around in the daytime, so what''s the use of our being afeard?" |
7198 | But say-- where you going to dig first?" |
7198 | But wo n''t the widow take it away from us, Tom? |
7198 | Can you get out?" |
7198 | Did they fight?" |
7198 | Did this attorney mean to throw away his client''s life without an effort? |
7198 | Do n''t you feel sorry for him, sometimes?" |
7198 | Do you know Robin Hood, Huck?" |
7198 | Do you reckon they can be up- stairs?" |
7198 | Follow? |
7198 | Hain''t you ever seen one, Huck?" |
7198 | Have you heard anybody?--seen anybody? |
7198 | He gathered himself up cursing, and his comrade said:"Now what''s the use of all that? |
7198 | Hear it?" |
7198 | How near were you?" |
7198 | How''s that?" |
7198 | Huck said:"Do they always bury it as deep as this?" |
7198 | If it''s anybody, and they''re up there, let them STAY there-- who cares? |
7198 | If they want to jump down, now, and get into trouble, who objects? |
7198 | Is that so?" |
7198 | Now what you going to do?" |
7198 | Presently he said:"Who could have brought those tools here? |
7198 | S''pose we tackle that old dead- limb tree on the hill t''other side of Still- House branch?" |
7198 | Sunday- school sup''rintendents?" |
7198 | The poor fellow had got the attorney to promise secrecy, but what of that? |
7198 | Tom was impatient to go to the haunted house; Huck was measurably so, also-- but suddenly said:"Lookyhere, Tom, do you know what day it is?" |
7198 | What business has a pick and a shovel here? |
7198 | What business with fresh earth on them? |
7198 | What did you take there?" |
7198 | What do you reckon it is?" |
7198 | What do you think?" |
7198 | What for?" |
7198 | What makes you ask?" |
7198 | What you going to do with yourn, Tom?" |
7198 | What''ll we do with what little swag we''ve got left?" |
7198 | What''s his other name?" |
7198 | What''s the name of the gal?" |
7198 | Who brought them here-- and where are they gone? |
7198 | Who did he rob?" |
7198 | Who''s Robin Hood?" |
7198 | You mean Number One?" |
7198 | bury it again and leave them to come and see the ground disturbed? |
7198 | have I been asleep?" |
7194 | Becky, wo n''t you say something? |
7194 | Did he say anything? |
7194 | Do you? 7194 Everybody?" |
7194 | Good for? 7194 Have you? |
7194 | In the daytime? |
7194 | Kiss? 7194 Like? |
7194 | Look here, Joe Harper, whose is that tick? |
7194 | Oh, auntie, I''m--"What''s the matter with you-- what is the matter with you, child? |
7194 | Oh, will you? 7194 Oh, you do n''t, do n''t you? |
7194 | Say, Hucky, when you going to try the cat? |
7194 | Say-- what is dead cats good for, Huck? |
7194 | Shall I tell YOU? |
7194 | Tom, why did n''t you wake me sooner? 7194 Was you ever at a circus?" |
7194 | Well, what of it? 7194 Well, why do n''t you? |
7194 | What did you give? |
7194 | What was it? |
7194 | What''ll you give? |
7194 | What''ll you take for her? |
7194 | What''ll you take for him? |
7194 | What''s that you got? |
7194 | What''s that? |
7194 | Where''d you get him? |
7194 | Where''d you get the blue ticket? |
7194 | Why, what''s the matter, Tom? 7194 With his face to the stump?" |
7194 | Would you like to? |
7194 | You wo n''t tell anybody at all? 7194 You would n''t, would n''t you? |
7194 | At last he said:"Is it genuwyne?" |
7194 | At the door Tom dropped back a step and accosted a Sunday- dressed comrade:"Say, Billy, got a yaller ticket?" |
7194 | But say-- how do you cure''em with dead cats?" |
7194 | But you must n''t ever tell anybody-- WILL you, Tom? |
7194 | But you''ve another one I daresay, and you''ll tell it to me, wo n''t you?" |
7194 | By jings, do n''t you wish you was Jeff?" |
7194 | D''you ever try it, Huck?" |
7194 | D''you ever try it?" |
7194 | Did n''t they get him Saturday night?" |
7194 | Do you go home to dinner?" |
7194 | Do you remember what I wrote on the slate?" |
7194 | Ever, as long as you live?" |
7194 | He said to himself, it is not possible that the boy can answer the simplest question-- why DID the Judge ask him? |
