Questions

This is a list of all the questions and their associated study carrel identifiers. One can learn a lot of the "aboutness" of a text simply by reading the questions.

identifier question
18502''What shall I render for all thy benefits?''
18502*** After such considerations, can I be so weak as not to make religion my only pursuit?
18502How far am I advanced in the great end of being, the making such use of my time here, that it may bear fruit when time with me is over?
18502Let us not be inquiring,"What shall this man do,"or what should the other have done?
18502Need we then wonder at their success?
18502Once he exclaimed,"what could all the world do for me now?"
18502She continued for some time addressing those around her in this strain; and to the question of her brother, whether she was happy?
18502To a young friend whom she tenderly loved, she said,"Oh if we should all meet in heaven, will it not be delightful?
18502We have often anxiously pondered over the question,--Why the Society of Friends should be a diminishing body?
18502What shall I say or promise unto my Lord?
18502and raising her hand, exclaimed,"Oh such love!--such love!--and to me such a sinner; is it not marvellous?"
18502and what is my calling?
42164And what becomes of the water, as the Dead Sea has no outlet?
42164Forward and fear not; speed on the way, Why dost thou shrink from thy path in dismay? 42164 Forward and fear not; though trials be near, The Lord is thy refuge; whom shouldst thou fear?
42164There are so many rents and divisions throughout Christendom that many are crying, Who shall show us any good? 42164 ''Are not Abana and Pharpar, rivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel?'' 42164 --''What are the conditions on which we can join you?'' 42164 16)_ is_ here, and shall not_ this_ desert yet blossom as a rose? 42164 3d, 1873, to a crowded house she preached for half an hour from the text,''If I will that he tarry till I come, what is that to thee? 42164 Again,Where does it end?"
42164And are we not reminded by divers tokens for good that light is advancing?
42164And may we not accept as true the words of the poet:''Upon the great dial- plate of ages The light advanced no more recedes''?
42164As he listened to its contents at the end of his journey he made the significant remark,"Is that all there is in it?"
42164Did ever two more worthy the name go out to fulfil the duties belonging to that title?
42164Does the improvement correspond to the outlay and effort?"
42164How long, O Lord, ere thou takest unto thyself the great power and reignest?
42164In the course of the evening our kind hostess inquired if we would like water for our feet?
42164Liberia seems to press upon my mind, but can all this be called for at such weak hands?
42164Nay, Thy power and might, as ever, all omnipotent shall be:''Rock of Ages,''what can move me if I lean my soul on Thee?"
42164Penn asked,"How shall I know that a man does not obtrude his own sense upon us as the infallible Spirit?"
42164Such thrilling raptures_ this_ impart With_ love my bosom_ warm?
42164Sybil Jones said,"I hope thou art seeking a crown in that higher warfare?"
42164The questions are often asked,"Is the gain worth the cost?
42164What tongue can tell my soul''s anguish as the tears flowed fast from each child''s almost bursting heart?
42164Who can calculate the amount of good that one such life of dedication and devotion has accomplished?
42164Who, indeed, can know the agony of my spirit, save"He who rolls the planets in their spheres And counts the lowly mourner''s tears?"
42164and if in the land of peace, wherein thou trustedst, they wearied thee, then how wilt thou do in the swelling of Jordan?"
42164he exclaimed,''is this the way you honor your prophet?
42164shall a face, then, win my heart, Mere symmetry of form?
50374Now, what was this Holy Ghost and spirit of truth, and where are we to find it? 50374 Some may query, what is the cross of Christ?
50374A second query was to the effect,"Did God send him into the world purposely to suffer death?"
50374And are not the histories of passing events, written by candid men of the present age, which thousands know to be true, as authentic as the Bible?
50374And what was it that was a Saviour?
50374But how, in his time, could he have had any knowledge of evolution?
50374But what is this Jesus Christ?
50374Do n''t we see how different the precepts of the law of God are?
50374In reply to the query,"By what means did Jesus suffer?"
50374Is it like coming home to justice?
50374It is a plain way, a simple way which all can understand, and not be under the necessity to go to a neighbor, and to say,''Know thou the Lord?
50374Its clear- sightedness; how comes it that the eye is single to the true course?
50374Its quickening sympathy; what is the sweet secret?
50374Its strength to endure; from what fountain flows unfailing strength?
50374Now can we hesitate a single moment, in regard to the truth of this declaration?
50374Or such a place as hell, or a gulf located in some interior part of this little terraqueous globe?
50374Shall we say that the love of God is equally manifested in all these?
50374Speaking of the"Comforter"which was to come, he said:"And what was this Comforter?
50374The Lord had declared beforehand unto them in plain characters, that none need to say,''Know ye the Lord?
50374The text was,"What is the chief end of man?"
50374The unswerving rectitude; whence is its divine directness?
50374Using the term,"washed clean in the blood of the lamb,"he proceeded to explain himself as follows:"And what is the blood of the lamb?
50374What is this, but this Comforter which reproves the world of sin?
50374Who has the authority, in the language of Whittier, to..."fix with metes and bounds The love and power of God?"
50374which proves it to be immortal; and can any thing, or being, that is not immortal in itself, receive the impress of an immortal desire upon it?
37311Do these Proceedings beget hard Thoughts? 37311 Doth Mankind, walking in Uprightness, delight in each other''s Happiness?
37311Doth Pride lead to Vanity? 37311 Doth he condescend to bless thee with his Presence?
37311A Friend, coming some Miles to see her the Morning before she died, asked her, how she did?
37311And do these Creatures, capable of this Attainment, by giving way to an evil Spirit, employ their Wit and Strength to afflict and destroy one another?
37311As one Query admitted with Unanimity was,"Are any concerned in buying or vending Goods unlawfully imported, or prize Goods?"
37311Do hard Thoughts, when ripe, become Malice?
37311Do our Minds, in Things outward, look beyond our own Dissolution; and are we contriving for the Prosperity of our Children after us?
37311Do we feel an affectionate Regard to Posterity; and are we employed to promote their Happiness?
37311Does Malice, when ripe, become revengeful; and, in the End, inflict terrible Pains on their Fellow- creatures, and spread Desolation in the World?
37311Doth Vanity form imaginary Wants?
37311Doth he claim my Body as his Temple, and graciously grant that I may be sacred to him?
37311Hath not one God created us?
37311Have none of my Fellow Creatures an equitable Right to any Part which is called mine?
37311Have the Gifts, and Possessions received by me from others, been conveyed in a Way free from all Unrighteousness, so far as I have seen?
37311How agreeable to the true Harmony of Society, is that Exhortation of the Apostle?
37311Is not he that sitteth at Meat?
37311May each of us query with ourselves, have the Treasures I possess been gathered in that Wisdom which is from above, so far as hath appeared to me?
37311Now what pious Father beholding his Son placed in one of these Ships, to learn the Practice of a Mariner, could forbear mourning over him?
37311Of this the Prophet appears to have had a Feeling, when he said,_ Have we not all one Father?
37311The Apostle speaking on this Subject, asketh this Question;_ What Fellowship hath Righteousness with Unrighteousness?_ 2 Cor.
37311The Query was,"Are there any concerned in the Importation of Negroes, or buying them after imported?"
37311Their Change is happy: Are the Wicked taken away in their Wickedness?
37311To dwell in thee, and walk in thee?
37311To move and influence to Action?
37311When these Things are weightily attended to, how mournful is the Subject?
37311Which they altered thus:"Are there any concerned in the Importation of Negroes, or buying them to trade in?"
37311Whither would his"concerns"have carried him, had not the Angel of Small- Pox ended his wistful and unrelenting quest?
37311Who amongst us shall dwell with everlasting Burnings?
37311Who is my Neighbour?
37311Why then do we deal treacherously every Man with his Brother, in prophaning the Covenant of our Fathers?_ Mal.
37311_ Is it a Time to receive Money and Garments, Men Servants and Maid Servants?
37311_ Who amongst us shall dwell with devouring Fire?
10369And what is the use,said we,"of confessing to man?"
10369But what will you do about the language?
10369O Lord God, who is a strong Lord like unto Thee, or to thy faithfulness round about Thee? 10369 Who then is that faithful and wise steward whom his Lord shall make ruler over his household, to give them their portion of meat in due season?
10369Why so?
1036912_ mo._ 7.--_Query._ What is the most likely means for me to adopt to approach nearer to holiness?
1036922--"What is that to thee?
1036922_nd_[?].
10369And what greater privilege could we desire than to be fed at the Lord''s table?
10369And what was their request?
10369And when his eyes were opened, what did he see?
10369But for what purpose are we here?
10369I was instructed yesterday evening by hearing a reply of one of the first missionaries of the Moravians[?].
10369Is it to be wondered at?
10369Is not the work rather marring as on the wheel; can I, in sincerity say, I am the clay, Thou art the potter?
10369It all revolves on this single and important point,--What is the_ divine will_ concerning me?
10369It is often a query with me, how am I spending this precious time, which passes so swiftly away never to return?
10369It is often the consideration of my heart, What has brought me into this country?
10369John Yeardley says: Wilt thou not be surprised when I tell thee that I am about to commence yarn- bleaching?
10369O, happy spirit, thou art at rest; then why should I mourn thy loss?
10369O, my soul, wherefore dost thou doubt, when thou feelest the glorious presence of thy Redeemer''s countenance to shine upon thee?
10369Once being in the fields in the night season, he exclaimed, Lord what shall I do, or whither shall I go?
10369The daughter of Mad''e de W. whispered to my M.Y., Are we too dissipated to have something good?
10369The unhallowed thought arose, Where shall we find bread to feed this multitude?
10369Then it sprang in my heart, Where is the man that can offer up an Isaac?
10369This is an awful consideration; but why should any despair?
10369What can be more pure than the profession we make to be guided by the Holy Spirit?
10369What shall we do but seek ability at the Divine footstool to bow in humble resignation to this afflictive dispensation?
10369When I am concerned to stand up in His dread and fear, what have I else to fear?
10369You think my task is light?
10369and what have I to do?
10369said to me,"Whatever can be the meaning that thou so often repeats these lines?"
10369what am I doing?
10369what have I done?
10369what is that?"
10369what of the night?
10369what of the night?
10369where are the fruits?
21492And hast thou been content to pass so long a time without communicating with thy old friends?
21492And now tell me, when dost thou think we shall arrive at our destination?
21492And what is it I hear of you,asked Christison;"that you have joined the followers of George Fox?"
21492And what is thy name?
21492And what name hast thou fixed on for this new province, Master Penn?
21492But tell me, how is she? 21492 But where are they?"
21492By what right are they prohibited from thus meeting?
21492By whose authority am I arrested?
21492Can it be our consort?
21492Canst tell me, friend, what has brought all these people together?
21492Christison, Ford, which will you all do, gentlemen?
21492Christison, your eyes are sharp; is that a sail away to the north- east?
21492Didst not thou fear greatly?
21492Do you hear me, sirrah?
21492Do you know anything of the land ahead?
21492Friend Charles, why dost thou not keep on thy hat?
21492Friend,said the young horseman,"canst tell me the abode of Master Isaac Pennington?"
21492Hast ever crossed the ocean before, young sir?
21492Have you no one then who cares for you?
21492Have you not seen them?
21492Is there a harbour there, then?
21492Is this Master Mead''s abode, young man?
21492Know you not, young man, that we allow no persons of your persuasion to remain in our state?
21492Tell me honestly, Master Kennard, whether you deem this sickness unto death?
21492Thank you, friend,said the stranger;"but will all these people submit to be treated thus by those few soldiers?
21492Then how didst thou quit it? 21492 There, whom do you see there?"
21492To an unlawful assembly?
21492What does it look like?
21492What have become of the passengers, then?
21492What say you to that?
21492Where away?
21492Who are these knaves?
21492Who are you, who thus dares to interrupt the court?
21492Who are you?
21492Who are you?
21492Who art thou?
21492Will you go also, Master Christison? 21492 With all my heart,"answered Christison;"but tell me who is that noble youth addressing the people?
21492You can have had but little time for obtaining instruction then?
21492Are you safe?
21492Art thou satisfied?"
21492Do you hear me, sirrah?"
21492Do you not know that every head of a family is fined a shilling on every Sunday that he neglects to attend the parish church?
21492Do you wish to take time to think on the matter, or will you run the chance of seeing service under the noble Earl of Ossory?"
21492Has thy father escaped also?"
21492How is it, young man?
21492I suppose they will not exclude you from the society of your friends?"
21492If this court can not show that it is, the question is, will a jury of Englishmen, when the case is made clear to them, venture to convict?"
21492Tell me what has occurred?"
21492Wenlock found himself conveyed to a comfortable mansion in Rotterdam overlooking a canal; indeed, what houses do not overlook canals in that city?
21492What is life worth to man without these?
21492What more can I say?
21492What say you, Wenlock?
21492Where is she?
21492Where is the earl?"
21492Which was the conqueror?
21492Wilt thou accept my offer?
21492and leave us all here, not to return?"
21492are you safe?"
21492do all the other dissenters of England submit to such a law?"
21492he exclaimed,"art thou the son of my ancient comrade?
21492is it thou?"
21492is she in Rotterdam?"
21492knowest thou not, Friend William, that it is the custom of this place for only one person to remain covered at a time?"
21492she asked, in a tone of sympathy;"no one in your native land to whom you desire to return?"
21492what are they about?
21492what would Mary Mead, what would her father and William Penn, have said to such sentiments?
21492ye varlets, do you come into the presence of the Lord Mayor of London with your hats on?
11959Can I trust a fellow- being? 11959 How shall we escape if we_ neglect_( not only_ reject_) such great salvation?"
11959***"And now, Lord, what wait I for?"
11959**** I lay still half hour, and read over thy tenderly interesting and affecting sheet, and poured out my full heart; but what can I say?
11959***** To home, to home my spirit hastes; For why?
11959***** Where can we search to find its home?
11959*****"WHAT PROFIT HATH A MAN OF ALL HIS LABOR THAT HE TAKETH UNDER THE SUN?"
119599th_, 1837.-- Can it be true that one more link In that mysterious chain, Which joins the two eternities, I shall not see again?
11959A short time afterwards, appearing a little discouraged, she asked,"Do you feel assured for me?
11959Am I in this repining?
11959And if so, dare we murmur or wish to recall the loved one from that home?
11959And now, my dear----, are we not one, essentially one, both one in Christ?
11959And shall its ask''d and promised resurrection In dreams of disappointed hope subside?
11959Are ten thousand fears desiring To engulf their helpless prey?
11959Are we never to rest in principles and practices of actual faith and love?
11959At another time, whilst amusing herself with her toys, she asked,"Mamma, what is it that makes me feel_ so sorry_ when I have done wrong?
11959Because I feel benevolence towards the poor?
11959Because I feel the love of God constraining me?
11959But how talk of abolition by_ law_, and keep spirit- merchants in the Church?
11959But may I write prose?
11959But this desperate heart-- might it not well be despaired of?
11959But what will He gather them to?
11959But when, all beautiful upon the mountains, Shall come the herald of our peace restored?
11959But why thus?
11959But, for the year that is passed, what can I say?
11959Can I say, in full sincerity,"_ more_ than they that watch for the morning"?
11959Can I trust an angel''s care?
11959Can it be joyful to reflect, This year may be our last?
11959Can it be joyful, then, to find That life is hastening fast?
11959Can it be that every heart is a treasury of sadness which has but to be stirred up to set us in mourning?
11959Can we hope ever to attain it?
11959Can we not have faith in our principles?
11959Comes there no blessed day for Sabbath- keeping, No time within the temple to adore?
11959Could the stony heart in me help melting, seeing her exceeding great joy?
11959Do we suffer only by our own fault, unless a grief is actually inflicted upon us?
11959Do you think it is?"
11959Does a certain amount of evil necessarily bring a certain amount of sorrow soon or late?
11959Doubtless to wait for it, and perhaps ask for it also; but how?
11959From thy barn and storehouse treasure Did He take thy hoarded pelf?
11959Has He made it vain thy toiling Fine- spun raiment to prepare?
11959Has my aim been duty-- not pleasure?
11959Has my employment and economy of time been right?
11959Has not our life a germ of real perfection, As holds the tiny seed the forest''s pride?
11959Hast thou long thy Lord''s abiding Vainly sought''mid shadows dim?
11959Hast thou seen thy building falter Can thy God thy griefs despise?
11959Have I been quiet and submissive?
11959Have I fallen short of this amount, I am uneasy, and feel myself burdened; the thing is before me, I must do it: why?
11959Have I looked on the things of others as my own?
11959Have propensities or sentiments ruled?
11959How can I be sufficiently thankful that it has been mine?
11959How can I describe these eventful days?
11959How full of significance is the inquiry,"To whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?"
11959How shall I account, in the last day, for these things?
11959How shall I join the ransom''d throng Around the throne that stand, And cast their crowns before thy feet, Lord of the saintly band?
11959How shall my guilty spirit meet The great, all- searching eye?
11959How, then, can I dream of clearing off these debts, when there can be no doubt that I shall daily incur more?
11959I did write poetry sometimes: is it presumptuous to call it poetry?
11959If I should lose my soul through poetry?
11959If so, who can tell the fierceness of the fire that burns between me and my wished- for rest?
11959In faith''s long contest have life''s quenchless fountains Bade calm defiance to the hostile sword?
11959Is His hand shortened at all?
11959Is it proportionate to the amount of evil?
11959Is the gospel changed?
11959Is there, then, no positive Christian duty?
11959Is thy spirit all unfeeling, Save to sin that grieves thee there?
11959Look on the firmament above, From south to northern pole: Can we find there a resting- place For the immortal soul?
11959Many an occasion of deep instruction was offered to us at the Yearly Meeting; and yet from all this what remains?
11959Must we forever the rough stones be heaping, And building temple walls for evermore?
11959Must we forever urge the brain with learning, And add to moral, intellectual woes?
11959Nearly sixteen years have I been warned, and sweetly called upon to awake out of sleep:"What meanest thou, O sleeper?
11959Nor hold in peace the spoils we have been earning, And find in wisdom''s self the mind''s repose?
11959Oh, does He not say in_ these_ days,"Open thy mouth wide, and I will fill it"?
11959Oh, how shall I be enough careful to trust him alone?
11959Oh, how shall I set forth His tender compassion, who has blessed me this evening with, I was going to say, the abundance of peace and truth?
11959Oh, how should I be rebuked by the thought,"One thing is needful, and but one: Why do thy thoughts on many run?"
11959Oh, what were life without it?
11959Oh, who can tell the snares that surround me?
11959Or is the calming and soothing power a thing confined to sense and sensibility?
11959Ought we not to be willing to be bent or unbent any way?
