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 |
---|---|
34483 | Are they all dead, have none been spared? |
34483 | But how shall I be able to live all alone by myself on the island? |
34483 | I suppose it must be; and do n''t you know me? |
34483 | Is that you, Gurton? |
34483 | What is your name, then? |
34483 | What should I have done without this? |
34483 | But then when they were gone, how should he live? |
34483 | But where have you been all the time?" |
34483 | Have you a companion with you?" |
34483 | If any one asks you questions on deck, that is what you must say to them-- you understand me?" |
34483 | If his friend Hadow had fallen in the strife, what would be his fate when the rest of the crew discovered him? |
34483 | What is your name?" |
34483 | What, is n''t there a young lad somewhere about the island?" |
34483 | are you Englishmen?" |
34483 | have you got that book still, Mr Gurton?" |
61803 | And what,asked he,"do you intend to do with us, now you have secured us?" |
61803 | Do with you? 61803 What is it?" |
61803 | Why so? |
61803 | But, Uncle Thomas, what became of the mutineers? |
61803 | Could not the Royal George be got up again, Uncle Thomas? |
61803 | Did the other three arrive in safety, Uncle Thomas? |
61803 | Did the parties in the boats reach land safely? |
61803 | Do such misfortunes ever take place, Uncle Thomas? |
61803 | Do you think they were again shipwrecked, Uncle Thomas? |
61803 | How shall we convey an idea of it which will not fall far short of the reality?" |
61803 | The rest of the crew, who were carried to the Mauritius, did they get home in safety also, Uncle Thomas? |
61803 | Then we will have no rum on board of our ship, when we are men, will we, John? |
61803 | Was rum the cause of this sad disaster, Uncle Thomas? |
61803 | Was the vessel completely destroyed, Uncle Thomas? |
61803 | Were those that remained on board the Kent all lost, Uncle Thomas? |
61803 | Where did they come from, Uncle Thomas? |
61803 | Will you have the goodness to tell us about it? |
37732 | Are all my days to be spent,I ejaculated,"in hopes that delight me only to make me more miserable?" |
37732 | But what right have I, a poor, short- sighted mortal,I then exclaimed,"to seek for the motives that actuate an all- wise Deity? |
37732 | Has God,I involuntarily exclaimed,"made all his creatures that they may devour each other? |
37732 | How so? |
37732 | If not,said I,"why tolerate them, and why not apply to the Great and Good Spirits themselves for help?" |
37732 | What good,he asked,"could arise from allowing one to take all, and giving nothing to the other?" |
37732 | You lost her, then, did you? |
37732 | Do you, then, really believe that these pretenders to superior knowledge are esteemed, or that any in the place have faith in their arts?" |
37732 | How were the sparks to be collected? |
37732 | Might they not be savages, and take my life? |
37732 | Notwithstanding, he asked me whether I had not food enough to eat, and what it was the Evil Spirit had made me do that troubled me so much? |
37732 | Or might they not lead me into captivity, and make a slave of me? |
37732 | Pecoe heard me out with great patience, then shook his head, and enquired how it came that my father should know better than his? |
37732 | The owl opened and then shut his eyes, as if at first unconscious of the meaning of the attack, and asking,"Can it be me you mean?" |
37732 | They are winging their way to the business of the day, and why should I neglect mine? |
37732 | What divides their fate? |
37732 | When I informed the officer that I had been lost when a boy, he replied--"Then you are now found; but have you a knowledge of this river?" |
37732 | Who hath not found, be his errors what they might, that there was one gentle spirit to turn to, ever ready to pardon, protect, and solace? |
37732 | Who of us has not felt the depth and purity of a mother''s love? |
37732 | Who-- who are you?" |
37732 | meaning to ask, ironically, if we took the birds for soldiers? |
37732 | these between, How thin the barrier? |
32833 | Did they believe the doctor? |
32833 | Do you read me? 32833 Oh, you awake, Miss Kitty?" |
32833 | See anything wrong, Miss Kitty? |
32833 | What children, Miss Kitty? |
32833 | What could you have done about it, if we had told you, Miss Kitty? |
32833 | What is it you must tell me? |
32833 | You wanna know something else? 32833 ... frustration? 32833 ... relief? 32833 ..._ fear?_ Fear! 32833 And what about New Earth? 32833 And where was the other man? 32833 And who had a better right? 32833 But Sam and Lt. Harper? 32833 But what reason, in heaven''s name, would they have for staying here? 32833 But you wanna know something? 32833 Did her tiara slip while she snored? 32833 Did she sleep with her mouth open? 32833 Even now, was one of them standing above the other, holding a dripping knife? 32833 Had he hurt himself with the axe, gashed his leg or something? 32833 Had he lost his mind? 32833 How would they keep warm through the long winter months this year, and in the years to come? 32833 If that one particular mansion needed someone to make it into a home, why not herself? 32833 In there? 32833 Instead of their fists and crushing arms, were they stalking one another with knives? 32833 Lt. Harper''s voice shouting at her with a roar like a waterfall,My God, Miss Kitty, are you sick?" |
32833 | Or was it her maiden aunt who had dominated her widowed mother and herself through all the years she was growing up? |
32833 | She would not give way to... rage? |
32833 | Sons and daughters from both...."How are we going to tell her now?" |
32833 | Was he quietly drinking up the wine-- first? |
32833 | Was n''t that what her roommate at college had once said? |
32833 | Was she too late? |
32833 | Were they going off into the darkness to settle a conflict which they had not been able to resolve through sensible agreement? |
32833 | Were they going to gamble for her? |
32833 | What did it matter who said it? |
32833 | What horrors might she run into, even precipitate, if she threw open the door? |
32833 | What is it I must be told?" |
32833 | What were they doing in there? |
32833 | Which had remained behind? |
32833 | Which one? |
32833 | Why had he made no sound in the outer room? |
32833 | Would the processions of colonists going there spoil it? |
32833 | Would the women going there see in it a great mansion? |
32833 | You ready to see them soon?" |
32833 | You want my advice? |
32833 | [ Illustration]"What is it you must tell me?" |
32833 | _ Is this Earth?_"She saw his face. |
32833 | _ Why?_ She realized then she had intuitively known from the first that they would never get back to Old Earth. |
21742 | And are''ee goin''to do it? |
21742 | And pray who are_ you_, that comes here to lecture us about our lingo? |
21742 | Are_ you_ a Christian man, Jowin? |
21742 | But why so much ado about a piece of tobacco? |
21742 | But you''re not looking at it,objected Jarwin,"you''re looking straight up in my face; so how can you tell what it''s like, doggie?" |
21742 | Cuffy,said Jarwin, panting, as he reached the summit of his island, and sat down on its pinnacle rock,"that''s a splendid view, ai n''t it?" |
21742 | How long ago was that? |
21742 | I think you are one of the strangers who have just arrived, are you not? |
21742 | It''s easy to hear and see that,replied Jarwin,"but wot is it all about?" |
21742 | Jowin,he exclaimed at length,"you Christian Breetish tar, have your dibbil got into you?" |
21742 | Lost your appetite this morning, Cuff? |
21742 | Not saved yet? |
21742 | Of a_ Christian_? |
21742 | The promise of a Breetish tar? |
21742 | Well, Cuffy,said Jarwin at last, rousing himself with a sigh,"wot are''ee thinking of?" |
21742 | Well, have you been successful? |
21742 | What did you tell me, then? |
21742 | What say''ee, old man? |
21742 | What ship did you sail in, what has come of her, and how came you to be cast adrift? |
21742 | Where do you belong to? |
21742 | Why not, old feller? |
21742 | Why, where ever have''ee got yourself into? |
21742 | Wot have we here, Cuffy? |
21742 | Wot is it to be about? |
21742 | Wot_ is_ gammon? |
21742 | You do n''t mean_ that_, old man? |
21742 | You go home? |
21742 | You''s bedder? |
21742 | Are''ee sure, Bill, that Jarwin has n''t gone overboard along with his dog?" |
21742 | At length he said abruptly--"What''s your name?" |
21742 | Bound for England, did''ee say-- the ship?" |
21742 | But wot about this here palaver you spoke of? |
21742 | Cuffy-- what''s that? |
21742 | Do n''t you see the land, you idiots? |
21742 | Have''ee seed it, Cuff, since I found''ee there? |
21742 | Hey, old dog, wot say_ you_?" |
21742 | How d''ee s''pose that_ I_ can tell''ee wot to do? |
21742 | Is it a song you wants, or a hymn? |
21742 | It''s true that we might burn a canoe out of a solid tree, but who''s to cut down the solid tree for us, doggie? |
21742 | May I not be allowed to palaver a bit with''em? |
21742 | Not a sail, eh?" |
21742 | Now, wot does all this here come to?" |
21742 | Now, you''s hall right?" |
21742 | Queery-- wots the meanin''of it?" |
21742 | Stuff and nonsense? |
21742 | That''s not a wery agreeable notion, is it, eh?" |
21742 | W''y are they asses? |
21742 | W''y, wot would come of it? |
21742 | Well, then, as we ca n''t swim or fly, and have n''t a boat or canoe, or the means o''makin''em, what''s the next thing to be done?" |
21742 | What say you?" |
21742 | What think''ee o''that, my doggie?" |
21742 | What''s this? |
21742 | Who shall presume to describe the feelings of that shipwrecked sailor as he and his dog drank from the same cup at that sparkling crystal fountain? |
21742 | Why on earth ca n''t''ee keep it still for a bit? |
21742 | Wot more? |
21742 | Wot next? |
21742 | Wot then? |
21742 | Wot you mean by airnest?" |
21742 | Wot''ll you''ave? |
21742 | Wot''s up, old feller?" |
21742 | Wot, John Jarwin, you''re not goin''to give in like that, are you? |
21742 | You''re a trader, I suppose?" |
21742 | _ Cuff_, is that you, my doggie?" |
21742 | ` Ben Bolt,''` Black- eyed Susan,''` The Jolly Young Waterman,''` Jim Crow,''` There is a Happy Land,''or the` Old Hundred,''eh? |
21742 | ` How does I know that?'' |
21742 | exclaimed Jarwin in surprise,"_ what_ doctor?" |
21742 | old feller, you ai n''t bin took bad, have''ee?" |
21742 | to haul down your colours on a fine day with a clear sky like this overhead? |
21742 | wot''s this-- plums? |
21742 | wot''s up?" |
46128 | As I have said so often in this narrative before, what in the world could one want in excess of all this but companionship? |
46128 | As the dusk came on I began to think, What is the next most important thing for me to do? |
46128 | But how was I safely to pass over a thousand miles of water? |
46128 | But if they had been placed upon the island thus, why was it not reported, why was it not known? |
46128 | But it immediately set me thinking, How could there be goats on this island? |
46128 | But what was the use of my regaining it? |
46128 | Could anything be more miserable than our condition? |
46128 | Could it be done? |
46128 | Could it be possible? |
46128 | Did ever man drive such a car and team before? |
46128 | Do you accept? |
46128 | Do you ask what I was looking for? |
46128 | Good God, and had your retribution met them then so suddenly? |
46128 | Had I been saved to become their prey? |
46128 | Had this unfortunate been cast on shore alone as I was? |
46128 | Have I not a book of all the practical sciences to aid me in forcing Nature to give up her secrets? |
46128 | Having gathered all these riches about me, was I happier than before? |
46128 | How did he come here? |
46128 | How long did he live here? |
46128 | How many years must I stagnate on this island? |
46128 | How much character did this parchment, on the face of it, proclaim? |
46128 | How should I do it? |
46128 | I could not help thinking that if I could find iron, I could do almost anything, and why should I not be able to find it? |
46128 | I felt sure that I was right in theory; would the thing work in practice? |
46128 | I felt that the problem of all problems hereafter to me would be how can I escape to some civilized country in safety? |
46128 | I_ must_ find steel, flint, and tinder, but where? |
46128 | In what direction should we steer? |
46128 | It was first a question with them whether I could subscribe any money to the project, and secondly, what position I desired in the adventure? |
46128 | Shall I ever forget the ending of that pleasant day? |
46128 | Should I ever know how long? |
46128 | Should I find land before me? |
46128 | Should I lower the outlet of the lake so as to draw off the water in a degree? |
46128 | Such being the facts of the case, what should be my future course, and what my plans and duty? |
46128 | These tasks nearly finished the year for me, within a month and a few days, and what had I accomplished? |
46128 | This set me to thinking again, Was this nature or man? |
46128 | This was, I felt, the case, and would any be saved to be my companions on this desolate island? |
46128 | To expiate some horrible crime? |
46128 | Was it the preparatory discovery to many others, or lone and solitary? |
46128 | Was the island inhabited by savages? |
46128 | Was there land behind me? |
46128 | Was this hut all, or was it one of a series? |
46128 | What could I not do with that metal to aid me? |
46128 | What good to me was all my wealth unless I could utilize it? |
46128 | What had been this mortal''s life that he should here set down that he had gained a treasure through bloodshed? |
46128 | What should I do? |
46128 | What''s the use of our cutting each other''s throats when we have some ten or fifteen millions to spend? |
46128 | Where was I? |
46128 | Where were my companions in the boat? |
46128 | Who was to steer when I was asleep? |
46128 | Who will give you as much liberty and money as I will? |
46128 | Why did he die? |
46128 | Why had he remained in this solitary spot? |
46128 | Why should I not be able to improve my condition far beyond that which my predecessor in history had been able to do? |
46128 | Why was I punished in this manner? |
46128 | Why, who have you on your side that can navigate a vessel? |
46128 | Would this be my fate? |
46128 | Would this eventually be my fate, and should I some day have to lie down and die, too, with no one to inter my bones? |
46128 | and then supposing I should be able to arrive at Easter Island, what guarantee had I that I should not be murdered at once by the natives? |
46128 | did I hear the break of water upon land before me? |
46128 | how? |
46128 | or should I let go my last hold upon life when I unclasped my hands from the rock- weed that they held to? |
46128 | what had God still in store for us in the shape of misfortune and horror? |
46128 | what had I done that I should be imprisoned in this solitude? |
46128 | what was to be our fate? |
46128 | what was treasure to me that was at the bottom of the sea? |
23117 | A tree covered with_ what_? |
23117 | After all,said Max,"why need we take such a dismal view of the matter? |
23117 | And meantime,said Morton,"are we to give up all attempt to find Arthur and the rest?" |
23117 | And suppose it to be so? 23117 And the savages-- what has become of them?" |
23117 | And will that settle the difficulty between these hostile parties? |
23117 | And you said that meant Little Captive,pursued Johnny with great animation,"and the` Lai''means` little,''I suppose?" |
23117 | Are you alone? |
23117 | Are you quite sure, Johnny, that you heard any words at all;--any thing more than a strange noise of some kind? |
23117 | Atollo? |
23117 | But how is this? 23117 But suppose,"said Arthur,"that I wanted Rokoa to figure in a future story, and so could n''t afford to kill him just yet?" |
23117 | But there''s the difficulty; how can you ascertain even whether we are to the east, or to the west of them? |
23117 | But what are we to do? 23117 But why has Shakespeare such a long face?" |
23117 | Ca n''t you muster a few words of their heathen talk, Archer? |
23117 | Comrades, can we do nothing more? |
23117 | Did you ever know, or hear of such a thing,inquired Johnny, after a pause,"as a company of boys, like us, starving at sea?" |
23117 | Do you mean to say that we were but five days at sea before reaching the island? |
23117 | Do you remember,said he, when he had finished,"hearing Eiulo, in talking of affairs at Tewa, make mention of a person named Atollo?" |
23117 | Do you see where the parrot is now? |
23117 | Do you suppose that I would try to deceive you, Johnny,said Arthur,"that you ask me so earnestly to tell you truly?" |
23117 | Does any one know what day it really is? |
23117 | How can that be? |
23117 | How long do you suppose we can continue that? |
23117 | Is he a tall, large- framed man, but gaunt and spare as a half- starved hound? |
23117 | Is that all? |
23117 | Is that to be our answer? |
23117 | Is there any certainty,said Browne,"that we can find it? |
23117 | It us out of the question,said Browne;"see, is there any hope that we can succeed?" |
23117 | Now my co- mates, and brothers in exile, Hath not long custom made this life more sweet Than that of painted pomp? 23117 Only two or three words,"pursued Arthur,"would you know them again if you should hear them repeated?" |
23117 | Shall we let them take the ship and murder our friends, without an effort to warn them of their danger? 23117 This really begins to look serious,"said I;"what are we to do?" |
23117 | Travellers ne''er did lie, Though fools at home condemn them: If in Naples, I should report this now, would they believe me? |
23117 | Well, how do you feel? |
23117 | Well, was you right in your conjecture? |
23117 | What can we do, then? |
23117 | What do you think of this, Johnny? |
23117 | What is that? |
23117 | What is this Atollo like? |
23117 | What is this? |
23117 | What was the sound which you speak of, as resembling this? |
23117 | What''s all this? |
23117 | What_ can_ that be? |
23117 | Where''er thou wanderest, canst thou hope to go Where skies are brighter, or the earth more fair? 23117 Why do they call so lovely a spot as this a desert island, I wonder?" |
23117 | Yes,answered Max, gravely,"who knows but there are cannibals here? |
23117 | ` How much longer are we to endure this?'' 23117 ` Is it possible,''said Barton,` that he intends to desert us?'' |
23117 | And do n''t we deserve a vote of thanks for our early labours for the general good?" |
23117 | And how could we hope to escape a pursuit so determined and persevering as Arthur anticipated? |
23117 | Are not these woods More free from peril than the envious court? |
23117 | Art thou afeard, master? |
23117 | But what_ can_ have become of Arthur and the rest? |
23117 | Can we hope to turn the scale of this unequal strife? |
23117 | Could we ever forgive ourselves if Arthur should be carried off through our having omitted a precaution calculated to prevent it?" |
23117 | Do we even know positively where, or in what direction from this place it is; and shall we not incur the risk of getting lost again at sea?" |
23117 | Do you think we are all heathens, except Arthur? |
23117 | Dost thou not love these aye- blue streams that flow, These spicy forests, and this golden air? |
23117 | For the present, I am in state of mind to believe in phoenixes and unicorns-- and why not in oyster- trees? |
23117 | He promises to leave us unmolested if we comply, and threatens us with death if we refuse: you see it concerns us all-- what do you say?" |
23117 | How is it with you, Eiulo-- do you feel able to travel fast?" |
23117 | If the history of our adventures should ever be written,( and why should n''t it be?) |
23117 | Is not God, our Father in heaven? |
23117 | Is this the hill? |
23117 | Max was the first to break silence;"And now, what''s to be done?" |
23117 | OUT OF SIGHT OF LAND-- SLENDER RESOURCES-- WHAT''S TO BE DONE? |
23117 | Only a few hours ago, the sea supplied us with food, and the clouds with drink: why may we not hope for future supplies according to our need? |
23117 | Question: Is childhood the happiest period of human life? |
23117 | Shall I not use those means?" |
23117 | Suppose that they merely aim at Eiulo''s life, without wishing to molest us?" |
23117 | What do you know about Eiulo''s father, or his islands, or where they are?" |
23117 | What should we do_ now_, if we had not made timely preparation?" |
23117 | Whither could we flee for safety? |
23117 | Who knows but we have happened upon a second Prospero''s isle? |
23117 | Why should we distrust our destiny, or shrink from our mission? |
23117 | Would you like to live here, Johnny, like Robinson Crusoe, or the Swiss family?" |
23117 | ` Must we stand here and suffer ourselves to be murdered by these cowardly attacks? |
23117 | cried Arthur, coming forward with a puzzled air,"what is Max making a speech about? |
23117 | cried Max,"what has put all that into your head? |
23117 | do you understand conchology?" |
23117 | exclaimed Browne,"and what could be the motive for so atrocious a crime?" |
23117 | exclaimed Browne,"can you think of nothing but gormandising? |
23117 | exclaimed Browne,"pray, how do you propose to do that without instruments?" |
23117 | exclaimed he,"does he expect to subdue us by his looks,--that he comes on in this fashion?" |
23117 | has he taken the stump as a candidate for the presidency of the island?" |
23117 | interposed Browne, warmly,"what cold- blooded doctrine is this?" |
23117 | is it not fortunate that we have a roof over our heads? |
23117 | is this indeed The light- house top I see? |
23117 | is this the kirk?-- Is this mine own countree? |
23117 | said Browne, interrupting the narration,"what noise is that? |
23117 | said Browne,"but could n''t you at the same time manage to save a drowning washerwoman? |
23117 | said Morton,"will there not be a general fight after all, whichever leader is victor?" |
23117 | that you heard?" |
23117 | what sound is that? |
23117 | where are you? |
23117 | where''s Frazer? |
23117 | whispered he;"is it not a boat?" |
50713 | A friend? 50713 A radio, flares, mirrors?" |
50713 | And now that you say it, do you know what that current is? 50713 Are there animals here without eye or light?" |
50713 | But surely there must be some way of calling their attention even sooner? |
50713 | But what happened when Von Borck returned here to get his space suit? |
50713 | But why did n''t you just stay here instead of going out? |
50713 | Can we send a message back to Earth then? |
50713 | Could you lead me there? |
50713 | Did you ever see one of those blasts? |
50713 | Did you get hit? |
50713 | Did you understand him? |
50713 | Do n''t you know,said the other,"this is that big top- secret experimental job they were working so fast on this week? |
50713 | Do you have a rocket on the surface? |
50713 | Do you have flares? |
50713 | Do you suppose Von Borck is following us? |
50713 | Have I been out long? |
50713 | Have you ever fired a rifle or a pistol, Robin? |
50713 | Here? 50713 How did you ever find this passage?" |
50713 | How did you spot that break in the wall we came through? |
50713 | How far do you think it will go? |
50713 | How far is White Sands from Las Cruces? |
50713 | Is there anything there we could use to signal the Earth with? |
50713 | No rocket? 50713 No visitors?" |
50713 | Only how do we get to the surface? 50713 Shall I untie this or shall we jump together?" |
50713 | Shall we wait for him to come back or shall we try to follow him? |
50713 | Suppose the Glassies see the light? |
50713 | The instruments in place? |
50713 | There are many bubble- places without light? |
50713 | This is the one they''re firing off tomorrow, is n''t it? |
50713 | Uh huh,said Robin,"and then how do we get back down here again?" |
50713 | Uh uh, so they say, but you notice where they moved our outfit, did n''t you? 50713 Well,"he asked Peter,"what do we do now?" |
50713 | What am I waiting for? |
50713 | What do we do now? |
50713 | What happened? |
50713 | What is it? |
50713 | What is it? |
50713 | What now? |
50713 | What now? |
50713 | What station? |
50713 | What''s the source of the electricity? |
50713 | What''s the trouble, fellow? |
50713 | What? |
50713 | Where did you get your name? 50713 Where''d he go?" |
50713 | Who are you? |
50713 | Who was in charge of them? |
50713 | Wo n''t they kill you if you go back? |