7194 | He said:"Do you love rats?" |
7194 | How did he know she was a- witching him?" |
7194 | How long you been this way?" |
7194 | How many of my readers would have the industry and application to memorize two thousand verses, even for a Dore Bible? |
7194 | Is that so? |
7194 | Lemme go with you?" |
7194 | Now you wo n''t, WILL you?" |
7194 | Now, sir, why are you late again, as usual?" |
7194 | Say, Becky, was you ever engaged?" |
7194 | Say-- what''s that?" |
7194 | So all this row was because you thought you''d get to stay home from school and go a- fishing? |
7194 | The master said:"You-- you did what?" |
7194 | Tom, what is the matter?" |
7194 | Tom, what''s the matter with you?" |
7194 | What do you kiss for?" |
7194 | What is it like?" |
7194 | What is it?" |
7194 | What is the matter, Tom?" |
7194 | What''s the matter with your tooth?" |
7194 | What''s your name?" |
7194 | What''s your way?" |
7194 | What''s yours? |
7194 | When I''m gone--""Oh, Tom, you ai n''t dying, are you? |
7194 | When?" |
7194 | Where''d you get him?" |
7194 | Why do n''t you tell me, Mary?--what do you want to be so mean for?" |
7194 | Will you meow?" |
7194 | Will you?" |
7194 | Wo n''t you tell us the names of the first two that were appointed?" |
7194 | You call me Tom, will you?" |
8479 | ''A dark and dreadful one?'' |
8479 | ''Account for it? |
8479 | ''And the boy knew it?'' |
8479 | ''And what''s the other?'' |
8479 | ''Brothers,''said the leader,''has never any one of you, when fasting, dreamed of some friendly spirit who would aid you as a guardian?'' |
8479 | ''Dashed who in pieces-- her parents?'' |
8479 | ''Do you still travel with it?'' |
8479 | ''Everything about what?'' |
8479 | ''Have n''t you the least idea?'' |
8479 | ''How do you account for it?'' |
8479 | ''How is that?'' |
8479 | ''Is that so?'' |
8479 | ''Is that so?'' |
8479 | ''No, indeed,''said one of the others,''do you not know we were all killed, and that it is our sister who has brought us to life?'' |
8479 | ''Very drunk?'' |
8479 | ''Well, what are they?'' |
8479 | ''Well,''said I,''if you are so light- hearted and jolly in ordinary times, what must you be in an epidemic?'' |
8479 | ''Which one?'' |
8479 | ''Who is a great manito?'' |
8479 | ''Why did n''t you see them Roman soldiers that stood back there in a rank, and sometimes marched in procession around the stage?'' |
8479 | ''Wish you may die in your tracks if you have?'' |
8479 | A citizen asked,''Do you remember when Jimmy Finn, the town drunkard, was burned to death in the calaboose?'' |
8479 | And above Winona you''ll have lovely prairies; and then come the Thousand Islands, too beautiful for anything; green? |
8479 | And what did the husband do? |
8479 | And what will become of you? |
8479 | Are you happy? |
8479 | At last he said in a low voice--''My little friend, can you keep a secret?'' |
8479 | But what can you do? |
8479 | Do all the good people go to your place? |
8479 | Do all whom you send from Hartford serve their Master as well? |
8479 | Do n''t it occur to you, why?'' |
8479 | Do you know how the man came to be burned up in the calaboose?'' |
8479 | How can I give what I would have done with so much pleasure? |
8479 | How do you amuse yourself? |
8479 | How is that? |
8479 | How long have you been in the spirit land? |
8479 | I asked him various questions; first about a mate of mine in Sunday school-- what became of him? |
8479 | I do n''t mean HIS act, I mean yours: would you be a murderer for letting him have that pistol?'' |
8479 | I met him on the street the next morning, and before I could speak, he asked--''Did you see me?'' |
8479 | I said, with admiration--''Why, how in the world did you ever guess it?'' |
8479 | I said--''What is the matter?'' |
8479 | Is n''t that a good deal of a triumph? |
8479 | Is not this true? |
8479 | Is she the maiden of the rock?--and are the two connected by legend?'' |
8479 | Is there much profit on a coffin?'' |