11959Query:--Is it_ per se_ a_ sin_ to drink a little?
11959Shades of night, thy strain''d eye scorning, Have they; long enwrapp''d the skies?
11959Shall I not, from this time, cry unto Him,"My Father, thou art the guide of my youth"?
11959Suppose I am one of these?
11959The constant inquiry,"What must I do to keep an easy conscience?"
11959The presumption always seems to me on the other side; and yet who is free from it altogether?
11959Time passes on, and what progress do I make, either in usefulness in the earth, or preparation for heaven?
11959Was not nature meant by Him to work in concert with His spirit on our hearts?
11959We have been interrupted; in what?--in the fulfilment of our duty?
11959We say"it is because I listen to temptation;"but why do I listen, to temptation?
11959We who have tried our heavenly Father''s patience so long, dare we complain of waiting for Him?
11959What could I do but endeavor to lie down in passiveness under it, and crave that nothing might interfere to mar the work of the Lord?
11959What if nature chose the sweeter, Where her blooming gift to lay?
11959What in me but my greatest foe could hinder the full adoption of the prayer,"Thy will be done"?
11959What shall I render unto the Lord for all his benefits?
11959What testimony of gratitude can I record to that tender mercy which has drawn near to me this evening?
11959What will all issue in?
11959What will be discouraged by it, except that self- confidence and self- reliance which are the bane, the very opposite, to the idea of faith?
11959What wonder that the wilderness is so long and tortuous, when I reckon the molten calves, the murmurings, the fleshly desires?
11959What would be my present condition but for the unchangeable faithfulness of my God and Saviour?
11959What would be thought of a person, especially young, who should profess so much now?
11959What, then, must be the essence of that glory in which all perfection is beauty united?
11959When He giveth quietness, what should make trouble?
11959Which should be sacrificed?
11959Who shall tell us which were meeter,-- Marriage morn, or funeral day?
11959Why sacrifice either?
11959Why should the cup the sooner cloy Which God hath deign''d to bless?"]
11959Why, then, do not I?
11959Will He convict me still of holding the truth in unrighteousness?
11959Will you be satisfied with seven sketches, such as they are, for this day?
11959[ Footnote 3:"Why should we fear youth''s draught of joy, If pure, would sparkle less?
11959_ Directly_, mamma: what is it?"
11959and if it is not employed properly, when at home, how can it be naturally and intelligently exercised when abroad?
11959and yet, if but prepared to go, whether we depart as he did, or as poor Cowper, how true are the words of the latter,"What can it signify?"
11959can you trust for me?"
11959follows its judgment as"desperately wicked,"with emphasis full as great as that of"Who can know it?"
11959gayly spreading On a long- nursed household tree, What unwonted spell is shedding Thought of grief on bloom of thee?
11959how shall I account for the sixteen years which have, this day, completed their course upon my head?
11959is no proof of high Christian attainment; rather says the Christian,"What can I render for all His benefits?"
11959shall I leave my only Helper because of my evil case-- my only Physician because of my desperate disease?
11959will it be heaven?"
63160Ai n''t it nice, Archie?
63160Ai n''t you and McClure goin'', Brad?
63160Boys, what has become of Scip? 63160 But, husband, what will become of us?
63160Come, mother,said Harry,"we''re raving hungry: ai n''t you going to give us any supper?"
63160Did Mr. Holdness, or McClure, or Mr. Honeywood, know you were going?
63160Did ever anybody in this world see such children?
63160Did he say where the Black Rifle was?
63160Did you ever see a house made of brick?
63160Did you put sand in your clay, just as we do when we make mortar?
63160Dinna ye ken wha hae became o''my bairn?
63160Does it take him a good while to make a pot?
63160Doing what?
63160Doing? 63160 Hab dey killed Massa Blanchard and all de rest but you?"
63160Has the mill been going this morning?
63160How are you, old stand- by?
63160How did you cut that vine so true, Sam?
63160How did you get''em out?
63160How did you know about that tree, Scip?
63160How did you know it?
63160How did you know this?
63160How high and wide and long shall we make it?
63160How many of them?
63160How''d you know''twas hollow?
63160I,said Honeywood,"would inquire, in the first place, who is to command this force it is proposed to raise?"
63160If there''s so little difference, why ai n''t the unglazed just about as good?
63160Is n''t he a noble- looking man?
63160Is n''t he handsome, beautiful? 63160 Is n''t it a good way?"
63160Is that so?
63160It did n''t soak through faster than you could eat it, did it?
63160It is n''t play,said Sammy, straightening him self up:"what makes you call it play?
63160Mother, may I ask Uncle Seth to come to supper? 63160 Mr. Holdness, did n''t you like Tony?"
63160Mr. Honeywood, how did you know so much about Indians? 63160 Mr. Seth, you know my mother''s got an earthen milk- pan, and Mrs. Holdness has got two: where did they come from?"
63160Neighbors,said McClure, seating himself upon a bag of meal, with his rifle across his knees,"have you heard the news?"
63160Not after he made such efforts to save you and the children''s lives?
63160Right? 63160 Sam, what does ail that child?"
63160Sammy, do n''t you feel well?
63160Sammy, have you got your rifle with you?
63160So you''ve made a wheel for yourselves, have you?
63160Then they wo n''t kill, scalp, nor roast him alive?
63160Then what made ours leak so fast?
63160Was n''t the moulds the Lord made good enough for you to work from?
63160Was that all?
63160Well, well, what''s in the wind now?
63160Were there cracks in it?
63160What are you going to do to it next?
63160What de matter wid my leetle Sammy?
63160What do Indians want a white boy for?
63160What do you say, Brad?
63160What do you want to be a duck for?
63160What else did Dick say?
63160What else did you do to it?
63160What is a brave man, what ai n''t a coward?
63160What kind of moulds do the potters in the settlements have to make their things of?
63160What made it do so?
63160What made you put your large wheel flat on the floor? 63160 What made you throw all those punkins, squashes, and gourds away, my son, after you had taken so much pains to boil and scrape the inside out?"
63160What makes you sit there so still, then?
63160What matter will it be,said Archie,"if we let the fire be at night, and then kindle it up in the morning?
63160What shall I do for water?
63160What shall I say to him?
63160What were those Indians about there?
63160What will you do with us?
63160What''s a better way to do?
63160What''s a sea, and what''s a vessel?
63160What''s that?
63160What''s the matter, Sammy?
63160What''s the reason?
63160When did you see my husband last? 63160 Where can we bake it?"
63160Where have you been all this time?
63160Where should we get news, who are a hundred miles from anywhere, and cut off from all the rest of mankind?
63160Where''s my father?
63160Where''s our Harry?
63160Who else can it be? 63160 Who is to command it?
63160Who made''em?
63160Who sent you here?
63160Why could n''t I put it in Mr. Cuthbert''s hominy- block that is right here before the door, and pound it same as we used to the corn? 63160 Why do n''t you coax Uncle Seth to make one?
63160Why, Sammy Sumerford, where have you been this livelong day?
63160Will you let us take our cattle and mules and goods and arms?
63160Wo n''t dey come back?
63160Yes, and the dogs are coming too: wo n''t it be nice to have''em all?
63160Yes; and we made it our own selves, did n''t we?
63160You find any thing? 63160 You hunting after a bear''s den, or a coon- hole?"
63160You wo n''t tell Tony''s father nor our Harry that we are here, will you, Mr. Holdness? 63160 Ai n''t I brave?
63160Alarmed, he said,--"Mother, what are you doing up there?"
63160Blanchard?"
63160Blanchard?"
63160But did you truly make the letters, and the leaves on there, your own self?"
63160Ca n''t he, Sammy?"
63160Did ever anybody see or hear tell of such a boy?
63160Did n''t he shut himself up in the mill when the Indians attacked the fort, scared to death?
63160Did n''t they set us to hold the fort, and stand watch?
63160Did n''t you hear me blow the horn?
63160Did n''t you see him smile when the baby stood up and held on to his leggings?
63160Did n''t you see that the inside was of a different color from the outside, and there was something smooth and shiny all over it?
63160Do n''t you know how fast your mother''s spindle on her large wheel whirls?"
63160Do n''t you see how he carries that left arm: that was broke by an Indian bullet?"
63160Do n''t you see that cow has got her foot in the pail?
63160Does the red man give to his friend that which he values not, and set before him that he would not eat himself?"
63160Has he lost his way?
63160Have n''t you come in a good time?
63160Have you been throwing water on this baby?"
63160He made it for them because he loved them, that they might amuse themselves; but how could he love boys that were so cruel?
63160Honeywood said,"Who is there?"
63160How can anybody die,''cept they''re killed or drownded?
63160How did you get out of the fort?"
63160How did you make your bowls and platters the other day?
63160I wonder how many Indians''twould take to kill twenty- eight men like us?"
63160If you wanted to work with your clay, why did n''t you tell''em that was the reason you did n''t want to go to- day?
63160In the course of fifteen minutes they asked,--"Is n''t it trod enough, Uncle Seth?"
63160Is he hungry?
63160Is he not our brother?
63160Is he tired?
63160Is it not sae, Jean Stewart?"
63160Is it not so?"
63160Is that yourself?"
63160It is truly a great thing I have asked of the Delawares; but is any thing too good for a friend?
63160Marm, there''s both pots: now which do you think is the best shape?
63160Mr. Holdness nor McClure would n''t go in there in the night, sooner''n they''d jump into the fire: do n''t you call them brave men?"
63160Notwithstanding all your advantages, is it not probable, that, turn you right out in the world, you would either beg or starve?
63160Raymond.--Where are the children, wife?"
63160Sam Sumerford, what have you been doing?
63160Sammy soon returned with the cards, when his mother said,--"Had you rather be down here alone, than at play with the boys?"
63160Should not a Delaware be just?
63160The boys went off; and Mrs. Sumerford said,"Sam, what made you so short with the boys?
63160The boys were exceedingly proud of their workmanship, and often exclaimed,--"Is n''t it nice?
63160The last basketful had been placed on the sled; and Honeywood took up his goad to start the oxen, when Mrs. Sumerford exclaimed,"Who''s that?
63160What could you find to do there without any dinner, and all alone?"
63160What did you have to make''em by?"
63160What do you suppose is the reason?"
63160What in the world can you be thinking of?
63160What is brick?"
63160What satisfaction could there be in turning that wheel upside down, and sticking a turnip on the spindle?"
63160What will the Indians do to him, Mr. Holdness?
63160What''ll my mother say?
63160What''s the reason milk nor nothing else wo n''t go through mother''s pan?"
63160When will the Delawares come?"
63160Where should he get boards to make a bench?
63160Who is it says that?
63160Who told you you might go?"
63160Will my brothers allow the woman to speak to them?"
63160Will you?"
63160Wo n''t you, ma''am?"
63160Would n''t Tony Stewart like to be here?"
63160You wo n''t be behind the loop- holes down there in the woods.--What do you think of it, Harry?"
63160and did n''t his own brother Israel say it was the first time he ever knew a fort saved by a coward?"
63160and did n''t we kill a lot of Indians?
63160and how came you to be separated from him?"
63160and how did you learn to talk Indian?"
63160are you out of your senses?
63160asked Sammy;"or do they make''em in holes in the ground or on a basket?"
63160cried Sammy:"you''ve got flour now; and wo n''t you make some berry- pies, and a pigeon- pie with crust, for me,''cause I''m wounded and ca n''t go?
63160did you come to see me work?"
63160exclaimed Harry,"what sent you here right into the thickest of the fire?"
63160how can you bend such a great piece of wood?"
63160how much you do know, do n''t you?"
63160said the mother, after Sammy had gone to bed,"that he should set out all at once in such a fury to make things of clay?"
63160shouted Sammy,"only look at baby''s bear coming to see us fish: is n''t he good?
63160was he frightened''cause his mother left him?
63160what shall I do with the child?"
63160why did n''t you set it on the legs?"
63160will they kill him?"
63160you there, my little potter?
44991A what, dear?
44991And did not any one say hateful things about me when Miss Ashton read my letter, and they knew I had not done what I was so sure I would do?
44991And did you not say Miss Annie showed you how it was to be done?
44991And did you not shut the door?
44991And make it for me very soon, will you?
44991And tell Miss Ashton, mamma?
44991And why did you not have as much accomplished as the other children? 44991 Are you willing to tell me about it?"
44991Aunt May, will you please do the sum of four times twenty minutes, and tell me how much it is?
44991Belle, when did you finish yours?
44991Bessie, what do you think it is?
44991But how came you to forget mamma''s orders, Lily?
44991But what is the story?
44991But why do n''t you begin now, right off?
44991But you put it away this afternoon, did you not?
44991But you will ask Him now, wo n''t you?
44991By Monday, Doctor?
44991Can I trust you to do something for me?
44991Did he ever put off?
44991Did she come in?
44991Did the lady with the toothache ever tell the late lady she made her have it?
44991Did you find a proverb that would be a lesson for me, or did you have to make one?
44991Did you move the inkstand at all, Lily?
44991Did you not hear how often they said''pet''? 44991 Did you put it away yesterday?"
44991Do n''t you find''distance lends enchantment to the view''of Pro? 44991 Do n''t you know what a Murphy is, Miss Ashton?
44991Do n''t you scorn me, papa?
44991Do you like other people to keep you waiting, Lily?
44991Do you remember, if you please, Miss Lily?
44991Doctor,she asked wistfully,"is my eye going out?"
44991Does any one know?
44991Does it pain you so, darling?
44991Dora, when did you finish yours?
44991Give us another, Midge, will you?
44991Go and ask mamma to forgive me; but how can she, Tom?
44991Going out? 44991 Going to do some shopping too, Lily?"
44991Have you seen nothing of the kind lying about in the sitting- room, or did you not touch Miss Lily''s box?
44991How does she try you?
44991How is it, then, that you have done so very little, and that little so badly?
44991How long before mamma will be able to put such trust in you, do you think?
44991How was it? 44991 I do n''t believe the children will come before twelve o''clock, do you, mamma?"
44991I say, Midge,he said,"let a fellow stay and see the rest of your charade, will you?
44991I think you will all remember,she said,"the lame soldier who was run over and killed on the corner of this street?"
44991I would n''t be such a slow poke as Nellie, would you?
44991Is Lily''s petticoat finished?
44991Is it not there? 44991 Is it possible that you like canine dogs, Mrs. Smith?
44991Is my proverb picture nearly ready?
44991Is that what cured you of carelessness? 44991 Is there any proverb about putting off?"
44991Is this all you have done?--this little piece of a seam?
44991Is your apron done, Nellie?
44991It is not a duty for me to make this, is it, mamma?
44991Lily,he said, when he saw her,"did you tell Nora to sew on these two buttons?"
44991Maggie is quite a Murphy, is n''t she, Miss Ashton?
44991Maggie,said Lily, as the carriage drew up at Miss Ashton''s door,"could n''t you make me a proverb picture about putting off?
44991Mamma?
44991Miss Lily''s harnsum box, is it, ma''am? 44991 Miss Lily,"said Nora, starting up,"now what have you done with her?
44991Miss Lily,said a servant man, putting his head in at the library door,"is Master Tom at home?"
44991Miss Lily,she said, by way of a gentle reminder,"do you need any help with your work?"
44991My pet, what is it? 44991 No, indeed, dear; and why would I touch it, unless you wanted some help with it?"
44991Nora, did you take my orphan petticoat out of my work- box?
44991Not a_ fault_, is it, Aunt May?
44991Now ca n''t you see it is better for you to begin at once?
44991Now, Tom, what are you laughing at?
44991Now,she said, thinking to strengthen and give point to this,"who was the good little girl who always did as she was told?"
44991Putting off is not being naughty, is it, Aunt May?
44991Shall Aunt Annie tell you a pretty story?
44991Shall I call mamma?
44991Shall I call mammy to take you away?
44991Shall you make the poetry a divine song, or a moral poem?
44991Then ought you not to be careful how you do it to others?
44991Tom,she said presently,"could n''t you come and see the woman while Nora finishes the coat?
44991Well, dear, shall we accept Maggie''s offer?
44991Well, then,said Bessie, tenderly,"is n''t that a reason for asking Him?
44991Well, you know Will Sturges, Lily?
44991Were you much provoked with me to- day?
44991What Quaker lady?
44991What are you going to do, Maggie?
44991What is it, dear?
44991What is it? 44991 What kept you?"
44991What mamma?
44991What ought you to do first?
44991What''s the reading on this one?
44991What''s the rest of the story?
44991What, about putting off?
44991When mamma''s wishes and your pleasure come in the way of one another, which should you put first?
44991Who did it? 44991 Who would take it, Lily?
44991Who, the woman? 44991 Whose fault is it, Lily?"
44991Why did n''t you begin it, Lily?
44991Why do you want to know that?
44991Why not to- night, mamma?
44991Why would n''t it do just as well to keep some for Monday?
44991Why, Gracie, my dear,she said,"is it possible that you can sew no better than this?
44991Why,he said,"what ails my little sunbeam to- day?"
44991Why? 44991 Why?"
44991Will she have it washed and dried and ironed in time for me to finish it before the children come, mamma?
44991Will you be good and quiet then?
44991Will you come to the nursery? 44991 Will you dress them for me while you tell me about this morning?"
44991Would you?
44991Yes, it is a duty for you to do that which you have promised to do, is it not?
44991Yes; what are they?
44991You could n''t give a poor mother a loaf of bread, or a few pennies, little lady? 44991 You''re sure there''s nothing taken, and that she''s not in the house, Master Tom?"
44991''Pet''dog and''pet''cat?"
44991A kitten?
44991And do you think mamma would let me give her a loaf of bread?
44991And here are Father Time and Remorse coming after him with their-- their-- What kind of whips do they have, Maggie?"
44991And now perhaps you will say, What has all this long story about"Tootins"to do with Lily and procrastination?
44991And what do you think happened to her one day?
44991And what had brought this about?
44991And what was her work?
44991And who was"Tootins"?
44991Are you quite sure you have not seen it, Hannah?"
44991Bradford''s?"
44991Bradford?"
44991But did n''t you say you had shut her out?"
44991But how did she come by such a funny name?
44991But was it really possible that any one thought baby was going to sit still on that footstool?
44991Ca n''t Lily come with us, Tom?"
44991Can I depend upon you for once?''
44991Could n''t you come again?"
44991Could she have been in here, and caught up the inkstand?
44991Did you ever ask Him to help you, Lily?"
44991Do n''t you want to give her something too, Tom?
44991Do you not think so?"
44991Do you see these things in Procrastination''s hand?"
44991Do you see, Lil?"
44991Had she gone away?"
44991Had she really said such dreadful words to mamma?
44991How can you have such a pet?