50713 | Yes, we''re lucky to be alive, but how will we ever get back to the surface now? 50713 Yes,"said Peter,"but how?" |
50713 | Actually what could they do to him? |
50713 | Again, escape though he might, could he save Korree too? |
50713 | All set?" |
50713 | And I wonder what metal this is? |
50713 | And how do you spell your last name?" |
50713 | And how was it he was a prisoner? |
50713 | And what are they doing there?" |
50713 | Are you hit?" |
50713 | But could he risk it? |
50713 | But escape to what? |
50713 | But how to combine atomic explosions with controlled rocket fire? |
50713 | But maybe you know more about our family?" |
50713 | But now-- were these unknowns dangerous to him? |
50713 | But what about water? |
50713 | But what time was it now? |
50713 | But where did he come from? |
50713 | But who knows?" |
50713 | Could he survive? |
50713 | Could it be that he was already in outer space, heading for the void, never to return to Earth? |
50713 | Could it be that the inventors had miscalculated? |
50713 | Did you say they were firing it at six?" |
50713 | Do you think you could get back to your rocket on the surface?" |
50713 | Feel like some hot food? |
50713 | Finally he reached out and tapped the Glassie and whispered,"What are those lights?" |
50713 | Had he suddenly become weak? |
50713 | Had they seen his flashlight? |
50713 | Had they taken the wrong turn and come to a dead end? |
50713 | He thought he was falling, but was it not just as likely that instead he was simply beyond gravity? |
50713 | He was the first-- but who would ever know? |
50713 | How about you? |
50713 | How could he tell how long he had been asleep, how long unconscious? |
50713 | How did he get here? |
50713 | How did you say you got here?" |
50713 | How do we know Von went down here? |
50713 | How far? |
50713 | How fast was he traveling? |
50713 | How had his companion vanished? |
50713 | How long had he been at this? |
50713 | How long had he slept? |
50713 | How was it the air was remaining fresh now, though it had gone stale while he was hiding? |
50713 | How would you blow it up in the first place? |
50713 | I wonder how cold it will get in this place?" |
50713 | I wonder if this is really writing or just a design? |
50713 | If he delayed, doled it to himself in small bits, it could only prolong the agony awhile, but would not the result still be the same? |
50713 | If there were air, was it enough to sustain him? |
50713 | In this tunnel?" |
50713 | Is food here?" |
50713 | Is there someone here who speaks English?" |
50713 | Is this stuff good to eat?" |
50713 | Korree said quietly,"Another prisoner or a listener?" |
50713 | Maybe they hire civilian workers? |
50713 | Might it not be poisonous or utterly lacking in oxygen? |
50713 | On the back it read:_ Ready for loading._"I better put this back where it fell from,"he said, adding,"but which side is correct? |
50713 | One of your people? |
50713 | Or-- maybe if you enlist there they''ll let you serve there? |
50713 | Perhaps Korree was in trouble there? |
50713 | Real Earth food?" |
50713 | Robin suddenly asked,"How did you learn to speak English so well?" |
50713 | Robin was on his way to the rockets, to the famous White Sands Proving Grounds... or was he? |
50713 | Save it for what? |
50713 | Shall we set them off?" |
50713 | Should he eat it now or save it? |
50713 | Should we plant the Red flag there, or you the Stars and Stripes? |
50713 | So... what would really happen when his rocket hit the Moon? |
50713 | Such a chunk brought back to Earth might be worth an emperor''s ransom-- but who could think of such values here? |
50713 | Suppose they caught him there, would he get off as lightly as he might at White Sands? |
50713 | Surely they must have been supplied with some sort of food for their flight? |
50713 | The question was, where could he escape to? |
50713 | The unseen speaker spoke again:"Who is that? |
50713 | Trackers on the job?" |
50713 | Was it a few feet or a fraction of an inch? |
50713 | Was it a rocket? |
50713 | Was it after all but a daydream that he was pursuing? |
50713 | Was it mist he was passing through? |
50713 | Was not this then such a crossroads? |
50713 | Was the cold reality to prove too indifferent to the hopes of just an ordinary young fellow? |
50713 | Was there air outside, wherever it was that he found himself? |
50713 | Was this a mistake he would regret? |
50713 | Water-- under the Moon? |
50713 | Were they coming to investigate? |
50713 | What could he do? |
50713 | What did they have of yours?" |
50713 | What do you say, shall we spend this next week playing Columbus, looking for more bubble worlds to conquer?" |
50713 | What even if he went to jail? |
50713 | What had brought him in? |
50713 | What next? |
50713 | What then if he spent some bad hours under arrest? |
50713 | What was going on here? |
50713 | What was the Red Sands Station anyway? |
50713 | What was the secret? |
50713 | What was this? |
50713 | When Robin had finished, he asked,"Now I want to know about you? |
50713 | When this pack was used up, how could he make fire? |
50713 | Where are you?" |
50713 | Where was Red Sands? |
50713 | Which way did you come?" |
50713 | White Sands or Red? |
50713 | White Sands or Red?_ From Missouri where the bus ride had ended, the time had passed with difficulty. |
50713 | Why had he never heard of it? |
50713 | Why not sign up and try for it?" |
50713 | Why were they standing, he thought, why did n''t they go on in, punch their cards? |
50713 | Would White Sands prove a disappointment? |
50713 | _ Red_ Sands? |
23071 | Am I to take this message, then? |
23071 | And did he really perform all the gallant acts you describe? |
23071 | And how is Janet this evening? |
23071 | And thee wouldst trust the chaps, would thee? |
23071 | Are we approaching the hall yet? |
23071 | Are we two, then, the only survivors from the_ Marie_? |
23071 | Are you aware, Lord Reginald Oswald, that you are infringing the rules of the service? 23071 But how did the_ Wolf_ and her prize manage to escape from the enemy?" |
23071 | But suppose they fire into us? |
23071 | But what if the toady be sent with us? 23071 But where do you intend going?" |
23071 | But you have a good many prisoners below; I suppose they could be trusted to help us? |
23071 | Can he be dead? |
23071 | Can she have gone on shore at the other end of the island? |
23071 | Can you see the chase? |
23071 | Could not we begin on that? 23071 Did he, indeed?" |
23071 | Did you call, Voules? |
23071 | Did you give him my message properly? |
23071 | Did you lose many men? |
23071 | Do you dare to answer me? |
23071 | Do you dare to cast reflections on the honour of Irishmen? |
23071 | Do you know to whom you are speaking, my man? |
23071 | Do you suppose that the dog would have got those birds by himself? |
23071 | Does your lordship recollect that we are in the region of hurricanes? |
23071 | Give in? 23071 Hargrave, my dear fellow,"said Lord Reginald, in a comparatively strong tone of voice,"can you really forgive me?" |
23071 | Has he deserted me for the sake of that scoundrel? 23071 Have you no clue to his hiding- place?" |
23071 | Have you nothing more to say? |
23071 | Have you really come back? 23071 Have you taken my advice, and made up your mind for a trip on board the_ Nancy_?" |
23071 | How dare you speak to me in that fashion? |
23071 | How dare you speak to me in that way? |
23071 | How do you like serving his Majesty afloat? 23071 How have you managed to catch this bird?" |
23071 | How soon do you think we shall come up with that craft? |
23071 | How soon shall we get back to England? |
23071 | How''s that? |
23071 | I lash the bowsprit to the rigging? 23071 I mind once offering your good mother a few yards of stuff to make her a Sunday gown, and, would you believe it? |
23071 | I say, Ben, how do the Frenchmen treat us if we go on shore, seeing that we and they are fighting each other? |
23071 | I say, Ben, what''s become of the chase? |
23071 | I say, Oswald, what''s happened to your arm? |
23071 | I thought I ordered you to take that dog to Farmer Hargrave? |
23071 | If I play my cards well, who knows what may happen? 23071 Is it my fate alone to have escaped among all the stout fellows who manned the ship?" |
23071 | Is that what you left me for? |
23071 | Is there a chance, then, of our having a battle? |
23071 | May n''t any one else pity you? |
23071 | Shall we be in to- morrow morning? |
23071 | Shall we shorten sail, too, sir? |
23071 | Still, you do not deny that you deserted, and had no intention of returning? |
23071 | Suppose she is French, shall you attack her? |
23071 | Then is there no chance of saving our lives if we strike? |
23071 | Then it will not prevent him from joining his ship? |
23071 | Then you dare to say that you doubt my word, Farmer Hargrave? |
23071 | Then, mates, you''d rather be slaves than free men? |
23071 | True, he abused his power on board the_ Marie_; but how have I behaved since we were thrown together on this island? |
23071 | Voules, did you see him? |
23071 | We have n''t got the chance yet,answered Dick;"if I get off where should I go? |
23071 | Well, mates, who''s for the shore? |
23071 | What about the boat you propose building? |
23071 | What ails you, lad? |
23071 | What are you about there, you lubberly hound? |
23071 | What brings her back? |
23071 | What business have you here, youngster? |
23071 | What can that be? |
23071 | What chance have we of escaping her? |
23071 | What craft is that? |
23071 | What do you see? |
23071 | What else did you find in the chest? |
23071 | What has happened, Dick? |
23071 | What has happened? 23071 What has kept you so late, Dick?" |
23071 | What hast thou got there, Dick? |
23071 | What have you got there? |
23071 | What have you got to say, Mr Gooch? |
23071 | What is it, my lord? |
23071 | What is she, Mr Mason? |
23071 | What makes you stand idling there, boy? |
23071 | What right have you to stop us in this way? |
23071 | What villain has dared to hurt you, my poor Faithful? |
23071 | What would I now give for a few weeks, or even days, to redeem the past? 23071 What''s that you are saying about me?" |
23071 | What''s that you say, you young ruffian? |
23071 | What''s your name, my lad? |
23071 | What, my good dog, have you been unsuccessful in your hunting? |
23071 | What, then, do you think will happen? |
23071 | Where can the animal have gone to? |
23071 | Where do you come from? |
23071 | Where have you come from, Nep? |
23071 | Where is your shipmate Ben? |
23071 | Where was the cargo run? |
23071 | Who are those persons? |
23071 | Who are you? 23071 Who''s that?" |
23071 | Who''s there? |
23071 | Whose account is to be relied on? |
23071 | Why do n''t we try and knock away some of her spars? |
23071 | Why should that young lord persecute me? 23071 Will she fight?" |
23071 | Will she get away? |
23071 | Will you, young masters? |
23071 | Wo n''t you let me go and see my friends first, or let me send them a message to say where I am gone? |
23071 | You acted well, then, on both occasions? |
23071 | You do n''t suppose that any common misfortune would bring me down to your level? |
23071 | You know that desertion is always punished by flogging? |
23071 | You will have to scoop out the whole centre part; what can be the use of polishing it down in that fashion? |
23071 | A pleasant sort of a life, is n''t it?" |
23071 | Again, I ask, can you forgive me?" |
23071 | Are you hurt?" |
23071 | But, I say, do you think we can finish the boat in time to get off and catch some fish this evening? |
23071 | Can you walk, my friend?" |
23071 | Did n''t you die, and did n''t I bury you? |
23071 | Did you manage to get home and see my old woman, and give her the money? |
23071 | Do n''t you see the enemy have given in?" |
23071 | Do you feel much pain?" |
23071 | Do you really mean to say that you could build a boat?" |
23071 | Few on board failed to ask themselves,"Shall we see another sunset?" |
23071 | Have you any news?" |
23071 | Have you heard how she is?" |
23071 | Have you really been watching over me all this time?" |
23071 | Have you thought about the matter?" |
23071 | He was standing inhaling it with much satisfaction, when he heard Lord Reginald''s voice exclaiming--"What has happened? |
23071 | How did that happen?" |
23071 | I am capable of doing that, at all events, and now let me taste one of those canes? |
23071 | I suppose they wo n''t shut us up in the Bastile, or treat us as Napoleon did Captain Wright?" |
23071 | In what direction shall we sail?" |
23071 | Is that you, Hargrave?" |
23071 | Many of them accepted the offer to go on board a man- of- war; and where are they now? |
23071 | May I venture to ask you to assist me?" |
23071 | Or could it be a spirit? |
23071 | The next morning Lord Reginald opened his eyes and exclaimed in a dreamy tone,"Where am I? |
23071 | They live not many doors off, down the lane; wo n''t you just let me go down and kiss the children? |
23071 | Touching his hat, he said--"Wo n''t you order the hands to shorten sail, sir? |
23071 | Was it possible that he was still alive? |
23071 | What are you going to do with me?" |
23071 | What business had he to be trying to seize a smuggler?" |
23071 | What can I do for you? |
23071 | What do you propose we should do, Hargrave?" |
23071 | What do you say, Dick; will you come?" |
23071 | What has happened?" |
23071 | What if she should prove to be the_ Wolf_?" |
23071 | What is there, to prevent him? |
23071 | What was his surprise to find that his dog had gone? |
23071 | Where can he be going?" |
23071 | While thus employed he heard a voice close to him say--"Shall I help you?" |
23071 | Who are to form the prize crew?" |
23071 | Will you accept my services, and let me work under your orders?" |
23071 | Yet, what may be mine?" |
23071 | You are a sea lawyer, are you?" |
23071 | an''who''s speakin''disrespectfully of him?" |
23071 | and what are you about?" |
23071 | are you an Englishman?" |
23071 | do n''t you hear us? |
23071 | do you call it?" |
23071 | does he call us?" |
23071 | exclaimed Lord Reginald to Dick and his companions;"did n''t you hear the captain''s orders to desist from fighting? |
23071 | is that you? |
23071 | or did they catch you afore, and take it from you?" |
23071 | what is the matter? |
23071 | who are you? |
7124 | ''Hark''ee, boy, can you swim?'' 7124 ''Might we not make a large bag of cocoa- nut cloth, into which I could shove my head, and tie it tight round my neck?'' |
7124 | ''Why,''said I,''have you strangled your father''s wives before he is dead?'' 7124 Allow it? |
7124 | An''where have you been used to friendly conversation? |
7124 | And if they should,said the teacher,"the Lord is on our side; of whom shall we be afraid?" |
7124 | And pray,asked Peterkin,"what sort of''stuff''does the ripe nut contain?" |
7124 | And suppose I were to write the account in a letter instead of telling you in words, would that be less useful? |
7124 | And what is it that my friends wish to say to me? |
7124 | And what of Avatea? |
7124 | And what will you do,said he,"if it comes on to blow a storm?" |
7124 | And what''ll be the result of that? |
7124 | And what''s a banyan tree? |
7124 | And what,continued the captain,"makes you think that this schooner is a pirate?" |
7124 | And you''re not afraid to trust yourself out on the deep sea so far? |
7124 | Are they lost? |
7124 | Are they, then, so numerous? |
7124 | Are ye sure, lad, ye saw them in the Bible? |
7124 | Are you better now? |
7124 | Ay, Ralph, I''ve heard the missionaries say that before now, but what good can it do me? 7124 Bite? |
7124 | Boy,said he, looking me full in the face,"what is your name?" |
7124 | But are you sure that that''s it? |
7124 | But how are we to get hold of Avatea? |
7124 | But suppose there are no natives? |
7124 | But the captain and crew, what of them? |
7124 | But what has become of the wreck, Jack? 7124 But where are the other cubs?" |
7124 | But why does Tararo frown and look so angry? |
7124 | Can you doubt it? |
7124 | Did he bite? |
7124 | Did you ever in your life, Ralph, see anything so lovely? |
7124 | Did you? |
7124 | Do n''t you think we had better put them up first? |
7124 | Do n''t you think we should awake her to make her eat something first? 7124 Do n''t you think, Peterkin, that it''s the nearest thing to being drowned alive that you ever felt?" |
7124 | Do you believe in ghosts, Ralph? |
7124 | Do you hear me? |
7124 | Do you know what conclusion_ I_ have come to? |
7124 | Do you recognise that hole? |
7124 | Free? |
7124 | Free? |
7124 | Have the missionaries many stations in these seas? |
7124 | Have these wretched creatures no law among themselves,said I,"which can restrain such wickedness?" |
7124 | Have you been there before, then? |
7124 | Have? |
7124 | How comes it, Bill, that the mothers allow such a dreadful thing to be done? |
7124 | How comes it,said Tararo, turning to the teacher,"that these youths have abused our hospitality?" |
7124 | How so, Bill? |
7124 | How? |
7124 | I say, Ralph, what''s that in the water; is it a shark? |
7124 | Is all ready? |
7124 | Is it celebrated? |
7124 | Is it far from this? |
7124 | Is she on the island now? |
7124 | Is she? |
7124 | No-- eh--_can_ they be boats, Jack? |
7124 | Nobly spoken, Jack.--Hand me a drop of water, Ralph.--Why, girl, what''s wrong with you? 7124 Now then, do you hear, youngster? |
7124 | Now, Ralph, are you ready? |
7124 | Now, what can it be? |
7124 | O Peterkin,said I, going up to him,"what have you done"? |
7124 | Or bore a hole through a shark''s tail, and reeve a rope through it, eh? |
7124 | Penguins? |
7124 | Peterkin,said Jack in a hoarse whisper,"have you got your knife?" |
7124 | Say you so? |
7124 | So they can, youngster,rejoined Bill somewhat sternly;"and I could speak, too, if I had a mind to, but what''s the use o''speakin''here? |
7124 | So you''re blubbering, are you, you obstinate whelp? |
7124 | So, youngster,he said with a sardonic smile, while I felt his grasp tighten on my shoulder,"the villains have been balked of their prey, have they? |
7124 | Surely they are not going to murder them? |
7124 | The matter? |
7124 | Then how can you say she''s a trader? |
7124 | Then what are you shamming for, and frightening us in this way? |
7124 | Then you''re willing to go with us, are you? |
7124 | Well then, Peterkin,replied Jack with a smile,"what would you have?" |
7124 | Well, Ralph, awake at last, my boy? 7124 Well, Ralph, how have you slept?" |
7124 | Well, but what do you propose to do? |
7124 | Well, cat, what are you thinking about now? 7124 Well, suppose I were to print it, and send it to you in the form of a book, would it not be as good and useful as ever?" |
7124 | Well, what is''t? |
7124 | Were you much disturbed by the wind last night? |
7124 | What are they doing there? |
7124 | What are yon, think you? |
7124 | What can it be? |
7124 | What can that mean, I wonder? |
7124 | What do I mean? 7124 What do you mean by saying I half choked you, Peterkin?" |
7124 | What does my friend say? |
7124 | What have your shoes to do with the old hog? |
7124 | What is it? |
7124 | What is it? |
7124 | What is to be done? |
7124 | What part will you have? 7124 What say you to building a boat?" |
7124 | What say you to it, Jack? |
7124 | What says he? |
7124 | What says he? |
7124 | What shall we do, Jack? |
7124 | What sort of amusement is this surf- swimming? |
7124 | What was it? |
7124 | What''s the matter, Peterkin? |
7124 | What''s the matter? |
7124 | What''s to be done now? |
7124 | What''s wrong? |
7124 | What''s yon, think you? |
7124 | Where away? |
7124 | Where did you come from, and how came you to be on that island? 7124 Where do you come from, and where are you bound? |
7124 | Where''ll it spout this time, I wonder? |
7124 | Where''s the commander of this ship? |
7124 | Which-- this? |
7124 | Who said I was afraid? |
7124 | Why have you kept us in the dark so long, you vile philosopher? |
7124 | Why, where did you pick up English? |
7124 | Why, you precious humbug,said Peterkin, coming up to me,"how could you expect it to be otherwise? |
7124 | Will you, lads, go with me in spite of this? |
7124 | Wo n''t a good blazing fire give you light enough? |
7124 | Would not a small raft do better? |
7124 | You hear what he says, whelp: where are the other dogs? |
7124 | A leg, or a wing, or a piece of the breast-- which?" |
7124 | After returning his salutation, Jack exclaimed,"You must be the native missionary teacher of whom I have heard; are you not?" |
7124 | Are you prepared, then, to take your chance of that?" |
7124 | As he now leaned over the taffrail close beside me, I said to him--"Bill, why is it that you are so gloomy? |
7124 | But what comes here?" |
7124 | But what''s that you''re doing?" |
7124 | But why did you not tell us it was so nearly ready? |
7124 | But, captain, what is it that you intend to do?" |
7124 | Ca n''t we have one, Jack?" |
7124 | D''ye hear, boy?'' |
7124 | D''you think I''d say so if I did n''t, you black villain? |
7124 | D''you think they are hospitable, Jack?" |
7124 | Did you say she had gone to pieces?" |
7124 | Do n''t you love me?" |
7124 | Do n''t you see he''s a''most going to kick the bucket?" |
7124 | Do you hear?" |
7124 | Do you think that you can make so great a sacrifice?" |
7124 | Hallo, Venus, where did you come from? |
7124 | Hark''ee, boy,"said Bill, lowering his voice,"what said the captain to you the day you came aboard?" |
7124 | How can I act? |
7124 | How many companions had you on it? |
7124 | I exclaimed in surprise;"why, what does he mean by that?" |
7124 | I say, Jack, how does it happen that you seem to be up to everything? |
7124 | I think that our only chance of success lies in mild measures; do n''t you think so?" |
7124 | Is English not your mother- tongue, or do you want me to repeat it in French, by way of making it clearer? |
7124 | Is there not a Bible on board, Bill?" |
7124 | Is your philosophy deserting you, Jack?" |
7124 | It is a sad thought, but should we on that account exclude it from our minds? |
7124 | May it not, perchance, teach us to devote our thoughts more frequently and attentively to that land where we meet, but part no more? |
7124 | May not a lesson worth learning be gathered in the contemplation of it? |
7124 | Now tell me, do n''t you think it''s a monstrous shame that those two scoundrels, Jack and Ralph, should keep us waiting for our supper so long?" |
7124 | Ralph?" |
7124 | Suddenly the captain walks up to me:''Where did you come from, you scamp, and what do you want here?'' |
7124 | Suppose that you make one bow and arrow for yourself, and we can take our clubs?" |
7124 | Then, you see that great mop o''hair on the chief''s head? |
7124 | We pondered this very much; and we put to ourselves the question,"What raised the island to its present height above the sea?" |
7124 | What cargo have you aboard?" |
7124 | What do you mean by talking bad grammar? |
7124 | What kept you so long?" |
7124 | What possessed you to stick_ her,_ Peterkin?" |
7124 | What say you, Ralph: would you like to become a sandal- wood trader?" |
7124 | What say you? |
7124 | What shall we do?" |
7124 | What was I now to do? |
7124 | What''s the use o''tryin''to kill the blackguards when it''ll do us no manner o''good?" |
7124 | What_ has_ that brute got under its tail?" |
7124 | When fishes are accustomed to live in the Pacific Ocean, how can you expect them to exist in a hole like that?" |
7124 | Where are your comrades?" |
7124 | Why did you not speak at once, eh?" |
7124 | Why do you never speak to any one?" |
7124 | Why not cut your cable and take French leave o''them? |
7124 | Why should I laugh?" |
7124 | Will you go with me, friend?" |
7124 | Will you go?" |
7124 | Wo n''t speak, eh? |
7124 | Wo n''t we have a jolly sail to- morrow, eh?" |
7124 | You are but one; why should you die?" |
7124 | You say that the native missionary talks English?" |
7124 | Your young heart would grow cold if I-- But why should I go on? |
7124 | _ Done?_"I''ve killed their great- great- grandmother, that''s all,"said he, looking with a somewhat awe- struck expression at the transfixed animal. |
7124 | cried Peterkin, stopping short and grasping his club with both hands,"what''s that?" |
7124 | did he?" |
7124 | exclaimed Jack,"did you_ really_ resolve to do that?" |
7124 | how long do you mean to lie there?" |