8479 | Now, is that boy a murderer, do you think?'' |
8479 | Presently he asked--''Are you going to give him up to the law?'' |
8479 | Quick-- out with it-- what did I say?'' |
8479 | Some talk followed--''Why-- what should make you suspect that it is n''t genuine?'' |
8479 | The burden of my thought was, How much did I divulge? |
8479 | The chief, looking around, and observing the woman, after some time said to the man who came with her:''Who have you got there? |
8479 | The man was drunk?'' |
8479 | Then this one has actually forgotten the date of its translation to the spirit land? |
8479 | To- day I heard a schoolmistress ask,''Where is John gone?'' |
8479 | Unhandkerchiefs one eye, bats it around tearfully over the stock; says--''"And fhat might ye ask for that wan?" |
8479 | Very well, then, when did you pass away? |
8479 | Well, then, what year was it? |
8479 | Well, when you come to look at it all around, and chew at it and think it over, do n''t it just bang anything you ever heard of?'' |
8479 | Well, would it be murder?'' |
8479 | What became of Winona?'' |
8479 | What do you drink? |
8479 | What do you eat there? |
8479 | What do you read? |
8479 | What do you smoke? |
8479 | What do you talk about? |
8479 | What else? |
8479 | What is it?'' |
8479 | What was to be done''? |
8479 | When did the r disappear from Southern speech, and how did it come to disappear? |
8479 | When did you die? |
8479 | When your friends in the earth all get to the spirit land, what shall you have to talk about then?--nothing but about how happy you all are? |
8479 | Where are you? |
8479 | Where did you get all this youth and bubbling cheerfulness? |
8479 | Why? |
8479 | Would you like to come back? |
8479 | Would you say that under oath? |
8479 | You hear gentlemen say,''Where have you been at?'' |
8479 | in this town?'' |
8479 | profit? |
8479 | who can this be he is leading us to?'' |
8479 | who is a manito? |
42322 | And pray, let me ask, where do you intend that desirable operation to be performed? |
42322 | Anything to trink, shur? 42322 Is this proceeding just and honourable"towards that unfortunate race? |
42322 | What''s your_ name_, any how? |
42322 | Who gave you your invulnerable life, Your strength, your speed, your fury, and your joy? 42322 Will you be pleased, sir, to register your name?" |
42322 | Amid what terrible convulsion of the elements did these great ocean- plains heave themselves into being? |
42322 | And did the dust Of these fair solitudes once stir with life And burn with passion? |
42322 | Are they_ indeed_ to us no more than the dull clods we tread upon? |
42322 | Around the couch of suffering humanity, who could not outwatch the stars? |
42322 | But many a year of toil and privation must first have passed away; and who shall record their annals? |
42322 | But what pencil has wandered over the grander scenes of the North American prairie? |
42322 | But where is Joe Smith? |
42322 | But, with such an admission, what is the crowd of reflections which throng and startle the mind? |
42322 | By what race of beings was the vast undertaking accomplished? |
42322 | Can imagination boast, Amid its gay creations, hues like hers? |
42322 | Charles, Mo._ XXIII"Say, ancient edifice, thyself with years Grown gray, how long upon the hill has stood Thy weather- braving tower?" |
42322 | Clair Co., Illinois._ XV"Are they here, The dead of other days? |
42322 | France: who will aver that it was popular_ ignorance_ that rolled over revolutionary France the ocean- wave of blood? |
42322 | Has war, or famine, or pestilence brooded over these beautiful plains? |
42322 | Have we too many memorials of the olden time? |
42322 | Have we visited them with so_ many_ returns of kindness that this would overflow the cup of recompense? |
42322 | If knowledge, pure, defecated knowledge, be a conservative principle, why do we witness these appalling results? |
42322 | Is it in individual villany? |
42322 | Is it in legal enactment? |