44991How many boys do you think would have consented as readily, cheerfully, and kindly as Tom Norris did to such a request from a little sister?
44991I do n''t believe I ever will cure myself of procrastination, do you?"
44991I do n''t s''pose thieves have many feelings, do you, Maggie?"
44991I know a lady--""What''s her name?"
44991I suppose you wo n''t take notice of us if you are building a ship, would you, Tom?"
44991Is not this enough, Lil darling, to show you how much pain and trouble may come from this habit, and why you ought to try to break yourself of it?
44991Is that all about that picture?"
44991Mamma, did you take it?"
44991Mrs. Norris uttered no word of reproach; but, as she looked within the well- ordered secretary, she said,--"Where did Tom put the silver inkstand?
44991Nellie, when was yours done?"
44991Norris?"
44991Now, would you not have thought that Gracie disliked Lily, and was glad to have the chance of showing up her faults?
44991Oh, is n''t it fun?"
44991Owing to her procrastination, to the putting off of the small service her mother had asked of her?
44991Rush, who was that day making a visit to Maggie''s and Bessie''s mamma,"how is this?
44991Shall I do it?"
44991Shall I go and ask him what he did with the inkstand?"
44991Shall I?"
44991Shall you give her some money?
44991Smith?"
44991Ten?
44991Think a moment, my daughter; can you distinctly recollect putting it away in your box?"
44991Tom looked dismayed, and Lily still more so; for, if the inkstand were indeed stolen, was it not all her fault?
44991Tom, why do n''t the boys in your school make proverb pictures for each other?
44991Understand you, do you ask?
44991Was he not a kind brother?
44991What are you laughing at, Aunt Annie?
44991What do you want to do with it?"
44991What have you done, and what have n''t you done?"
44991What is the matter now?"
44991What is the matter?"
44991What is the proverb, mamma?"
44991What is wrong?"
44991What was the reason Lily forgot so quickly and so often?
44991What would papa say, what would Tom say, when they should know it?
44991Where is she?"
44991Who made this picture?"
44991Will you be a helpful little girl, and see to that for me, my daughter?"
44991Will you bring them to me before you go down again?"
44991Will you go to Nora_ at once_?"
44991Will you sew on it a little while this afternoon, after you have had your lunch?"
44991Would it not be a good plan for us five to have a little sewing meeting at our house for these clothes, if mamma has no objections?
44991Would n''t you like to see''em, Miss Lily?
44991You went to look at the monkey in place of attending to mamma''s orders, and so forgot all about them?"
44991You wo n''t mind, will you?"
44991You?"
44991Your mother was away, I know, so that you could not go to her for help; but could you not ask some other person to show you how it should be done?"
44991[ Illustration] V._ PROMISING._"How many of my little girls would like to help in a good work?"
44991_ Our_"Tootins,"did I say?
44991and can I have the bread, Tom?"
44991and could mamma ever, ever forgive them?
44991could I go with you?"
44991have n''t you done any on yours yet?"
44991said Miss Ashton, smiling, as light broke in upon her;"you mean a Mentor, do you not, Lily?"
44991said the doctor,"what is that, I should like to know?
44991what have you been thinking of?
44991what shall I do?"
44991what would Maggie and Bessie say?
21034''And what happened to Sodom and Gomorrah?'' 21034 ''Cause Trix is good friends with Carrie?
21034''Neale O''Neil?'' 21034 ''Wha''dat?''
21034''Wha''dis? 21034 ''What do yo''mean?''
21034''Wot I tell yo''? 21034 ''Wot paht ob de goose is yo''mos''fon''of, Miss Lee?''
21034Ah- ha?
21034Ai n''t none of the folks to home?
21034All right?
21034An''wot you t''ink dat young scalawag ob a clerk gib her?
21034And Neale''s been in a den of lions and never told us about it?
21034And ai n''t he ever blowed about it to the boys?
21034And especially not Sam Pinkney, eh?
21034And he married a lady named Mary, did n''t he?
21034And how many do you suppose of them farmers come after their money? 21034 And sleep in a bed that ai n''t been aired in a dog''s age?"
21034And what did he say, Uncle Rufus?
21034And what do you want?
21034And what is it now, Miss Ruth?
21034And what''s the matter with Jakey now?
21034Are n''t there as many as five mice left? 21034 Are n''t you ashamed?"
21034Are we ever going to get to Sammy Pinkney?
21034Are you going?
21034Aunt Sarah?
21034Be_ what_?
21034Beatrice Severn? 21034 Before when?"
21034Boys are always getting into trouble, are n''t they?
21034Buried her alive?
21034But I begin tuh wondah wot Mars''Colby say''bout dat los''laig? 21034 But a thing with feathers, roosting in a tree, must be some kind of a fowl-- yes?"
21034But how?
21034But if you''d like to go to another room----?
21034But suppose Neale comes before you can get Mr. Howbridge here?
21034But the color of your head?
21034But what happened? 21034 But where can we keep a goat?"
21034But you know where he does hang out?
21034But you_ can_, Uncle Rufus?
21034But, if we have made so much out of the houses in the past, should n''t we spend some of the profit on the tenants_ now_?
21034But_ what_ has he done to his hair?
21034Can you beat Aggie?
21034Could-- could a feller get to stay here?
21034Did it hurt him?
21034Did n''t he ever?
21034Did n''t you ever go to a circus?
21034Did somebody steal it?
21034Did something happen to it?
21034Did you get it?
21034Did you hear him? 21034 Did you know we all have to be_''scalloped_ before we can go to school here in Milton?"
21034Did you_ ever_ see such a mess in all your life?
21034Did you_ ever_?
21034Do I mean am I willin''to pay the bye out of yer clutches?
21034Do n''t all ladies marry-- some time?
21034Do n''t any of you girls know him? 21034 Do n''t they suit?"
21034Do n''t you mean shedding?
21034Do n''t you suppose we shall be? 21034 Do n''t you think boys are any good, little lady?"
21034Do n''t you want some help with all that load, Miss Dorothy?
21034Do what for?
21034Do you live in Milton?
21034Do you mean it has begun to snow, Neale?
21034Do you mean it?
21034Do you mean that, sir?
21034Do you mean to say you have n''t asked Aggie and Ruth?
21034Do you suppose I can ever get it off, Aggie?
21034Do you suppose we have enough to eat in the house, to stand a long siege?
21034Do you think I''d tell a story?
21034Do_ you_ always tell the truth?
21034Does he live here?
21034Does n''t he know? 21034 Drowned?"
21034Going into lions''dens?
21034Has it come?
21034Have you come to consult me professionally, or am I honored by a social call?
21034Have you gone under?
21034He ai n''t here?
21034He told you that, did he?
21034Heh? 21034 Hev ye not hear- r- rd two legs already bespoke, Patrick Sarsfield, an''ye come back at me for another?
21034How can you folks study when you all talk so much?
21034How could he? 21034 How could you?"
21034How did you get into it?
21034How do I know?
21034How do you do, child? 21034 How is that?"
21034How much_ what_?
21034How will ye do ut? 21034 How- do, Miss Ruthie-- and Miss Aggie?
21034However did you do it? 21034 I hope I see you well?"
21034I wonder why?
21034If they were n''t such stuck- up things----"Who says they''re stuck up?
21034If you want it awfully bad?
21034In a lions''den?
21034Is Miss Andrews so dreadfully strict?
21034Is he afraid to tell us who he really is?
21034Is he in her bad books?
21034Is it a locomotive headlight?
21034Is it snowing as hard as it did the night we came from Carrie Poole''s party?
21034Is n''t that the room you and Aggie occupy?
21034Is she the oldest sister you spoke of?
21034Is that so?
21034Is that the baste that shot me pig under the fince?
21034Is that why you''ve got that great bow on your head?
21034Is this a boarding- house?
21034Is-- isn''t there a-- a bridge over it?
21034Iss dot de vay to talk yedt about your mamma?
21034It was awfully rash of you, Aggie, but it was providential this-- this-- You have n''t told me his name?
21034It''s very kind of you----"Then you''ll come?
21034Niver tell me that_ youse_ was the one that pushed the pig through the fince that har- rd that he kem near flyin''down me t''roat? 21034 No family at all?"
21034No, ma''am,said Neale O''Neil, rather sullenly Ruth thought"You are not all alone-- a boy like you?"
21034Now, Miss, where is that''circus boy''as they call him? 21034 Of that tattling business?"
21034Oh, ye do, do ye?
21034Oh-- well----Don''t you suppose there''s enough men to go''round, Tess?
21034Our Neale?
21034Out of the tree? 21034 Pes- sa- pessamisty?"
21034Pessimistic? 21034 Phat''s that?"
21034Playing savages?
21034Please, sir,she asked,"is that your business?"
21034Popo----_who_?
21034Puts a quarter each week in Sarah''s bank?
21034She''s kind of bossy, is n''t she?
21034She''s never been over that way, has she?
21034So that''s what he calls himself, is it?
21034So the lions saved your money for you?
21034Suppose somebody should hear? 21034 Suppose you should wake up in the night?"
21034Sure, d''ye think the bye is a miracle?
21034Take Neale O''Neil to a dirthy circus- show and make him do thricks, like a thrained pig, or a goose, or a-- a-- a naygur man from the Sahara Desert? 21034 That he has no beginning and no ending?
21034That one your mother put the quarter in every week for you?
21034That pig again?
21034That red bank in the kitchen?
21034That was the stuff you were buying yesterday in the drugstore?
21034That young felley standin''there, I dunno?
21034That''s most int''resting-- isn''t it, Dot?
21034Their_ what_?
21034Then I suppose we ought to call_ you_ a''Maniac,''eh?
21034Then why do you wear it?
21034Then you could take boarders if you wanted to?
21034Then, why----?
21034Then, will you come and sleep with me? 21034 These primary minds are like sieves, are n''t they?
21034They did n''t re''lly_ beat_ her?
21034This boy whom ye call nephew----?
21034This is n''t a joke, now?
21034To attract attention?
21034To be a suffragette? 21034 To eat?"
21034To make you look''fetching''?
21034Undt dot boy iss vet? 21034 Was it hurt in any way?"
21034Was it poisoned?
21034Was it sure enough_ so_, Uncle Rufus?
21034Was-- was George Washington one of those things?
21034We think Neale is a very nice boy, and if we had a boy in our family we''d want one just like Neale-- wouldn''t we, Tess?
21034Well, he does n''t belong to us, does he?
21034Well, how did they_ know_ he did n''t tell a lie?
21034Were you afraid some of the bad men might hurt your lions, sir?
21034Wha''fo''dat? 21034 Wha-- wha--_what_?"
21034What can be the matter with him?
21034What can we do?
21034What circus was it you went to?
21034What did you come for?
21034What did you crawl out of that window for?
21034What did you do to it?
21034What did you want to do that for?
21034What do you call it, then? 21034 What do you call this?"
21034What do you care what people call you?
21034What do you mean by that, Trix Severn?
21034What do you mean-- circus?
21034What do you say that for?
21034What do you think, Ruthie Kenway? 21034 What do you want to wear-- overalls and a jumper?"
21034What does he rather do, but work and slave, and almost freeze and starve-- jest to git what, I ax ye?
21034What does this mean?
21034What door are you going to sit behind, Dot?
21034What for goodness''sake is the matter?
21034What for, may I ask?
21034What good will it do for me to run? 21034 What is it, Chicken- little?"
21034What is that?
21034What next? 21034 What things?"
21034What transom?
21034What under the canopy''s the matter with that boy''s head?
21034What under the sun is a''cabal''? 21034 What was the matter with Neale''s father?"
21034What you buying?
21034What''s amusing you so much?
21034What''s become of that kitten of yours-- Bungle, did you call it?
21034What''s brought you''way out here, Aggie?
21034What''s come?
21034What''s my business?
21034What''s that goat doing in our yard?
21034What''s that? 21034 What''s that?"
21034What''s that?
21034What''s the matter with me?
21034What''s the matter with my hair?
21034What''s the matter, Sir Lachrymose?
21034What''s the matter, Uncle?
21034What''s the matter, child?
21034What''s the matter? 21034 What''s this all about?
21034What-- what''s he going to do?
21034What?
21034What?
21034What_ have_ you done, Neale O''Neil? 21034 What_ was_ that, Neale?"
21034What_ were_ you doing, Beatrice?
21034Whatever do you want out here, Neale O''Neil? 21034 When was it discovered?"
21034Where did you throw them?
21034Where''s all his lovely flaxen hair?
21034Which smart sister?
21034Who is that, thin?
21034Who told you this was a short way to town?
21034Who told you, child?
21034Who will advise us? 21034 Who''s he?"
21034Who''s murdered this time?
21034Who''s this Billy Bumps ye air talkin''so fast about?
21034Who, dear?
21034Who-- who are you?
21034Whom shall I turn to for help?
21034Whuffor all disher combobberation? 21034 Why do n''t you know?"
21034Why do you want to attract attention?
21034Why does it stand that way-- on one leg-- Uncle Rufus?
21034Why not keep him in that yard and make his owner pay to get him home again?
21034Why not?
21034Why not?
21034Why not?
21034Why should n''t he want to be a showman, too? 21034 Why should n''t we know something about it?"
21034Why vor shouldt you pe paid vor he''pin''your mamma yedt?
21034Why, Tess,said Agnes,"is n''t Sadie Goronofsky Mrs. Goronofsky''s little girl that lives in one of our tenements on Meadow Street?"
21034Why, do n''t you know?
21034Will you please show me how to do cartwheels, Neale?
21034Will you stay to breakfast with us?
21034Wo n''t it be just_ fine_ to get to school again?
21034Wo n''t you tell us who you are?
21034Would n''t it be dreadful to grow up like Aunt Sarah-- or your Miss Andrews?
21034Would ye have me lock him into me spare bedroom?
21034You do n''t call that a cat?
21034You do n''t suppose that man sitting there is the only generous man in the world, do you? 21034 You surely have some friends?"
21034You wanter see him, chillen?
21034You''re not really hurt?
21034You''ve got a_ right_ to tell me to take''em?
21034_ Me_ kiss_ you_?
21034_ What''s_ the reason?
21034_ What?_demanded Agnes.
21034_ What?_he shouted.
21034_ Who_ said so?
21034_ You_ do n''t need any, do you?
21034''Ai n''t all dem gooses got one laig lak''I tol''yo''?''
21034''On''y_ one_ laig on dis goose?''
21034''Sally Alley,''he roar at her,''whar de odder laig ob dis goose?''
21034''What of Tyre, Sammy?''
21034''Who been a- tamperin''wid dis goose?
21034''Yo''tell me my goose ain''hab but one laig?''
21034A beast, or a bug?"
21034A drink?"
21034Above all, who will stop this man Sorber from taking Neale away?"
21034Aggie blushed vividly, but she hastened to say:"Why did you do it, Neale?"
21034Ain''dat Sam Pinkney''s ol''Billy?"
21034And Alice, me dear, phat will_ youse_ hev?"
21034And so that rascal of mine''s been here all winter?
21034And what would happen to poor Neale?
21034And whoever told_ you_ we were n''t used to money before we came to Milton?''"
21034And you, Patrick Sarsfield?"
21034Are you and Aggie going, Ruth?"
21034Are you making all that noise about losing a little old tooth?
21034Are you sure?"
21034Ask the boys themselves about it?
21034But is n''t the color coming out?"
21034But where was Ruth to find Neale O''Neil?
21034But you got it pulled, did n''t you?"
21034CHAPTER XII THE CHRISTMAS PARTY"What do you think Sammy Pinkney said in joggerfry class to- day?"
21034Ca n''t you fashion a harness and some kind of a cart for him so that we can take turns riding-- Dot and me?
21034Could she help Neale in any way by being friendly with this man?
21034De clerk ask her:''Wot shade does yo''want, Ma''am?
21034Did n''t I say a goat was a perfectly useless thing?"
21034Did n''t I tell you that was the way to get your tooth pulled?"
21034Did you hear him?"
21034Did you hear how plain he said''Yes,''with a pure Parisian accent?"
21034Do n''t_ I_ get one?"
21034Do you mean to say he does n''t know what his head looks like?"
21034Do you suppose he is playing a joke on you, Tess?"
21034Do you''spects I kin git by wid''em on Monday-- for dey''s de on''iest shoes I got ter wear?"
21034Do-- do the lions ever bite?"
21034Dot has given us a good idea-- hasn''t she?"
21034Even Aunt Sarah came to the top of the stairs and wanted to know"if that young one was killed?"
21034Every girl of Tess''acquaintance was going to do something"lovely,"and she wanted to know what_ she_ could do?
21034Finally he burst out with:"Say, young lady, ai n''t you going to pass around some of those kisses?
21034Fix your hair like that?"
21034Goin''to say how- de- do to old Bill Sorber?"
21034He always_ was_ a good number, as Master Jakeway in high and lofty tumbling; when he rode bareback; or doing the Joey----""The Joey?"
21034He has a real noble beard-- don''t you think?"
21034He_ did n''t_ make her go see the field overseer, did he?"
21034How much?"
21034How- do, Tessie and Dottie?
21034I-- I used to play with him when he was a little bit of a feller-- don''t you remember them times, Neale?"
21034Idt iss your deaths mit cold you vould catch-- no?"
21034If you are sure there ai n''t no more goin''to fall?"
21034In this man comes and robs mine bank----""What_ is_ the trouble?"
21034Is it funny for a kitten to grow into a cat?"
21034Is it wan o''thim big Jarmyn guns youse have got in there, that the pa- apers do be tillin''erbout?"
21034Is n''t that one of them new- fangled wigs I read folks in the city wear to dances and other affairs?
21034Is n''t that so, Neale?"
21034Is that right?"
21034Kranz?"
21034Look after furnaces, and clean up yards, and all that?"
21034Miss Pepperill asked Eddie Collins:"''What happened to Babylon?''
21034Murphy?"
21034O''Neil?"
21034Or,_ had_ he done just that?
21034Phat for kind of a baste do ye think this is?
21034She darted forward and demanded:"Where did_ I_ cheat, Miss?
21034She wished to get to the bottom of the mystery:"Why do you want folks to look at your head, Alfredia?"
21034Sho''ain''gwine tuh take dat ole goat tuh boa''d, is yo''?"
21034So why not cats?
21034Sorber?"
21034Tess, do you and Dot want to run over to Mr. Stetson''s after supper and bring me some crackers?"
21034That rascal been playin''the hero again?
21034That''s hardly worth while, is it?"
21034The Christmas goose?"
21034The twelve year old-- the fly- away-- the irrepressible-- what shall we say about her?
21034Then you do know him?"
21034Then, how much money will ye take for your right to him?"