7124 | is that all?" |
7124 | repeated the captain, in a voice of suppressed anger,"Do you call a good cargo all for nothing no pay?" |
7124 | said Bill, his lip curling with contempt;"what do you think of that for a god, Ralph? |
7124 | said I with deep anxiety,"what is the matter with you? |
7124 | said I;"what at, Peterkin? |
7124 | said I;"would the natives not receive me?" |
7124 | said Peter kin in a whisper, as he stepped upon the beach,"is that you, Avatea?" |
7124 | said he, pointing to the pig''s ear;"and are you familiar with this arrow, eh?" |
7124 | said he,"where were you? |
7124 | what could I say? |
7124 | what do you say to it?" |
7124 | what have we here?" |
7124 | what mean you by that?" |
7124 | what''s this? |
7124 | what''s this?" |
7124 | what''s wrong?" |
7124 | why, what do you mean, Jack? |
7124 | will you join me?" |
21721 | Allow it? 21721 An''where have you been used to friendly conversation?" |
21721 | And if they should,said the teacher,"the Lord is on our side; of whom shall we be afraid?" |
21721 | And suppose I were to write the account in a letter instead of telling you in words, would that be less useful? |
21721 | And what of Avatea? |
21721 | And what will you do,said he,"if it comes on to blow a storm?" |
21721 | And what''ll be the result of that? |
21721 | And what''s a banyan tree? |
21721 | And what, is it that my friends wish to say to me? |
21721 | And what,continued the captain,"makes you think that this schooner is a pirate?" |
21721 | And where does it lie? |
21721 | And you''re not afraid to trust yourself out on the deep sea so far? |
21721 | And, pray,asked Peterkin,"what sort of` stuff''does the ripe nut contain?" |
21721 | Are they lost? |
21721 | Are they, then, so numerous? |
21721 | Are ye sure, lad, ye saw them in the Bible? |
21721 | Are you better now? |
21721 | Ay, Ralph, I''ve heard the missionaries say that before now; but what good can it do me? 21721 Bite? |
21721 | Boy,said he, looking me full in the face,"what is your name?" |
21721 | But are you sure that that''s it? |
21721 | But how are we to get hold of Avatea? |
21721 | But suppose there are no natives? |
21721 | But the captain and crew, what of them? |
21721 | But what has become of the wreck, Jack? 21721 But where are the other cubs?" |
21721 | But why does Tararo frown and look so angry? |
21721 | Can you doubt it? |
21721 | Did he bite? |
21721 | Did you ever in your life, Ralph, see anything so lovely? |
21721 | Did you? |
21721 | Do n''t you think we had better put them up first? |
21721 | Do n''t you think we should awake her to make her eat something first? 21721 Do n''t you think, Peterkin, that it''s the nearest thing to being drowned alive that you ever felt?" |
21721 | Do you call a good cargo all for nothing no pay? |
21721 | Do you hear me? |
21721 | Do you know what conclusion I have come to? |
21721 | Do you recognise that hole? |
21721 | Done? 21721 For a moment?" |
21721 | Free? |
21721 | Free? |
21721 | Have the missionaries many stations in these seas? |
21721 | Have these wretched creatures no law among themselves,said I,"which can restrain such wickedness?" |
21721 | Have you been there before, then? |
21721 | Have? |
21721 | How comes it, Bill, that the mothers allow such a dreadful thing to be done? |
21721 | How comes it,said Tararo, turning to the teacher,"that these youths have abused our hospitality?" |
21721 | How so, Bill? |
21721 | How? |
21721 | I say, Ralph, what''s that in the water? 21721 I used to be a pretty fair shot once.--But what''s that you''re doing?" |
21721 | I wonder,said one,"why our captain looked so sweet on yon swallow- tailed supercargo o''pigs and Gospels? |
21721 | Impossible? |
21721 | Is all ready? |
21721 | Is it celebrated? |
21721 | Is it far from this? |
21721 | Is she on the island now? |
21721 | Is she? |
21721 | No-- eh-- can they be boats, Jack? |
21721 | Nobly spoken, Jack!--Hand me a drop of water, Ralph.--Why, girl, what''s wrong with you? 21721 Not on that Coral Island, I take it?" |
21721 | Now, Ralph, are you ready? |
21721 | Now, then, do you hear, youngster? 21721 Now, what can it be?" |
21721 | Or bore a hole through a shark''s tail and reeve a rope through it, eh? |
21721 | Penguins? |
21721 | Peterkin,said Jack in a hoarse whisper,"have you got your knife?" |
21721 | Say you so? |
21721 | So they can, youngster,rejoined Bill somewhat sternly;"and I could speak too if I had a mind to, but what''s the use o''speakin''here? |
21721 | So you''re blubbering, are you, you obstinate whelp? |
21721 | So, youngster,he said with a sardonic smile, while I felt his grasp tighten on my shoulder,"the villains have been balked of their prey, have they? |
21721 | Surely they are not going to murder them? |
21721 | The matter? |
21721 | Then how can you say she''s a trader? |
21721 | Then what are you shamming for, and frightening us in this way? |
21721 | Then you''re willing to go with us, are you? |
21721 | Well, Ralph, awake at last, my boy? 21721 Well, Ralph, how have you slept?" |
21721 | Well, but what do you propose to do? |
21721 | Well, cat, what are you thinking about now? 21721 Well, suppose I were to print it and send it to you in the form of a book, would it not be as good and useful as ever?" |
21721 | Well, then, Peterkin,replied Jack with a smile,"what would you have?" |
21721 | Well, what is''t? |
21721 | Were you much disturbed by the wind last night? |
21721 | What are they doing there? |
21721 | What are yon, think you? |
21721 | What at, Peterkin? 21721 What can it be?" |
21721 | What can that mean, I wonder? |
21721 | What do I mean? 21721 What do you mean by saying I half- choked you, Peterkin?" |
21721 | What does my friend say? |
21721 | What good will that do us? |
21721 | What have your shoes to do with the old hog? |
21721 | What is it? |
21721 | What is it? |
21721 | What is to be done? |
21721 | What part will you have? 21721 What say you to building a boat?" |
21721 | What say you to it, Jack? |
21721 | What says he? |
21721 | What says he? |
21721 | What shall we do, Jack? |
21721 | What sort of amusement is this surf- swimming? |
21721 | What was it? |
21721 | What''s the matter, Peterkin? |
21721 | What''s the matter? |
21721 | What''s to be done now? |
21721 | What''s wrong? |
21721 | What''s yon, think you? |
21721 | Where away? |
21721 | Where did you come from, and how came you to be on that island? 21721 Where do you come from, and where are you bound? |
21721 | Where''ll it spout this time, I wonder? |
21721 | Where''s the commander of this ship? |
21721 | Which-- this? |
21721 | Who said I was afraid? |
21721 | Why have you kept us in the dark so long, you vile philosopher? |
21721 | Why, what does he mean by that? |
21721 | Why, where did you pick up English? |
21721 | Will you, lads, go with me in spite of this? |
21721 | Wo n''t a good blazing fire give you light enough? |
21721 | Would not a small raft do better? |
21721 | Would the natives not receive me? |
21721 | You hear what he says, whelp: where are the other dogs? |
21721 | ` Hark''ee, boy, can you swim?'' 21721 ` Might we not make a large bag of cocoa- nut cloth, into which I could shove my head, and tie it tight round my neck?'' |
21721 | ` Why,''said I,` have you strangled your father''s wives before he is dead?'' 21721 A leg, or a wing, or a piece of the breast-- which? |
21721 | After returning his salutation, Jack exclaimed,"You must be the native missionary teacher of whom I have heard-- are you not?" |
21721 | Are you prepared, then, to take your chance of that?" |
21721 | As he now leaned over the taffrail, close beside me, I said to him:"Bill, why is it that you are so gloomy? |
21721 | But what comes here?" |
21721 | But why did you not tell us it was so nearly ready? |
21721 | But, captain, what is it that you intend to do?" |
21721 | Ca n''t we have one, Jack?" |
21721 | D''ye hear, boy?'' |
21721 | D''you think I''d say so if I did n''t, you black villain? |
21721 | Did you say she had gone to pieces?" |
21721 | Do n''t you love me?" |
21721 | Do n''t you remember?" |
21721 | Do n''t you see he''s a''most goin''to kick the bucket?" |
21721 | Do n''t you think so?" |
21721 | Do you hear?" |
21721 | Do you think that you can make so great a sacrifice?" |
21721 | Hark''ee, boy,"said Bill, lowering his voice,"what said the captain to you the day you came aboard?" |
21721 | How can I act? |
21721 | How many companions had you on it? |
21721 | I say, Jack, how does it happen that you seem to be up to everything? |
21721 | I wonder if they will receive us kindly?--D''you think they are hospitable, Jack?" |
21721 | Is English not your mother- tongue? |
21721 | Is it a shark?" |
21721 | Is there not a Bible on board, Bill?" |
21721 | Is your philosophy deserting you, Jack?" |
21721 | It is a sad thought, but should we on that account exclude it from our minds? |
21721 | May it not, perchance, teach us to devote our thoughts more frequently and attentively to that land where we meet but part no more? |
21721 | May not a lesson worth learning be gathered in the contemplation of it? |
21721 | Now tell me: do n''t you think it''s a monstrous shame that those two scoundrels, Jack and Ralph, should keep us waiting for our supper so long?" |
21721 | Suddenly the captain walks up to me:` Where did you come from, you scamp, and what do you want here?'' |
21721 | Then, you see that great mop o''hair on the chief''s head? |
21721 | We pondered this very much; and we put to ourselves the question,"What raised the island to its present height above the sea?" |
21721 | What cargo have you aboard?" |
21721 | What do you mean by talking bad grammar? |
21721 | What has that brute got under its tail?" |
21721 | What kept you so long?" |
21721 | What possessed you to stick_ her_, Peterkin?" |
21721 | What say you, Ralph: would you like to become a sandal- wood trader?" |
21721 | What say you? |
21721 | What shall we do?" |
21721 | What was I now to do? |
21721 | What''s the use o''tryin''to kill the blackguards when it''ll do us no manner o''good?" |
21721 | When fishes are accustomed to live in the Pacific Ocean, how can you expect them to exist in a hole like that?" |
21721 | When he was gone, Peterkin stepped up to Jack, and touching his cap, said:"Well, captain, have you any communications to make to your_ men_?" |
21721 | Where are your comrades?" |
21721 | Why did you not speak at once, eh?" |
21721 | Why do you never speak to any one?" |
21721 | Why not cut your cable and take French leave o''them? |
21721 | Why should I laugh?" |
21721 | Why, what do you mean, Jack? |
21721 | Will you go with me, friend?" |
21721 | Will you go?" |
21721 | Will you join me?" |
21721 | Will you now be so good as to inform me what sort of fruit that is growing on the top of yonder bush? |
21721 | Wo n''t speak, eh? |
21721 | Wo n''t we have a jolly sail to- morrow, eh?" |
21721 | You are but one: why should you die?" |
21721 | You recollect that, after the ship struck, we three sprang over the bow into the sea? |
21721 | You say that the native missionary talks English?" |
21721 | Your young heart would grow cold if I-- But why should I go on? |
21721 | cried Peterkin, stopping short, and grasping his club with both hands;"what''s that?" |
21721 | dear Jack and Peterkin,"said I,"what is to become of us? |
21721 | did he?" |
21721 | exclaimed Jack,"did you_ really_ resolve to do that?" |
21721 | how long do you mean to lie there?" |
21721 | is that all?" |
21721 | or do you want me to repeat it in French by way of making it clearer? |
21721 | said Bill, his lip curling with contempt;"what do you think of that for a god, Ralph? |
21721 | said I with deep anxiety,"what is the matter with you? |
21721 | said I, going up to him,"what have you done?" |
21721 | said Peterkin in a whisper as he stepped upon the beach;"is that you, Avatea?" |
21721 | said Peterkin quite gravely.--"Do you believe in ghosts, Ralph?" |
21721 | said Peterkin, coming up to me,"how could you expect it to be otherwise? |
21721 | said he, pointing to the pig''s ear;"and are you familiar with this arrow, eh?" |
21721 | said he,"where were you? |
21721 | what could I say? |
21721 | what do you say to it?" |
21721 | what have we here?" |
21721 | what mean you by that?" |
21721 | what''s this?" |
21721 | what''s wrong?" |
21721 | where did you come from? |
646 | ''Might we not make a large bag of cocoa- nut cloth, into which I could shove my head, and tie it tight round my neck?'' 646 ''Why,''said I,''have you strangled your father''s wives before he is dead?'' |
646 | Allow it? 646 An''where have you been used to friendly conversation,"said Bill, looking down again into the sea;"not on that Coral Island, I take it?" |
646 | And pray,asked Peterkin,"what sort of''stuff''does the ripe nut contain?" |
646 | And suppose I were to write the account in a letter instead of telling you in words, would that be less useful? |
646 | And what is it that my friends wish to say to me? |
646 | And what of Avatea? |
646 | And what will you do,said he,"if it comes on to blow a storm?" |
646 | And what''ll be the result of that? |
646 | And what''s a banian- tree? |
646 | And what,continued the captain,"makes you think that this schooner is a pirate?" |
646 | And where does it lie? |
646 | And you''re not afraid to trust yourself out on the deep sea so far? |
646 | Are they lost? |
646 | Are they, then, so numerous? |
646 | Are ye sure, lad, ye saw them in the Bible? |
646 | Ay, Ralph, I''ve heard the missionaries say that before now, but what good can it do me? 646 Babies?" |
646 | Bite? 646 Boy,"said he, looking me full in the face,"what is your name?" |
646 | But are you sure that that''s it? |
646 | But how are we to get hold of Avatea? |
646 | But suppose there are no natives? |
646 | But the captain and crew, what of them? |
646 | But what has become of the wreck, Jack? 646 But where are the other cubs?" |
646 | But why does Tararo frown and look so angry? |
646 | Can you doubt it? |
646 | Certainly, my dear,cried Peterkin, seizing the axe;"what part will you have? |
646 | Did he bite? |
646 | Did you ever in your life, Ralph, see anything so lovely? |
646 | Did you? |
646 | Do n''t you think we had better put them up first? |
646 | Do n''t you think we should awake her to make her eat something first? 646 Do n''t you think, Peterkin, that it''s the nearest thing to being drowned alive that you ever felt?" |
646 | Do you believe in ghosts, Ralph? |
646 | Do you call a good cargo all for nothing no pay? |
646 | Do you hear me? |
646 | Do you know what conclusion_ I_ have come to? |
646 | Do you recognise that hole? |
646 | Done? 646 Free?" |
646 | Go with you? |
646 | Hark''ee, boy, can you swim?'' 646 Have the missionaries many stations in these seas?" |
646 | Have these wretched creatures no law among themselves,said I,"which can restrain such wickedness?" |
646 | Have you been here before, then? |
646 | Have? |
646 | How comes it, Bill, that the mothers allow such a dreadful thing to be done? |
646 | How comes it,said Tararo, turning to the teacher,"that these youths have abused our hospitality?" |
646 | How so, Bill? |
646 | I say, Ralph, what''s that in the water? 646 Is all ready?" |
646 | Is it celebrated? |
646 | Is it far from this? |
646 | Is she on the island now? |
646 | Is she? |
646 | Laugh? |
646 | Now then, do you hear, youngster? 646 Now, Ralph, are you ready?" |
646 | Now, there''s a fix!--what shall we do? |
646 | Now, what can it be? |
646 | Or bore a hole through a shark''s tail, and reeve a rope through it, eh? |
646 | Penguins? |
646 | Peterkin,said Jack in a hoarse whisper,"have you got your knife?" |
646 | Say you so? |
646 | So you''re blubbering, are you, you obstinate whelp? |
646 | Speak to us, my dear Ralph,whispered Jack, tenderly,"are you better now?" |
646 | Stay at home? |
646 | Surely they are not going to murder them? |
646 | The matter? |
646 | Then how can you say she''s a trader? |
646 | Then what are you shamming for, and frightening us in this way? |
646 | Then you''re willing to go with us, are you? |
646 | There,said Bill, his lip curling with contempt,"what do you think of that for a god, Ralph? |
646 | Well, Ralph, how have you slept? |
646 | Well, but what do you propose to do? |
646 | Well, cat, what are you thinking about now? 646 Well, suppose I were to print it, and send it to you in the form of a book, would it not be as good and useful as ever?" |
646 | Well, then, Peterkin,replied Jack, with a smile,"what would you have?" |
646 | Well, what is''t? |
646 | Were you much disturbed by the wind last night? |
646 | What are they doing there? |
646 | What are yon, think you? |
646 | What can it be? |
646 | What do I mean? 646 What do you mean by saying I half choked you, Peterkin?" |
646 | What does my friend say? |
646 | What good will that do us? |
646 | What have your shoes to do with the old hog?'' 646 What is it?" |
646 | What is it? |
646 | What is to be done? |
646 | What say you to building a boat? |
646 | What say you to it, Jack? |
646 | What says he? |
646 | What says he? |
646 | What shall we do, Jack? |
646 | What sort of amusement is this surf swimming? |
646 | What was it? |
646 | What''s the matter, Peterkin? |
646 | What''s the matter? |
646 | What''s to be done now? |
646 | What''s wrong? |
646 | What''s yon, think you? |
646 | Where did you come from, and how came you to be on that island? 646 Where do you come from, and where are you bound? |
646 | Where''ll it spout this time, I wonder? |
646 | Where''s the commander of this ship? |
646 | Where, away? |
646 | Which-- this? |
646 | Who said I was afraid? |
646 | Why have you kept us in the dark so long, you vile philosopher? |
646 | Why, where did you pick up English? |
646 | Why, you precious humbug,said Peterkin, coming up to me,"how could you expect it to be otherwise? |
646 | Wo n''t a good blazing fire give you light enough? |
646 | Would not a small raft do better? |
646 | You hear what he says, whelp; where are the other dogs? |
646 | After returning his salutation, Jack exclaimed,"You must be the native missionary teacher of whom I have heard-- are you not?" |
646 | Are you prepared, then, to take your chance of that?" |
646 | As he now leaned over the taffrail close beside me, I said to him,--"Bill, why is it that you are so gloomy? |
646 | But what comes here?" |
646 | But what''s that you''re doing?" |
646 | But why did you not tell us it was so nearly ready? |
646 | But, captain, what is it that you intend to do?" |
646 | Ca n''t we have one, Jack?" |
646 | D''ye hear, boy?'' |
646 | D''you think I''d say so if I did n''t, you black villain? |
646 | D''you think they are hospitable, Jack?" |
646 | Did you say she had gone to pieces?" |
646 | Do n''t you love me?" |
646 | Do n''t you see he''s a''most goin''to kick the bucket?" |
646 | Do n''t you think so?" |
646 | Do you hear?" |
646 | Do you think that you can make so great a sacrifice?" |
646 | Hark''ee, boy,"said Bill, lowering his voice,"what said the captain to you the day you came aboard?" |
646 | How can I act? |
646 | How many companions had you on it? |
646 | I exclaimed in surprise;"why what does he mean by that?" |
646 | I say, Jack, how does it happen that you seem to be up to everything? |
646 | I smiled and looked up, saying,"Better; why, what do you mean, Jack? |
646 | Is English not your mother tongue, or do you want me to repeat it in French, by way of making it clearer? |
646 | Is there not a Bible on board, Bill?" |
646 | Is your philosophy deserting you, Jack?" |
646 | It is a sad thought, but should we on that account exclude it from our minds? |
646 | May it not, perchance, teach us to devote our thoughts more frequently and attentively to that land where we meet, but part no more? |
646 | May not a lesson worth learning be gathered in the contemplation of it? |
646 | Now, tell me; do n''t you think it''s a monstrous shame that these two scoundrels, Jack and Ralph, should keep us waiting for our supper so long?" |
646 | Peterkin, lazy fellow, how long do you mean to lie there?" |
646 | Ralph, lad, why do n''t you laugh?--eh?" |
646 | Ralph?" |
646 | Suddenly the captain was up to me:''Where did you come from, you scamp, and what do you want here?'' |
646 | Suppose that you make one bow and arrow for yourself, and we can take our clubs?" |
646 | Then, you see that great mop o''hair on the chief''s head? |
646 | Venus, where did you come from? |
646 | We pondered this very much; and we put to ourselves the question,"What raised the island to its present height above the sea?" |
646 | What cargo have you aboard?" |
646 | What do you mean by talking bad grammar? |
646 | What kept you so long?" |
646 | What possessed you to stick_ her_, Peterkin?" |
646 | What say you, Ralph, would you like to become a sandal- wood trader?" |
646 | What say you; will you join me?" |
646 | What was I now to do? |
646 | What''s the use o''tryin''to lick the blackguards when it''ll do us no manner o''good?" |
646 | What_ has_ that brute got under its tail?" |
646 | When fishes are accustomed to live in the Pacific Ocean, how can you expect them to exist in a hole like that?" |
646 | When he was gone, Peterkin stepped up to Jack, and, touching his cap, said,--"Well, captain, have you any communications to make to your_ men_?" |
646 | Where are your comrades?" |
646 | Why did you not speak at once? |
646 | Why do you never speak to any one?" |
646 | Why not cut your cable and take French leave o''them? |
646 | Why, girl what''s wrong with you? |
646 | Will you go with me, friend?" |
646 | Will you go?" |
646 | You are but one; why should you die?" |
646 | You say that the native missionary talks English?" |
646 | Your young heart would grow cold if I--; but why should I go on? |
646 | a leg, or a wing, or a piece of the breast; which?" |
646 | can they be boats, Jack?" |
646 | cried Peterkin, stopping short and grasping his club with both hands,"what''s that?" |
646 | cried Peterkin,"my dear Ralph, you are mistaken, there is nothing so easy--""How?" |
646 | dear Jack and Peterkin,"said I,"what is to become of us? |
646 | did he?" |
646 | eh? |
646 | eh?" |
646 | eh?" |
646 | exclaimed Jack,"did you_ really_ resolve to do that?" |
646 | is it a shark?" |
646 | is that all?" |
646 | said I, going up to him,"what have you done?" |
646 | said I, with deep anxiety,"what is the matter with you? |
646 | said I,"would the natives not receive me?" |
646 | said I;"what at, Peterkin? |
646 | said Peterkin in a whisper, as he stepped upon the beach,"is that you, Avatea?" |
646 | said he, pointing to the pig''s ear;"and are you familiar with this arrow, eh?" |
646 | said he,"where were you? |
646 | what could I say? |
646 | what do you say to it?" |
646 | what have we here?" |
646 | what mean you by that?" |
646 | what''s this? |
646 | what''s this?" |
646 | what''s wrong?" |
646 | why should I laugh?" |
646 | wo n''t speak? |
646 | wo n''t we have a jolly sail to- morrow? |
22554 | A couple of days? 22554 And suppose they find the chamber looted-- may they not be all the more savage and eager to tear us to pieces?" |
22554 | And suppose you had been killed? |
22554 | And they came for that? 22554 And things all made and ready, including tools and powder, not to mention a tiger- skin rug.... You refuse to admit you like it for itself?" |
22554 | And what are your sticks to become? |
22554 | And what,she inquired,"is your-- notion?" |
22554 | And you''ll wait around for him to come in the dark? |
22554 | Are we thrust so far back as the stone age, then? 22554 Are you coming? |
22554 | Are you hurt? |
22554 | Bad? |
22554 | But after that-- to- morrow? |
22554 | But could n''t you use the raft? |
22554 | But how could that possibly be managed, now that you have n''t your raft? |
22554 | But how-- unless someone put it on? |
22554 | But suppose they arrive an hour or two before sunset? |
22554 | But surely you''ll not attempt such a venture as this again? |
22554 | But there may be something wrong with the island? |
22554 | But what about the treasure in the crypt? |
22554 | But where? |
22554 | But why does it have to be entered? |
22554 | But-- doesn''t a tiger usually feed at night? |
22554 | But-- why should we let them come? |
22554 | But-- why? 22554 Ca n''t I do something else?" |
22554 | Can they see us yet? 22554 Can you hear me now any better?" |
22554 | Concerning what? |
22554 | Could n''t I fill them with powder? |
22554 | Could n''t I help? |