42322 | Is it in public sentiment? |
42322 | Is not"knowledge omnipotent to preserve; the salt to purify the nations?" |
42322 | Is there no hallowing interest associated with these aged relics, these tombs, and temples, and towers of another race, to elicit emotion? |
42322 | It is a question daily becoming of more startling import, How may these fatal occurrences be successfully opposed? |
42322 | Many believed-- was there ever faith too preposterous to obtain proselytes? |
42322 | Of what_ other_ nation of Europe, if we except the Highlands of Scotland, may anything like the same assertion with truth be made? |
42322 | On learning, in reply to his inquiry,"Whence do ye come, stranger?" |
42322 | Or can it mix them with that matchless skill, And lose them in each other, as appears In every bud that blooms?" |
42322 | Or to what else shall we refer those collections of enormous seashells, heaped upon the soil, or thrown up to its surface from a depth of fifty feet? |
42322 | Plack your poots, shur? |
42322 | Shall the book of knowledge be taken from the hands of the people, and again be locked up in the libraries of the few? |
42322 | We are reproached as a nation by Europeans for the contemptible vice of avarice; is the censure unjust? |
42322 | What bard has struck his lyre to the wild melody of loveliness of the prairie sunset? |
42322 | What changes in its form and magnitude have taken place? |
42322 | What the associations which throng the excited fancy? |
42322 | What vicissitudes and revolutions have, in the lapse of centuries, rolled like successive waves over the plains at its base? |
42322 | What was its purpose? |
42322 | What woman does not love to tell over those passages of her history in which the_ heart_ has ruled lord of the ascendant? |
42322 | What, then, shall be done? |
42322 | When a scene like this is developed, what shall adequately depict it? |
42322 | When have the French,_ as a people_, exhibited a prouder era of mind than that of their sixteenth Louis? |
42322 | When was this stupendous earth- heap reared up from the plain? |
42322 | Where lies the fault? |
42322 | Who has not gazed with anguish on the sunken cheek and the emaciated frame of the young aspirant for literary distinction? |
42322 | Why did not intelligence save Greece? |
42322 | Why linger fondly around them, and meditate upon the power which reared them and is departed? |
42322 | Why now so lone and desolate? |
42322 | Why tear away the last and only relic of the past yet lingering in our midst? |
42322 | Why, then, does the wanderer from the far land gaze upon them with wonder and veneration? |
42322 | Yet was the emigrant satisfied? |
42322 | [ 128] What are the reflections to which this stupendous earth- heap gives birth? |
42322 | [ 33]_ Ohio River._ IV"Who can paint Like Nature? |
42322 | _ Greene County, Ill._ XVIII"What earthly feeling unabash''d can dwell In Nature''s mighty presence? |
42322 | and all that quiet{ 56} intermingling of heart with heart which divests grief of half its bitterness by taking from it all its loneliness? |
42322 | and what, and where are they and we, when evening''s lengthening shadows are gathering over the landscape of life? |
42322 | for who shall tell the emotions which may swell the bosom of many a dying emigrant who here shall find his long, last rest? |
42322 | mid the swell Of everlasting hills, the roar of floods, And frown of rocks and pomp of waving woods? |
42322 | shave your face, shur?" |
42322 | so she was: but why was not the subtle element neutralized in the cup of_ knowledge_ in which it was administered? |
42322 | to what those vast salt- plains of Arkansas? |
42322 | what do you reckon of sending this young Jack Stewart to Congress?" |
44935 | Are you going to the council? |
44935 | Friend, what is the matter? 44935 Have you eaten enough?" |
44935 | How do you get the persimmons? |
44935 | How do you like it now? |
44935 | How shall I make it become quiet? |