21034Trix Severn?"
21034We ca n''t really get lost out here, can we, Neale?"
21034Wha''dis?''
21034What par- r- rt of the bir- r- d will ye have, Aloysius?"
21034What should she do?
21034What would ever become of him?
21034What''s he got it on for?"
21034What''s she going to do now-- have me arrested and hung?"
21034What''s the matter?"
21034What_ did_ happen to Bungle?"
21034When was he born, Ruthie?"
21034Which one will you take?"
21034Who do you s''pose nursed you t''rough de scarlet fever dot time?
21034Who done let dat goat intuh disher yard?
21034Who wanted to eat just before going to a real, country barn- dance?
21034Why not?"
21034Why would n''t he be able to do all sorts of tricks like that?
21034Will you get it, Aggie, and give it to Neale?"
21034Will you show me-- please-- just a little?"
21034Wot I tell yo'', Mars''Colby?''
21034Would you like to know what became of the good friends you have made in this book?
21034Would you like to read other stories continuing their adventures and experiences, or other books quite as entertaining by the same author?
21034Would you take a boarder?"
21034Ye grant that?"
21034You know that Trix Severn?"
21034You vorked for de money every time-- aind''t idt?"
21034You''ll come?
21034You- all gwine to school on Monday?"
21034_"What?
21034and how much will ye tax me?"
21034can you help us?
21034can_ that_ be the reason why we have n''t been invited?"
21034do you think-- like that old man-- that I did it a- purpose?"
21034exclaimed Wib, as they called young Ketchell,"is the roof really unsafe?"
21034he is n''t?"
21034how''s that, Miss?"
21034queried Ruth, doubtfully,"is n''t that a joke?"
21034said Mr. Sorber, with rough joviality,"who are these little dames?
21034the dog did n''t get away with the goose, did he, Uncle Rufus?"
21034then you own it?"
21034then your folks have just moved in?"
21034wha''fo''dat?"
21034what are you doing down there, Aggie?"
21034what do you think of that?"
21034what have you been doing to your head?"
21034what have you there?"
21034what is the matter, Sadie?"
21034what''s that he''s eatin''this very minute?"
21034what''s that?"
21034what''s that?"
21034what''s this?"
21034whatever shall we do?
21034when_ was_ he born?"
21034where are you going?"
21034why did n''t you girls bring a bushel basket-- or engage a pack- mule?"
21034why did n''t you stop her?"
21034wot dat cat do now?"
21034you do n''t mean that, do you?"
21034you''ll tell us all about what happened to you in the circus, wo n''t you, now?"
21034you''re not really hurt, are you?"
31406''And do you think,''said he,''that I am to be bound by the last words of a man too far gone to know his own mind in the matter?'' 31406 ''But what is the use of roast meat, if we are to be roasted too?''
31406''Follow-- where?'' 31406 ''For yourself, you black rascal?''
31406''Member de lickins? 31406 ''Sert you?
31406''Then why did n''t he give it to you before, instead of requiring me to make such a sacrifice? 31406 ''Who is your master?''
31406A gentleman? 31406 A shave?"
31406Able, child? 31406 About the schoolmaster?
31406Ai n''t to home, none of''em, hey?
31406Ai n''t wanted, Cudjo? 31406 All ready?"
31406All right so far, Pepperill?
31406All safe?
31406All?
31406Amuse me? 31406 And Pomp?"
31406And are you so very weary of the cave?
31406And did he not promise to do so?
31406And did you give it me?
31406And do you know there''s a secret passage from this cellar into the cellar under Jim''s shop? 31406 And do you maintain that you did not go willingly?"
31406And do you remember a conversation you had with Lysander under a bridge?
31406And how you that day took a journey to be away from us in our trouble?
31406And if I comply?
31406And if I had n''t took ye in season, you''d have returned to your base- born mire, would n''t you?
31406And my daughter?
31406And my dead child up yonder?
31406And my faithful servant?
31406And now, what is to be done? 31406 And our friends!--Carl!--have you heard from them?"
31406And that is petter as being hung?
31406And the property?
31406And they have no suspicions?
31406And vat shall you do?
31406And we must conceal him?
31406And what can we do?
31406And what did he reply?
31406And what is to become of me?
31406And what?
31406And where but here?
31406And where is Aunt Deb?
31406And ye knows whar she ar?
31406And you will use it if necessary?
31406And you would have us submit to them?
31406And you?
31406And you?
31406Any one hurt?
31406Anything?
31406Are they well? 31406 Are ye sartin ob dat, massa?
31406Are you asleep?
31406Are you going again?
31406Are you lost? 31406 Are you ready?"
31406Are you sure the man is dead?
31406Are you sure?
31406Are you well, my child?
31406Bold?
31406But all this happened before I came to Tennessee, did it not? 31406 But how came you here?
31406But how came_ she_ here?
31406But how can I resolve to send a guest from my house in this way? 31406 But how do you know, my son,----""How do I know he''s there?
31406But how?
31406But is Mr. Villars safe?
31406But is n''t she a Grace? 31406 But suppose I can show you that you are wrong, and that even by your own laws we are not, and can not be, property?"
31406But whar''s the schoolmaster?
31406But what comes o''de rock?
31406But what had they done to him?
31406But what had you done to merit such cruelty?
31406But what''s he so dead set agin''the master fur?
31406But why do you prefer to be away when the fun is going on?
31406Ca n''t eat, sar? 31406 Ca n''t you see for yourself?"
31406Can you change these rocks under our feet with empty words?
31406Can you show me that spot, Toby?
31406Captain,they replied,"if you not know, how should we know?
31406Carl what?
31406Carl, what''s this?
31406Carl, why do n''t you come too?
31406Condition?
31406Could n''t you find nowhere else to go to? 31406 Could n''t you move the horse?"
31406Danger?
31406Dat ar? 31406 Dat so, Pomp?"
31406Dat? 31406 Daughter, are you here?"
31406De gemman?
31406Dead?
31406Dead?
31406Deslow,laughed Stackridge, himself not ill pleased with Pomp''s arguments,"what do you say to that?"
31406Did I tremble, did I shrink when you carried me through the fire? 31406 Did n''t somebody knock me on the head?"
31406Did n''t we trust you? 31406 Did n''t you hear me tell ye to stop?"
31406Did somepody say somepody is a willain?
31406Did you meet any person on the road, travelling north?
31406Did you not bring my daughter with you?
31406Did you say_ shtop_?
31406Do you believe Deslow will be delivered up?
31406Do you hear anything?
31406Do you know how to use it?
31406Do you know that name? 31406 Do you know this ravine?"
31406Do you remember the night my father was arrested?
31406Do you see any landmarks yet?
31406Do you think it was not a bitter cup for me? 31406 Do you?"
31406Does old Pete visit you since?
31406Does that suit you?
31406Don''ye see? 31406 Dreadful?
31406Fear so? 31406 Find him?"
31406For me, Miss Villars?
31406Gentlemen, will you fight? 31406 Go in?"
31406Gone out, to- night? 31406 Good idee?"
31406Got him?
31406Has he killed him?
31406Has the colonel orders to make the arrests?
31406Have n''t I just got avay from Stackridge? 31406 Have n''t I told you not to_ wake him_?"
31406Have some?
31406Have you anything to confess?
31406Have you had any more trouble since Pomp left you?
31406Have you let Toby go?
31406Have you plenty of arms?
31406Have you two been together long?
31406He wishes to speak with me? 31406 Her?
31406Hey? 31406 Hey?
31406Hey?
31406Him?
31406His name?
31406How are you getting on, boys?
31406How came we property, sir?
31406How came you here, sir?
31406How came you here?
31406How corrupted, my friend?
31406How dare you come back without her?
31406How did I leave them?
31406How do I know you are shmart? 31406 How do you know I am?"
31406How far is it now to your ravine?
31406How is he?--much injured?
31406How large was this spot, this island?
31406How long,she added immediately,"do you imagine we shall have to stay here?"
31406How many friends have you with you?
31406How many slaves do you own?
31406How old is he?
31406How old is she?
31406How shall we get news to you? 31406 How so?"
31406How''s it my fault, I''d like to know?
31406How?
31406I a deserter? 31406 I believe you partly promised it to me, did n''t you?
31406I can read for one; and as for the rest, what good would it do''em to be edecated? 31406 I fancy you do n''t know very well where you are, sir,"said the negro, with a smile;"and you do n''t know me either, do you?"
31406I suppose Toby has told you the news? 31406 I think-- you are my preserver-- are you not?"
31406If you are so independent in your movements, why have you never escaped to the north?
31406If you will disgrace yourself, how can I help it?
31406Is he in the willage?
31406Is it for me?''
31406Is it true what that man is saying?
31406Is it you, Daniel, who are to bear witness against me?
31406Is it you, Hapgood?
31406Is it you, Mr. Stackridge? 31406 Is it you, Penn?
31406Is it you, massa?
31406Is justice done?
31406Is justice done?
31406Is no guns here?
31406Is not that what you would have said to me if you had found me in your power after making me such a promise? 31406 Is that so?"
31406Is the passage behind the spot where Mr. Villars is sitting?
31406Is this so? 31406 Keep your liquor up there, do ye?"
31406Killed?
31406Kin uh do any ting fur ye, sar?
31406Leafe a little trop for me, vill you?
31406Lysander, how are ye? 31406 Many there?"
31406Mine? 31406 Minny- fish?
31406Must I die?
31406My poor boy, you seem to be in trouble; can I help you?
31406My wife-- my two daughters: what will become of them?
31406None missing?
31406Nor for me?
31406Not Mass''Penn? 31406 Not even to save your life?"
31406Not much skin dar, hey? 31406 Not unless Toby lied to me!--Did he?"
31406Nothing for my father?
31406Notwithstanding your oath that you would not tell?
31406Now what''s the use, Sal? 31406 Now what?"
31406Now will you behave, my girl? 31406 Now you vill tell?"
31406Now, Pepperill,said Sprowl,"can you move ahead and make no mistake?"
31406Now, where''s yer tar- and- feathering party?
31406O, must we pass on?
31406O, what shall we do, father?
31406On our''count? 31406 One of your tantrums?"
31406Penn, is it you?
31406Penn-- has anything happened to Penn?
31406Pepperill-- Dan Pepperill; ye know me, do n''t ye, Stackridge?
31406Ropes?
31406Sal, is it you? 31406 Sal,"--in a low voice, looking up at her, and showing his manacled hands,--"are you pleased to see me in this condition?"
31406See the bodies anywhere?
31406Shall I go, too?
31406Shall we go through these woods?
31406Shore? 31406 Sile,"interrupted Dan, earnestly,"what''ge mean I''m to do?
31406Sir, who are you?
31406Soon?
31406Suppose? 31406 Take holt, why do n''t you?"
31406The devil, Toby? 31406 The frog, Toby?"
31406The man in the rawine? 31406 Then what is the grievance you complain of?"
31406Then why do you stop here?
31406Then you wo n''t enlist?
31406Think he''s heerd us?
31406Thought you''d come and meet us half way, did ye?
31406To throw on her?
31406Toby, what are we to do?
31406Toby, who is that?
31406Toby, you black devil, where have you been?
31406Toby? 31406 Vas that shpeaking?"
31406Vat did you say?
31406Vat for you dodge? 31406 Vat is it?"
31406Vat is vanting?
31406Vill nothing happen?
31406Virginia, that man is thy worst enemy? 31406 Vot sort of Tutchmen vos they?"
31406Vot vinder?
31406Vould you really be pleased to have me?
31406Vy not? 31406 Was it you that rapped before?"
31406Was it you?
31406Was n''t it the schoolmaster?
31406Was the secret known to many?
31406Water?
31406Well, Dutchy,--for the first time deigning to consult Carl,--"this route is taking us to the cave, too, ai n''t it?"
31406Well, and if I reject your generous offer?
31406Well, how are you getting on, sir?
31406Well, how many negroes has your friend?
31406Well, of the eleven, how many own slaves?
31406Well, what do you want of me?
31406Well, what luck, you lying scoundrel?
31406Well, what more?
31406Well, where did they take you?
31406Well?
31406Wha''fur?
31406Wha''sh''ll we do?
31406Wha-- wha-- what de debil you want hyar?
31406Whar''s that Dutch boy?
31406What am I to pay for?
31406What are you bowing and grinning at me for? 31406 What are you going to do to that helpless, blind old man?"
31406What becomes of the sugar that dissolves in your coffee?
31406What business he got hyar?
31406What dar?
31406What dat to me, if him die, or whar him die?
31406What dat ye call dis nigger?
31406What dat?
31406What did Gad pitch into me fur?
31406What did he see, Virginia?
31406What did you do with them?
31406What did you mean by''barbarous system''?
31406What did you pitch into me fur?
31406What did you push and jump on to me fur?
31406What do you demand of me?
31406What do you mean by''our people''?
31406What do you mean to do?
31406What do you mean, Cudjo?
31406What do you mean, you d-- d deserter?
31406What do you think of that back, sir?
31406What do you think, Pomp?
31406What do you want of Mis''Stackridge?
31406What do you want?
31406What does anybody care for me?
31406What does he want of it?
31406What for do you do this, Carl?
31406What good der tanks do to we?
31406What has happened to Carl?
31406What has happened to Penn?
31406What has happened?
31406What have ye been doing to the schoolmaster? 31406 What have you got in your hand?"
31406What have you hung over the window, Toby?
31406What is it about your boarder? 31406 What is it, Carl?"
31406What is it?
31406What is it?
31406What is the trouble?
31406What is this on it? 31406 What luck?"
31406What make de cave, anyhow?
31406What makes ye look so down- in- the- mouth, Dutchy? 31406 What makes you think so, Pomp?"
31406What me done? 31406 What men are they?"
31406What more? 31406 What news from my dear girl?--from my two dear girls?"
31406What news?
31406What next, you scoundrel?
31406What rights could n''t you have under the government left to us by Washington?
31406What smoke is that?
31406What soldiers?--Who is this?
31406What sort of a chap was with him? 31406 What sort of a person?"
31406What sort of books_ do_ you like?
31406What then are we to do?
31406What to do?
31406What was in the kittle?
31406What was you thar at the winder fur?
31406What will you say then when I tell you I have been in Bythewood''s house, since I left him? 31406 What''s going on?"
31406What''s that to me?
31406What''s that, you Dutchman?
31406What''s that?
31406What''s the Dutchman done?
31406What''s the matter, Toby?
31406What''s the matter?
31406What''s the odds, so long as they''re men of the true sperrit?
31406What''s the trouble, Carl?
31406What''s use ob all dis trouble on his''count?
31406What''s wantin'', sar?
31406What''s wanting, Carl?
31406What''s your business in town, stranger?
31406What, marm?
31406What, then, is the worst?
31406What, then, must they think?
31406What?
31406What?
31406When did he go?
31406Where am I, then?
31406Where am I?
31406Where are you bound?
31406Where bound?
31406Where did you come from? 31406 Where did you get it?"
31406Where is Aunt Deb?
31406Where is Carl to- night, Toby?
31406Where is Carl? 31406 Where is Salina?
31406Where is Virginia?
31406Where is he?
31406Where is he?
31406Where is the fellow?
31406Where is the master?
31406Where shall I go and borry to- day?
31406Where you from?
31406Where your husband?
31406Where''s Hapgood? 31406 Where''s Sile?
31406Where? 31406 Where?"
31406Which of us goes down into the ravine?
31406Which?
31406Who dar?
31406Who eber knowed you''s sech a powerful smart chil''?
31406Who is it?
31406Who is with you?
31406Who told you to speak?
31406Who warned you?
31406Who will be disappointed?
31406Who''s the fish this time?
31406Who''s there?
31406Who''s_ me_?
31406Who-- what is it?
31406Who? 31406 Who?
31406Why did they take you prisoner?
31406Why do n''t you hurry up this business?
31406Why do n''t you kill and eat him?
31406Why do n''t you speak?
31406Why forbid him?
31406Why go down there at all?
31406Why not send for him?
31406Why should n''t a cullud pusson hab de right to be honest, well as white folks? 31406 Why should we blacks have anything to do with this quarrel?"
31406Why, what is the matter? 31406 Why, what''s the matter, Toby?"
31406Will Salina come too?
31406Will no one save me? 31406 Will you give me a safe conduct?"
31406Will you stay here, or go with us?
31406Would I be any better off there? 31406 Would n''t take the pistol?
31406Would you like some cheese?
31406Would you like to hear something of my story?
31406Would you see her die?
31406Ye pooty sick, sar?
31406You are the fellow that enlisted to save the schoolmaster''s neck, ai n''t you?
31406You de lady of de house?
31406You have heard from them, then?
31406You know they druv me to it, do n''t ye? 31406 You let Cudjo do what him pleases?"
31406You mean to say, if you are licked, then you wo n''t tell?
31406You offer yourself as a substitute, eh, if I will spare his life?
31406You promise to take me to the cave?
31406You put on the tar?
31406You saw her!--where?
31406You see them little saplings?
31406You see vair the rock comes down? 31406 You take it?"
31406You tell now? 31406 You try your chance wid Cudjo agin, miss?"
31406You understand?
31406You vill take me prisoner?
31406You''re partic''larly interested in the young man, hey?
31406You, Miss Jinny? 31406 You?
31406You? 31406 Your heart is a- burnin'', ai n''t it?"
31406''Fraid your friends will get scorched?"
31406''How so?''
31406''Josh,''says he,''what ye doin''thar?
31406''Member my gal ye got away?
31406( she gazed at him affectionately),"you ai n''t in no great danger, be you?"
31406Ai n''t dar nuffin ol''Toby can be a doin''fur ye, jes''to pass away de time?"
31406All ready?"
31406And Pomp-- where all this time was Pomp?
31406And Virginia?
31406And Virginia?
31406And do you remember I vas putting some supper in my pocket ven you took me to show you the cave?
31406And how was his escape from the state to be effected?
31406And if I am unloved, whose fault is it but my own?
31406And if there should be a little fighting to do, will you help do it?"
31406And some pushes just under it?
31406And was not that a human form moving dimly between him and the sky?
31406And whar''s old Aunt Deb?"
31406And what should we leave it for?"
31406And what was this he saw on awaking?
31406And what''s the use of getting away from it, even if we could?
31406And you know, do n''t you, how Pete came by his licking?"
31406Any thing else I can do for ye?"
31406Any whiskey in the house, widder?"
31406Anybody in the house?"
31406Are we going to make a stand here, and see if the loyal part of old Tennessee will rise up and sustain us?
31406Are you hurt?"
31406As he gazed, he became extremely alarmed for the safety of Stackridge and his friends: and where all this time was Carl?
31406Assuredly, they must have fled from it before this time; but whither had they gone?