22554 | Could n''t we even---- You think they are all-- all gone? |
22554 | Could n''t we paddle in closer? |
22554 | Could n''t we use the cannon first-- keep them off with that while the fuses and things are drying? |
22554 | Did n''t you know? |
22554 | Did you have to swim to get the ladder? |
22554 | Do n''t you like him, Elaine? |
22554 | Do you discern anything of the disloyal ambassador in that hard- worked friend and comrade of my happiest years? |
22554 | Do you know of any island that ought to be in this locality? |
22554 | Do you like it here, Elaine? |
22554 | Do you mean he sleeps where you have been walking every day? |
22554 | Do you think these creatures have visited the cave? |
22554 | Do you think they''ll attack us soon after landing? |
22554 | Do you think you shall ever have the time? |
22554 | Do you want me to change it-- or something? |
22554 | Do? |
22554 | Does that mean you like it?--you''ll go? |
22554 | Dreamed? |
22554 | Elaine,he said, finally, glancing once more towards the silvered sea,"what is your notion of love?" |
22554 | Engaged a chimney? |
22554 | Have I ever played a joker with you yet? |
22554 | Have n''t I said I accept your challenge? 22554 Have n''t I tried every leaf I could find, to make you something to drink?" |
22554 | Have you been awake for long? |
22554 | Have you made some sort of mistake? |
22554 | Have you more old pieces of brass? |
22554 | Have you seen or heard anything of any of the others? |
22554 | Here? |
22554 | How can I help? |
22554 | How did you manage to find it? |
22554 | How shall we know if they do come back? |
22554 | How shall you know when he comes? |
22554 | Hurt? |
22554 | I might have managed it better, I suppose---- Are n''t you a little bit glad to see me? |
22554 | I? |
22554 | If we go on like this for a week, what then? 22554 If you kill him,"she said,"you''ll come home?" |
22554 | In this particular instance you think there is not the slightest danger? |
22554 | Is n''t he with you, here on the boat, going home? |
22554 | Land? |
22554 | Must n''t they get us in the end? |
22554 | Must you wait very long till you know? |
22554 | My notion? |
22554 | Not something actually valuable? 22554 Of finding in old Sid a modern Launcelot?" |
22554 | Of love or crocodiles? |
22554 | Oh, this? |
22554 | Oh,she said,"you''ve found water-- or is it the juice of the melon?" |
22554 | One night-- in the smoke-- on the island-- when we might have died of thirst-- and you came with water---- You remember what you said? |
22554 | Or, if you like, your principles? |
22554 | Right? 22554 Should n''t we put up a flag, or something, in case a steamer should happen to be passing?" |
22554 | Sidney, are you absolutely honest? |
22554 | Suppose they had really been friendly, after all-- and we let them go and leave us here like that? |
22554 | The ship? |
22554 | The treasure you have joked about before? |
22554 | Then heap all the others upon it? |
22554 | Then why all this futile argument and waste of valuable time? |
22554 | Then-- if they should n''t happen to be friendly, they would know it all just the same-- and may still come back to-- look us up? |
22554 | Then-- what is the first thing to do? |
22554 | Then-- you do think the tiger dangerous-- hard, at least, to kill? |
22554 | There is gunpowder here on the island? |
22554 | There was nothing-- up here? 22554 These jewels---- The tiger was wearing this?" |
22554 | They could n''t go by and miss us now? |
22554 | They have n''t gone down since? |
22554 | They have n''t landed yet? |
22554 | They''d kill us if they could, I suppose, if only to cut---- They are not human beings, really-- the kind we ought not to shoot? |
22554 | To the one that you_ really_ love? |
22554 | Was anyone there? |
22554 | Was that-- all you said? |
22554 | We shall have to endure it twice a day? |
22554 | Well, Sid,demanded that impetuous lieutenant of finance,"gone dumb? |
22554 | Well, suppose he did commit the folly you describe, what then? |
22554 | Well, what''s all the row about, after that? |
22554 | Were you shot? |
22554 | What are you making? |
22554 | What can we do in the meantime? |
22554 | What do you think it is called? |
22554 | What else can I do? 22554 What happened?" |
22554 | What has happened? |
22554 | What have you got about your neck? |
22554 | What is it, anyway? |
22554 | What language do you suppose the natives speak? |
22554 | What reason could they possibly have for coming at last to this island? 22554 What seems to be the trouble?" |
22554 | What shall we do to- morrow? |
22554 | What then? |
22554 | What was happening here? |
22554 | What was it? 22554 What was it?" |
22554 | What was the fault of the ladder? |
22554 | What''s the joker, old chap? 22554 What''s the use of going to school?" |
22554 | What''s wrong? |
22554 | Where are you going? |
22554 | Where do you mean to land? |
22554 | Where has he gone? |
22554 | Wo n''t they see you? |
22554 | Would Cinderella go to a ball? |
22554 | Would they hide if they meant to be friendly? |
22554 | Yes-- very clear-- quite clear---- And then? |
22554 | You are not afraid they may go there soon-- and discover the end of this passage? |
22554 | You could really shoot him with this? |
22554 | You did n''t swim out to this contraption? |
22554 | You do fear them, then? 22554 You do n''t believe we shall find the island inhabited? |
22554 | You expect to remain here long enough to build a boat, when the raft---- I know it ca n''t be rowed, of course, but-- couldn''t you try a sail? |
22554 | You hardly expect to shoot the creature, then, after all? |
22554 | You have found some metal? |
22554 | You have met him again? |
22554 | You have n''t heard them talking, near the door? |
22554 | You have n''t much faith, then, in hailing some passing steamer? |
22554 | You have n''t the slightest right in the world----"Right? |
22554 | You have-- booked my passage-- for Wednesday? |
22554 | You mean they will know, of course, that someone must be here who made it? |
22554 | You meant it, then-- no strings on the proposition? |
22554 | You saw them come up? |
22554 | You think it will-- that a fight will come? 22554 You think there is something worse? |
22554 | You think, if they leave, they may return here later-- with a larger force-- if they find we are ready for a fight? |
22554 | You were n''t down there? |
22554 | You''re not going to blow down the hill? |
22554 | You-- wired we were coming home? |
22554 | Your cannon would kill him, though, of course? |
22554 | Your convictions, then? |
22554 | _ Pale hands I loved, upon the Shalimar, Where are you now? 22554 ... Are you there? |
22554 | After another long silence, she finally said, with eyes averted and excitement throbbing in her veins:"I know the name of this little place-- do you?" |
22554 | After three unsuccessful efforts at speech, Elaine at last found the voice and the courage for a question:"Do you wish to be-- best man?" |
22554 | And how about your winning my little girl? |
22554 | And now, as she stood there, rigid with fears and fixedly staring at the formless gloom-- why did she hear no sound? |
22554 | And you have taken it out-- have hidden it, rather-- and you think, perhaps, they have missed it?" |
22554 | And, if there was, what good could it be to us?" |
22554 | Are you there?" |
22554 | Are you there?" |
22554 | But how can we hide-- if they land and come up on the hill?" |
22554 | But the constant, underlying worry was-- when would the tiger arrive? |
22554 | Can you hear me quite distinctly?" |
22554 | Can you tell how long it must have been since anyone was here?" |
22554 | Did I get the tiger?" |
22554 | Did it ring? |
22554 | Did they not, then of what possible value would be their final decipherment and solution? |
22554 | Did you understand me when I shouted?" |
22554 | Do you think I''m a mere senseless rack of wires and bones because I''m not my usual self? |
22554 | Granting this premise, then what should follow next? |
22554 | Had they heard the news, in that far- away home, of the steamer gone down with every soul? |
22554 | Have you been across to see?" |
22554 | Have you had to give up at last?" |
22554 | Have you noticed it''s rapidly failing?" |
22554 | He was, then, confronted once again by the questions-- how long would it last?--how might it end? |
22554 | He wondered instantly-- had they towed away his boat? |
22554 | How could he possibly hasten? |
22554 | How did it happen?" |
22554 | How did you get here-- come aboard? |
22554 | How far might she go, enduring this life, reduced to savagery? |
22554 | How long would it last, he asked himself-- and what would be the end? |
22554 | If we missed one-- whom should we blame?" |
22554 | It is n''t someone-- some horrible men who hunt human heads for trophies?" |
22554 | It''s really as bad as that?" |
22554 | Might there not be hogs so plentiful, quarry so readily captured, that the overdisdainful monarch would prefer warm meat to cold? |
22554 | Might you not be wiser to rest to- night? |
22554 | Or had one of his many inscrutable moods possessed him, barely for the moment? |
22554 | Or might they have left it moored in some inlet of the island, to be taken upon some future visit? |
22554 | Powder? |
22554 | Shall we wave?" |
22554 | She added,"Why did you ask?" |
22554 | She inquired:"How long will it take to build your boat?" |
22554 | She wondered also, had he meant it at the time? |
22554 | She would not reply, and therefore demanded,"Do you?" |
22554 | Since Fenton refused to be worried concerning himself and the girl who supplied the motive for the trip, then why should he consider it further? |
22554 | The question is-- will you go?" |
22554 | The tide was floating you away-- and I do n''t see why---- Wo n''t you please sit still and behave?" |
22554 | The tiger? |
22554 | Then she said:"What should we do if a year went by-- two years, perhaps, or even more-- and a ship should never come?" |
22554 | There would naturally be, in these circumstances, some word in the cipher spelling"Island"--but what would the place be called? |
22554 | This island''s dominion? |
22554 | Want to come?" |
22554 | Was it floating still in the estuary''s mouth, or had some of the Dyaks destroyed it? |
22554 | We may have to fight two days?" |
22554 | We shall have only fruit this morning?" |
22554 | What have I done?" |
22554 | What is the worst that could happen at the midnight stroke of twelve?" |
22554 | What means, in this situation, might he presently adopt to coerce the love she knew she should never bestow? |
22554 | What sort of things do you mean?" |
22554 | What would he do, she wondered, on the morrow? |
22554 | What''s to prevent me from falling head over heels---- What''s the rest of her name-- Elaine what? |
22554 | What, then, was the reason of their long delay? |
22554 | When I got Sid''s wholly incredible wire that you were both safe and well and coming home---- But how is the good old rascal?" |
22554 | When would he speak of his passion again? |
22554 | Where are you now?_"The mad intoxication of his senses rocked him strangely, there in the thicket. |
22554 | Where are you? |
22554 | Who could come to molest us here?" |
22554 | Who lies beneath thy spell? |
22554 | Whom do you lead on rapture''s roadway jar Before you agonize them, in farewell?_"_ Pale hands I loved, upon the Shalimar, Where are you now? |
22554 | Whom do you lead on rapture''s roadway jar Before you agonize them, in farewell?_"_ Pale hands I loved, upon the Shalimar, Where are you now? |
22554 | Why else should they once more visit the hill at such an hour of the morning? |
22554 | Why should he not bend it thus, she thought, who had wrenched it from a tiger? |
22554 | Why would you work so hard to- night?" |
22554 | Would a search be made for the missing boat that had gone to the bottom of the sea? |
22554 | Would no ship ever come-- or how long might it be till succor finally arrived? |
22554 | Yet how had they happened on his boat and why had they removed it? |
22554 | but why did you go? |
22554 | he interrupted, hoarsely,"when did you throw away his ring?" |
22554 | he said,"why do n''t you help me a little? |
22554 | said Elaine, delighted by the thought;"do you really think you could make it?" |
22554 | she said, impulsively,"could n''t we build a wall of stone around enough of the fruit for just ourselves? |
19235 | A customs officer, then? |
19235 | And can understand English? |
19235 | And do you think,continued the young trader anxiously,"that you want our entire cargo?" |
19235 | And pray, sir, who are you? |
19235 | And you did not send me any message? |
19235 | And you have a guardian? |
19235 | Are there good schools at Pretty Harbour? |
19235 | Are you hurt? |
19235 | Are you still willing to trade your cargo for our pack? |
19235 | At your own expense, I suppose? |
19235 | British or French? |
19235 | But I thought you went down with the''Lavinia''? |
19235 | But hello,he added to himself,"what''s that?" |
19235 | But how did you know of us? |
19235 | But how do you know my name? 19235 But how do you know she''s a steamer? |
19235 | But if we destroyed the schooner, how would we get out of here next summer? |
19235 | But what did they want of you, and what would have happened if you had not given them the slip? |
19235 | But what has become of my mother and sister? |
19235 | But where''s White? 19235 Cabot, are you crazy, or what do you mean? |
19235 | Can you show us a light? |
19235 | Could n''t we go up or down the coast as well as an Eskimo, whenever these miserable waterways freeze over? |
19235 | Could you show me the place, or somewhere near where you found it? |
19235 | Did he send you a note? |
19235 | Did n''t you know that we had come from St. Johns, and were going in the opposite direction? 19235 Did not you send a messenger yesterday?" |
19235 | Did we come in that way? |
19235 | Did you go to it? |
19235 | Did you miss the train after all? |
19235 | Do n''t I? 19235 Do you know him?" |
19235 | Do you mind telling his name and address? |
19235 | Do you suppose Hepburn knows of his escape? |
19235 | Do you think it is safe to leave that chap alone on deck with all those things? |
19235 | Do you think me capable of filling so responsible a position, sir? |
19235 | Do you think there is any chance of our getting away from him? |
19235 | Do you want to heave to and let them overhaul us? |
19235 | Does the ore show anywhere about here? |
19235 | Have they ever troubled you? |
19235 | Have you come to Newfoundland to investigate mineral lands? |
19235 | Have you discovered any indications of mineral wealth during your explorations? |
19235 | Have you the keys of this factory? |
19235 | Have you, then, seen and spoken with him? |
19235 | How about Eskimo? |
19235 | How about light, air, water, food, and sleep? |
19235 | How did it happen? 19235 How do you make a living here?" |
19235 | How is that? |
19235 | How may I reach St. Johns from there? |
19235 | How was the question settled? |
19235 | I thought you were opposed to receiving smuggled goods? |
19235 | I wonder what''s up now? |
19235 | If others have made the trip, why ca n''t we? |
19235 | In what way? |
19235 | Is any member of his family here? |
19235 | Is he an expert? |
19235 | Is it a miracle? |
19235 | Is it possible that you can be Watson Balfour, the celebrated English electrician, who is supposed to have been lost at sea some years ago? |
19235 | Is n''t a New York man by the name of Hepburn one of the interested parties? |
19235 | Is n''t it a lobster factory? |
19235 | Is n''t it fine,he whispered to Cabot, after all hands had sought their bunks,"to think that our venture has turned out so splendidly after all?" |
19235 | Is n''t it? |
19235 | Is n''t there an iron mine on it? |
19235 | Is that a necessary preliminary to drawing money on a letter of credit? |
19235 | Is the place still open, and can I have it? |
19235 | Is this the Pretty Harbour lobster factory? |
19235 | Is your summer to be devoted to work or play? |
19235 | It is owned by the family of the late William Baldwin, is it not? |
19235 | Midnight, and all hands on deck,he shouted, and White, springing up, asked:"What''s happened? |
19235 | Nice calling rig I''ve got on, have n''t I? |
19235 | Not yet of age? |
19235 | Of London? |
19235 | Sailed on the''Lavinia''for St. Johns, Newfoundland, has he? |
19235 | So what''s the use of worrying? |
19235 | Son of the late General Walling, and a man who failed to graduate, is he not? |
19235 | Suppose it should be dark before you got back? |
19235 | Then how did you happen to come? |
19235 | Then perhaps it''s an invitation for us to go and dine with the French captain? |
19235 | Then you also are a mining engineer? |
19235 | Then you intend to develop it, sir? |
19235 | Then,continued Cabot, hardly noting that his deliverer had not spoken,"wo n''t you please go aboard the schooner and find my friend? |
19235 | Those orders apply to the property of Mrs. William Baldwin, do they not? |
19235 | Thought you had started off with Grant on a trip around the world? |
19235 | Was it an accident? |
19235 | Was n''t there a rock or ship or anything she might have run into? |
19235 | Was one of them Pretty Harbour? |
19235 | Was your factory one of those then in existence? |
19235 | What are you doing? |
19235 | What are you going in for, Grant? |
19235 | What became of the others? |
19235 | What do you say to wiring and finding out? 19235 What does it mean?" |
19235 | What happened her? |
19235 | What is it, Yim? |
19235 | What is it? |
19235 | What is the matter? |
19235 | What is the matter? |
19235 | What is your sister''s name? |
19235 | What kind of a building is that? |
19235 | What kind of stuff? |
19235 | What of it? |
19235 | What steamer, and where was she bound? |
19235 | What will they do? |
19235 | What wreck? |
19235 | What''s the matter? |
19235 | What''s the news? |
19235 | What''s up? |
19235 | What, for instance? |
19235 | What, through ice water? 19235 What?" |
19235 | Where is the captain of this schooner? |
19235 | Where shall I find a person by the name of Whiteway Baldwin? |
19235 | Where shall I find it? |
19235 | Where then is the crew? |
19235 | Where? |
19235 | Who are coming? |
19235 | Who are you and where are you bound? |
19235 | Who are you? |
19235 | Who is he? |
19235 | Who is it? 19235 Who is that?" |
19235 | Who then does own the property? |
19235 | Who was Mother Carey,asked Cabot,"and why are they her chickens?" |
19235 | Why did n''t you do it yourself? |
19235 | Why did n''t you send it in before, instead of that other one? |
19235 | Why do n''t you emigrate to the States? |
19235 | Why is canning lobsters considered so wicked? |
19235 | Why, do you know him? |
19235 | Why? 19235 Why?" |
19235 | With any definite object in view,inquired Mr. Hepburn,"or merely for pleasure?" |
19235 | Without knowing its requirements, what hardships it may present, nor in what direction it may lead you? |
19235 | Wo n''t your man and dogs also come aboard? |
19235 | Wot''s hup? |
19235 | Would they really have dared do such a thing? |
19235 | Would you really have offered it to me? |
19235 | You are Cabot Grant of New York? |
19235 | All at once Cabot paused, and, holding a bit of serpentine in his hand, asked:"Did this come from about here?" |
19235 | All you want is three days''delay, is n''t it?" |
19235 | And now, it being settled that we are to fight this thing out together, what do you propose to do with the pack we have worked so hard to make?" |
19235 | And you have decided that you would rather spend the ensuing year in foreign travel with Thorpe Walling than do anything else?" |
19235 | Anything gone wrong?" |
19235 | Are these instructions sufficiently clear?" |
19235 | Are you going to skin out, or wait for the return of the French and English fleets? |
19235 | Are you wounded, or just naturally ill?" |
19235 | Are you wounded?" |
19235 | Are you?" |
19235 | Been to the North Pole with Peary?" |
19235 | But how did you happen to let''em aboard, old man? |
19235 | But how do you happen to be up here, and how have you managed to establish an electric plant in this wilderness? |
19235 | But say, who owns this factory?" |
19235 | But tell me, sir, why have you masqueraded as a man- wolf?" |
19235 | But what brings you back so early? |
19235 | But what do you propose to do to- day, skipper?" |
19235 | But where did you meet him, and why did n''t he come back with you? |
19235 | But why are you second mate instead of captain?" |
19235 | But will you please tell us who you are, where you came from, and how you happened to discover us? |
19235 | Ca n''t you come and let me out?" |
19235 | Ca n''t you tell me some of these things?" |
19235 | Can you recommend one of your recent classmates for an important mission, to be undertaken at once to an out- of- the- way part of the world? |
19235 | Could n''t you stand them off with a gun?" |
19235 | Did she blow up, or what?" |
19235 | Did these far northern Indians still do such things? |
19235 | Do n''t you feel the change of wind?" |
19235 | Do n''t you think so?" |
19235 | Do you know him?" |
19235 | Do you mean that she is a frigate?" |
19235 | Do you propose to take this trip alone or in company?" |
19235 | Do you think your leg will stand the trip?" |
19235 | Eh? |
19235 | Evidently more visitors had arrived; but were they friends or foes? |
19235 | Finally he asked:"Where, then, are we bound?" |
19235 | GRADUATION: BUT WHAT NEXT? |
19235 | GRADUATION: BUT WHAT NEXT? |
19235 | Get tea, sugar, plenty, eat heap, you understand?" |
19235 | Had he really seen his last ray of sunlight and hope? |
19235 | Had there been a collision? |
19235 | Had they gone down with the ship, and was he sole survivor of the tragedy? |
19235 | Have we made a good run?" |
19235 | Have you thought of one?" |
19235 | He had perhaps brought his craft five miles nearer to the land than it was when he set out; but after all what had been the gain? |
19235 | How can you stand them? |
19235 | How did he manage to explain the situation? |
19235 | How did it happen? |
19235 | How did you become so severely wounded? |
19235 | How did you lose the power of speech? |
19235 | I wonder if I am really awake or still dreaming?" |
19235 | I wonder if any other person ever found the place? |
19235 | I wonder if he would mind being called Jim?" |
19235 | I wonder what comes next?" |
19235 | I wonder what possesses them to do such a thing, though, when they had so nearly caught us?" |
19235 | Is it plain, ma intention?" |
19235 | Is it possible? |
19235 | Is it so? |
19235 | Is it wrong to can lobsters?" |
19235 | Is n''t that a great lamp, and does n''t it make things look cheery?" |
19235 | Is not this an English colony?" |
19235 | Is that satisfactory?" |
19235 | Is your name really''Homolupus''?" |
19235 | Not starting off on your year of travel, are you?" |
19235 | Now, how about the young man you were to recommend? |
19235 | Now, what shall we do?" |
19235 | Now, which way did I come?" |
19235 | Now, with your Institute career ended, how do you propose to spend the remainder of your minority? |
19235 | Pierre?" |
19235 | Say, Arsenic, you all come with we all to shipee, sabe? |
19235 | Seeing as you are the boss, though, how''d you like to trade your pack for my cargo-- lobsters for groceries? |
19235 | Shall we go back?" |
19235 | The launch slowed down as it neared him, and an officer inquired in the crisp tones of authority:"What place is this?" |
19235 | Was not his life as well worth fighting for now as then? |
19235 | We were feeling blue enough without you, were n''t we, Dave?" |
19235 | Well then, why not invite them on board? |
19235 | Well, then, why not carry them somewhere else in the''Sea Bee''? |
19235 | Were n''t you afraid they would fire at us?" |
19235 | What are the Indians doing?" |
19235 | What are you doing here, you French beggars? |
19235 | What could it mean? |
19235 | What does he look like? |
19235 | What had become of his recent companions? |
19235 | What hev ye done with Whiteway Baldwin?" |
19235 | What if they were too late after all? |
19235 | What shall we do now?" |
19235 | What steamer was she, where was she bound, and what part of the coast was she wrecked on?" |
19235 | What was the use of learning a lesson of that kind if he could not profit by it? |
19235 | What would his guardian and employer say could he know all this and see him at the present moment? |
19235 | When do you plan to start?" |