44935 | Is that true? |
44935 | Nothing,said Pau- puk- kee- wis."Do you want to wrestle?" |
44935 | Now how do you like it? |
44935 | See, Grandmother,she said,"Lynx came down the trail and sang, Where, pretty white one, Where, pretty white one, Where do you go?" |
44935 | What are these for? |
44935 | What do they call you? |
44935 | What do you most fear? |
44935 | What is the matter? |
44935 | What shall we do with the body? |
44935 | Where are you going? |
44935 | Where does your strength come from? |
44935 | Who are you talking to? |
44935 | Who''s there? |
44935 | Why are you doing that? |
44935 | Why are you doing that? |
44935 | Why are you doing that? |
44935 | Why do you do so? |
44935 | Why do you do so? |
44935 | Why should you do that? |
44935 | A person said,"Why do you not eat the fruit of this tree? |
44935 | Alligator said to the hunter,"Where can water be found?" |
44935 | Am I all alone on the earth? |
44935 | Are you angry?" |
44935 | At last he said,"Is there no game?" |
44935 | At last they said,"Are you large enough?" |
44935 | At last, he said,"Nemissa, my elder sister, when will you end these doings? |
44935 | At once the evil underground spirits, the Ana maqkiu, said to one another,"What has happened? |
44935 | But Lynx sang again, Why do you go away, little white one? |
44935 | Do you know how to swim?" |
44935 | He asked,"What do you wish?" |
44935 | He said to Saw- whet,"Why do you want it so dark? |
44935 | He said,"Fish Hawk, what will you select for your food?" |
44935 | He said,"How does it sound with me?" |
44935 | He said,"My daughters, what has happened?" |
44935 | He said,"What are you doing?" |
44935 | He said,"Why did the Good Spirit send death so soon?" |
44935 | He said,"Why do n''t you join the Animals? |
44935 | He said,"Will you marry me?" |
44935 | He sang, Who is this, Who is this, Who boasts of flying so high? |
44935 | He slapped his thigh again and asked,"Who has been here? |
44935 | He thought to himself,"How did I come here? |
44935 | His grandmother said,"Grandson, how could you make the lives of your uncles and aunts endless like yours? |
44935 | His mother said,"You say you had plenty to eat there?" |
44935 | How could you do something in a way Earth- maker had not intended it to be? |
44935 | How do you keep so fat when I can not find enough to eat?" |
44935 | If your mother says,''My son, what is the matter?'' |
44935 | In the evening when your father comes in he will say to your mother,''What is the matter with my son?'' |
44935 | Kutnakin said to the next,"How will you go down to the Earth- plain?" |
44935 | Kutnakin said,"How will you go down to the Earth- plain?" |
44935 | Lynx sang: Where, pretty white one, Where, pretty white one, Where do you go? |
44935 | Manabozho asked,"Have I no father or mother?" |
44935 | Manabush said to Buffalo,"My uncle, how did you get here? |
44935 | Manabush, where are you going?" |
44935 | Moose said,"Who has thrust a spear into my leg?" |
44935 | Nokomis said,"What kind of a noise did it make?" |
44935 | Now what is to be done?" |
44935 | Now when I offer you food, why do you treat me in this way?" |
44935 | Now who is the fastest runner?" |
44935 | One day he asked Manabozho,"What are you most afraid of?" |
44935 | One day he said,"Are we alone on the Earth- plain?" |
44935 | One day the son asked,"What are you most afraid of on earth?" |
44935 | Or else they ask,"Is it ball- sticks or bread?" |
44935 | Otter said to his guest,"Have you eaten enough?" |
44935 | Otter said,"Where are you going?" |
44935 | Rabbit said,"Bear, what do you want for food?" |
44935 | She said,"How are you going to provide for me? |
44935 | Sun asked,"Why did you follow me?" |
44935 | Sun said,"Do you know your way home?" |
44935 | The brother said,"Do you see those children?" |
44935 | The chief said,"Where are you going? |
44935 | The giant said sternly,"What do you want?" |
44935 | The man said,"What are you doing?" |
44935 | The old manito said,"What have you come for?" |