31406At length Captain Grudd came to him, and taking him aside, said,--"Well, professor, what do you think of the situation?"
31406Betray his good old master to these ruffians?
31406Blood?"
31406Break his promise to Virginia, his oath to Cudjo and Pomp?
31406But I suppose you know so little how you came here that you would find some difficulty in tracing your way to us again?"
31406But Sprowl is to watch, and be ready to shoot me down?"
31406But am I equal to it?
31406But could he abandon his friends?
31406But had he not the morning before given way to a natural impulse, when he seized a club, firmly resolved to oppose force with force?
31406But he rallied quickly, and said,--"He cure Massa Hapgood?
31406But how was he to avoid participating in scenes of violence if he remained in Tennessee?
31406But how was it possible to comply with his demand?
31406But how?
31406But if he could not, why had he remained absent all day?
31406But if you starve and beat them?
31406But just then Ropes shouted at him,--"What ye at thar, Pepperill?
31406But now she began to question within herself,"What would Penn think?"
31406But tell me-- will you not?--how you came to inhabit this dreadful place?"
31406But the corporal?
31406But until I attain to these, may I not use such weapons as I have?"
31406But what next could she do?
31406But what''s the matter with his hands, sergeant?"
31406But where were the giants?
31406But where were they?
31406Ca n''t you loose the rope a little?
31406Can I do anything for you?"
31406Can I, under all circumstances, live up to it?
31406Can you deny it?"
31406Can you find the way?"
31406Can you, Virginia?"
31406Carl was in despair at this mode of treatment, for it rendered escape impossible,--and what would become of Virginia?
31406Carl''s heart gave a great bound; but he answered with an air of indifference,--"To- night?"
31406Dare you?"
31406Dat ar wan''t you, hey?"
31406Did he look like a Union- shrieker?"
31406Did n''t I say,''Is it you?''
31406Did n''t he corrupt you?"
31406Did n''t he, Dan?"
31406Did ye see him, missis?"
31406Did you ever, in whispering some secret trifle, some all- important, heavenly nothing, just brush the dearest little ear in the world with your lips?
31406Did you not promise your dying brother in your presence to give me my freedom?
31406Do n''t ye know nuffin''?"
31406Do n''t you know me, Wirginie?"
31406Do n''t you know?"
31406Do n''t you see?
31406Do n''t you, Dan?"
31406Do they know where I am?"
31406Do you ask what made me?
31406Do you know whose property this is?"
31406Do you remember how I vas kept quiet ven I vas_ your_ prisoner?
31406Do you think it was taking too much from one who would have robbed me of my soul?"
31406Do you understand?"
31406Do you understand?"
31406Do you, Minny- fish?"
31406Does not the color of a negro''s skin, even in your free states, render him an object of suspicion and hatred?
31406Does the word sound pleasant to your ears?
31406Each gun with its echoes, in those cavernous solitudes, thundered like a whole park of artillery: what, then, was the effect of the volley?
31406For dem''ar white trash, what ye s''pose day knows''bout takin''keer ob a sick gemman like him?
31406For do you know what will happen?
31406For was he not the husband of Salina?
31406Good joke, ai n''t it?"
31406Got his hands tied?
31406Got the schoolmaster fast?"
31406Had Pomp been able to find them?
31406Had Toby forgotten the strain on_ his_ wrists, and the anguish of the thumbs, when this same cruel Lysander had him strung up?
31406Had he really died, and was this unearthly place a vestibule of the infernal regions?
31406Had she been a slave, with a different complexion, although perhaps quite as white, would it have been any the less shameful?
31406Had she recognized her son''s voice?
31406Hapgood?"
31406Has he gone on some errand of yours?"
31406Has n''t Carl come yet?"
31406Has the rule of a hard master seemed grievous to you?
31406Have n''t we come through fire, following you?
31406Have you anything?
31406Have you got your bearings yet, Carl?"
31406Have you lived in this cave ever since?"
31406Have you prayers to make?
31406Have you sighted your man?"
31406He let me down when I was hung up on the rail, and helped me home; and so I says to myself, says I,''Why should n''t I do as much by him?''
31406He resolved to try it: indeed, all unarmed as he was, what else could he do?
31406Holding the branch with one hand, and gesticulating violently with the other, he exclaimed,--"Who is boss here?
31406How came you here?"
31406How can I depend even upon your oath?
31406How could he confront, with his sensitive spirit, those merciless, coarse men?
31406How could he warn her?
31406How does it happen?"
31406How long have you lived here?"
31406How many can read and write?
31406How many men here have any education?
31406How to circumvent the designs of these men?
31406How''s them Dutchmen?"
31406How, now?
31406I can not hope to change it?"
31406I have committed no crime against your laws; if I have, why not let the laws punish me?"
31406I trust no serious harm has been done, my dear Virginia?"
31406I was just starting out to look for them.--Who comes there?"
31406I''ll have the truth out of him, or I''ll have his life?"
31406I''ve tried that, and what did I get for it?"
31406If he, then, is an enemy, what hope is there?
31406Is it cold?
31406Is it damp?
31406Is it gloomy?
31406Is it love that unites such, or is it only the yearning for love?
31406Is it sunrise yet?"
31406Is n''t she loveliness itself?"
31406Is there fatality in a name?"
31406Is there no law, no justice, but the power of the strongest?
31406It was some time before he could reply to Penn''s impetuous demand-- what had brought him up thither?
31406It will be better for the poor maddened wretch himself to prevent him; do n''t you think so, Penn?"
31406It''s the Dutchman, ai n''t it?
31406Jest look arter my family a little, wo n''t ye?
31406Meanwhile Mr. Villars had called Toby to him, and said, in a low voice,--"Is all right with your prisoner?"
31406No?
31406Not that village loafer, who used to go about the streets dressed so shabbily?
31406Now can you see to take aim?"
31406Now you see that rock?"
31406Now, how is it, Pomp?"
31406Now, if he preaks his part of the pargain, vy should n''t I preak mine?"
31406Now, what do you know to the contrary?"
31406Once more alone with this villain, would not some interesting thing occur?
31406Or might they not all have become entangled in the intricacies of the wilderness until encompassed by the fire and destroyed?
31406Or shall we pity it, rather?
31406Penn gave her a look full of electric tenderness, which seemed to say,"Have not I been with you?
31406Penn interrupted the loose and confused narrative-- Virginia: had he_ seen_ her?
31406Pepperill?"
31406Pepperill?"
31406Remain, hoping that he would yet fulfil his promise?
31406Ropes?"
31406Rough streaks along dar, hey?
31406Say dat ar agin, will ye?"
31406Shall I show you?
31406Shall an old Virginian think less of the honor of his house than an Arab?"
31406Shall we condemn the weakness?
31406Shall we take this old man to our den?"
31406She had been there a dozen times; but could she find it in the night?
31406Since the way is opened for us to live together again, why ca n''t you make up your mind to it, let bygones be bygones, and begin life over again?
31406Sprowl,''says he,''do n''t be scared; it''s only me; wo n''t ye let me in?''
31406Sprowl?"
31406Stackridge?"
31406Stackridge?"
31406Stackridge?''
31406Strike a light, and get me some supper, ca n''t you?"
31406Suddenly a voice hailed them:--"Who goes there?"
31406Suddenly he paused: had he heard the words of command whispered?
31406That is not an unreasonable request?"
31406The bright young brow contracted:"Not coming here?"
31406The fatal leap of the terrified horse with his rider is known; but how came Gad on the horse?
31406The grin on the old man''s face was a ghastly one, and his eyes rolled as he stammered forth,--"Miss Jinny-- ye seen Miss Jinny?"
31406The master is out, then?
31406Then Carl stopped again, and said,--"You see that tree?"
31406Then Lysander put the question: Was he prepared to tell all he knew about the fugitives and the cave?
31406Then will you side with your avowed enemies, or with those who are already fighting in your cause without knowing it?"
31406There must be sunshine, and birds, and brooks,--human nature, life, suffering, aspiration, and----""And love?"
31406This is the happiest day I''ve seen----""Ah, what''s happened to- day?"
31406To ask my forgiveness?
31406Toby, why do n''t you bring that bootjack?"
31406Too late?
31406Turn agin''him?"
31406Vill you leave her to die?
31406Villars----?"
31406Villars?"
31406Villars?"
31406Vot shall I do?
31406Was Lysander going alone with him to the mountains?
31406Was ever a hero of romance in such a dismal plight?
31406Was his cry heard?
31406Was it any satisfaction for him to feel that he was thus avenged?
31406Was it not all a dream?
31406Was it not assuming a terrible responsibility to send this rampant sinner to his long account?
31406Was it on the rocks over their heads?
31406Was it some animal, or only a phantom of his feverish brain?
31406Was it supposed that the good old practice of applying torture to enforce confession had long since been done away with?
31406Was it the beauty of the earth and sky that made him shiver with so sudden and sweet a thrill?
31406Was she shocked by this cold, atrocious spirit of calculation?
31406Was this murder he had committed?
31406Wha''ye totin''on him fur?"
31406What are you doing with that nigger?"
31406What are you here for?
31406What chance is there for a man like me?"
31406What could that something be?
31406What do you mean?"
31406What do you say, youngster?
31406What had become of him?
31406What had she fled to the mountain for?
31406What have you got those bracelets on for?"
31406What hinders you?"
31406What if you''d seen dat back when''twas fust cut up?
31406What is going to become of us, if relief does n''t arrive soon?
31406What is the matter?"
31406What is there to be said which he did not say?"
31406What makes you think so?"
31406What right had Mrs. Stackridge to be absent when she came to borrow?
31406What satisfaction can there be in taking the life of so degraded and abject a creature?"
31406What shall I do?
31406What shall I say to them for you?"
31406What should he do?
31406What should she do?
31406What then?
31406What was he trying to lift and drag along the ground?
31406What was the man doing there?
31406What was to be done?
31406What we want to know is, will you join us?
31406What will folks say?"
31406What will you do?"
31406What would the world say?
31406What ye want o''Cudjo?"
31406What you doin''dar?
31406What''s going on?"
31406What''s in this box?
31406What, then, was left him but to perish here, alone, uncared for, unconsoled by a word of love from any human being?
31406What, then, would be his fate?
31406Where am I, anyhow?"
31406Where had he been during those hours of oblivion?
31406Where is Salina?"
31406Where is Toby?"
31406Where is your husband?
31406Where''s Pepperill?"
31406Where''s Sile Ropes?"
31406Where''s your schoolmaster?
31406Whether they will ever be happily united on earth, who can say?
31406Which Toby?
31406Which do you prefer-- the death of a traitor, or the glorious career of a soldier in the confederate army?"
31406Who brought in this fellow?"
31406Who can it be?"
31406Who gib ol''Toby his freedom, an''den''pose to pay him wages?
31406Who had committed the barbarous act?
31406Who ye goin''to mind?
31406Why ai n''t ye to work?''
31406Why did he not leave the body?
31406Why did n''t you tell me before?"
31406Why do n''t ye bring along that ar brush?"
31406Why do you come to torture me now?"
31406Why do you desert us now?"
31406Why do you follow to persecute us?
31406Why is it I feel such trust that Virginia will be provided for?
31406Why should we care which side destroys the other?"
31406Why was she sitting there, wasting the time in tears and reproaches?
31406Will no one speak for my life?"
31406Will you come?"
31406Will you favor us with a song, Virginia?"
31406Will you go back to the rebels, or make a push with us for the free states?
31406Will you write?
31406With those stones?
31406With what, you wonder?
31406Wo bin ich, mutter?_"But the words were not strange to Carl; neither was the voice strange.
31406Wo n''t he hear?"
31406Wonder if Mis''Stackridge and the childern have gone to the mountains too?
31406Would I wish to see my country submit?
31406Would he be retained a prisoner, like the rest, or delivered over to the mob that sought his life?
31406Would it be safe to move him, Toby?"
31406Would the schoolmaster join them?
31406Would you take a look at it?"
31406Yet the choice was between his life and Penn''s; and had not Pomp done well?
31406You are alive and vell now, ai n''t you?"
31406You feel pretty sound in your witals, do n''t you?
31406You hate a man that you''ve befriended, and that''s turned traitor agin''ye, worse''n you hate an open inemy, do n''t ye?
31406You might almost, I think, decide the question of a man''s Christianity by his answer to this:''What is your feeling towards the negro?''
31406You offer yourself to be whipped in this old nigger''s place?"
31406You promised Captain Sprowl, did you not, that you would conduct him to the cave?"
31406You remember what that was?
31406You think, maybe, the discussion vould not be greatly to your adwantage?"
31406You understand?"
31406You vill not tell?
31406_ THE OLD CLERGYMAN''S NIGHTGOWN HAS AN ADVENTURE._ Where, then, all this time, was Penn?
31406ai n''t it almost too bad?
31406ai n''t it the schoolmaster?"
31406and Carl?
31406and am I nothing to you?"
31406and the snug little Villars property, did he not covet it?
31406and then what would you do?"
31406and vasn''t I running to find you as vast as ever a vellow could?
31406are you crazy?"
31406are you sure?"
31406but being only a"nigger,"what else could you expect of him?
31406cavalry?"
31406could n''t you find''em?
31406cried Lysander, recoiling into the arms of his men;"what the devil do you mean?"
31406cried the old clergyman, with an energy that startled them,"what are you about to do?"
31406dat you, Cudjo?"
31406dat you?
31406dat you?"
31406did I promise to say all you wished?"
31406did he not?"
31406did n''t him take Massa Hapgood and make him well?
31406do n''t ye know Cudjo?
31406do n''t ye know?"
31406do n''t you''member Toby?
31406forsake Virginia and her father when the toils of villany were tightening around them?
31406g''e know Cudjo?
31406git mad, why do n''t ye?"
31406he answered, in the same language,"is it you?"
31406he called, searching among the prisoners;"is Medad Stackridge here?"
31406how came you here?"
31406how did he come hyar?"
31406is it you?
31406is it you?"
31406laughed Cudjo, getting down on his knees over the opossum;"how ye make dat out, by?"
31406leave Stackridge and his compatriots to their fate, when it might be in his power to forewarn and save them?
31406not Mass''Hapgood?"
31406not mobbed?"
31406or are we going to fight our way over the mountains, and never come back till a Union army comes with us to set things a little to rights here?"
31406or de mornin''arter?
31406or in caverns beneath their feet?
31406or not?"
31406or was he impressed by the awful mystery and silence?
31406or was it the lovely presence at his side, in whom was incarnated, for him, all the beauty, all the light, all the joy of the universe?
31406or, in listening to the syllables of divine nonsense, feel the warm breath and light touch of the magnetic thrilling mouth?
31406roared Lysander,"why do n''t you bring that bootjack?"
31406said Carl,"how came you here?"
31406said Silas, turning angrily on the recumbent figure,"what are you stretching your lazy bones thar fur?
31406said he,''do you think I was in earnest?''
31406said the agitated girl;"are you able?"
31406she called,"where are you?
31406that old traitor, or me?
31406the Quaker will fight?"
31406tink we''s go trough dat fire like we done trough tudder?"
31406vot for you choke a fellow so?"
31406what are you about?"
31406what are you doing here?"
31406what are you going to do with that old man?"
31406what are you staring for?
31406what can Pomp do?
31406what did he see?
31406what did you say to him through the winder?"
31406what for?"
31406what of her?"
31406what?"
31406where have you been?"
31406who?"
31406why did n''t I know you?"
31406why do n''t you?
31406why in hell you shtop?''
31406why not?"
31406will you accept my life as an atonement for all I have done amiss?
31406ye hain''t been foolin''us, have ye?"
31406you deny the fact?"
31406you persist?''
31406you threaten, you villain?''
31406you will?"
31406you?
30100A false pretence? 30100 A gentleman in the hall?"
30100A lie? 30100 A stranger?"
30100A young lady?
30100About Di Crinola? 30100 Ah, but young,--and beautiful?"
30100Ah, why? 30100 Ah, you are angry with me?"
30100Ai n''t it sad?
30100Ai n''t you going to give us your hand, old fellow?
30100Alone?
30100Always?
30100Am I in the way, Marion?
30100Am I to understand that Lord Kingsbury refuses to see me?
30100And Hampstead?
30100And are you happy?
30100And are you ready with your answer?
30100And are you ready?
30100And art thou not assenting to it unless thou tell''st her that her fancies are not only vain, but wrong? 30100 And as for him, what right has he to think of any girl?
30100And didst thou agree with her?
30100And disgrace all her family?
30100And do you know him,--yourself?
30100And does not Hampstead associate with all manner of low people?
30100And given the reasons?
30100And he a clerk in the Post Office?
30100And how do you find him?
30100And how does he address you?
30100And is n''t the niece to have it?
30100And leave her here with him, so that all the world shall say that I am running away from my own wife? 30100 And let her do just what she pleases?"
30100And now what''s to be done?
30100And she dropped him also?
30100And so be forced to speak of my sister to every one in the hunt and in the county? 30100 And that is all?"
30100And that is to be all?
30100And that she loves him?
30100And the Marquis?
30100And then that brute Crocker was shown in?
30100And this is to be the end of it?
30100And thou?
30100And was n''t that hitting me when I was down, do you think?
30100And what did she say, George?
30100And what did you say?
30100And what then, Sir Boreas?
30100And why not? 30100 And why?"
30100And would you have me yield, because for my sake she is afraid? 30100 And yet thou lovest him?"
30100And yet you think--?
30100And you believed him?
30100And you can love him?
30100And you think that nothing should be done for me?
30100And you will give it?
30100And you will tell him why I have come?
30100And you?
30100And you?
30100Another row?
30100Are they golden or only gilded?
30100Are you afraid of me?
30100Are you going to ask him to come here?
30100Are you in earnest?
30100Are you so sure of yourself?
30100Are you still staying in the neighbourhood?
30100Are you taking close- packing nets with you?
30100As my sister?
30100At such a moment, my lord, those whom nature has given to her for her friends--"Has not nature given me too for her friend? 30100 Because he has made a mistake which has honoured me, shall I mistake also, so as to dishonour him?
30100Business?
30100But I shall be there?
30100But Lady Kingsbury is still fond of him?
30100But as I wish to see you specially--"Why specially? 30100 But at last you have come?"
30100But did you ever see anything so noble as the way he got off his horse? 30100 But do you not distrust her if you shut her up, and are afraid to allow her even to sit at table in a strange house?"
30100But have you heard it?
30100But he treats you as though he were engaged to you?
30100But he will?
30100But how would he live?
30100But how?--how?
30100But if an exception to you, why not also an exception to me? 30100 But if he should?"
30100But if she has her own convictions--?