19235 | Where are you?" |
19235 | Where do you come from? |
19235 | Where do you suppose they came from?" |
19235 | Where does he live? |
19235 | Where on earth did you come from?" |
19235 | Who is he? |
19235 | Who zen belong to it?" |
19235 | Why are you masquerading as a man- wolf? |
19235 | Why could n''t they have kept away for three days longer?" |
19235 | Why did n''t you tie a string to one of those Indians, as I advised?" |
19235 | Why did you not come at once?" |
19235 | Why do you call him a wolf- man? |
19235 | Why does he disappear when you go in answer to his signals? |
19235 | Why not accept Captain Bland''s offer, and trade it to him for groceries?" |
19235 | Why should n''t we take the goods to Labrador? |
19235 | Why, sir, how many years have you dwelt in this place?" |
19235 | Wonder if they can be stars, though? |
19235 | Wonder what he thinks has become of me anyhow? |
19235 | Wonder why he ca n''t?" |
19235 | Wonder why he did it? |
19235 | Wot''s hup?" |
19235 | Would he be carried to the distant interior to become a slave in some filthy Indian village, or would he be killed before they took their departure? |
19235 | Would n''t it be fine to be picked up and carried straight to New York? |
19235 | Would n''t it be great if he could, and if, at the same time, he could carry with him enough money to relieve all present anxieties? |
19235 | You have enough money for your immediate needs, have you not?" |
19235 | You sabe, Nain?" |
19235 | You said there was another station that I could reach from your place, did n''t you?" |
19235 | You understand?" |
19235 | [ Illustration:"Did this come from about here?"] |
19235 | can you?" |
19235 | he finally asked,"and has your speech been restored to you, or have you been able to speak all the time?" |
37652 | A dozen? |
37652 | A picnic? |
37652 | A prisoner? 37652 A what? |
37652 | A what? |
37652 | After all, where does it matter, so long as he receives Christian burial? |
37652 | All quiet, I suppose? 37652 All ready, pater?" |
37652 | Alone? |
37652 | And Quexo? |
37652 | And are there fish or marine animals in the bed of the ocean? |
37652 | And how do you feel to- day? |
37652 | And our boat; how shall we be able to leave the island now? |
37652 | And water? |
37652 | And where''s the canoe? 37652 Any luck?" |
37652 | Any need to keep watch to- night, pater? |
37652 | Any sign of the boat? |
37652 | Any signs of the crew? |
37652 | Anyone hurt? |
37652 | Anything wrong? |
37652 | Are n''t you nearly ready? |
37652 | Are they doing anything for''ard? |
37652 | Are you all right, sir? |
37652 | Are you fit for a dash? |
37652 | Are you hurt? |
37652 | Are you making another trip to- day? |
37652 | Are you ready to start? |
37652 | Are you sure you are all right, dad? |
37652 | Armed, of course? |
37652 | Ask him whether we have plenty of sea room-- whether there is any danger of running ashore during the next hour or so? |
37652 | Between whom? |
37652 | But are we going straight to Ahii? |
37652 | But do you expect another crowd of savages? |
37652 | But how are we to get the gear up there-- including the useless lump of animated clay in the shape of myself? |
37652 | But how are you going to stop the wheel? 37652 But how is she behaving?" |
37652 | But what is the weight of the boat? |
37652 | But where? 37652 But, I say, is n''t everything quiet?" |
37652 | But,objected Ellerton,"what''s the use? |
37652 | By the by, do you ever go to Tahiti? |
37652 | By the tunnel? |
37652 | Ca n''t we go back for her? |
37652 | Ca n''t we go on deck? |
37652 | Ca n''t you see what it is? 37652 Coming ashore, boss?" |
37652 | Could n''t the boss bring over the rest of your pals and settle our score with those niggers? |
37652 | Could n''t we smash the door with an axe? |
37652 | Dead? |
37652 | Did you leave the door open? |
37652 | Do n''t you think we could rig up an electric alarm? |
37652 | Do you hear that, Quexo? |
37652 | Do you know its name, sir? |
37652 | Do you know, Ellerton? |
37652 | Do you think she''ll stay there? |
37652 | Do you think that Terence and you can manage by yourselves? |
37652 | Do you think there will be much of a struggle? |
37652 | Dynamite? |
37652 | Fine, is n''t it? |
37652 | Finished it, then, pater? |
37652 | Firearms? |
37652 | Glass-- telescope-- see? |
37652 | Going to start the motor? |
37652 | Had n''t we better get Quexo ashore before it gets dark? |
37652 | Had n''t we better see about baling her out? |
37652 | Has n''t the other? |
37652 | Have you ever tried to make a blaze that way? |
37652 | Hoppy''s bull? |
37652 | How are we going to get the brute on deck? |
37652 | How are we to manage when the hull is brought close in shore? |
37652 | How are you going to manage it? |
37652 | How are you going to throw them? |
37652 | How can we stop them taking to their canoes? |
37652 | How deep is it here? |
37652 | How did you get out of it? |
37652 | How do you propose to do it? |
37652 | How do you propose to get the cutter over the side? |
37652 | How do you think you''ll stop two hundred natives if they set their minds on landing here? 37652 How far are we from Ni Atong?" |
37652 | How far away is the stream-- I think you mentioned there was a stream in the bay? |
37652 | How inclose it? |
37652 | How is Quexo getting on? |
37652 | How is the glass, Captain? |
37652 | How? |
37652 | Hurt? 37652 Hurt?" |
37652 | I bet you never bought her at Hilo? |
37652 | I do n''t want unnecessary violence; besides, if their canoes are destroyed, how can they leave the island? 37652 I hope you do n''t mean to show the white feather, Andy?" |
37652 | I suppose we can not launch one of the canoes, provision her, and make a dash for safety? |
37652 | I was in a hurry to tell you, and what does it matter now that the man has escaped? |
37652 | I wonder what Hoppy is doing? |
37652 | I wonder what''s up? 37652 If we can use the stuff to no better purpose, why not set a time- fuse, and give them another surprise?" |
37652 | Is he asleep, or is he dead? |
37652 | Is it always calm in the Doldrums? |
37652 | Is it because the tide is falling? |
37652 | Is n''t it awful, this gale? |
37652 | Is n''t it superb? |
37652 | Is n''t the heat oppressive? |
37652 | Is n''t there a rift or a hole in the floor where we could bury him? |
37652 | Is she really done for? |
37652 | Is there one left? |
37652 | Left behind? 37652 Make a bomb and roll it over the cliff?" |
37652 | No sign of any canoes? |
37652 | No; has it one? |
37652 | Not a bad shot, eh, boss? |
37652 | Now the question is, what is to be done with the stuff? |
37652 | Now who''s right, sir? |
37652 | Now, Ellerton, how''s your nerve? |
37652 | Pleasant, is n''t it? |
37652 | Quexo missing? 37652 Quite so; but where is the power required to turn the winches to come from? |
37652 | Say, Andy,exclaimed Terence,"is n''t it about time I had a spell ashore?" |
37652 | Say, boss? |
37652 | Say, why? 37652 Say, why?" |
37652 | See, our pursuers are gaining; you are quite sure the motor is thoroughly tuned up, I hope? |
37652 | Seen anything of Blight? |
37652 | Shall I give you a tow? |
37652 | Shall I lend you four or five hands to work the sweeps? |
37652 | Shall we go back for our axes? |
37652 | Shall we let our men loose? |
37652 | Shall we make a bolt for it? 37652 Shall we place some others in the gorge when it is dark?" |
37652 | Strike me; wot''s this? |
37652 | Terence, keep the light steady for a moment, will you? |
37652 | That will, of course, come in handy; but wo n''t we require it on board? |
37652 | The island''s free, I guess? |
37652 | The ox? |
37652 | Then we must arm ourselves? |
37652 | Then we must have passed them? |
37652 | Then what happened? |
37652 | Then what happens to me? |
37652 | Then what is it? 37652 Then what''s to be done?" |
37652 | Then where does it lead to? |
37652 | Then you advise me to get away from the island as soon as I can, and never return to it? |
37652 | Then you do n''t want these fellows to have a set- to? |
37652 | Then, how in the name of goodness, do you expect to get back? |
37652 | They are willing to let the brutes free if you promise that your power''ll keep off the-- the-- you know what I mean, boss, the----"Evil eye?'' |
37652 | They wo n''t injure the boat? |
37652 | Thick, is n''t it? |
37652 | Thinking what, my boy? |
37652 | Thirty feet, do you call it? |
37652 | This is a present, is n''t it, boss? |
37652 | Time? |
37652 | Treasure, eh? 37652 Trouble in store?" |
37652 | We must set watches to- night, I suppose? |
37652 | Well, Quexo,said Andy, on the mulatto''s return,"what did the white man say?" |
37652 | Well, lads,he exclaimed,"what do you think of our allies?" |
37652 | Well, what can I do for you? |
37652 | Well, where is he? 37652 Well? |
37652 | Well? |
37652 | Well? |
37652 | What are they up to, pater? |
37652 | What did you bring ashore? |
37652 | What do they say? |
37652 | What do you propose to do? |
37652 | What do you think of that, sir? |
37652 | What fellow is that? |
37652 | What for? |
37652 | What have we here? |
37652 | What is it? |
37652 | What is the matter with my nerves? |
37652 | What is the value of the treasure? |
37652 | What is to prevent us from digging a shallow trench and conducting the water right to the entrance to the tunnel? |
37652 | What pals?'' |
37652 | What suspicions, sir? |
37652 | What''s her length, do you think? |
37652 | What''s that? |
37652 | What''s that? |
37652 | What''s the use? 37652 What''s to be done now? |
37652 | What''s up, Terence? |
37652 | What''s up? |
37652 | What''s up? |
37652 | What''s your business, might I ask? |
37652 | What''s your game? |
37652 | What''s yours? |
37652 | What, these natives? |
37652 | What? |
37652 | Whatever can be done to save it? |
37652 | When shall we be able to land, do you think? |
37652 | When shall we start? |
37652 | Where shall I make fast to? |
37652 | Where to? |
37652 | Where''s Blight? |
37652 | Where''s his lamp? 37652 Where''s the searchlight?" |
37652 | Why do n''t you want to let that chap Blight know we''ve a motor? |
37652 | Why not get aboard the canoes, and let this''ere packet go? |
37652 | Why not to- day? 37652 Why, sir?" |
37652 | Why? 37652 Why?" |
37652 | Will it hold? |
37652 | Will she do it, I wonder? |
37652 | Wo n''t we be able to have some bathes? |
37652 | Would n''t a sewing machine be better? |
37652 | You ai n''t going to shoot me? |
37652 | You are not going to throw away your life, are you? |
37652 | You are not hurt? |
37652 | You are quite sure you can unshackle the thing easily? |
37652 | You did? |
37652 | You know him? |
37652 | You know the course? 37652 You locked the door in the fence?" |
37652 | You see the second terrace? 37652 You told him?" |
37652 | You understand, Andy? |
37652 | You-- Why, what''s the matter with the lad? |
37652 | Afterwards the winning side secure those who are only stunned and----""And what?" |
37652 | Already several of them, laden with spoil, were descending the cliff- path to their canoes; were the white men to be left unmolested? |
37652 | And after? |
37652 | And how?" |
37652 | And you, Terence, would you not like to return to''Our Lady of the Snows''?" |
37652 | Andy, will you please take Quexo with you and bring up a couple of barricoes of water?" |
37652 | Are you ill?" |
37652 | Are you ready? |
37652 | Are you willing to go, lads? |
37652 | At all events, Mr. McKay and his party were still in a position to offer resistance, but against what odds? |
37652 | But I am awfully anxious to see, so what do you say to another turn at the winch?" |
37652 | But can you lend me a revolver, cap''n? |
37652 | But did n''t we give them a good licking when they pursued us in their canoes? |
37652 | But how about a drink? |
37652 | But how about a light? |
37652 | But now, how about Blight? |
37652 | But what are they up to now?" |
37652 | But what do you say? |
37652 | But what''s that I can see for''ard?" |
37652 | But----""What?" |
37652 | By the by, what was that noise we heard last night?" |
37652 | CHAPTER II AGROUND For a brief instant Ellerton hesitated; ought he to return to his friends or make his way for''ard? |
37652 | CHAPTER XIX THE PRISONER''S ESCAPE"Do you think they will ever return?" |
37652 | Can we get over the reef, do you think, Hoppy?" |
37652 | Can we land?" |
37652 | Could you manage to come down here, do you think?" |
37652 | Dare the pursuer use his revolver and stop this headlong flight? |
37652 | Did you find any signs of the island having been inhabited?" |
37652 | Do you think we might spare Blight a lamb, Andy?" |
37652 | Each sheet is ten feet in height, is it not?" |
37652 | Ellerton, you''re feeling fit, I hope? |
37652 | Everything is ready, I suppose?" |
37652 | Had his comrades searched in vain and had they abandoned their quest and left him to his fate? |
37652 | Had n''t we better unload the boat?" |
37652 | Has anyone any matches?" |
37652 | Has anything gone wrong?" |
37652 | Have you any matches?" |
37652 | Have you anything to say?" |
37652 | How are we to pass a sling round the brute''s body?" |
37652 | How did these get here?" |
37652 | How did you descend?" |
37652 | How far did you fall?" |
37652 | How long had he been in this hideous deathtrap? |
37652 | How''s Terence?" |
37652 | Hullo, Quexo, tired, eh?" |
37652 | I must stay here-- what do you say, lads?" |
37652 | I suppose Captain Perez is steering to the south''ard to try and avoid the main path of the hurricane?" |
37652 | I suppose you do n''t object to being landed there?" |
37652 | I wonder where they keep the fodder?" |
37652 | In the meantime, lads, what do you say to a kind of picnic?" |
37652 | Is Andy still on the beach?" |
37652 | Is that so?" |
37652 | McKay?" |
37652 | Now will you please empty that case of biscuits? |
37652 | One would have thought that your unpleasant experiences in connection with the_ Sea Belle_----""What d''ye mean?" |
37652 | Say, are you traders?" |
37652 | See yon hills?" |
37652 | See?" |
37652 | Shall I tell our men to push right in and burn their blessed canoes?" |
37652 | Suppose that rogue has got the upper hand? |
37652 | Terence, there''s a pencil and paper close to your elbow; will you please sketch a plan of a Union Jack?" |
37652 | Terence, will you go back to the house and bring three or four spades? |
37652 | Terence, will you please hand me over that signalling flag from the for''ard port locker?" |
37652 | The rock afforded but a slender hold: either the fabric might become loosened, or his hand might be unable to keep up the strain, and then----? |
37652 | Their allies were being driven back; but where were the white men? |
37652 | Then came the question, how were they going to transport the crippled Mr. McKay to the shore? |
37652 | Then:"What have you fellows been up to?" |
37652 | This was done, but then came the difficulty: how were they to release the animal from the stall and drag it to the hatchway? |
37652 | Understand?" |
37652 | Was it a night, or many days and nights? |
37652 | Were his companions at length overwhelmed by dint of numbers? |
37652 | What chance do you think these fellows will have?" |
37652 | What could be easier? |
37652 | What did it mean? |
37652 | What for? |
37652 | What had happened? |
37652 | What is the interior like?" |
37652 | What lay behind it? |
37652 | What noise, boss?" |
37652 | What secret did it guard so well? |
37652 | What your massa name is?'' |
37652 | What''s that?" |
37652 | What''s your experience of these, Ellerton?" |
37652 | When do you set sail for your own island?" |
37652 | Where are you?" |
37652 | Where''s a machine to be had?" |
37652 | Where''s the wind?" |
37652 | Who fired it?" |
37652 | Why do you ask?" |
37652 | Why do you ask?" |
37652 | Why not come back to Ahii with us, and make those chaps from Teku clear off back to their own island? |
37652 | Why should we chuck away our chance for a wounded nigger?" |
37652 | Why, whatever is the matter with you, Andy? |
37652 | Would it hold? |
37652 | Would it not be well to carry a supply of provisions with us and store them in the cave? |
37652 | Would the natives be content with their success, and re- embark with their booty? |
37652 | You brought the signal flags, I hope?" |
37652 | You do n''t imagine I''m afraid to tackle an unarmed man, do you? |
37652 | You have plenty of ammunition?" |
37652 | You quite understand?" |
37652 | You understand? |
37652 | You understand?" |
37652 | _ Bounty_, for instance, did he not successfully accomplish a voyage of 4000 miles in an open boat in forty- one days? |
37652 | asked Mr. McKay cheerfully; then realising that his son looked ill, he exclaimed:"What have you been doing, Andy?" |
6897 | ''But who''he asked,''was to be the ambassador from so stupendous a Power to these barbarous states? 6897 ''Do you think then that we are in danger?'' |
6897 | ''Has my husband caught any fish, do you know, Jackson?'' 6897 ''How can I tell?'' |
6897 | ''Not there?'' 6897 ''Why so, my dear?'' |
6897 | A Christian,said I,"what is that?" |
6897 | Am I not blind-- how can I teach you? |
6897 | And how could it be otherwise? 6897 And my chest, and my seal?" |
6897 | And now, I say, where do you hold out? 6897 And what is grateful?" |
6897 | And what is that? |
6897 | And when do you think of leaving this island? |
6897 | And you say that God will give us all that we ask for in our prayers? |
6897 | And your father? |
6897 | Are these all the birds that you have for food? |
6897 | Are you much hurt, Frank Henniker? |
6897 | Are you quite well? |
6897 | Are you there, Frank? |
6897 | Are you? 6897 Blind, what is blind?" |
6897 | Bring me some more water, do you hear? |
6897 | But are not you always? |
6897 | But are we only to think of ourselves in this world, and not of others? |
6897 | But did they never come into collision with the wild natives of the country? |
6897 | But do you mean to say that you really like to drink that stuff? |
6897 | But how can we do that, it is so thick and heavy? |
6897 | But what are we to do with the potatoes? |
6897 | But who is God? 6897 But who was Jesus Christ?" |
6897 | But why did he so? |
6897 | But will it never be understood then by anybody? |
6897 | But wo n''t it make it cold at night? |
6897 | But,said I,"this round glass-- what is that for?" |
6897 | Ca n''t you see me? |
6897 | Can you eat any dinner? 6897 Charity and mercy,"said I,"what are they? |
6897 | Die? |
6897 | Do I like to drink it? 6897 Do they still hold possession of it?" |
6897 | Do you feel easier? |
6897 | Do you know if they left anything behind them, Frank? |
6897 | Do you think you could get to the cabin, if I helped you? |
6897 | Do you think, then, that God prevented our going with them on purpose that we might not share their fate? |
6897 | Do you think, then, that we shall starve? |
6897 | Do you understand it yourself? |
6897 | Do you want anything else? |
6897 | Do you want anything? |
6897 | Does he know, Frank? |
6897 | Eat? 6897 Frank Henniker, did you speak?" |
6897 | Frank Henniker, do you know that rock? |
6897 | Had I not better run home and get arms? |
6897 | Has England then completely lost the country she colonised? |
6897 | Has God abandoned us? |
6897 | Have you brought any with you? |
6897 | Have you called long? |
6897 | Have you never been able to call your own mother to your memory? |
6897 | Have you no light at hand? |
6897 | Have you no wish then, to leave this island? |
6897 | Have you used all the potatoes you brought up? |
6897 | He was a good man, was he not? |
6897 | Here,said I,"what is this?" |
6897 | How are you this morning? |
6897 | How could he be equal with God, if, as you said yesterday, God sent him down to be killed? |
6897 | How did he die? |
6897 | How did he die? |
6897 | How is it possible? |
6897 | How long have you been on this island? |
6897 | How shall we manage it? |
6897 | How? |
6897 | I brought all this earth from there, and there is plenty of it; but what is the good of planting them? |
6897 | I do not like interrupting you,I here observed,"but I certainly should like to know what is meant by the word lovers?" |
6897 | I know that,replied he;"but what do I care now?" |
6897 | I know what children are, as Jackson represented to me that I was the child of my father and mother, but what makes children, parish children? |
6897 | I say, boy, have you a good stock of them dried chickens of yours? |
6897 | I suppose,I here observed,"that the people who lived there, were deeply impressed with their good fortune in finding such an asylum?" |
6897 | I want to know the whole story of how we came to this island, who my father and mother were, and why you said that you hated me and my name? |
6897 | If you take all the provision, of course you will take the lad with you? |
6897 | Is she alive? |
6897 | Is she sending a boat, boy? |
6897 | Is that all you have gained by reading your Bible? |
6897 | Is that you, Frank? |
6897 | Is there anything else? |
6897 | Is there no way? |
6897 | Is there, my hearty,--where? |
6897 | It must be alive,thought I;"is it a fish or a bird?" |
6897 | Jackson,said I, kneeling down by him,"are you much hurt?" |
6897 | Let me feel them? |
6897 | Lucky for me, do you mean, Frank? |
6897 | No one can drink this-- what can it be? |
6897 | No!--yes!--can it be possible? 6897 Now what shall I bring in?" |
6897 | Now, what have you brought this time? |
6897 | Now, what is this? |
6897 | Of course I do; why should I not be? |
6897 | Perhaps not,replied Jackson;"his foot may have slipped, who knows? |
6897 | Shall I read to you? |
6897 | Shall I take Nero with me? |
6897 | Shall I wake them? |
6897 | Shall this go in? |
6897 | Shall we have the mizen? |
6897 | Then why have you not been kind to me? 6897 Then you killed him for love of his wife, and hate of himself?" |
6897 | Then you will be punished when you die, will you not? |
6897 | There''s the shovel,said I,"and the boat''s sail-- must I bring them down?" |
6897 | To what republic do you allude? |
6897 | Well, but we can get more, ca n''t we? |
6897 | Were the immediate results of so large an addition to geographical knowledge, as beneficial to the entire human race as they ought to have been? |
6897 | Were you born without a mother? |
6897 | What are brushes and combs and scissors? |
6897 | What are miracles? |
6897 | What are parish children? |
6897 | What are souls? |
6897 | What can I do? |
6897 | What did I sing to you last night? |
6897 | What did you do? |
6897 | What does he do there? |
6897 | What had become of your mother? |
6897 | What is I thank you? |
6897 | What is a Bible, and what is a Prayer- book? |
6897 | What is a parish clerk? |
6897 | What is faith? 6897 What is there in it?" |
6897 | What temptations are we not free from here? |
6897 | What then, it has eyes? 6897 What use can we make of that long line which they have left?" |
6897 | What was that? |
6897 | What''s a boat? |
6897 | What''s a lady? |
6897 | What''s a missionary? |
6897 | What''s a mystery? |
6897 | What''s an alphabet? |
6897 | What''s the matter, master? |
6897 | What, the diamonds? |
6897 | What? |
6897 | Where am I? |
6897 | Where are they? |
6897 | Where did you get that linen? |
6897 | Where is South America? |
6897 | Who are you? |
6897 | Who is Nero? |
6897 | Who spoke? |
6897 | Who taught you to read? |
6897 | Who''s there? |
6897 | Who''s there? |
6897 | Who? |
6897 | Why am I to do that, mother? |
6897 | Why did God keep the Jews apart from the Egyptians, and have them thrown in bondage? |
6897 | Why do n''t you keep up with the lady? 6897 Why do n''t you wear some of them?" |
6897 | Why is it called the Lord''s Prayer? |
6897 | Why should he object to receive what he so much stands in need of? |
6897 | Why should you have thought that? |
6897 | Why, did you not say that you were born on the island, boy? |
6897 | Why, do n''t you know that you''re blind, Jackson? |
6897 | Why, where have you been all your life? |
6897 | Why, you did n''t expect a regular hotel when you landed, did you, mate? |
6897 | Will God hear you? 6897 Will you bring me some water for my eyes? |
6897 | Will you come with me? |
6897 | Will you? 6897 Wo n''t you have something to eat?" |
6897 | Wo n''t you tell it to me? |
6897 | Would you rather stay on the island with Nero, than go away without him? |
6897 | Yes,replied I;"but is it not injuries to ourselves? |
6897 | You called me, master? |
6897 | You like songs, do you? 6897 You wo n''t be afraid of the seal,"said I,"will you? |