44935 | Then Rabbit asked another Deer, of the same totem,"Deer, what will you select as food?" |
44935 | Then they said,"Where have you been? |
44935 | They asked,"Why do you not eat at home?" |
44935 | They said again,"Where do you go?" |
44935 | They said,"What is that?" |
44935 | They said,"What shall we do?" |
44935 | They said,"Who shall run first?" |
44935 | Was it you whom I treated in that manner? |
44935 | Was it you whom I treated in that manner? |
44935 | What do you wish for food?" |
44935 | What is it you wish?" |
44935 | What is your name?" |
44935 | What shall we do?" |
44935 | What shall we do?" |
44935 | When all were seated, Manabush said:"My friends, why is it you have come so long a journey to see me? |
44935 | When the Cherokee Indians hear of a new baby, they ask,"Is it a bow, or a meal sifter?" |
44935 | When the man came back in the evening, the mother said,"Where have you been all day?" |
44935 | When they met, Good said,"Tell me first-- what do you most fear?" |
44935 | Why are your feet so dry and swift? |
44935 | Why do you go away, little white one? |
44935 | Wolf said,"What are you doing in this place?" |
44935 | You see how it is? |
44935 | Your father will say,''My son, what is the matter? |
44935 | whew!_ Now when the man came home that night, the mother asked,"What have you been doing all day?" |
11151 | ''Do you know Tom O''Reilly?'' 11151 ''Is that the only way?'' |
11151 | ''Shall I make him my husband?'' 11151 ''What isht yees want?'' |
11151 | ''Will ye marry him this same night?'' 11151 A white man, does ye say, that run off wid Miss Cora?" |
11151 | All right-- all be good-- like Miss Harvey? |
11151 | An''what if we did, zur? 11151 And could not Teddy have obtained his of such a man?" |
11151 | And he wishes me to see him; is that it? |
11151 | And how do you suppose I feel, Teddy? |
11151 | And what does ye make of it, Miss Cora, or Master Harvey? |
11151 | And you''ve been huntin''''i m these three or four months be you? |
11151 | Are there not some of your people who are addicted to the use of liquor? |
11151 | Are you the man, Brazey, who has haunted me ever since we came in this country? 11151 Arrah, be aisy now; is n''t it me master he''s after, and what''s the difference? |
11151 | Arrah, now, has either of ye saan anything more than the same bowlders there? |
11151 | Brazey, why have you haunted me thus, and done me this great wrong? |
11151 | But, Teddy, what made him do it? |
11151 | Can I ask more? |
11151 | Can it be that Bra-- that that hunter has done me this great wrong? |
11151 | Cora, Cora, what is the matter? 11151 Cora, are you sorry that we came into this wild country?" |
11151 | Cora, has he harmed you? |
11151 | Could n''t yees be doing that, and this same thing, too? |
11151 | Did I not do right, Cora? |
11151 | Did n''t yees pursue the subjact any further? |
11151 | Did yees ever hear him? |
11151 | Did you ever give it him before? |
11151 | Do n''t want more? |
11151 | Do n''t yer s''pose I know all about_ that_? |
11151 | Do n''t you notice any difference in the atmosphere, Cora? |
11151 | Do ye know? |
11151 | Do you not become lonely sometimes, Cora, hundreds of miles away from the scenes of your childhood? |
11151 | Do you turn off here? |
11151 | Does he want kill you? |
11151 | Harvey Richter-- don''t you know me? |
11151 | Harvey Richter-- don''t you know me? |
11151 | Has anything befallen your husband? |
11151 | Has such been the revenge that he has been harboring up for so many years? 11151 Have I not my husband and boy?" |
11151 | Have you come a long distance? |
11151 | Have you lost your way, At- to- uck? |
11151 | How do you do, Teddy? |
11151 | How do you know she ca n''t be got agin, whin--"She was tomahawked afore my eyes-- ain''t that enough? |
11151 | How do you know? 11151 How far away is The- au- o- too?" |
11151 | I am displeased, for your shot might have taken his life, and-- but, see yonder, Teddy, what does that mean? |