30100But if they have been exacted and have been made? 30100 But it shall be made as light as I can make it,--shall it not?
30100But it''ll come all right now?
30100But it''s true, Sir Boreas?
30100But need that hinder her?
30100But she was not ashamed of what she is doing?
30100But what has he said?
30100But what have they heard?
30100But what is it, mother?
30100But what is the difference in jumping just over a hedge or two? 30100 But what name?"
30100But what shall I do for myself if you take my tidy horse?
30100But what?
30100But why does he come on a Tuesday?
30100But why should a lot of people be enabled to say that they''d dined here?
30100But you are--?
30100But you could n''t ride over High Street?
30100But you think he should take his father''s name?
30100But, Marion; do you not love me?
30100Can I help myself if I am broken- hearted? 30100 Can he tell thee aught that is good?"
30100Can not you put it to yourself as though you were brought in question? 30100 Can that be necessary?"
30100Can they hurt you?
30100Can you send for this man and get him here to- day?
30100Clara,he said,"will you have me?
30100Could he not come here?
30100Could it be that I should not love him? 30100 Could we be alone for a few minutes, my lord?"
30100Could you not shut him up?
30100Could you see just by looking at him that he was so different from others? 30100 Crocker in Cumberland?"
30100Dare not love me, Marion? 30100 Dead?
30100Did he say anything about Hampstead?
30100Did he so?
30100Did it come to that?
30100Did she say aught of her health in discussing all this with thee?
30100Did you ever hear any music like that in Leicestershire, my lord?
30100Did you ever promise him anything?
30100Did you expect me sooner? 30100 Did you not think it very odd that they should have been asked?"
30100Did you tell her?
30100Do I not respect him?
30100Do I, my lord?
30100Do n''t you hear me tell you that I can not interfere?
30100Do n''t you know that they must be in pairs?
30100Do n''t you think he''s a very fine- looking young man, Miss Fay?
30100Do n''t you think it a very improper time, with a sick man in the house?
30100Do n''t you think, my lord,said Mrs. Vincent,"that she looks as though she wanted a change?"
30100Do you always go to church?
30100Do you love me, Marion?
30100Do you love me?
30100Do you love me?
30100Do you mean about Frances and George Roden?
30100Do you mean to say that you owe no obedience to your parents?
30100Do you not think that such marriages are most injurious to the best interests of society?
30100Do you really know him?
30100Do you really mean it?
30100Do you think I would not have her for my sister, if it were possible? 30100 Do you think she would be contented if your father''s wife were to frown on her?"
30100Do you think that I do not know,--that I have forgotten? 30100 Do you?"
30100Do you?
30100Does he interfere?
30100Does he mean to say that I am to be turned out into the road at a moment''s notice because I ca n''t approve of what Lady Frances is doing? 30100 Does he not sit at the same desk with you?"
30100Does it concern you, Zachary?
30100Does n''t he?
30100Doest thou wish it thyself?
30100Fainted, has she?
30100Fanny,he said,"how would it be if we were to ask those Quakers to dine here on Christmas Day?"
30100Father,she said, laying her hand upon his arm as she went to meet him, and looking up into his face;--"father?"
30100For his mother''s sake I was speaking;--but why not for his also? 30100 For three years?"
30100For whom then?
30100For years?
30100Fred, did not I say that you should not call him Jack?
30100From what I hear,said Lord Persiflage,"I suppose you would not wish to reside permanently in Italy, as an Italian?"
30100From whom had he heard it?
30100George, what has happened?
30100Go off of what?
30100Going to sleep?
30100Going to walk over, is he, in the middle of the night?
30100Gone? 30100 Had I so promised, should I not then have been bound to think first of your happiness?"
30100Had I told you any untruth?
30100Hampstead,he said,"can this possibly be true what your mother has told me?"
30100Hampstead?
30100Has Mr. Roden sent you as a messenger?
30100Has anything happened to my father?
30100Has he always signed the old name?
30100Has he been very determined lately in anything?
30100Has he gone away contented?
30100Has he quarrelled with you?
30100Has he said anything to you since he was at Hendon;--as to my family, I mean?
30100Has he sent his name?
30100Has n''t he been hitting me all the time that I was down? 30100 Has not Fanny disgraced herself in having engaged herself to a low fellow, the scum of the earth, without saying anything even to you about it?"
30100Has she persuaded you?
30100Has she said anything?
30100Has she said that she would refuse the man?
30100Has she told thee,he asked,"what it is in her mind to do?"
30100Has she told you nothing of it?
30100Has that man gone yet?
30100Has what man gone?
30100Hast thou advised her as to what she should say?
30100Have I ever told you what your aunt said to me just before I left Castle Hautboy?
30100Have I interfered, my lord?
30100Have I not told you that I do? 30100 Have n''t I been very good to you?"
30100Have they made him that over there?
30100Have you any answer to make to me?
30100Have you heard any tidings in the City?
30100Have you heard any, Marion?
30100Have you heard from him, my lord, since you have been down in these parts?
30100Have you not said it over and over again? 30100 Have you seen George?"
30100Have you seen his lordship to- day?
30100Have you told me why;--all the reason why?
30100He I suppose is not going to church with her?
30100He does not come to you, sir, unless you send for him?
30100He was not killed?
30100He wo n''t stay with us, Sir Boreas, I suppose?
30100Heard what about George Roden?
30100Heard what?
30100Here, in this house?
30100How am I to help it? 30100 How am I to say?
30100How can I answer that? 30100 How can I help it?
30100How can you tell?
30100How could he help his coming? 30100 How did he know it?"
30100How did you get home that night?
30100How did you know it?
30100How do you do?
30100How do you know, Miss?
30100How do you know?
30100How done?
30100How has he offended you, sir?
30100How has the visit gone?
30100How if we gave him nothing to eat?
30100How long are we to stay here?
30100How long?
30100How many weeks is it since first thou saw''st him? 30100 How often have I heard you call him a poor mean skunk?"
30100How out of the way?
30100How should a girl not want advice in so great a matter?
30100How so?
30100How would it be if she had a mother?
30100How wrong?
30100How''s his lordship? 30100 How, indeed?
30100I am quite well;--and you?
30100I am to have that bugbear again between me and my happiness?
30100I can not admit that,--but suppose he is?
30100I hope your lordship find yourself better this morning?
30100I lived to be hated;--and why not another?
30100I shall not prevail? 30100 I suppose he has mentioned her?"
30100I suppose it is true about the Quaker lady?
30100I suppose it''s true; is n''t it? 30100 I suppose there are such feelings, sir?"
30100I suppose there is nothing to be done?
30100I suppose there is such a person as this Quaker,--and that there is such a girl?
30100I suppose there was no doubt about the first marriage?
30100I suppose you do know all about it?
30100I wonder if Lord Hampstead has mutton- chops for luncheon?
30100I would have been courteous to him,--if only because he sat at the same desk with you;--but--"But what?
30100I''m afraid he does n''t come in for much?
30100If he be there, what harm? 30100 If he should appear on the scene ready to carry her off, what should I have done?"
30100If he thinks it fitting, why shouldst thou object?
30100If it has been made public in that way, what can be the object of keeping us apart? 30100 If it shoots a gintleman to be incognito, why is n''t he to do as he plaises?"
30100If so, why should n''t Hampstead fall in love with her? 30100 If there be no need?"
30100If they want me at ten, why do they ask me at nine?
30100If you can really hope it, then why should we not be happy? 30100 In all matters as I believe; and how should I, being such a one as I am, not be willing to give my girl to such a suitor as thee?
30100In the Civil Service?
30100Is Fanny naughty?
30100Is Fanny very naughty?
30100Is Lord Hampstead to cause you to drop the Post Office?
30100Is a young man to be afraid of that?
30100Is he a friend of yours?
30100Is he a friend of yours?
30100Is he dead-- only now?
30100Is he not away on leave?
30100Is he not so?
30100Is he so ill as that?
30100Is he very anxious about it?
30100Is he, indeed? 30100 Is he--?"
30100Is it about me?
30100Is it about the matrimonial alliance?
30100Is it no better than that?
30100Is it so, my lord?
30100Is it such a sacrifice?
30100Is it then necessary to condemn her? 30100 Is it to be?"
30100Is it true then?
30100Is it true, I wonder?
30100Is it true? 30100 Is it?
30100Is n''t he in a hurry?
30100Is n''t it well that a man in his position should have a regard to his country?
30100Is not Mr. Pogson within?
30100Is not he kind to them?
30100Is not this George Roden a low person? 30100 Is not this almost silly, John, about Mr. Roden not coming here?"
30100Is she a friend of yours?
30100Is she the first young woman that was ever married without being as strong as a milkmaid? 30100 Is there then to be no future world, Lord Hampstead?"
30100Is this a threat?
30100Is this you, Zachary? 30100 It shall not?"
30100It wo n''t be long, I suppose, before you will have to do so always?
30100It would be odd, would n''t it, as they are strangers, and dined here so lately?
30100It would not hurt you to feel that I loved another?
30100Judging from your own heart do you think that you could do that if outward circumstances made it convenient?
30100Keep an establishment of your own?
30100Know what?
30100Lord--; Lord--;--Lord who, is he?
30100Mamma, was n''t he christianed?
30100Mamma, when is Jack coming?
30100Mamma,said Lord Frederic,"where''s Jack?"
30100Mamma?
30100Marion has told thee that this young man will be here to- day?
30100Marion, I say, is as good as gold; but is it likely that any girl should remain untouched and undazzled by such an offer as you can make her?
30100Marion, Marion,he said, still holding her in his embrace,"you will be persuaded by me?
30100Marion, will you do something for me?
30100Marion,he said,"you expected me to come to you again?"
30100Marion,he said;"Marion; oh, Marion, will you hear me?
30100Marion,said the Quaker, who was somewhat moved by those things which had altogether failed with the girl herself;"Marion, must it be so?"
30100Miss Fay did not catch cold?
30100Miss Watson had a red face, and a big cap, and spectacles;--had she not?
30100Mother of his children?
30100Mother,he said to her in the train,"you are in mourning,--as for a friend?"
30100Mr. Fay,he said,"are you aware of what has passed between me and your daughter Marion?"
30100Mr. Greenwood, what is the use of all this?
30100Must it be so?
30100Must it necessarily be mock hesitation? 30100 My dear Fanny,"said Lady Persiflage, without a touch of ill- nature in her tone,"how can you tell what a young man will do?"
30100My friend,said Mr. Pogson,"have you read this yet?"
30100My lord?
30100My mother--?
30100Never?
30100No alternative as to what I may call myself?
30100No doubt you will try again?
30100No need? 30100 No spark of sympathy in you for me,--for one who loves you so truly?"
30100No, Marion; he is not that.--May I call you Marion?
30100No, indeed;--nor yet no hunting, nor yet no hounds; are there, my lord? 30100 Nor his office?"
30100Not George Roden?
30100Not Lord Hampstead?
30100Not Marion Fay?
30100Not honest?
30100Not if you have not given it away?
30100Not that?
30100Not to me? 30100 Nothing beyond that?
30100Now my girl will be happy again?
30100Of course you know all about my marriage, Hampstead?
30100Oh, Miss Fay,she said,"have you heard?"
30100Oh, Mr. Fay, how do you do? 30100 Oh, Sam, why did you tear those papers;--Her Majesty''s Mail papers?
30100Oh, Sam; how dare you?
30100Oh, Sir Boreas--"Well, Mr. Crocker; what is it that you have to say for yourself?
30100Oh, awfully; but what can he do, poor fellow? 30100 Oh, you have?"
30100Or you would not have come, perhaps? 30100 Paddy, where were you last night?"
30100Papa,she said,"you are going back to London?"
30100Perhaps a cup of coffee?
30100Perhaps we might go out into the street?
30100Promised what?
30100Quarrelling, Walker?
30100Shall I go now, dearest?
30100Shall I know soon?
30100Shall I tell him;--shall I tell Lord Hampstead?
30100Shall I think nothing of him, father?
30100Shall we say June next?
30100She is not ill, I hope?
30100Should I have been treated like this had I not taken her ladyship''s part? 30100 Should not I have been a party to that agreement?"
30100Since he told you in that rude way to leave the room?
30100Sir?
30100So I understand,--and a Quaker?
30100So much depends upon it,--does it not, Lord Llwddythlw? 30100 So soon, my child;--so soon?"
30100So you''re going to Castle Hautboy?
30100So you''ve gone off to Hendon to live with your brother?
30100Tell you what?
30100That I should not love you?
30100That I,--and your brother,--have settled everything at last?
30100That the Post Office clerk is an Italian nobleman?
30100That they-- should be married?
30100That was all?
30100That''s very well, dear;--but what if one is ruffled? 30100 The word has offended you?"
30100The young lord?
30100Then I may tell mamma?
30100Then thou didst agree with her?
30100Then why do n''t you go away? 30100 Then why does he go on like that?"
30100Then why is it that thou wouldst go to his house?
30100Then why not have had it done quietly, my dear?
30100Then why not profess as she does?
30100Then you do know?
30100There is money I suppose?
30100There was no quarrel, I hope?
30100There''s no happiness like married happiness; is there, my lord?
30100These hounds do n''t go as far north as Carlisle?
30100Thou art aware that in our poor household she does all that the strictest economy would demand from an active mother of a family? 30100 Thou hast not taken his offer then?"
30100To leave Trafford?
30100To see her, and say farewell to her for ever?
30100To see thee?
30100To speak to him when you see him?
30100To tell me the name of the man you ran away from in Cumberland?
30100To- morrow, father, is a holiday, is it not, in the City?
30100To- morrow?
30100Turn against thee, Marion? 30100 Turned out of the house?"
30100Unhappy for a moment you must make him;--for a month, perhaps, or for a year; though it were for years, what would that be to his whole life?
30100Very ordinary;--wasn''t it, Amblethwaite?
30100Very pretty, is she not; particularly when speaking? 30100 Was any sum of money named?"
30100Was he a foreigner, mother?
30100Was he good?
30100Was it so very unfortunate, John?
30100Was it wise?
30100Was papa angry?
30100Was she disagreeable?
30100Was that going on for a marriage?
30100Well, Marion; and what has he said?
30100Well?
30100Well?
30100Were there now?
30100Were they for my ears?
30100Were you angry with him?
30100Were you drunk? 30100 Were you, indeed?"
30100What about Lady Frances?
30100What about an Italian title?
30100What accident-- what accident, Mr. Greenwood? 30100 What am I to do about the lodgings?"
30100What am I to say, Lord Hampstead?
30100What am I to say? 30100 What answer has she made you?"
30100What are your intentions, sir, as to supporting that young woman?
30100What can I do for you now?
30100What can I do, Lord Hampstead?
30100What can I do? 30100 What can I do?"
30100What can I do?
30100What can I do?
30100What can I do?
30100What can I think of it, Lord Hampstead? 30100 What can a lord be doing in such a place as that,"asked Clara,"--coming so often, you know?
30100What can be better, what can be purer,--if only it be true? 30100 What can it all mean?"
30100What can it be?
30100What can the Docks want with you to open them?
30100What can they have been talking about?
30100What can we do?
30100What can you expect from doctrines such as those which she and her brother share? 30100 What could Mr. Greenwood say to him?"
30100What did she say to thee?
30100What did she say to you when you spoke to her?
30100What difficulty?
30100What do you know of any cause?
30100What do you mean by a false pretence now?
30100What do you mean by that, John?
30100What do you mean by that? 30100 What do you mean, sir?
30100What do you think of that, Geraldine?
30100What do you want to tell me, Frances?
30100What does he mean by stumbling- blocks?
30100What does it mean?
30100What does she talk about?
30100What does that mean?
30100What duty, Marion?
30100What effort? 30100 What else am I to say?
30100What gentleman?
30100What good would it do me, Sir Boreas?
30100What harm could have been done?
30100What has Fanny done, mamma?
30100What has all that to do with it?
30100What has that got to do with it?
30100What has that to do with earning money?
30100What have they said to you?
30100What have you come here for, Mr. Crocker? 30100 What is he then, my lord?"
30100What is it all? 30100 What is it that you would have me do?"
30100What is it to thee, who are young, and hardly knew her twelve months since?
30100What is it, John? 30100 What is it, Mr. Greenwood, that makes you stand thus?
30100What is it, Mrs. Roden? 30100 What is it, Mum?"
30100What is it?
30100What is over?
30100What is that something, Marion?
30100What is that to you? 30100 What is true?
30100What makes the doubt?
30100What man, sir?
30100What more did he do?
30100What more is she?
30100What more is there then?
30100What more, my lord?
30100What must be told?
30100What on earth are you driving at?
30100What on earth brings you here at such a time as this?
30100What on earth do you think that they are to do with themselves?
30100What on earth do you wish me to do about her?
30100What other thing?
30100What other words should she have spoken to me? 30100 What ought we to do?"
30100What passed?
30100What passed?
30100What purpose?
30100What right have you to tell me to give it up? 30100 What roughness would there be?"
30100What shall I do, my lord?
30100What should there be to be done? 30100 What then?
30100What was it then?
30100What was it to him what anybody eats for his lunch?
30100What way is that, dear?
30100What will her ladyship say when she hears of my maid Marion?
30100What will the Marquis say?
30100What word?
30100What word?
30100What words, my child?
30100What would I not do that you wish,--except when you wish things that you know you ought not? 30100 What would their frowns be to me?
30100What would you have me do? 30100 What would you have me do?"
30100What would you have your sister do if a man came to her then, whom she knew that she could never marry? 30100 What would you think, Lady Kingsbury, if you had to live all the rest of your life on an income arising from a thousand pounds?"
30100What''s nothing of the kind?
30100What''s the good?
30100What''s the use of repeating that so often? 30100 What, Italy?"
30100What, Zachary; you walking about at this busy time of the day?
30100When have I done so?
30100When he repeated his story so often what was I to do?
30100When then do you think it will be?
30100Where am I to go to?
30100Where did you pick him up?
30100Where does he dine?
30100Where is the difference?
30100Where was the fault?
30100Where will you go to, my dear?
30100Which among us is so likely to be guided by what is right? 30100 Which shall it be?"
30100Who art thou, my child, that thou shouldst be able to judge whether words of guile are likely to come from a young man''s lips?
30100Who can know as she knows?
30100Who cares?
30100Who has said so? 30100 Who has said so?"
30100Who has said that it does?
30100Who has talked about always?
30100Who has thought of them?
30100Who has told you all that, Walker?
30100Who hates me?
30100Who is to be turned away?
30100Who knows? 30100 Who says so?"
30100Who should be soft- hearted if not a father?
30100Who was he?
30100Who weighed them?
30100Who were the guests?