6897 | ''Had he caught any fish when you were with him?'' |
6897 | ''Shall I leave Jackson with you?'' |
6897 | After a while he recommenced--"Who can ever prove that they were Henniker''s diamonds?" |
6897 | After we had eaten our dinner, she said to me--"How could you contrive to live on this island, if you had no dried birds?" |
6897 | And that no one could prove they were his-- this implied that Jackson had no right to them; indeed how could he have? |
6897 | Are you afraid of him?" |
6897 | Are you going to bed now?" |
6897 | Are your clothes wet?" |
6897 | As I looked at him, and recalled to mind his words,"Am not I an object of pity?" |
6897 | As we sat at our meal, I said,"Dear mother, what are we to do next?" |
6897 | As your father undressed, your mother said,''Does not that belt worry you a great deal, my dear?'' |
6897 | Besides, I have only two lines, and I might lose them both-- then what would become of me? |
6897 | Bob, you fool, why could n''t you leave the animal alone? |
6897 | But I asked myself how was this desirable object to be effected? |
6897 | But where was he? |
6897 | But where? |
6897 | But, I repeat, that we must study the whole of the Bible with faith, and not be continually asking ourselves,''Why was this done?'' |
6897 | But, are we to suppose that, because we, in our foolishness, can not comprehend his reasons, that therefore they must be cavilled at? |
6897 | Can you do that?" |
6897 | Can you explain to me yourself? |
6897 | Can you feel resentment against one in my wretched state? |
6897 | Can you tell me? |
6897 | Can you tell? |
6897 | Come, boy, what have you got for our breakfast? |
6897 | Did I ever prevent you from having water?" |
6897 | Did I make much noise last night?" |
6897 | Did you plant all these flowers and creepers which grow over the cabin?" |
6897 | Do you ever pray to him?" |
6897 | Do you know what for? |
6897 | Do you not understand in what spirit the Bible should be read?" |
6897 | Do you recollect?" |
6897 | Do you think that you could walk to your bed- place?" |
6897 | Do you understand how it is that that plant keeps alive-- grows every year-- every year throws out a large blue flower? |
6897 | Do you understand me, Frank?" |
6897 | Do you understand me? |
6897 | Do you understand me?" |
6897 | Do you understand?" |
6897 | Does he know that we are starving?" |
6897 | Does it mind the wind?" |
6897 | Does not the commandment say,''Thou shalt not kill?''" |
6897 | Had not the murder been already avenged? |
6897 | Have you a hut or a cave to live in?" |
6897 | Have you ever tried to sing?" |
6897 | Have you put the belt on?" |
6897 | He paused, as if he did not know my voice, and then said:"But I ca n''t see anything; how''s this?" |
6897 | How am I to plant them?" |
6897 | How big did you say that the cask was?" |
6897 | How could I have learnt deceit? |
6897 | How is it that the bird is covered with feathers, and has the power to fly? |
6897 | How is it that the inside of an egg is changed into a bird? |
6897 | How old do you think you are now?" |
6897 | How?" |
6897 | I ask you again, am I not an object of pity and commiseration?" |
6897 | I asked my companion,"or has He forgotten that two of his creatures are in the deepest peril of their lives, from which He alone can save them?" |
6897 | I confessed that he was, and then I asked myself the question, Can you forgive him who was the murderer of your father? |
6897 | I could soon tell it you if it were not for the last question,--why I hated your name? |
6897 | I pushed him for some time without success; but, at last he opened his eyes, and said:"My watch already?" |
6897 | I say, boy, where did you leave your trousers?" |
6897 | I suppose you expect to be very happy if ever you get back to England?" |
6897 | I was about to go up to the cabin for some birds, when another man called out--"I say-- can you get us any water?" |
6897 | I went to him and examined him-- was he asleep, or was he dead? |
6897 | I wonder if they would run up my cabin? |
6897 | In short, I read in darkness; and I may say that I almost knew the Bible by heart without understanding it.--How could I? |
6897 | Is it not nearly daylight?" |
6897 | Is it not so?" |
6897 | Is there anything in the pannikin?" |
6897 | Isolated as I had been, must it not have been innate? |
6897 | It was on the third morning that he said,--"I can talk to you now; what do you want to know?" |
6897 | Looking into the wound, my desire of information induced me to say,"What are these little white cords, which are cut through?" |
6897 | Most truly was the question put by me,"Charity and mercy-- what are they?" |
6897 | Now do you understand?" |
6897 | Now look, Frank; is the next letter to O the shape of this?" |
6897 | Now, John Gough, what do you intend to do?" |
6897 | Now, can you forgive me? |
6897 | Now, do you understand what I want?" |
6897 | On my return, I found Jackson in his bed- place; he heard me come in, and asked me, in a quiet tone, whether I would bring him some water? |
6897 | See the judgment of God-- am I not now precisely in his position, lying battered and crushed as he was? |
6897 | Shall I kill him while he sleeps?" |
6897 | Shall I pray now for both of us?" |
6897 | Shall I wear the belt myself, or shall I put it in the bundle? |
6897 | Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it,''Why hast thou made me thus?'' |
6897 | She examined the cabin and the bed- places, and then said,"Where do you sleep?" |
6897 | Tell me now, yourself, what do you prefer and set most value upon, your belt of diamonds, or the iron kettle?" |
6897 | The one addressed did so, and the man put it into my hands, saying,"Bring us that pail, boy, will you?" |
6897 | The question is, will you give me the price, or will you not? |
6897 | The reader may inquire how it was that I knew the exact time of the arrival of the birds? |
6897 | Then perhaps you''ll tell us how to get something to eat, my hearty?" |
6897 | There he was, apparently a gentlemen of property and consideration; and I, what was I? |
6897 | There they are, do you choose to buy them?" |
6897 | Was he not already punished? |
6897 | Was there no man,''he again asked,''great enough and bold enough to undertake a mission of such vast importance, attended by such terrible risks? |
6897 | Well, what of Captain James, eh?" |
6897 | What can they expect from him in the way of mercy when they have shewn none? |
6897 | What do the Proverbs say? |
6897 | What is your name? |
6897 | What is your name?" |
6897 | What next, O Lord of Heaven?" |
6897 | What then was I to do? |
6897 | What then, shall I tax him with it when he is awake, and then kill him?" |
6897 | What trouble would you take for me, if I were blind now, and not you? |
6897 | What was it that you said just before I forgot everything this morning?" |
6897 | What was it? |
6897 | What was your reason then?" |
6897 | What will you do?" |
6897 | When I had answered the question, I said to her--"I have brought up more of the potatoes, as you call them; what am I to do with them?" |
6897 | When I had told her all, I said--"Now, as they talk of not taking my chest, what shall I do? |
6897 | Where could we be? |
6897 | Where did I come by them? |
6897 | Where is she?" |
6897 | Where now could be the island I, though long so anxious to quit, now was a thousand times more desirous of beholding? |
6897 | Where''s John Gough? |
6897 | Where''s all on''em?" |
6897 | Where''s the captain? |
6897 | Who are you that have guessed that? |
6897 | Who are you? |
6897 | Who left you on shore to get all ready for us?" |
6897 | Who shall I begin with-- with my husband or with myself?" |
6897 | Who would venture to be a messenger of peace and comfort to a cruel and savage nation? |
6897 | Why did you thank God for the seamen having left us here, instead of taking us with them?" |
6897 | Why does he feel so angry at my name? |
6897 | Why should it do so? |
6897 | Will you come again? |
6897 | Will you do this for me?" |
6897 | Will you take Nero with you?" |
6897 | You ca n''t tell why or how or what causes produce these effects-- can you?" |
6897 | You have read the history of Joseph and his brethren?" |
6897 | You know which book I told you was the Prayer- book?" |
6897 | You see me now-- are they not all avenged?" |
6897 | You see, you know that it does do so; but can you tell me what makes it do so?" |
6897 | You understand now?" |
6897 | and has not His vengeance fallen upon me even in this world? |
6897 | and whence comes that beautiful colour? |
6897 | and''God damn''--but who is he?" |
6897 | exclaimed he,"how shall I escape?" |
6897 | in that cask? |
6897 | inquired I; and then after a little thought, I said,"You do n''t mean Nero, mother?" |
6897 | or will you believe that I''m master?" |
6897 | or will you wear it for me, as my mother would have done, if she had been alive?" |
6897 | said one of the men, addressing me,"and how many of you are there here?" |
6897 | very well; and my name?" |
6897 | what birds?" |
6897 | what do you mean?" |
6897 | what is the meaning of Henniker, I wonder? |
6897 | why should the flower always be blue? |
21551 | A Christian,said I,"what is that?" |
21551 | Am I not blind-- how can I teach you? |
21551 | And how could it be otherwise? 21551 And my chest, and my seal?" |
21551 | And now, I say, where do you hold out? 21551 And what is grateful?" |
21551 | And what is that? |
21551 | And when do you think of leaving this island? |
21551 | And you say that God will give us all that we ask for in our prayers? |
21551 | And your father? |
21551 | Are these all the birds that you have for food? |
21551 | Are you much hurt, Frank Henniker? |
21551 | Are you quite well? |
21551 | Are you there, Frank? |
21551 | Are you? 21551 Blind, what is blind?" |
21551 | Bring me some more water, do you hear? |
21551 | But are not you always? |
21551 | But are we only to think of ourselves in this world, and not of others? |
21551 | But did they never come into collision with the wild natives of the country? |
21551 | But do you mean to say that you really like to drink that stuff? |
21551 | But how can we do that, it is so thick and heavy? |
21551 | But what are we to do with the potatoes? |
21551 | But who is God? 21551 But who was Jesus Christ?" |
21551 | But why did he so? |
21551 | But will it never be understood then by anybody? |
21551 | But wo n''t it make it cold at night? |
21551 | But,said I,"this round glass-- what is that for?" |
21551 | Ca n''t you see me? |
21551 | Can you eat any dinner? 21551 Charity and mercy,"said I,"what are they? |
21551 | Die? |
21551 | Do I like to drink it? 21551 Do they still hold possession of it?" |
21551 | Do you feel easier? |
21551 | Do you know if they left anything behind them, Frank? |
21551 | Do you think you could get to the cabin, if I helped you? |
21551 | Do you think, then, that God prevented our going with them on purpose that we might not share their fate? |
21551 | Do you think, then, that we shall starve? |
21551 | Do you understand it yourself? |
21551 | Do you want anything else? |
21551 | Do you want anything? |
21551 | Does He know, Frank? |
21551 | Eat? 21551 Frank Henniker, did you speak?" |
21551 | Frank Henniker, do you know that rock? |
21551 | Had I not better run home and get arms? |
21551 | Has England then completely lost the country she colonised? |
21551 | Has God abandoned us? |
21551 | Have you brought any with you? |
21551 | Have you called long? |
21551 | Have you never been able to call your own mother to your memory? |
21551 | Have you no light at hand? |
21551 | Have you no wish, then, to leave this island? |
21551 | Have you used all the potatoes you brought up? |
21551 | He was a good man, was he not? |
21551 | Here,said I,"what is this?" |
21551 | How are you this morning? |
21551 | How could he be equal with God, if, as you said yesterday, God sent him down to be killed? |
21551 | How did he die? |
21551 | How did he die? |
21551 | How is it possible? |
21551 | How long have you been on this island? |
21551 | How shall we manage it? |
21551 | How? |
21551 | I brought all this earth from there, and there is plenty of it; but what is the good of planting them? |
21551 | I do not like interrupting you,I here observed,"but I certainly should like to know what is meant by the word lovers?" |
21551 | I know that,replied he;"but what do I care now?" |
21551 | I know what children are, as Jackson represented to me that I was the child of my father and mother-- but what makes children parish children? |
21551 | I say, boy, have you a good stock of them dried chickens of yours? |
21551 | I suppose,I here observed,"that the people who lived there were deeply impressed with their good fortune in finding such an asylum?" |
21551 | I want to know the whole story of how we came to this island, who my father and mother were, and why you said that you hated me and my name? |
21551 | If you take all the provision, of course you will take the lad with you? |
21551 | Is she alive? |
21551 | Is she sending a boat, boy? |
21551 | Is that all you have gained by reading your Bible? |
21551 | Is that you, Frank? |
21551 | Is there anything else? |
21551 | Is there no way? |
21551 | Is there, my hearty,--where? |
21551 | It must be alive,thought I;"is it a fish or a bird?" |
21551 | Jackson,said I, kneeling down by him,"are you much hurt?" |
21551 | Lucky for me, do you mean, Frank? |
21551 | No one can drink this-- what can it be? |
21551 | No!--yes!--can it be possible? 21551 Now what shall I bring in?" |
21551 | Now, what have you brought this time? |
21551 | Now, what is this? |
21551 | Of course I do; why should I not be? |
21551 | Perhaps not,replied Jackson;"his foot may have slipped, who knows? |
21551 | Shall I read to you? |
21551 | Shall I take Nero with me? |
21551 | Shall I wake them? |
21551 | Shall this go in? |
21551 | Shall we have the mizen? |
21551 | Then why have you not been kind to me? 21551 Then you killed him for love of his wife, and hate of himself?" |
21551 | Then you will be punished when you die, will you not? |
21551 | There''s the shovel,said I,"and the boat''s sail-- must I bring them down?" |
21551 | To what republic do you allude? |
21551 | Well, but we can get more, ca n''t we? |
21551 | Were the immediate results of so large an addition to geographical knowledge, as beneficial to the entire human race as they ought to have been? |
21551 | Were you born without a mother? |
21551 | What are brushes and combs and scissors? |
21551 | What are miracles? |
21551 | What are parish children? |
21551 | What are souls? |
21551 | What can I do? |
21551 | What did I sing to you last night? |
21551 | What did you do? |
21551 | What does he do there? |
21551 | What does the Bible say-- that not a sparrow falls to the ground without His knowledge; and of how much more worth are you than many sparrows? 21551 What had become of your mother?" |
21551 | What is a Bible, and what is a Prayer- book? |
21551 | What is a parish clerk? |
21551 | What is faith? 21551 What is there in it?" |
21551 | What is, I thank you? |
21551 | What temptations are we not free from here? |
21551 | What then, it has eyes? 21551 What use can we make of that long line which they have left?" |
21551 | What was that? |
21551 | What''s a boat? |
21551 | What''s a lady? |
21551 | What''s a missionary? |
21551 | What''s a mystery? |
21551 | What''s an alphabet? |
21551 | What''s the matter, master? |
21551 | What, the diamonds? |
21551 | What,said he,"and share their fate?" |
21551 | What? |
21551 | Where am I? |
21551 | Where are they? |
21551 | Where did you get that linen? |
21551 | Where is South America? |
21551 | Who are you? |
21551 | Who is Nero? |
21551 | Who spoke? |
21551 | Who taught you to read? |
21551 | Who''s there? |
21551 | Who''s there? |
21551 | Who? |
21551 | Why am I to do that, mother? |
21551 | Why did God keep the Jews apart from the Egyptians, and have them thrown in bondage? |
21551 | Why do n''t you keep up with the lady? 21551 Why do n''t you wear some of them?" |
21551 | Why is it called the Lord''s Prayer? |
21551 | Why should he object to receive what he so much stands in need of? |
21551 | Why should you have thought that? |
21551 | Why, did you not say that you were born on this island, boy? |
21551 | Why, do n''t you know that you''re blind, Jackson? |
21551 | Why, where have you been all your life? |
21551 | Why, you did n''t expect a regular hotel when you landed, did you, mate? |
21551 | Will God hear you? 21551 Will you bring me some water for my eyes? |
21551 | Will you come with me? |
21551 | Will you? 21551 Wo n''t you have something to eat?" |
21551 | Wo n''t you tell it to me? |
21551 | Would you rather stay on the island with Nero, than go away without him? |
21551 | Yes,replied I;"but is it not injuries to ourselves? |
21551 | You called me, master? |
21551 | You like songs, do you? 21551 You wo n''t be afraid of the seal,"said I,"will you? |
21551 | ` But who,''he asked,` was to be the ambassador from so stupendous a Power to these barbarous states? 21551 ` Do you think then that we are in danger?'' |
21551 | ` Has my husband caught any fish, do you know, Jackson?'' 21551 ` How can I tell?'' |
21551 | ` Not there?'' 21551 ` Why so, my dear?'' |
21551 | After a while he recommenced--"Who can ever prove that they were Henniker''s diamonds?" |
21551 | After we had eaten our dinner, she said to me--"How could you contrive to live on this island, if you had no dried birds?" |
21551 | And that no one could prove they were his-- this implied that Jackson had no right to them; indeed how could he have? |
21551 | And whence comes that beautiful colour? |
21551 | Are you afraid of him?" |
21551 | Are you going to bed now?" |
21551 | Are your clothes wet?" |
21551 | As I looked at him, and recalled to mind his words,"Am not I an object of pity?" |
21551 | As we sat at our meal, I said,"Dear mother, what are we to do next?" |
21551 | As your father undressed, your mother said,` Does not that belt worry you a great deal, my dear?'' |
21551 | Besides, I have only two lines, and I might lose them both-- then what would become of me? |
21551 | Bob, you fool, why could n''t you leave the animal alone? |
21551 | But I asked myself how was this desirable object to be effected? |
21551 | But are we to suppose that, because we, in our foolishness, can not comprehend His reasons, that therefore they must be cavilled at? |
21551 | But can you tell me what makes it do so?" |
21551 | But where was he? |
21551 | But where? |
21551 | But, I repeat, that we must study the whole of the Bible with faith, and not be continually asking ourselves,` Why was this done?'' |
21551 | Can you do that?" |
21551 | Can you explain to me yourself? |
21551 | Can you feel resentment against one in my wretched state? |
21551 | Can you tell me? |
21551 | Can you tell? |
21551 | Come, boy, what have you got for our breakfast? |
21551 | Did I ever prevent you from having water?" |
21551 | Did I make much noise last night?" |
21551 | Did you plant all these flowers and creepers which grow over the cabin?" |
21551 | Do you ever pray to Him?" |
21551 | Do you know what for? |
21551 | Do you not say in the Lord''s Prayer,` Our Father which art in heaven?'' |
21551 | Do you now understand in what spirit the Bible should be read?" |
21551 | Do you recollect?" |
21551 | Do you think that you could walk to your bed- place?" |
21551 | Do you understand how it is that that plant keeps alive-- grows every year-- every year throws out a large blue flower? |
21551 | Do you understand me, Frank?" |
21551 | Do you understand me? |
21551 | Do you understand me?" |
21551 | Do you understand?" |
21551 | Does he know that we are starving?" |
21551 | Does it mind the wind?" |
21551 | Does not the commandment say,` Thou shalt not kill?''" |
21551 | Had not the murder been already avenged? |
21551 | Have you a hut or a cave to live in?" |
21551 | Have you ever tried to sing?" |
21551 | Have you put the belt on?" |
21551 | He paused, as if he did not know my voice, and then said:"But I ca n''t see anything; how''s this?" |
21551 | How am I to plant them?" |
21551 | How big did you say that the cask was?" |
21551 | How could I have learnt deceit? |
21551 | How is it that the inside of an egg is changed into bird? |
21551 | How is that the bird is covered with feathers, and has the power to fly? |
21551 | How old do you think you are now?" |
21551 | How?" |
21551 | I ask you again, am I not an object of pity and commiseration?" |
21551 | I asked my companion;"or has He forgotten that two of His creatures are in the deepest peril of their lives, from which He alone can save them?" |
21551 | I confessed that he was, and then I asked myself the question, Can you forgive him who was the murderer of your father? |
21551 | I could soon tell it you, if it were not for the last question,-- why I hated your name? |
21551 | I pushed him for some time without success; but, at last, he opened his eyes, and said:"My watch already?" |
21551 | I say, boy, where did you leave your trousers?" |
21551 | I suppose you expect to be very happy if ever you get back to England?" |
21551 | I was about to go up to the cabin for some birds, when another man called out:--"I say-- can you get us any water?" |
21551 | I went to him and examined him-- was he asleep; or was he dead? |
21551 | I wonder if they would run up my cabin? |
21551 | In short, I read in darkness; and I may say that I almost knew the Bible by heart without understanding it.--How could I? |
21551 | In that cask? |
21551 | Is it not nearly daylight?" |
21551 | Is it not so?" |
21551 | Is there anything in the pannikin?" |
21551 | Isolated as I had been, must it not have been innate? |
21551 | It was on the third morning that he said--"I can talk to you now; what do you want to know?" |
21551 | Looking into the wound, my desire of information induced me to say,"What are these little white cords which are cut through?" |
21551 | Most truly was the question put by me,"Charity and mercy-- what are they?" |
21551 | My little chap? |
21551 | Now do you understand?" |
21551 | Now look, Frank; is the next letter to O the shape of this?" |
21551 | Now, John Gough, what do you intend to do?" |
21551 | Now, can you forgive me? |
21551 | Now, do you understand what I want?" |
21551 | Or will you believe that I am master?" |
21551 | Or will you wear it for me, as my mother would have done, if she had been alive?" |
21551 | See the judgment of God-- am I not now precisely in his position, lying battered and crushed as he was? |
21551 | Shall I kill him while he sleeps?" |
21551 | Shall I pray now for both of us?" |
21551 | Shall I wear the belt myself, or shall I put it in the bundle? |
21551 | Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it,` Why hast thou made me thus?'' |
21551 | She examined the cabin and the bed- places, and then said:"Where do you sleep?" |
21551 | Tell me now, yourself, what do you prefer and set most value upon, your belt of diamonds, or the iron kettle?" |
21551 | The one addressed did so, and the man put it into my hands, saying,"Bring us that pail, boy, will you?" |
21551 | The question is, will you give me the price, or will you not? |
21551 | The reader may inquire how it was that I knew the exact time of the arrival of the birds? |
21551 | Then perhaps you''ll tell us how to get something to eat, my hearty?" |
21551 | There he was, apparently a gentleman of property and consideration; and I, what was I? |
21551 | There they are, do you choose to buy them?" |
21551 | Very well; and my name?" |
21551 | Was he not already punished? |
21551 | Was there no man,''he again asked,` great enough and bold enough to undertake a mission of such vast importance, attended by such terrible risks? |
21551 | Well, what of Captain James, eh?" |
21551 | What birds?" |
21551 | What can they expect from Him in the way of mercy when they have shown none? |
21551 | What do the Proverbs say? |
21551 | What do you mean?" |
21551 | What is the meaning of Henniker, I wonder? |
21551 | What is your name? |
21551 | What is your name?" |
21551 | What next, O Lord of Heaven?" |
21551 | What then was I to do? |
21551 | What then, shall I tax him with it when he is awake, and then kill him?" |
21551 | What trouble would you take for me, if I were blind now and not you? |
21551 | What was it that you said just before I forgot everything this morning?" |