11151 | I knew that I should look upon your face again; but, till me where it is yees have come from? |
11151 | I think it is more in accordance with your own disposition,smiled the wife,"is it not?" |
11151 | If we think of rest at this early stage in our lives, how will it be when we become thirty or forty years older? |
11151 | Indians? 11151 Is n''t that proof that we''ve attracted attention?" |
11151 | Like Miss Harvey-- good man''s squaw-- t''ink she be good woman? |
11151 | Me honey, is n''t there an airthquake agitatin''this solitude? |
11151 | My quarrel is not with you, I tell you, but with your psalm- singing_ master_--"And ai n''t that_ meself_? |
11151 | Nebber know what he do-- how me know? |
11151 | No, no, no, Harvey; have you not already killed him? |
11151 | Not always, or how could I be an Irishman? 11151 Now, me butternut friend, what''bjections have yees to that?" |
11151 | Sign o''what? |
11151 | Teddy, do n''t you remember day before yesterday when we came out of the Mississippi into this stream, we observed something very similar to this? |
11151 | Teddy, where have you been? |
11151 | Then some one must furnish him with it, and who now can it be? |
11151 | Then why does n''t ye come to hear him preach, ye rose of the wilderness? |
11151 | Thin what does ye mane by talking in that shtyle? 11151 Tim, could n''t yees make the s''arch wid me?" |
11151 | Tired out? |
11151 | Was n''t that about as poor a business, for yees, as this be for me, barring yees was hunting for an old man and I''m hunting for a young woman? |
11151 | Was she a swateheart? |
11151 | Well, At- to- uck, what is the matter now? |
11151 | What be yees waiting for? |
11151 | What can it all mean? |
11151 | What do you mean then? |
11151 | What do you mean, At- to- uck? |
11151 | What do you say, now? |
11151 | What do you wish? |
11151 | What good might result from that? |
11151 | What have you done with her? |
11151 | What if I does lose a few peltries when they''re bringing such a good price down in St. Louey? 11151 What is it ye say, Mister Harvey?" |
11151 | What is it yees have diskivered? |
11151 | What is it? |
11151 | What is up now? |
11151 | What might be the reason for that? |
11151 | What must I do, Cora? 11151 What time might it be jist now?" |
11151 | What''s the matter, Mister Harvey? 11151 When Mister Harvey go to village?" |
11151 | When come back? |
11151 | Where Misser Richter? |
11151 | Where Mr. Harvey go, if not in cabin? |
11151 | Where Ted? |
11151 | Where does yees get the jug? |
11151 | Where has the owld divil carried her? |
11151 | Where is he? |
11151 | Who do you wish to see then? |
11151 | Who knows but Master Harvey has gone to the village, and Miss Cora stands in the door this minute,''xpacting this owld spalpaan? |
11151 | Who may it be then? |
11151 | Why do you come in their neighborhood-- in their country? |
11151 | Why do you think so? |
11151 | Why you not stay with squaw? |
11151 | Wo n''t that spake for itself? |
11151 | Wo n''t you come in and rest yourself until Mr. Richter returns? |
11151 | Would ye have me give up the s''arch altogether? |
11151 | Yer oughter come; and that minds me I''ve never saan ye around the village, for which I axes yees the raison? |
11151 | Yes, my son; do you hear the bell? |
11151 | You are not a Sioux, then? |
11151 | You are perfectly contented-- happy, are you? |
11151 | You give me your promise, then, that ye''ll niver furnish me anither drap? |
11151 | You not ax for jug, eh? 11151 You would not change it for a residence at home with your own people if you could?" |
11151 | _ Me_ make you drink him? |
11151 | ''You have treated him ill.''"''That I know I have,''she sobbed,''and how can I do him justice?'' |
11151 | An''be what token would they be acquaint with her?" |
11151 | And what father does not hold precisely the same opinion of his young hopeful? |
11151 | And what husband could prevent them?" |
11151 | And who could this enemy be? |