30100Who wrote it? 30100 Who''s going to let her do anything?
30100Whom you disliked?
30100Whose else, Mum? 30100 Why did you so often tell me not to come?"
30100Why do you answer in that way when all your friends desire it?
30100Why do you not tell me instead of standing there?
30100Why do you stand there and shake your head?
30100Why dost thou make thyself different from other girls?
30100Why has he not obeyed me?
30100Why is he any poorer than me? 30100 Why not, Mrs. Roden?
30100Why not, aunt?
30100Why not? 30100 Why not?
30100Why not? 30100 Why not?"
30100Why not?
30100Why on earth should you wish that?
30100Why should George be bothered with him?
30100Why should I not come if it be a joy to you?
30100Why should he not be in Cumberland,--when, as it happens, his father is land- steward or something of that sort to my uncle Persiflage?
30100Why should he not come?
30100Why should he not?
30100Why should he?
30100Why should her mother refuse my love for her daughter? 30100 Why should it be a misfortune?"
30100Why should it be a nuisance for me? 30100 Why should it not be for good?"
30100Why should n''t they exchange words, and they fast friends of five years''standing? 30100 Why should n''t we have a Post Office clerk as well as some one else?
30100Why should not I also be in black?
30100Why should she be so anxious to leave her natural home?
30100Why should you be glad?
30100Why should you be in the way?
30100Why should you have stopped him?
30100Why should you hope so? 30100 Why should you like her better?
30100Why should you not have both been made happy?
30100Why should you not own it? 30100 Why should you speak so positively?"
30100Why should you suppose me to be harder- hearted than yourself, more callous, more like a beast of the fields?
30100Why should you want to come?
30100Why should you-- not live?
30100Why shouldst thou like it? 30100 Why so?
30100Why sorry for his sake?
30100Why to sorrow? 30100 Why, indeed, Mum?"
30100Why, my child, why? 30100 Why, sir, should you have a mind diseased?
30100Why-- why,--why?
30100Will a young man love me like that;--a young man who has so much in the world to occupy him? 30100 Will it be honest on your part to ask her to abandon the rank which she will be entitled to expect from you?"
30100Will it matter much?
30100Will it not be better, father, that you and I shall remain together till the last?
30100Will not nine pairs suffice?
30100Will severity prevent it?
30100Will you come across with me now?
30100Will you have Sir James down from London?
30100Will you promise me?
30100Wilt thou pay no heed to my words, so as to crave from him further time for thought?
30100Wishes you to become his wife?
30100With Crocker even?
30100Wo n''t I?
30100Wo n''t it be rather hard upon him?
30100Wo n''t you have a cup of tea?
30100Would August do? 30100 Would it be honest on your part,"Lady Persiflage had asked him,"to ask her to abandon the rank which she will be entitled to expect from you?"
30100Would it be much?
30100Would it go against the grain with you, John?
30100Would it not be robbery if you and their little lordships should be turned at once out of this house?
30100Would it? 30100 Would that hurt you so sorely?"
30100Would you ask them alone?
30100Would you wish to send for her ladyship?
30100You an Italian?
30100You are not in love with the Quaker''s daughter?
30100You are quite sure that he is really engaged to her ladyship?
30100You can let me go, and never wish me to return?
30100You could not?
30100You did?
30100You did?
30100You did?
30100You do n''t mean that Tribbledale''s been and talked you over already?
30100You do not doubt the power of the Almighty to watch over His creatures?
30100You got my telegram? 30100 You have heard this, have n''t you, about George Roden?"
30100You have n''t found out who it is, aunt?
30100You have n''t got rid of everything yet?
30100You have never heard of his flea- bitten horse?
30100You have probably seen the_ Pall Mall_ of yesterday, and the_ Standard_ of this morning?
30100You have told him that?
30100You know it then, Lord Hampstead?
30100You know the story;--do you not? 30100 You mean me, my lord?"
30100You mean me, sir?
30100You mean that I should get promoted quicker because of my title?
30100You mean that you have not fixed upon a day?
30100You think that possible?
30100You think you ought to make a demand upon me because as my Chaplain you were asked to see a gentleman who called here on a delicate matter?
30100You were not at Castle Hautboy when Hampstead and his sister were there?
30100You will be back punctually for dinner, father?
30100You will go again on Friday?
30100You will not congratulate me?
30100You''d like a glass of beer, would n''t you;--after walking up and down so long?
30100You''ll come and shoot to- morrow?
30100Your lordship did n''t know that her ladyship down at Trafford used to be talking to me pretty freely about Lord Hampstead and Lady Frances?
30100Your master''s horses, I suppose?
30100Your wife?
30100******"Has the Marquis said anything about Lady Frances since she went?"
30100A woman without vanity, without jealousy, without envy--""Where will you find one?"
30100After all this could he refuse to grant the favour of a last interview?
30100After this who will say that any nobleman ought to call himself what they call a Liberal?
30100Ah, Roden, how are you?
30100Am I not at home every day at all hours?
30100Am I not justified in declaring that I have divorced them from my heart?
30100Am I not justified in declaring that no communication shall be kept up between the two families?
30100Am I not right in saying that it is so?"
30100Am I right in supposing that I have been accepted here by you in that light?"
30100And how often?
30100And how was she to obey him as to her mode of addressing him?
30100And if he has, what will a thousand pounds do for me?
30100And if it were, would she obtain her own happiness by clinging to it?
30100And now will you let me know why you have called him my friend?"
30100And was there not ground for security in the reticence and dignity of Lady Frances herself?
30100And was this glory to be thrown away because she had filled her mind with false fears?
30100And what assurance shall I have of that?
30100And what does it matter;--except for his sake?
30100And what is it now?"
30100And what were Marion''s thoughts?
30100And when she knows it all, she who shall lie on his breast, shall I not be dear also to her?"
30100And who has not noted the sympathy with which the woman has unconsciously accepted the homage?
30100And why do you wish to speak to me about him?"
30100And why had not that woman assisted him,--she who had instigated him to the doing of the deed?
30100And why should it be denied to her, a noble scion of the great House of Montressor, to be the mother of none but younger sons?
30100And why should not his death be contemplated, especially as it would confer so great a benefit on the world at large?
30100And would she not wish to leave in her lover''s eyes the memory of whatever prettiness she might have possessed?
30100And would you have it that I should bring such a one as that to sorrow,--perhaps to disgrace?"
30100And yet he,--strong and masterful as he was,--could he have aught of a woman''s weakness about him?
30100And yet, had she really have loved him, why should she have asked for time?
30100And you, mother?"
30100And, therefore, seeing you and knowing you,--for we all know you now in Paradise Row--""Do you now?"
30100Are his truth, and his loving heart, and his high honour, and his pure honesty, all written in his eyes,--to you as they are to me?
30100Are you sure that Lord Hampstead is strong?
30100Art thou justified in thine own thoughts in bidding her regard herself as one doomed?"
30100As I do n''t think that I can help you, perhaps you would n''t mind-- going away?"
30100As for danger, what was there to fear?
30100As he says himself, what else will he have to live on?"
30100As it is so why not let us have the sweet of it as far as it will go?
30100As to going, where am I to go to?"
30100As to this girl, who was so true to him, was he justified in supposing that she would be different from others, simply because she was true to him?
30100B.;''Why did you do it,--and you engaged to a young woman?
30100Because he has not seen the distance, shall I be blind to it?
30100Bobbin, my boy, if you would open that window, do you think it would hurt your complexion?"
30100But could you induce your father''s wife to smile on her?"
30100But have I said one word to you about your terrible name?"
30100But he is not going to die?"
30100But how could I hope it if, with my eyes open, I were to bring a great misfortune upon him?
30100But how was he to live upon £ 200,--he who had been bedded and boarded all his life at the expense of another man, and had also spent £ 300?
30100But how was she to open her arms to Lady Frances Trafford?
30100But how was this to be done while Mrs. Roden was present with them?
30100But how will that help me?"
30100But how would it be if Lady Frances should jump out of the window at Trafford and run away with George Roden?
30100But if I did,--what of that?"
30100But if he did come, how could I refuse to see him?
30100But if she loved him as she said she did, would he not be able to teach her that everything should be made to give way to love?
30100But in becoming the future Duchess of Merioneth--""That''s in the hands of the Almighty, too, is n''t it?"
30100But my darling will be good to me;--will he not?
30100But ought he not to be paid for holding his tongue?
30100But should she now return to her Crocker, how could she excuse herself with Tribbledale?
30100But still why should he be the Macbeth, seeing that the Lady Macbeth of the occasion was untrue to him?
30100But thinking like that,--believing like that,--how can I enter into the sweet Epicurean Paradise which that child has prepared for herself?"
30100But was papa so very angry?"
30100But was the thing she proposed to do of such a nature as to be regarded as an evil to her family?
30100But what did it matter?
30100But what if he come?
30100But what is a man to do with inveterate offenders?
30100But what is he?"
30100But what might not a man do who had shown the nature of his disposition by tearing up official papers?
30100But what steps should he take to recover the ground which he had lost?
30100But what was to be done with the Duca?
30100But what would be achieved by that if she were to walk out only to encounter misery?
30100But what would he_ get_ by that?
30100But when one has heard such news as this, how is it possible that one should compose oneself?
30100But who cries for spilt milk?
30100But who does not know that a lady may repudiate vanity in rich silks and cultivate the world in woollen stuffs, or even in calico?
30100But who thought then, Mrs. Roden, that this young nobleman would have really cared for the Quaker girl?"
30100But why have you come now?
30100But why should he allow his mind to be perplexed with such thoughts?
30100But why was the lord walking up and down the street with that demented air?
30100But why,--why had he been so tender to her?
30100But why?"
30100But with what a face could such a one as he ask such a one as Mrs. Roden to assist him in such an enterprise?
30100But would the young man''s death be now of any service to him?
30100But you think he is?"
30100But you will give him my message?"
30100But, had he lost that excuse, where should he find another?
30100By- the- bye, Harris, have you seen my lord to- day?"
30100Can I comfort her by doing that?
30100Can I do that;--or say that I will do it at some future time?
30100Can I make a change because you ask why,--and why,--and why?
30100Can I teach myself to forget that I have ever seen you?"
30100Can a man love and not love?"
30100Can any friend love her more truly than I do?
30100Can it be right that you should hold to your own and sacrifice me who have thought so much of what it is I want myself,--if in truth you love me?
30100Can not a woman understand her duties as well as a man?"
30100Can you be sure that Lord Hampstead will be constant amidst the charms of others whose manners will be more like his own than yours can be?"
30100Can you love me, Marion?"
30100Could I if I would?
30100Could I make it so now, as though I had never seen her?
30100Could I stand nobly on his hearth- rug, and make his great guests welcome?
30100Could he be expected to cut the ground from under his own feet at such a moment?
30100Could he have been sent for suddenly into Cumberland?
30100Could he have been taken ill with a fit,--so as to make his absence absolutely necessary, say for an entire week?
30100Could he not escape from the house during the period that the young lord would be there, without seeing the young lord?
30100Could it be possible that I should be to him what a wife ought to be to her husband?
30100Could it be possible that Æolus should not have heard of the day''s absence?
30100Could it be that a creature so insignificant as Crocker could annoy him by a mere word or two?
30100Could it be that he should put up with such usage, and allow the Marquis to escape unscathed out of his hand?
30100Could it be that"Fanny and her young man"had already got themselves married?
30100Could it have been by accident that the graces of her form were so excellently shown?
30100Could n''t your lordship do something to make things up between us again,--especially on this festive occasion?
30100Could you spare me five minutes?"
30100Crocker?"
30100Crocker?"
30100Crocker?"
30100Crocker?"
30100Crocker?"
30100Did I hide it even from you?
30100Did I not pour out my whole heart into her lap from the first moment in which I saw her?
30100Did I not tell you before you went that it should never be so?"
30100Did I not worship her?
30100Did anybody ever read anything like it in a novel?
30100Did he ask that Marion should also go to his house?"
30100Did he tell you about the fire?"
30100Did he understand, she wondered, how absolutely her heart had been set upon him?
30100Did not Hampstead repeat the promise to my own ears?"
30100Did she feel that an evil had been done, an evil for which there could never be a cure found?
30100Did she love him?
30100Did she speak about this marriage of hers?"
30100Did you think that that did not move me?"
30100Directly your back was turned?"
30100Do I not know that I am not, as others are, free to we d, not a lord like that, but even one of my own standing?
30100Do n''t you remember him at Castle Hautboy?"
30100Do n''t you think so, my lady?"
30100Do n''t you think that that would have been most unnatural?
30100Do you not believe that I too can love her?
30100Do you not feel that it is your duty as a man to apply what intellect you have, and what strength, to some purpose?"
30100Do you not hear me tell you that I have got nothing more to say to you?"
30100Do you not know it all?"
30100Do you not know that if she were placed beyond your reach you would recover from that sting?
30100Do you not know that not even for an instant could I hide my love?
30100Do you remember when for a moment he knelt almost at my feet, and told me that I was his friend, and spoke to me of his hearth?
30100Do you remember when you poked the fire for me at Hendon Hall?"
30100Do you say that certainly I shall not prevail?"
30100Do you say that you are ill?
30100Do you think I would hurt him?"
30100Do you think it proper that a young lady should correspond with,--with,--a gentleman in opposition to the wishes of her father and mother?"
30100Do you think that I can not work and talk at the same time?
30100Do you think that my friendship is cold for you?"
30100Do you want them out of the way?"
30100Does he ever live with young men or with ladies of his own rank?"
30100Does she come here often?"
30100Dost thou believe of me that it is because the man is a noble lord that I desire this marriage?"
30100Eh?"
30100Fay''?"
30100Fay?"
30100For what purpose should I inquire into myself when the object of such inquiry has already been obtained?
30100Greenwood?"
30100Greenwood?"
30100Greenwood?"
30100Had he done well to take himself there?
30100Had he done well to take his girl to this young nobleman''s house?
30100Had he himself been a Post Office clerk, then would not this chosen friend have been fit to love her?
30100Had he not done wrong, at any rate, done foolishly, in thus moving himself out of his own sphere?
30100Had not the idea come from her?
30100Had she not plainly intimated her conviction that she would never again return to her old home?
30100Had they not all quarrelled with him?
30100Had you not agreed with Hampstead and your father that I was not to come?"
30100Half- a- dozen steps would carry him the whole length of King''s Court; and who could tell his love- story in a walk limited to six steps?
30100Has my father been with you?"
30100Has n''t he triumphed?
30100Has she gone back to Hendon yet?"
30100Has she not said as much to thee?"
30100Has there been any such promise?"
30100Hast thou not heard that for girls of feeble health marriage itself will strengthen them?
30100Hautboy lost fourteen hundred pounds the other day at the Pandemonium; and where did the money come from to save him from being expelled?"
30100Have I gainsaid you?
30100Have I not a right to expect something better after the devotion of a life?
30100Have I not been true and honest to you?
30100Have I not said nice words?"
30100Have any of them lived?
30100Have n''t you been in his arms?"
30100Have you any account to give of yourself?"
30100Have you introduced yourself to my friend Miss Fay?"
30100Have you not declared how good a thing it would be that Lord Hampstead should die?
30100Have you not often heard that young men may be infatuated?
30100He may have a little money saved, but what''s that to the likes of your ladyship and his lordship the Marquis?
30100He means to take the title, I suppose?"
30100How am I to do that for her?"
30100How am I to live upon £ 200 a year?
30100How are they to be_ expected_ to live upon nothing?
30100How are you this morning?"
30100How best might she save him from any great pain, and yet show him that she was proud that he had loved her?
30100How can I be bad to the one being that I love better than all the world?
30100How can I say that I am not like to other girls because of my darling, my own dearest mother?
30100How can I say that she is honest till she has answered me honestly?"
30100How can I tell him?
30100How can I think of thy trouble when my own is so heavy?"
30100How can it be otherwise, when they are both in rebellion against me?
30100How could I be angry with him?
30100How could I earn my bread there?
30100How could I go from the littleness of these chambers to walk through his halls without showing that I knew myself to be an intruder?
30100How could I pass my days so as to be in any degree useful?
30100How could it be that such a one as Marion Fay should be a fitting wife for such a one as Lord Hampstead?
30100How could it be then that she should not at last obey him in this great thing which was so necessary to him?
30100How could she be angry with him?
30100How could she say those words to him, full of reason and prudence and wisdom, if he spoke to her like this?
30100How could there be an end to this,--an end that would be satisfactory to himself and to the girl that he loved?
30100How else would it be possible that they should live?
30100How far might she indulge herself in allowing some tenderness to escape her?
30100How good and how gentle we can not always see;--can we?
30100How is a young woman to go and get herself married to a young man, and he with nothing to support her?
30100How is it possible that she should not think that I am standing in her way?"
30100How is it to be done?"
30100How is one to tell a lie to a man when one feels towards him as I do about George?
30100How long is it since you remained away a day before?"
30100How long would it be, Mrs. Roden, before he saw some little trick that would displease him?
30100How long would it last with him?
30100How long?
30100How many of her daily doings had he ever witnessed?
30100How many thoughts had he extracted from her?
30100How many words had he spoken to her?
30100How might he best manage to see Marion Fay?
30100How on earth can it have been brought about?"
30100How should he have gone?
30100How should he, when he is so anxious to sacrifice his own sister?
30100How should she be dressed to receive her lover?
30100How should you?"
30100How was he to be addressed?
30100How was he to be sure of that while she had no opportunity of telling him that it was so?
30100How was he to hold his balance between them if he was to be questioned by both sides in this way?
30100How were twenty young ladies to be kept together in the month of August when all the young men were rushing off to Scotland?
30100How would it have been with them all now at Trafford Park?
30100I have no mother, and to whom can I go better than to you to fill a mother''s place?"
30100I hope I have not been a cause of grief to you?"
30100I suppose Miss Fay did take it badly?"
30100I suppose Mr. Roden is very, very handsome?"
30100I told you, did n''t I, that I had heard from him the other day?"
30100If George Roden were not strong would you throw him over and go away?"
30100If I did him an evil here, could I hope that he would love me in Heaven, when he would know all the secrets of my heart?
30100If I do love her, is it not proper that I should tell her?"
30100If I had made a promise would you not have me keep it?"
30100If I love this man, of whom am I to think the most?
30100If I really love you am I not bound to want what may be best for you?"
30100If I were to write and ask him, would he tell the truth about this marriage?"
30100If I,--even I,--had set my heart upon some one below me, would not you, as my friend, have bade me conquer the feeling?"
30100If Lord Hampstead chose to get himself married to a Quaker''s daughter, how could it be helped?
30100If all these good things came in his girl''s way because of her beauty, her grace, and her merit, why should they not be accepted?