21551 | What was it? |
21551 | What was your reason then?" |
21551 | What will you do?" |
21551 | When I had answered the question, I said to her--"I have brought up more of the potatoes, as you call them; what am I to do with them?" |
21551 | When I had told her all, I said--"Now, as they talk of not taking my chest, what shall I do? |
21551 | Where could we be? |
21551 | Where did I come by them? |
21551 | Where is she?" |
21551 | Where now could be the island I, though long so anxious to quit, now was a thousand times more desirous of beholding? |
21551 | Where''s John Gough? |
21551 | Where''s all on''em?" |
21551 | Where''s the Captain? |
21551 | Who are you that have guessed that? |
21551 | Who are you? |
21551 | Who left you on shore to get all ready for us?" |
21551 | Who shall I begin with-- with my husband or with myself?" |
21551 | Who would venture to be a messenger of peace and comfort to a cruel and savage nation? |
21551 | Why did you thank God for the seamen having left us here, instead of taking us with them?" |
21551 | Why does he feel so angry at my name? |
21551 | Why should it do so? |
21551 | Why should the flower always be blue? |
21551 | Will you come again? |
21551 | Will you do this for me?" |
21551 | Will you take Nero with you?" |
21551 | You ca n''t tell why, or how, or what causes produce these effects-- can you?" |
21551 | You have read the history of Joseph and his brethren?" |
21551 | You know which book I told you was the Prayer- book?" |
21551 | You see me now-- are they not all avenged?" |
21551 | You understand now?" |
21551 | ` Had he caught any fish when you were with him?'' |
21551 | ` Shall I leave Jackson with you?'' |
21551 | and has not his vengeance fallen upon me even in this world? |
21551 | and` God damn''-- but who is he?" |
21551 | exclaimed he,"how shall I escape?" |
21551 | inquired I; and then after a little thought I said,"You do n''t mean Nero, mother?" |
21551 | replied I,"not until the birds come again, and that will not be for these next five moons?" |
21551 | said one of the men, addressing me,"and how many of you are there here?" |
53692 | Afraid? 53692 All ready to run, Ris?" |
53692 | An''why not, señor? |
53692 | And are you not here alone, and in my power? 53692 And do the people love their master?" |
53692 | And how about the bananas? |
53692 | And if the planes, or braces, or fastenings break? |
53692 | And is it powerful enough to destroy the ship? |
53692 | And we have n''t passed it? |
53692 | And what did you think of her? |
53692 | And what would you use for fuel? |
53692 | And you think, on that account, we will let you go again, to carry out your cowardly designs? |
53692 | And you would be willing to forfeit your life as the alternative of not getting control of this yacht? 53692 Any damage?" |
53692 | Any of our people? |
53692 | Any water in it? |
53692 | Are any other men left upon this island? |
53692 | Are they armed? |
53692 | Are you afraid? |
53692 | Are you going to sleep all day, Crusoe, like those dreadful owls? |
53692 | Are you ready, Sybil? |
53692 | Are you sure of that? |
53692 | Are you sure they were not seen? |
53692 | Are you traveling alone? |
53692 | Are-- are we sinking? |
53692 | But how about you, Chesty? 53692 But how will you get there-- swim?" |
53692 | But the big launch could n''t do it? |
53692 | But what are we to do with Ramon Ganza-- and those three rascals imprisoned with him, whom Chesty captured and brought to us? |
53692 | But what made that noise? 53692 But what''s the use, without gasoline?" |
53692 | But will not this journey be a hazardous one for Mr. Kane to undertake? |
53692 | But-- to lie here all day? 53692 Ca n''t he be eaten just boiled?" |
53692 | Ca n''t we arrest him for disturbing the peace, and trying to capture our yacht, and attempting to murder one of the crew? |
53692 | Ca n''t we go there, Orissa, and find out? |
53692 | Ca n''t we manage to do that, Steve? |
53692 | Ca n''t we recover the bars? |
53692 | Can they all be drowned? |
53692 | Can you manage to get away from the deck? |
53692 | Can you solve it, Miss Dentry? |
53692 | Could n''t any ship see our white tent from the ocean? |
53692 | Could n''t we blast a channel? |
53692 | Could we venture some two hundred and eighty miles in open boats? |
53692 | Could you climb a wire, Syb? |
53692 | Could you conceive a more horrible combination? |
53692 | Did I? 53692 Did you get to land?" |
53692 | Did you go over the water? |
53692 | Did you yell because_ I_ was scared? |
53692 | Do n''t they make kerosene and gasoline of it? |
53692 | Do n''t you aviators often shut off your engine and volplane to the ground? |
53692 | Do you believe they are still alive? |
53692 | Do you imagine you would like to fly? |
53692 | Do you know the Tuppers? |
53692 | Do you play checkers? |
53692 | Do you realize, Sybil,asked Orissa in a grave tone, as she took her second sandwich,"that we must pass the night in this wiggly, insecure boat?" |
53692 | Do you see anyone? |
53692 | Do you think you can master the mechanism by that time? |
53692 | Do you think,asked Sybil, uneasily,"it is one of our people come to look for us?" |
53692 | Do you, Captain? |
53692 | Does n''t it look something like lettuce? |
53692 | Does your brother use the Gnome engines? |
53692 | Eh? |
53692 | For why, señor? |
53692 | Fuel? |
53692 | Hair or salad oil, Ris? |
53692 | Have n''t you heard? 53692 Have you a revolver, Ris?" |
53692 | Have you ever seen this dare- devil namesake of yours, Miss Kane? |
53692 | Have you not the flying- machine-- the airship? |
53692 | Having a boat under them, I suppose they will float indefinitely? |
53692 | How about Ramon Ganza? |
53692 | How about food? |
53692 | How about gasoline? |
53692 | How can we do it? |
53692 | How can you do that? 53692 How did Ramon manage to build that house, and make such a big settlement on the island, all in secret?" |
53692 | How did you do that? |
53692 | How do you expect to regain the ship? |
53692 | How far is the island? |
53692 | How fast are we going? |
53692 | How is Mason getting along? |
53692 | How many games? |
53692 | How many men did he take with him? |
53692 | How many years has he lived on this island? |
53692 | How shall I steer? |
53692 | How? |
53692 | How? |
53692 | How? |
53692 | I stood below to catch you in case you slipped; but who is there to catch_ me_, I beg to inquire? |
53692 | I suppose there''s none aboard, Captain Krell? |
53692 | I suppose with the gasoline tanks filled we could go home? |
53692 | I? 53692 If you can not trust me, why should I trust you?" |
53692 | In that case, how long will they continue flying? |
53692 | In what way? |
53692 | In what way? |
53692 | Interesting, is n''t it? |
53692 | Interesting, is n''t it? |
53692 | Interesting; is n''t it? |
53692 | Is Miss Kane here, sir? |
53692 | Is it a-- a-- tent? |
53692 | Is it best to argue the point, Steve? |
53692 | Is it necessary to say more? |
53692 | Is it the same old engine, Steve? |
53692 | Is it worth while? 53692 Is n''t it Madeline Dentry''s yacht?" |
53692 | Is n''t it astonishing,said Orissa,"how much moisture is dispersed from this tiny stream? |
53692 | Is there? |
53692 | Is your mission here to gain information concerning aëroplanes? |
53692 | Kane? |
53692 | Matches? |
53692 | May I rest my head upon you, chummie dear? |
53692 | May I take Sybil with me? |
53692 | May we take the launch, Miss Dentry? |
53692 | Me? 53692 Me?" |
53692 | Me? |
53692 | Meat all gone? |
53692 | Mr. Tupper,said she to her uncle,"do I employ you to advise me, or to manage my business affairs?" |
53692 | My island is a pleasant place, and where else can you find so much happiness when my ship, which you now inhabit, is destroyed? |
53692 | No arms at all-- not even a hatpin? |
53692 | Not yet? |
53692 | Oh, Crusoe, ca n''t you see? 53692 Oh, what shall we do?" |
53692 | Oh; did you see the machine fly? 53692 Oh; have you a yacht?" |
53692 | Oh; that''s the idea, is it? |
53692 | Orissa? |
53692 | Ramon''s? 53692 See anything else?" |
53692 | See that smoke? 53692 So soon?" |
53692 | So you think Don Miguel will keep my yacht? |
53692 | Suppose the engine should some time fail you? |
53692 | Suppose we strike deep water? |
53692 | Tell me, Mateo,said Ramon Ganza,"where is it, beneath this boat, that the mine has been planted?" |
53692 | The Hydro- Aircraft? |
53692 | The Red- beard? |
53692 | The outlaw? 53692 Then it''s the''sort''you love?" |
53692 | Then which one do you love? |
53692 | Then you are''fraid of Ramon? |
53692 | Then, alas, my overtures of peace are refused? |
53692 | Three? |
53692 | Was n''t she to alight this side of the island? |
53692 | Was that your only crime? |
53692 | Well? |
53692 | Well? |
53692 | What are those unmarked dots which are scattered around? |
53692 | What can we do? |
53692 | What did he do? |
53692 | What did you do? 53692 What difference would it make?" |
53692 | What do you intend to do with him, Miss Cumberford? |
53692 | What do you think he intends to do? |
53692 | What do you want? |
53692 | What good would it do us? |
53692 | What has become of the Mexican''s launch? |
53692 | What have we to decide? |
53692 | What in the mischief is Orissa up to now? |
53692 | What is it? |
53692 | What is that, sir? 53692 What is there to cook, in this place?" |
53692 | What little boat do you refer to, sir? |
53692 | What luck, Syb? |
53692 | What next? |
53692 | What now? |
53692 | What shall we do? |
53692 | What time is it? |
53692 | What was it? |
53692 | What will be the fashion of our dropping, anyhow? |
53692 | What will you do, señor? |
53692 | What would be the use? |
53692 | What''s insecure about it? |
53692 | What''s the run, Captain? |
53692 | What''s up, Ris? |
53692 | What''s wrong? |
53692 | What''s your run, Captain? |
53692 | What, Ramon? |
53692 | What? 53692 When do we sail for San Diego?" |
53692 | Where is he, Miss Dentry? |
53692 | Where they go? |
53692 | Where to? |
53692 | Where? |
53692 | Which of the young ladies are you engaged to? |
53692 | Who else wants to go? 53692 Who is it?" |
53692 | Who is this? |
53692 | Who will fly with me to San Diego? |
53692 | Who? 53692 Why are you on deck?" |
53692 | Why did you try to escape? |
53692 | Why did you venture to place yourself in our power, Ramon Ganza, and then threaten us as you have done? |
53692 | Why do the work twice? |
53692 | Why not? |
53692 | Why on earth did you venture to come back? |
53692 | Why should you? |
53692 | Why the witch- women let Ramon make trouble for you? 53692 Why, Syb?" |
53692 | Why? |
53692 | Why? |
53692 | Will Steve go with me on Monday? |
53692 | Will our house stand much of a wind? |
53692 | Will you dare to oppose Ramon, then? |
53692 | Will you have a chocolate? |
53692 | Will you promise not to cry out and attract Ramon''s attention? |
53692 | Will you teach me how to operate it? |
53692 | Will you try it? |
53692 | Wo n''t they be amazed to see us continue this course, beyond the island? 53692 Would you follow Ramon?" |
53692 | Would you like to join our party? |
53692 | Would your men execute such an absurd order? |
53692 | Yes; what is there to make a fire with? |
53692 | Yet even snakes ca n''t exist without water, can they? 53692 You are fond of flying?" |
53692 | You have witch- women? |
53692 | You know Madero? |
53692 | You like Coronado, then? |
53692 | You mean we ca n''t get the yacht off again? |
53692 | You think we join you, then? |
53692 | Your first name is Orissa? |
53692 | A rain storm?" |
53692 | Agreeable, Columbus?" |
53692 | All ready, Steve?" |
53692 | All right?" |
53692 | Am I frightened? |
53692 | And coal?" |
53692 | And you are his daughter?" |
53692 | Are we sinking, Ris, or do we float?" |
53692 | Are_ you_ game, my dear Discoverer?" |
53692 | As they took their places Mr. Radley- Todd inquired:"Plenty of gasoline?" |
53692 | But Mr. Tupper, white and trembling as with an ague, leaped to his feet and cried:"In heaven''s name, Cumberford, what do you mean? |
53692 | But tell me, since you''ve started on such an indefinite cruise, is the_ Salvador_ well provisioned?" |
53692 | But where is your brother?" |
53692 | But why wait for fire to drive you to death most terrible or to my great hospitality? |
53692 | By the way, what am I to do on Monday? |
53692 | CHAPTER XXVIII THE PRISONER"What''s wrong, Ris?" |
53692 | Can you catch a fish?" |
53692 | Can you explain that?" |
53692 | Can you get to the bluff?" |
53692 | Can you see anything, Syb?" |
53692 | Can you tell me, then, the name of this island, and who inhabits it?" |
53692 | Cumberford?" |
53692 | Cut the explosives, and what remains for us to do?" |
53692 | Did I understand you to say, Mr. Kane, that your sister is unable to stop the engine, or to turn the machine?" |
53692 | Did n''t something give way?" |
53692 | Did we coax him to come and try to capture us, that we might prove he is a wicked law- breaker? |
53692 | Did we lay a trap for Ramon? |
53692 | Did you bring along your glasses?" |
53692 | Did you cork that bottle of water? |
53692 | Did you mark that place, Orissa, so we will know when we come to it?" |
53692 | Do I grow pale, and tremble? |
53692 | Do n''t you think, Ris, that those feathered fiends only stopped the concert because they''d howled until their throats were sore?" |
53692 | Do you all follow me?" |
53692 | Do you expect us to believe that?" |
53692 | Do you know, Ris, the owls must be responsible for the absence of all other life on the island? |
53692 | Does gasoline ever spoil, Ris?" |
53692 | Eh, Steve?" |
53692 | Eh? |
53692 | Eh? |
53692 | Feet wet, Syb?" |
53692 | Forgive Monsieur Champetre, if he falls down occasionally; he is as unused to the kitchen-- or is it scullery? |
53692 | Goodness sakes, child,"cried Mrs. Tupper, in great alarm,"do you think I''d risk my life in that dreadful airship?" |
53692 | Had there been a tragedy? |
53692 | Have n''t you enough reflected ingenuity to manufacture a checkerboard?" |
53692 | Have n''t you noticed it?" |
53692 | Have we anything in the way of clubs?" |
53692 | Have you any idea where we shall be by that time?" |
53692 | Have you heard of his latest contrivance? |
53692 | Have you positively decided to establish a circus in these wilds, Ris?" |
53692 | He now stopped short before the visitors, removed his hat and said:"I-- er-- pardon me, but-- er-- was your appointment for this hour?" |
53692 | How are you, girls? |
53692 | How did it blow?" |
53692 | How does the cover open, Ris?" |
53692 | How long a time will the trip take us, Steve?" |
53692 | How shall we get to it, though? |
53692 | How would it do, Ris, to build a stone bed-- something like an altar, you know, with a hollow center which we could fill with sand?" |
53692 | I How did he expect us to get at the repast, anyhow?" |
53692 | I hope you did n''t encourage her advances, Orissa?" |
53692 | If I escape from my island in little boat, where can I got? |
53692 | Interesting, is n''t it? |
53692 | Is it not good way, señor?" |
53692 | Is it not the best to accept my offer, and so save yourselves from-- inconvenience?" |
53692 | Is n''t it a glorious prospect?" |
53692 | Is n''t that another island?" |
53692 | Is that a clear understanding of your statement, Ramon Ganza?" |
53692 | Is there room enough for our boat to enter the bay you described, or is that big rock too close to shore to let us pass?" |
53692 | It has been a long and exciting day for us, has n''t it?" |
53692 | It would take more than a blind bird to scare either of us; would n''t it, Cap''n?" |
53692 | Kane?" |
53692 | Kane?" |
53692 | Kane?" |
53692 | Let''s see; ten in our party, so far, was n''t it? |
53692 | Madeline is rich; what does she care for this miserable yacht? |
53692 | Me, Señor? |
53692 | Me? |
53692 | Meantime, how can we get the key to unlock this chain?" |
53692 | Mighty poetical in the advertisements, eh? |
53692 | Must I carry Sybil in any certain direction, or for any given distance?" |
53692 | Must we not keep Ramon busy, to hold him here until the warship comes? |
53692 | Neither had uttered a word, however, so Mr. Cumberford stepped forward and said:"Do you speak English?" |
53692 | No one would guess this was your plan, would he? |
53692 | Now you understand me, do you not? |
53692 | Of course it will take them some time to find us, but----Don''t you think, Orissa, they''re quite certain to find us, in the end?" |
53692 | Oh, what shall we do?--what shall we do?" |
53692 | One morning Sybil asked:"Is n''t to- day Tuesday, Orissa?" |
53692 | Or had the torpedo boat merely frightened the outlaws, as she had imagined, and driven them away? |
53692 | Pretty sight, was n''t it? |
53692 | Question is, who''s got it? |
53692 | Shall we sing songs? |
53692 | She''s as much at home in the air as a bird; and why should n''t the machine fall gently to the water, when the gasoline gave out? |
53692 | Suppose a storm catches us before morning?" |
53692 | Tell me, Steve,"she added, turning to her brother,"what news of the Hydro- Aircraft?" |
53692 | The task was almost completed when Sybil suddenly exclaimed:"How about a frame for our tent?" |
53692 | Then Madeline sprung her important question:"Do you ever take a passenger?" |
53692 | Then he drew out a silver case and, choosing a cigarette with solicitous care, turned to Francisco and said:"Will the señor favor me with a light?" |
53692 | Then she leaned over and called to Sybil:"Can you manage it?" |
53692 | Uncertain what to say, he asked haltingly:"Do you call it''aviatrix''or''aviatrice''? |
53692 | We ca n''t afford the luxury of illness, can we? |
53692 | We do not seem much afraid of your Ramon, do we? |
53692 | Well, how about breakfast?" |
53692 | Were his men on board, and had they met with some astonishing accident, or had they deliberately committed suicide? |
53692 | What are you doing? |
53692 | What are you going to do?" |
53692 | What could it mean? |
53692 | What do you say, Pietro?" |
53692 | What first, Steve? |
53692 | What is our real danger?" |
53692 | What shall we do now, Sybil?" |
53692 | What shall we do?" |
53692 | What shall we tackle first?" |
53692 | What then, Stephen Kane?" |
53692 | What then? |
53692 | What''s the proposition?" |
53692 | What''s to eat?" |
53692 | What, then, shall we do for amusement?" |
53692 | Where do you suppose we are, anyhow?" |
53692 | Where''s that slab of aluminum that used to be a seat?" |
53692 | Who care?" |
53692 | Why not fly to the nearest point on the Mexican coast, Mr. Kane, and from there telegraph President Madero? |
53692 | Why should I be, with my brother''s wonderful engine at my back and perfect control of every part of my machine?" |
53692 | Why? |
53692 | Will not you, for the sake of the ladies who are with you, encourage my friendliness?" |
53692 | Will they presently descend and alight upon the surface of the water?" |
53692 | Will you accompany us, or ride with your aunt?" |
53692 | Will you see me die like this?" |
53692 | With merely an impressive pause, as if to drive the words home, he continued:"May I, then, be honored by a recital of your names and station?" |
53692 | Wo n''t you take him to Magdalena and turn him over to the Mexican police?" |
53692 | Would n''t the rocks scatter in every direction and bombard us and the ship, perhaps causing damage that would be fatal to our hopes of escape?" |
53692 | Would you destroy us all in this heartless fashion?" |
53692 | You do n''t object to my being Crusoe, do you?" |
53692 | You do not know to where-- to whom-- you have come? |
53692 | You know what time the mine is to explode?" |
53692 | You mean to land, do n''t you? |
53692 | You the Spanish speak? |
53692 | if this racket keeps up every night how are we going to be able to sleep?" |
53692 | protested Mr. Tupper;"what in the world are you thinking of?" |
33187 | A''gentleman,''did you say? |
33187 | Ai n''t ye goin''back, Jack? |
33187 | Am I right or wrong, captain? |
33187 | Am I? |
33187 | And I-- would despise myself? |
33187 | And where will you be? |
33187 | And you? |
33187 | Are n''t they beauties? |
33187 | Are n''t you engaged to him? |
33187 | Are n''t you getting hungry, Grace? 33187 Are you all ready?" |
33187 | Are you going to make the Prince happy at last, child? |
33187 | Are you hurt? |
33187 | Are you hurt? |
33187 | Are you jesting? |
33187 | Are your circumstances such that you are in need of nothing? |
33187 | Be my partner at shuffleboard, eh, what? |
33187 | But did n''t you say that whaling- vessels made these waters their fishing- grounds? |
33187 | But have you considered everything-- your father-- your friends-- the uncertain future? |
33187 | But we''ll get away some time, wo n''t we? |
33187 | But what has all this to do with being wrecked on a desert island? |
33187 | Ca n''t you guess? |
33187 | Coxe and Willoughby? |
33187 | D''ye hear, Schmalz? |
33187 | Did n''t you hear me? |
33187 | Did ye see''em storm- clouds? |
33187 | Did you put it out? |
33187 | Did you say I was home? |
33187 | Do I believe in marriage? |
33187 | Do n''t you see those men fighting? |
33187 | Do you hear that, Grace? |
33187 | Do you hear? |
33187 | Do you know what I am, do you realize what position I hold in society? 33187 Do you know what the matter is?" |
33187 | Does ye mean ye goin''to desert? |
33187 | Does ye see that tall gal dancin''wid the guy wid the Dutch whiskers? 33187 For my sake?" |
33187 | Forty thousand, did n''t you say? |
33187 | Going with me? |
33187 | Grace, tell me-- will you be mine? |
33187 | Have n''t you seen it, have n''t you felt it all along? |
33187 | Have you any ties here? 33187 Have you drawn to- day a check for$ 1,000 payable to bearer?" |
33187 | How about that, captain? |
33187 | How could we summon assistance? |
33187 | How did it go out? |
33187 | How did it go out? |
33187 | How do you know? |
33187 | How do you understand love? |
33187 | How long can we expect this glorious weather to last, captain? |
33187 | How long will we have to wait? |
33187 | How would you like to lie? |
33187 | I could hug the man who invented it-- Macaroni-- what''s his name? |
33187 | In relation to what? |
33187 | Is n''t this rolling horrible? 33187 Is that the reason, or is there another?" |
33187 | Is there no possible way of reaching the mainland? |
33187 | Is this Coxe and Willoughby? |
33187 | It''s a jolly good thing some of us have nerve-- eh, what? |
33187 | It''s jolly awful in that stoke- hold, don''tcher know? 33187 Matter-- where?" |
33187 | May I have the next waltz? |
33187 | Mrs. Stuart, may I trouble you for some more tea? |
33187 | No, who would have me-- a pauper? |
33187 | No,replied Armitage;"what is it? |
33187 | Oh, Grace, how can you look at such horrid sights? |
33187 | Only----"Only what? |
33187 | Passengers? |
33187 | Really? |
33187 | Say, you''re from Jersey, ai n''t you? 33187 See that tall building on the left? |
33187 | So short a time? |
33187 | So that is it? 33187 So this stoker fellow-- you think you understand him? |
33187 | Some one to see me? |
33187 | Tell me why is it so hot? |
33187 | Tell me,she repeated,"what good fairy has worked this transformation?" |
33187 | The railroad man? |
33187 | Then what good is our signal- fire? |
33187 | Then, without such act or ceremony, you would not consider a marriage binding or right? |
33187 | Was it only a nightmare? |
33187 | Was there nothing else more congenial, less brutalizing that you could do? |
33187 | Well, captain, pretty warm for dancing, eh? 33187 Well, what can I do for you? |
33187 | Well, what can we do to show our gratitude? 33187 Were you asleep?" |
33187 | Were you ever in love? |
33187 | Were you happier then than you are now? |
33187 | What are our chances of being sighted and taken off? |
33187 | What are you doing? |
33187 | What d''ye want with me? |
33187 | What did you say? |
33187 | What do I care for such jackals? 33187 What do you know about African explorers?" |
33187 | What do you know about love? |
33187 | What do you mean? |
33187 | What do you mean? |
33187 | What do you mean? |
33187 | What do you mean? |
33187 | What do you think about it, Mrs. Phelps? 33187 What do you understand by marriage?" |
33187 | What does he mean? |
33187 | What does the bearer look like? |
33187 | What has become of that poor fireman who made such a disturbance the day we sailed from New York? |
33187 | What is it, Louise? |
33187 | What is it? |
33187 | What is that? |
33187 | What is the real reason? |