11151 | And ye have n''t caught a glimpse of the gal nor heard nothin''of her?" |
11151 | Are you the person who carried away poor, dear Cora?" |
11151 | Be yees listening, ye riptile? |
11151 | But does your heart tell you you are at peace with Him whom you have offended so grievously?" |
11151 | But s''pose, my friend, you go on this way for a year more-- what then?" |
11151 | Ca n''t I afford to do it, when there''s a gal in the matter?" |
11151 | Can it be? |
11151 | Can you not welcome me?" |
11151 | Did you see him?" |
11151 | Do you hear?". |
11151 | Do you suppose I could have come as near and_ missed_ without doing so on_ purpose_? |
11151 | Does ye take him for a michanic, who goes to work as soon as he swallows his bread and mate?" |
11151 | Does yees consint?'' |
11151 | Harvey?" |
11151 | How bees it with yourself, Mistress Cora?" |
11151 | Is it run or fight?" |
11151 | Is n''t it time to bring Dolly home?" |
11151 | Is there anything I can do for you?" |
11151 | Is this you, Brazey Davis?" |
11151 | Let me see, he has been away since morning?" |
11151 | Let me see, you said it war nigh onto three months ago, warn''t it?" |
11151 | Mahogany?" |
11151 | Mister Harvey?" |
11151 | Naught else? |
11151 | On reaching the edge of the Clearing Teddy asked, abruptly:"If the haythen comes back to the cabin while we''s be gone?" |
11151 | S''pose I should git on the trail that is lost, can yer tell me how fur I''d have to foller it? |
11151 | Supposing one to have gazed from this stand- point, what would have been his field of vision? |
11151 | Teddy_ sad_? |
11151 | The Injin''l''git a good start on us, wo n''t he though?" |
11151 | The dull click of the lock reached the ear of the target, who asked, in a low, gruff voice:"Why do_ you_ seek me? |
11151 | The face of the Irishman was as dejected as his own, and the widowed man knew there was scarce need of the question:"Have you heard anything, Teddy?" |
11151 | They were upon the point of landing so as to kindle a fire, when Mr. Richter spoke:"Do you notice that large island in the stream, Cora? |
11151 | This afternoon, an Indian came in the house and threatened the life of both my wife and child--""Where the divil is he?" |
11151 | What could be the object in firing at the missionary, yet taking pains that no harm should be inflicted? |
11151 | What could have been more desirable than to unite with them in a country where whites were so scarce, and almost unknown? |
11151 | What else could I mean?" |
11151 | What is the meaning of this?" |
11151 | What think you, dear wife?" |
11151 | What thus alarmed him? |
11151 | What''s the matter with yees now?" |
11151 | What''s the matter?" |
11151 | What''s- your- name?" |
11151 | Where does yees get the jug?" |
11151 | Where have you concealed yourself? |
11151 | Where is it ye secures the vallyble contents?" |
11151 | Why did n''t ye pause, and sarve me then jist as ye have done? |
11151 | Why did n''t ye stick to it, and jist give me a chance to express meself? |
11151 | Why this untimely pleasantry?" |
11151 | Would you not prefer that as a landing- place?" |
11151 | Yees never did, eh? |
11151 | Yer do n''t s''pose that feller was able to keep paddlin''forever in the river, do yer? |
11151 | You not want him?" |
11151 | [ Illustration:"Harvey Richter-- don''t you know me?" |
11151 | [ Illustration:"Where does yees get the jug?"] |
11151 | _ Is_ it yerself, Mister Harvey, out in these woods, or is it yer ghost on the s''arch for Misthress Cora? |
11151 | but do n''t ye saa those same bushes moving? |
11151 | but do ye_ saa_ him? |
11151 | he asked, steadying himself against a sapling,"or am I standing on a jug?" |
11151 | hear groan? |
11151 | she asked, shaking like a leaf,''and who are yees?'' |
11151 | shrieked the gal, as if she''d go down upon the ground,''and how shall I save meself?'' |
11151 | what can be the m''aning of that?" |
11151 | where could he obtain it?" |
11151 | yees are gone already, bees you?" |