30100If grapes hang too high what is the use of thinking of them?
30100If it was to be that this sweet sister should some day give her heart to a lover, why not to George Roden as well as to another?
30100If it were only in regard to money would it not be necessary for him to do so?
30100If like others she requires change of air and scene, what can give her such chance as this marriage?
30100If much evil had been done, how could she forgive herself?
30100If papers are to be destroyed with impunity, what is to become of the Department?
30100If she has liked some fellow clerk in her father''s office better than she likes me, shall she accept me merely because I am my father''s son?"
30100If she must go,--what will the world know but that I have lost her who was to have been my wife?"
30100If so it is surely good that we should be cowards?"
30100If the Duke of Middlesex called himself Mr. Smith, he''d be Duke all the same;--wouldn''t he, Mr. Jerningham?
30100If this were so, how could she possibly encourage Lord Hampstead in his desire to make Marion his wife?
30100In such a state how should he tame the selfishness of self?
30100In what words first should she speak to him,--and in what sort?
30100Is Roden fond of following the hounds, my lord?"
30100Is he anxious to have her back again?"
30100Is he married?"
30100Is it not hard upon her that we should both go to Paradise Row?"
30100Is it not so in all things?
30100Is it not so that it is done always?"
30100Is it not so?"
30100Is it not true about Fanny?
30100Is it possible that I should start suddenly upon such a journey, or that I should see you doing so, without asking the reason why?
30100Is it to tell me that you can not love me, Marion?
30100Is it your father?"
30100Is my mouth to be stopped?
30100Is n''t it beautiful?
30100Is not that enough?
30100Is not the truth the best?"
30100Is she such that thou as her friend must bid her know that she must perish like a blighted flower?
30100Is there any one to whom her life can be half as much as it is to me?
30100Is there any reason why Lord Hampstead''s lunch should not be mentioned?"
30100It ca n''t mean that he is going to marry Marion Fay?"
30100It had pleased God to make her a Marchioness,--and should she derogate from God''s wish?
30100It is hard for me to tell, and why should you be troubled with it?
30100It might be that a Lady Diana should have run away with a groom, but would that be a reason why so monstrous a crime should be repeated?
30100It was wrong of me; was it not;--when I hardly knew you?"
30100It would be impossible to think of giving yourself to another?"
30100It would have been refused; would it not?"
30100Jerningham;--eh?"
30100Jerningham?"
30100Jerningham?"
30100Jerningham?"
30100Jerningham?"
30100Jerningham?"
30100Knowing that it will be enough, may I not speak out to you, and tell you all my heart?
30100Lord Frederic would have been the heir to a grand title and to vast estates;--but how would he have been the better for that?
30100Marion, can you love me?"
30100Miss Fay, when you were at school did they talk slang?"
30100Mr. Greenwood is the idlest human being that ever lived, and how could he have performed the duties of a parish?"
30100Must I bid her to hem and stitch her own winding- sheet?
30100Must I not work for that as for anything else?"
30100Must it be so with him always, for the rest of his life, only because he had considered how a thing might best be done?
30100My engagement then?"
30100Need the chronicler of such scenes declare that they were in each other''s arms before a word was spoken between them?
30100No community of soul?"
30100Now in this there had certainly been much hardship, and who was to compensate him if not the Marquis?
30100Now that we both understand that, why should we be sad?
30100Now, what is the meaning of all this?
30100Of course all that had been clear enough to him throughout his machinations; and therefore how could he really have intended it?
30100Of course it is much smaller;--but what comfort do I ever have out of a house like this?"
30100Of what nature was the harm of which Mrs. Roden was speaking?
30100Oh, father, is it true, think you?"
30100Or can I suppose if you do not tell me, but that there is some reason why you should not trust me?"
30100Or how could I even let the servants think that I would treat him so badly?
30100Or would it not be better that I should go over to Hendon Hall?
30100Ought she not to be sure of herself that she can love you?"
30100Roden?"
30100Roden?"
30100Roden?"
30100Roden?"
30100Roden?"
30100Roden?"
30100Roden?"
30100Roden?"
30100Roden?"
30100Roden?"
30100Seeing that the writer was so well acquainted with the facts as to Lady Frances, why should she be less well- informed in reference to Lord Hampstead?
30100Shall I go to you, or will you come to me?"
30100Shall I not be able to make a sacrifice?
30100Shall I not do unto him as it would be well for me that some such girl should do for my sake if I were such as he?"
30100Shall it be so?"
30100Shall we not meet again, and shall we not love each other then?"
30100She made me promise that I would not come again for a week, as though weeks or years could change me?
30100Should I be such a one that every day he should bless the kind fortune which had given him such a woman to help him to rule his house?
30100Should she let any sign of love escape from her?
30100Some horse of course must be the best, and why not yours?"
30100That''s what I call something like work for a man and horse.--There''s a fox in there, my lord, do you hear them?"
30100The Marchioness had talked to him frequently of Appleslocombe;--but what was the use of that?
30100The Marchioness would have been at any rate altogether satisfied;--but what comfort would there have been in that to him?
30100The Marchioness would not like it?
30100Then came the question-- what was the thing to be done, and what at once meant?
30100Then he added in a little whisper,"You could n''t get Crocker made a duke, could you,--or a Registrar of Records?"
30100Then we came home; and what do you think has happened?
30100Then when she paused he asked again,"May I not be told for whom it is done?
30100Then why not dismiss Crocker, and thus save the waste of public money?
30100Then, what had been the cost of all those pheasants which one shooting cormorant crammed into his huge bag during one day''s greedy sport?
30100There are reasons--""What reasons?"
30100They two were alone in the carriage, and why should his question not be answered now?
30100This lover of yours?"
30100This writing of daily letters,--what good could it do to either of them?
30100Thou hast not answered him, Marion?"
30100Though gone from me, art thou not mine?"
30100Though she were to die, must not the man take his chance with her, as do other husbands in marrying other wives?
30100Though thou hast not spoken the word, has not thy silence assented as fully as words could do?
30100To return to our muttons, as the Frenchman says, what sort of lunch does his lordship eat?"
30100Tribbledale?"
30100Was her heart to him as was his to her?
30100Was it not almost unmanly,--or rather was it not womanly?
30100Was it not certain that he would give rise to misery rather than to happiness by what had occurred between him and Lady Frances?
30100Was it not probable that he had embittered for her all the life of the lady whom he loved?
30100Was it not tantamount to wishing that her husband''s son was-- dead?
30100Was it not too late?
30100Was it nothing to me to see my-- mother die, and her little ones?
30100Was it possible that such a lover as Lord Hampstead should not succeed in his love if he were constant to it himself?
30100Was it probable that a Quaker''s daughter, the daughter of a merchant''s clerk out of the City, should refuse to become a Marchioness?
30100Was it to be expected that her love would have power to conquer such obstacles as these?
30100Was it"tanti?"
30100Was not a month of it more than a whole life without it?
30100Was poetry less valuable than the multiplication table?
30100Was she not equally bound now, already, to acknowledge his superiority,--and if not by him, was it not her manifest duty to be guided by her father?
30100Was there any pretence, any falsehood?"
30100Was there ever a young man who, when he first found a girl to be pleasant to him, has intended to fall in love with her?
30100Was there not cause to him for joy in the young man''s presence?
30100Was this a punishment which he was doomed to bear for being-- as his stepmother was wo nt to say-- untrue to his order?
30100We''ve been talking about that for-- how long shall I say?"
30100Well?"
30100Were not her darlings to be preserved from such contamination?
30100What am I to do if anything should happen?"
30100What am I to say else than that it is in God''s hands?
30100What are our lessons for but to teach us that?
30100What are we to call him?"
30100What business had you to say I used that nasty word?
30100What business has Mr. Greenwood to interfere in my family?
30100What can I do in your case but just reverse the position?"
30100What can I do to prevent it?
30100What can be gained?"
30100What can that mean?
30100What could a Mr. Jerningham say to a man who had torn up official papers on the eve of his marriage?
30100What could be expected of a husband who could tear up a bundle of Her Majesty''s Mail papers?
30100What could be more mean?
30100What could he be to her, or she to him?
30100What could she say to a man who spoke to her after this fashion?
30100What did he want of me?"
30100What did her hand signify?
30100What did you think about it, Hampstead?"
30100What did you think of Marion Fay?"
30100What do you say, Mrs. Roden?
30100What do you think of Llwddythlw as a public man?"
30100What does freely mean?
30100What does it matter though he does talk of Fanny?
30100What doest thou expect?
30100What effort?
30100What else could he do?
30100What else was he to expect?
30100What else was there to expect?
30100What false pretence?
30100What had he or his girl to do with lords?
30100What has he done with his money?
30100What has he done?
30100What has her ladyship got to do with it?"
30100What have you got to say?"
30100What have you heard?"
30100What if he resolved to remain and be starved?
30100What infinitesimal sum had the fox cost the country for every man who rushed after him?
30100What is it about now?"
30100What is it after all,--the few years that we may have to live here?
30100What is it you may not do with me?
30100What is the good of having a young man if you can not show him to your friends?
30100What is the good of thinking of antecedents which are impossible?
30100What is the use of asking''why''when the thing is done?
30100What makes two men like-- or a man and a woman?"
30100What matter that he was a revolutionary Radical if he could ride to hounds?
30100What more should he want?"
30100What must I do with him?"
30100What must she think of him if he allowed that to pass away without any renewal, without an attempt at carrying it further?
30100What news?"
30100What right had such a one as she to receive even an idle word of compliment from a man such as was Lord Hampstead?
30100What right have you to hope so?
30100What should I have thought if I had heard that he had gone without saying a word to me about it?
30100What should a Registrar of State Records to the Foreign Office do in so humble an establishment?
30100What sort of a time did you have down at Castle Hautboy?"
30100What then could I have done?
30100What want I with lords, who for the few days of active life that are left to me would not change my City stool for any seat that any lord can give me?
30100What was he to do with the abominable man?
30100What was he to do?
30100What was it that he saw in me, do you think?"
30100What was it to him how Roden got his bread, so long as he got it honestly?
30100What was it to him who might inherit the title and the property of the Traffords?
30100What was it you said of unequal marriages?
30100What was she to say?
30100What was the good of telling things to Mrs. Duffer, who was only an old widow without any friends, and with very small means of existence?
30100What was the story that you told me of your own?
30100What was there different in a girl''s nature that ought to make her fastidious as to society which he felt to be good enough for himself?
30100What was there for her to regret, for her to whom was given the luxury of such love?
30100What was there missing in him that a girl should require?
30100What was to come of it?
30100What was your own business at Holloway?"
30100What were any other love or any other sadness as compared to his love or to his sadness?
30100What were two hundred a- year as a pension for a gentleman after such a life- long service?
30100What will it matter now, though every one should know it?
30100What will my feelings be, should anything happen to the Marquis, and should I be left to the tender mercies of his eldest son?
30100What woman is there will fail to receive a stranger with hard looks when a stranger shall appear to her instead of an expected lover?
30100What woman is there will not forgive her lover for coming, even though he certainly should not have come?
30100What would Lord Frederic know of his benefactor when he should come to the throne-- as in such case he would do-- as Marquis of Kingsbury?
30100What would Marion say if I were to tell her that I loved her?"
30100What would the world say when it should have become known that he intended to lead Lady Frances to the"hymeneal altar?"
30100What would you say to me if I were to declare that George Roden should be given up?"
30100What''s the good of your coming to me with all that?
30100What, indeed, could he do himself if the man were to appear on the scene, and if his daughter should declare herself willing to go off with him?
30100When does the old crow cease to remind the younger crow that it was so?
30100When she was allowed to go to Hendon Hall, was it not done on a sacred pledge that she should not see that horrid man?
30100When you have told me what a trouble this young man has been to you, have not I always,--always,--always taken your part against him?"
30100Whence had come that peculiar brightness of complexion which would have charmed him had it not frightened him?
30100Where are you going?
30100Where do you think these hounds ran their fox to last Friday?
30100Where is he now?"
30100Where should a Post Office clerk find his friends except among Post Office clerks?
30100Where was he to look for maintenance, but to his own remaining friend?
30100Which day would suit you best, Wednesday, Thursday, or Friday?"
30100Which is so pure, and honest, and loving?
30100Who can doubt that for a certain maximum of good a certain minimum of suffering may be inflicted without slur to humanity?
30100Who can help loving her?"
30100Who can say that it be true till further tidings shall come?
30100Who cares about Mr. Greenwood?
30100Who does not know how odious a letter will become by being shoved on one side day after day?
30100Who does not know the fashion in which the normal young man conducts himself when he is making a morning call?
30100Who does not know the way in which a man may set himself at work to gain admission into a woman''s heart without addressing hardly a word to herself?
30100Who has a right to say that God has determined that she shall die early?"
30100Who hinders you?
30100Who is that young woman opposite who rushed out to me in the street?
30100Who tells you that you may not?
30100Who would have attempted to speak the first word of vain consolation?
30100Who would have broken the news to the father?
30100Why am I to have that man take up arms against me, whom I have fed in idleness all his life?"
30100Why did I ever come here?
30100Why did I know your son?
30100Why did he trouble you especially down in Cumberland?
30100Why did she stand there looking at her, as though desirous to probe to the bottom the sad secret of her bosom?
30100Why did you not ask before you came?"
30100Why do you banish me at once, and tell me that I must go home a wretched, miserable man?
30100Why do you call him my friend?
30100Why do you go from me?
30100Why do you look at me like that, Mrs. Roden?
30100Why do you not tell me?"
30100Why do you say it?
30100Why do you speak of her in this way?"
30100Why do you torment me?
30100Why else should he want to have her there?
30100Why go to such a subject?"
30100Why had he allowed himself to be so cowed on that morning?
30100Why had her beauty shone so brightly in the lord''s presence?
30100Why had she fainted and fallen through his arms?
30100Why not Cumberland, or Westmoreland, or Northumberland, you may say?
30100Why not?--or Yorkshire, or Lincolnshire, or Norfolk?
30100Why odd?"
30100Why should I look for happiness,--unless it be when the struggle of many worlds shall have altogether purified my spirit?
30100Why should I not be able to have you here, except as an enemy in the camp?
30100Why should I not?
30100Why should I trouble myself to know whether this thing would be a gain to me or not, when I am well aware that I can never have the gain?"
30100Why should a Post Office clerk be lower than another?
30100Why should a man be kept in the house simply to produce annoyance?
30100Why should either have been in fault?"
30100Why should he be ashamed to take an Italian title any more than his friend Lord Hampstead is to take an English one?
30100Why should he be hot and shiver with cold by turns?
30100Why should he be troubled with such waking dreams as these?
30100Why should he file his mind for Banquo''s issue?
30100Why should he not be on friendly terms with an excellent and lovely girl without loving her?
30100Why should he trouble himself on such a matter?
30100Why should his daughter not become a happy and a glorious wife, seeing that her beauty and her grace had entirely won this young lord''s heart?
30100Why should his girl lose this grand match?
30100Why should horrid phantoms perplex him in the dark?
30100Why should it be a trouble?
30100Why should it be all over?"
30100Why should it be true?
30100Why should my daughter be expelled from my own house?
30100Why should n''t he have taken his title?"
30100Why should n''t one office be the same as another?"
30100Why should n''t they be my own children?
30100Why should not Mr. Fay make acquaintance with your son''s friend?
30100Why should not the child see something of the world that may amuse her?"
30100Why should she not succeed in bringing things to such a pass as this; and if so, why should life be unhappy either to him or to her?
30100Why should she?
30100Why should the young lord desire such a one as I am to sit at his table?"
30100Why should we mourn?"
30100Why should you take upon yourself to condemn her?"
30100Why then could he not sleep?
30100Why to disgrace?
30100Why was it necessary that they should be taken to the Saxon Alps when the beauties and comforts of Trafford Park were so much nearer and so superior?
30100Why would he not believe me when I spoke to him?
30100Why would he not go when I told him?
30100Why would not the cruel young woman go and leave her to her sorrow?
30100Why?--why?--why?
30100Will it not be better than that I should go alone?"
30100Will the Almighty give me the girl I love if I sit still and hold my peace?
30100Will you say that you will neither come to her at Hendon Hall, or write to her, while she is staying with me?"
30100Wilt thou say that such recreation must necessarily be of service to a girl born to perform the hard duties of a strict life?"
30100Without George he could hardly hope that Mrs. Roden would come to him, and without Mrs. Roden how could he entice the Quaker and his daughter?
30100Wo n''t we, Lord Llwddythlw?"
30100Would I if I could?
30100Would a life like that satisfy your ambition on my behalf?"
30100Would it be honest on his part to ask her to abandon these fine names which Chance was putting in her way?
30100Would it be more than for days, do you think?"
30100Would it make your heart light to see me dressed up for a bridal ceremony, knowing, as you would know, that it was all for nothing?
30100Would it not after all be better to do as others use?
30100Would it not have been better that he should have carried out that project of his?
30100Would n''t it act well?
30100Would she even be grateful when she should tell herself,--as she surely would do,--that the deed had been done by the partner of her confidences?
30100Would the gentleman sit down for a minute or two?
30100Would you do anything Mr. Roden told you?"
30100Would you have her submit to his embrace because she knew him to be honest?"
30100Would you not wish to see how the child bears herself on such an occasion?"
30100Would you practise such self- denial as that you demand from your sister?"
30100Would you wish that I should receive the Post Office clerk here as my son- in- law?"
30100Would you wish to see me again at Trafford?
30100Wouldst thou be more likely to disgrace a husband than one of those painted Jezebels who know no worship but that of their faded beauty?
30100You are sad, and something troubles you?"
30100You could n''t take Crocker with you, could you?"
30100You do n''t know David?"
30100You do n''t know?
30100You do not think that she should--?
30100You got home all of you quite well?"
30100You have heard of that, have you not?"
30100You have heard of the Ducas di Crinola?"
30100You have heard of-- Crocker?"
30100You know D''Ossi?"
30100You know-- do you not?"
30100You remember me, my lord, down in Cumberland?"
30100You shall call it what you like,--or call me what you like; but can you contradict what I say?
30100You will be mine now?"
30100You will let me walk with you as far as your door, Miss Fay?"
30100You will not be angry because I say so?"
30100You will not cease to love me?"
30100You will not turn against me, John?"
30100You would have kept your title no doubt; but_ where_ would_ he_ have been?
30100You would not destroy yourself?"
30100You, too, have a lover, living close to us?"
30100_ What on earth are they to live on?_ I have told her about the young ravens.
30100asked Mrs. Duffer;"and why does he come alone?"
30100said Mrs. Demijohn to her niece;"where did you pick up Crocker?"