33187 | What makes you think that? |
33187 | What name, sir? |
33187 | What theory is that? |
33187 | What will become of us? 33187 What would be this man''s and woman''s attitude to each other? |
33187 | What''s all the fuss about? |
33187 | What''s that-- a husband? |
33187 | What''s that? |
33187 | What''s the matter? |
33187 | What''s the matter? |
33187 | What, in your opinion, would be the outcome? |
33187 | What? |
33187 | When did my father die-- of what? |
33187 | When do we get in, captain? |
33187 | When do you expect to get married? |
33187 | Where am I? |
33187 | Where are these islands? |
33187 | Where d''ye want me to go? |
33187 | Where have I seen you before? |
33187 | Where have you been? |
33187 | Where have you been? |
33187 | Where is he now? |
33187 | Where is your ship? 33187 Where will you sleep to- night?" |
33187 | Who are the flowers for? |
33187 | Who are you? |
33187 | Who are you? |
33187 | Who asked you for any information? |
33187 | Who''s there? |
33187 | Whose house is that? |
33187 | Why are we rolling-- is it getting rough? |
33187 | Why are you crying? |
33187 | Why did you desert from the steamer in New York? |
33187 | Why did you extinguish the fire? |
33187 | Why did you take to such dreadful work? |
33187 | Why do you look at me like that? |
33187 | Why is it so sultry, professor? |
33187 | Why not the chevalier who tempted her? |
33187 | Why not? 33187 Why should you care?" |
33187 | Why was I saved from the wreck if not to look after you? |
33187 | Will you eat something? |
33187 | Will you take us home? |
33187 | Wo n''t it spoil our frocks? |
33187 | Wo n''t you listen to me? |
33187 | Wo n''t you listen? |
33187 | Wot''s the good of kickin''? 33187 Yes, Hawkins, what is it?" |
33187 | You are Mr.--Mr.----? |
33187 | You love me? |
33187 | You mean that you have found more lucrative and congenial employment? |
33187 | You want nothing? |
33187 | You were happier then? |
33187 | You were n''t always so low down in the world? |
33187 | You were one of the crew? |
33187 | You''re happy, are n''t you? |
33187 | Your father, Sir William, is dead----"But my elder brother, Charles? |
33187 | Your wife? |
33187 | --_Boston Transcript._[ Illustration: WHAT RIGHT HAD HE TO ACCOST HER? |
33187 | After all, he thought philosophically, why should he care? |
33187 | After all, what right had she to question him? |
33187 | Ai n''t she a stunner?" |
33187 | Almost mockingly he asked:"Do you expect to leave here so soon?" |
33187 | Aloud he repeated:"_ You_ are John Armitage?" |
33187 | And if the_ Atlanta_ sailed without him-- what then? |
33187 | Anyhow, I''m not goin''back, do ye hear? |
33187 | Are you married?" |
33187 | Armitage was silent a moment, and then he said:"What was the use? |
33187 | Armitage was silent for a few minutes, and then he said:"You were reminded of this story by some remark you had previously made: What was it?" |
33187 | As Shorty passed Schmalz in the outer store, he said to the German in an undertone:"Look out for him, d''ye hear? |
33187 | Breaking the long and awkward silence, he said:"Have you quite recovered from your experience on Hope Island?" |
33187 | Brown?" |
33187 | Brown?" |
33187 | But we''ve signed for the voyage, ai n''t we? |
33187 | But where was the signal- fire? |
33187 | By what right had he presumed to take this step? |
33187 | Ca n''t you see that? |
33187 | Ca n''t you understand that I do n''t want to lose you, that I do n''t want you to go?" |
33187 | Come, we''ll go and see the chief engineer, eh, what?" |
33187 | Could his father be dead-- the father who had cursed him and forbade him ever to appear before him again? |
33187 | Could it be that she did not care for the Prince, that she was forcing herself in this ambitious marriage in spite of her own better, truer self? |
33187 | Could she have mistaken the road? |
33187 | Could they-- he and she-- go on forever living together like this? |
33187 | Could you sail on the_ Florida_ next Saturday?" |
33187 | Did n''t I tell you there had been a change for the better in my fortunes?" |
33187 | Did you actually take the trouble to understand him?" |
33187 | Did you see it?" |
33187 | Do n''t you remember that awful affair of the_ City of Berlin_? |
33187 | Do n''t you remember what happened to the passengers of the_ Aeon_, when that steamer was wrecked on Christmas Island? |
33187 | Do n''t you see how impossible it is-- even if I did care for you? |
33187 | Do n''t you see that I am interested in you? |
33187 | Do you indorse these opinions?" |
33187 | Do you know the story of the Abbess of Jouarre?" |
33187 | Do you suppose that I, John Harmon, would permit the man who saved my daughter to go unrewarded?" |
33187 | Do you think I would have dared if I thought we should ever get away? |
33187 | Do you understand?" |
33187 | Do you wonder I hate them?" |
33187 | Does such happiness as this come to a man so suddenly? |
33187 | Does that look as if I did n''t care?" |
33187 | Even if a vessel passed, how could she hope that an islet as small as this would be noticed? |
33187 | Even if he made the effort and let the whiskey alone, how could he seek employment looking as he did? |
33187 | Ever been down in the stoke- hold, Miss Harmon? |
33187 | Eyeing the bearer severely, he demanded sternly:"Where did you get this?" |
33187 | Fearfully she whispered:"Where is it? |
33187 | Finally he said impatiently:"Are you going to take that in to a member of the firm or must I do it myself?" |
33187 | Finally, summoning up courage, she asked:"What did you see-- could you make out where we are?" |
33187 | Get out-- do you hear?" |
33187 | Grace made a gesture of impatience as she answered:"What good are they? |
33187 | Grace smiled, and, poutingly, she protested:"Why do you question me in this way?" |
33187 | Grace''s mouth was already watering:"What shall I do with them?" |
33187 | Had n''t he scoffed at them just now? |
33187 | Had she already met him? |
33187 | He came still closer and, peering into his visitor''s face, said:"You? |
33187 | Her face paled, and her lips trembled as she asked:"Do n''t you think it''ll be seen sooner or later? |
33187 | Her head still averted, she said:"But you''ll come back?" |
33187 | Hesitatingly she added:"It may be that you are right-- that a ship will never come-- what then? |
33187 | How could a girl, raised as she''d been, be expected to do anything useful? |
33187 | How could she be alone on that desert island? |
33187 | How could she face the coming darkness alone with that man whom she had angered and with all the unknown terrors the island contained? |
33187 | How could she resist? |
33187 | How could she spend all the lonely hours of the night in the terrifying darkness-- alone with that man? |
33187 | How had he followed that sage advice? |
33187 | How would it affect her? |
33187 | How''s this?" |
33187 | I think we''d better put off the ball, do n''t you, count?" |
33187 | I''ll take you down some day-- eh, what? |
33187 | If he were willing to sacrifice himself, what right had he to sacrifice her? |
33187 | If her father became bankrupt to- morrow, where would she be? |
33187 | If it is n''t one thing, it''s another-- so wot''s the use?" |
33187 | If they must die-- to- day-- to- morrow-- or the next day-- why deny oneself any joy that the world still had to offer? |
33187 | If you love me, why did you do that?" |
33187 | In what way was she his superior now? |
33187 | Is it going to get any cooler?" |
33187 | Is n''t she one of those women who came down to the stoke- hold the other day?" |
33187 | Leaning over toward her, he said:"Ca n''t you guess the real reason?" |
33187 | Looking up at him mischievously, she added:"So you deceived me-- I marry a title, after all?" |
33187 | Marry she must, but whom? |
33187 | May I ask in what way this advertisement interests you?" |
33187 | May I call on Thursday afternoon? |
33187 | No? |
33187 | Nodding assent, he went on:"That is to say, a contract entered into between themselves?" |
33187 | One day she said to him:"You were n''t always a stoker, were you-- you were n''t born to that kind of life?" |
33187 | Page What right had he to accost her? |
33187 | Perhaps if things had turned out otherwise, if the_ Saucy Polly_ had not come---- Well, what''s the use of talking of that now? |
33187 | Petrified with fright, her heart in her mouth, she called out:"Who''s there?" |
33187 | Presently he said:"And the Abbess-- what became of her?" |
33187 | Presently she asked:"Can they make him go back to work in the stoke- hold whether he likes or not?" |
33187 | Puzzled, she asked:"What do you mean?" |
33187 | Shall I tell you what it is?" |
33187 | Shall I tell you what your heart desires? |
33187 | She had read and heard of such things-- hadn''t Professor Hanson, during their talks on shipboard, conceived this very situation? |
33187 | She looked up at him appealingly:"Is there no hope at all?" |
33187 | She made no answer, and Mrs. Stuart repeated her question:"Were n''t you afraid of him?" |
33187 | She must be aware of his real character, or was she completely blinded by the brilliancy of his position? |
33187 | She must find something else to wear, but what? |
33187 | She''ll believe every bally thing you tell her and get the blue spiders and all that sort of thing-- eh, what?" |
33187 | Should she disrobe entirely or remain fully dressed to be ready for any emergency? |
33187 | So you''re going to England?" |
33187 | Some such thought occurred to Armitage, for suddenly he blurted out:"Do you believe in marriage?" |
33187 | Suppose he had been a man of her own class, would she marry him? |
33187 | Suppose she braved everything for his sake, what then? |
33187 | Suppose we all go now?" |
33187 | Tenderly he added:"Do you understand now why I said I loved you? |
33187 | The afternoon was rapidly advancing; before very long the sun would set and what then? |
33187 | Then he replied:"Yes-- I do look a little different, do n''t I? |
33187 | Then, with eyes averted from hers, he said in a low tone:"What''s the use of letting it burn any longer? |
33187 | There''s no"Who''s Who?" |
33187 | They''ll never take me back, do you hear?" |
33187 | To change the conversation she said:"I wonder if we shall ever get away from here?" |
33187 | To hide his confusion he asked:"Can you direct me to the offices of Coxe and Willoughby, the attorneys? |
33187 | Was he the type of man she could love? |
33187 | Was it love? |
33187 | Was this the explanation of Armitage''s long absence the previous night? |
33187 | We do n''t always get things the way we want them, do we?" |
33187 | We have no boat-- no compass----""Oh, what can we do? |
33187 | Well, what was the use of torturing himself any longer? |
33187 | Were there no such men left in the world to- day? |
33187 | What about the coming night? |
33187 | What can I do for you?" |
33187 | What can I do for you?" |
33187 | What can happen? |
33187 | What can we do?" |
33187 | What could she do to protect herself? |
33187 | What could she do? |
33187 | What could she, a frail woman, do alone to get food and devise some way of escape? |
33187 | What d''ye say, Bill?" |
33187 | What did he care if a girder fell and he was dashed to pieces below? |
33187 | What did he mean? |
33187 | What do I care about your houses, your gowns and your jewels? |
33187 | What do you fellows get out of life, anyhow? |
33187 | What do you propose to do now?" |
33187 | What do you say, Dutch?" |
33187 | What do you want me to do?" |
33187 | What effect, therefore, must it have had on the delicate Miss Harmon, whose health already gave cause for alarm before she went on that fatal voyage? |
33187 | What good are your father''s millions here? |
33187 | What had she done that the happiness which other women know should not be granted also to her? |
33187 | What if help did not come? |
33187 | What is happiness? |
33187 | What is it?" |
33187 | What joys did life hold out to him? |
33187 | What potent attraction was there about this man that rendered her powerless to resist his pleading? |
33187 | What right had he to accost her? |
33187 | What use were her tears and her irritation? |
33187 | What use were the life- boats in such a sea? |
33187 | What was more natural? |
33187 | What was the count breathing down your neck?" |
33187 | What was the use of bucking against one''s luck? |
33187 | What was this woman''s suffering to him? |
33187 | What would their life be as the years went on? |
33187 | What''s happened? |
33187 | What''s the good?" |
33187 | What''s your opinion?" |
33187 | What, indeed, were the artificial, tawdry delights of the man- made cities compared with the delights of life in the God- made fields? |
33187 | Whatever are you so engrossed about?" |
33187 | When she ceased speaking, he asked quietly:"And what is your view? |
33187 | Where can we go?" |
33187 | Where have you been all these years?" |
33187 | Who built the signal- fire on Mount Hope? |
33187 | Who had done this? |
33187 | Who is he? |
33187 | Who keeps it going night and day? |
33187 | Who''s comin''?" |
33187 | Why did he hesitate? |
33187 | Why did n''t he take the prize which was already his? |
33187 | Why did you not come?" |
33187 | Why do n''t you marry him and be a princess-- only two lives removed from a throne? |
33187 | Why had he come to New York? |
33187 | Why had he done it? |
33187 | Why had he exhausted and bruised himself struggling with the waves, fighting death, when he had no desire to live? |
33187 | Why had he given up good wages to come here without the certainty of finding work? |
33187 | Why had he scattered and drowned out their signal- fire? |
33187 | Why not let her go now and have done with it? |
33187 | Why should he be denied her? |
33187 | Why should he care? |
33187 | Why should he lose this happiness that had come to him? |
33187 | Why should n''t she love this man? |
33187 | Why should one come into the world poor and the other rich? |
33187 | Why should she know that he had been one of the poor devils in the stoke- hole? |
33187 | Why should she? |
33187 | Why should they not mate now? |
33187 | Why should they want to communicate with him-- the scapegrace of the family? |
33187 | Why should you? |
33187 | Wild oats? |
33187 | With a married woman for a chaperon, what further objection could there be? |
33187 | Would a ship never come? |
33187 | Would it not be more natural, would not their lives be happier if they mated and had children to be the joy of their reclining years? |
33187 | Would she ever meet such a man? |
33187 | Would she scream, or faint, or do any of the hysterical things a woman is supposed to do in such circumstances? |
33187 | Ye remember-- Robinson, who tried to beat it at Naples? |
33187 | Yet how could he go away without saying good- by? |
33187 | Yet why, after all, should this man-- this ogre-- kill her? |
33187 | Yet, after all, why not? |
33187 | _ Vous comprenez?_"The girl curtsied. |
33187 | _ You_ are John Armitage?" |
33187 | exclaimed Schmalz nervously,"But mach schnell, eh?" |
45457 | ''Gator Road''? |
45457 | A fly? |
45457 | A flying bug? |
45457 | A girl? |
45457 | A job? 45457 A job? |
45457 | A new car? |
45457 | A what? |
45457 | Am I dreaming? 45457 Am I to meet her?" |
45457 | And Dot-- may I speak to Miss Carlton? |
45457 | And Louise, why do n''t you pour them some of this iced- coffee? 45457 And forced her to go with him?" |
45457 | And get on a steamer? |
45457 | And how do you happen to be here? |
45457 | And how''s the most famous girl- pilot in the world? |
45457 | And lose all that ransom money? 45457 And the man they called the''Doc''?" |
45457 | And we wait for them there? |
45457 | And what is your line, outside of kidnapping? |
45457 | And where are you going? |
45457 | And where does Susie come into all this? |
45457 | And where will you go with your Flying Bug, Miss Carlton? |
45457 | And will you please excuse me-- as I see Dot going to the dressing- room? |
45457 | And would n''t you like to try her out? 45457 Any news?" |
45457 | Are n''t you doing a thing to find them, Captain? |
45457 | Are n''t your family worried about you, Miss Carlton? |
45457 | Are you O.K., darling? |
45457 | Are you alone? |
45457 | Are you engaged to Ralph Clavering-- and is that why you''re turning other men away? |
45457 | Are you sure that it can go fast enough to suit you, Linda? |
45457 | Aunt Emily? 45457 Best in the country,"boasted Jackson...."Miss Carlton,"he added,"would you stay at our home while you are in the city?" |
45457 | But does n''t it make you feel dreadful-- at night, sometimes, or when you''re alone-- to think of leading such a wicked life? |
45457 | But how can we ever hope to build a fire in this rain? 45457 But how could you possibly know?" |
45457 | But how did you get away? |
45457 | But how do we manage it? 45457 But how shall I tell Mrs. Carter? |
45457 | But if they had, would n''t we have heard? 45457 But it flies?" |
45457 | But wait, have you had your supper? |
45457 | But what could you possibly do? |
45457 | But what good''s money, if you''re a cripple? |
45457 | But what has that to do with me? |
45457 | But what shall we do about this visitor? |
45457 | But what were they doing? 45457 But what''s the grand rush?" |
45457 | But when you discovered that he was n''t straight, why did n''t you leave him? |
45457 | But where have you been? |
45457 | But why did n''t you tell Hal and me that, when we found you in the swamp? |
45457 | But you agree that I could n''t call it my''Clothes- dryer,''or my''Wind- mill,''do n''t you, Aunt Emily? 45457 But,"she continued as they walked around the autogiro,"is n''t there really any danger of crashing?" |
45457 | By airplane? |
45457 | By the way, Miss Carlton,put in the pilot,"did you think to bring any food for lunch? |
45457 | Can I drive in to the hotel to see you, Ann? |
45457 | Can we be of any help to you, Miss? |
45457 | Can you fly that Bug, Susie? |
45457 | Can you shoot? |
45457 | Can you take us aboard? |
45457 | Could n''t you get rid of her, Auntie? |
45457 | Could n''t you take some other girl? |
45457 | Could we eat, Sergeant? |
45457 | Did n''t I tell you to? |
45457 | Did n''t you see Beefy take that big can to the boat with him? 45457 Did you ever see two such sights as we are?" |
45457 | Did you realize that at the time? |
45457 | Did you see them-- the police, I mean? |
45457 | Do I look like another girl? |
45457 | Do n''t you suppose we can go today? |
45457 | Do n''t you want a detective to go with you? |
45457 | Do n''t you want to try it out? |
45457 | Do n''t you, Captain? |
45457 | Do you honestly think she''ll reform? |
45457 | Do you mean that you wanted to kill me? |
45457 | Do you really know me? |
45457 | Do you suppose they''re both sick-- or injured? |
45457 | Do you think we can make it? |
45457 | Do you''spose some canoe picked her up-- maybe those same boys that rescued you? |
45457 | Does Susie like all this? |
45457 | Does it hurt very much, Susie? |
45457 | Flying? |
45457 | Go where? |
45457 | Good news, Linda? |
45457 | Got a good knife, Linda? |
45457 | Got any guns on you? |
45457 | Got the lines out about her yet? |
45457 | Had n''t we better be pushing on, if we expect to get out of the swamp before dark? |
45457 | Had n''t we better eat? |
45457 | Have n''t you learned from driving a car that it does n''t pay? 45457 Have n''t you read about yourselves? |
45457 | Have they a good police department? |
45457 | Have you had your dinner, Sir? |
45457 | Her disappearance will make it a lot harder to trace that other thief.... Do you really expect to do anything about hunting him, Linda? |
45457 | How about taking me up for a little fly? |
45457 | How can we ever thank you enough, Captain Smallweed? |
45457 | How did it get there? |
45457 | How did you know where to find us? |
45457 | How do I know how Linda got away? 45457 How do I know that that plane wo n''t burst into flames any minute?" |
45457 | How do you expect to get across the state? |
45457 | How do you get that way? |
45457 | How do you know that you can fly any plane I happen to get, Miss Carlton? |
45457 | How long do you think it will take you to get to Cuba? |
45457 | How long has it been since you ate? |
45457 | How long will it take us to get to Jacksonville? |
45457 | How soon do you think you can get off, Linda? |
45457 | How soon will we get to the coast? |
45457 | How would you know where to go-- without even a suggestion from Susie? |
45457 | How? |
45457 | How? |
45457 | If it did n''t have a leak----"But did n''t you say that it was broken? |
45457 | If they had n''t taken it? |
45457 | In his canoe? |
45457 | In trouble, girls? |
45457 | Is her Bug still there? |
45457 | Is it really, truly you, Linda darling? |
45457 | Is my bag still in the autogiro? |
45457 | Is that all you had? |
45457 | Is there anything I can do? |
45457 | Is this surely the right island? 45457 It''s huge, is n''t it?" |
45457 | Just what are your plans, Linda? |
45457 | Kit? |
45457 | Like her, Susie? |
45457 | Linda,said Susie, interrupting these thoughts,"will you go to my tent and get me a magazine I have there? |
45457 | Linda,she said softly,"see that young man over there at that table back of you-- to the right-- with an older woman? |
45457 | May I ask you a personal question, Linda? |
45457 | May I look the plane over before we start? |
45457 | May we throw our stuff on board first? |
45457 | Miss Carlton? |
45457 | Miss Carlton? |
45457 | Money? 45457 Must you call it that, Linda?" |
45457 | No, we''ll go straight west.... Or is that the west? 45457 Not in that boat?" |
45457 | Now, can you climb? |
45457 | Oh, yeah? |
45457 | Oh, you did, did you? |
45457 | Or go straight on to the ocean? |
45457 | Pretty slick, are n''t they? 45457 Rain or shine? |
45457 | Ready now? |
45457 | Ready to start now? |
45457 | Remember all the dark futures I used to wish for Bess Hulbert? |
45457 | Say, does this uncover a lot of money? 45457 Shall we eat?" |
45457 | Shall we get out? |
45457 | Shall we go back to our island-- if we can find it? |
45457 | Shall we leave Jacksonville? |
45457 | Smashed your plane? |
45457 | So far away-- in an airplane? |
45457 | So stop that taxi for us, will you please, Captain?... 45457 Soldiers''Camp Island?" |
45457 | Suppose they get caught? |
45457 | Susie hurt? |
45457 | Tell me how you got into a gang like this? |
45457 | That island does n''t look very far away, does it? |
45457 | The girl who flew to Paris alone? |
45457 | The what? |
45457 | Then where is it? |
45457 | Then why did you treat him so cruelly? 45457 Then your Ladybug is damaged?" |
45457 | There are n''t any roads in the swamp, are there? |
45457 | Think I better try to call him back? |
45457 | This is a P C A--2, is n''t it? |
45457 | Tired? |
45457 | To match my eyes? |
45457 | To show us the way? |
45457 | Unless,he added, turning to Susie,"you would want to take the body back to your home?" |
45457 | Want some grub first, Jake? |
45457 | Want to come along home with me, and meet the wife? 45457 Was it Jackson Carter who rescued you before, Linda?" |
45457 | We had a wreck.... Will you take me with you? |
45457 | We have it.... Now, suppose instead of my asking you questions, you tell us the whole story, Miss----? |
45457 | We have to be able to manage most anything.... Can you send a car out for me to the Carters''home, early in the morning? |
45457 | We might even build a boat----"Out of underbrush? |
45457 | We''ll be delighted to accept, wo n''t we, Linda? |
45457 | We''re your best friends, are n''t we, Linda? 45457 Well, what''s it all about, Miss Carlton?" |
45457 | Well, would it, Captain Smallweed? |
45457 | What boat? |
45457 | What do you girls mean by going out on a rough sea like this, in a shell like you had? |
45457 | What do you mean? |
45457 | What do you mean? |
45457 | What do you think of that, Linda? |
45457 | What do you- all call this? |
45457 | What does he care-- so long as he ai n''t the one that''s hurt? |
45457 | What does it mean? |
45457 | What shall we do? |
45457 | What would be the nearest large city to this southern end of the swamp? |
45457 | What would you like to do? |
45457 | What''s in that flask? |
45457 | What''s new? |
45457 | What''s the connection between chicken soup and sore throats? |
45457 | What''s the matter, Dot? |
45457 | What? 45457 What? |
45457 | When can I see you, Ann? 45457 When do you expect them back?" |
45457 | When will you be home, dear? |
45457 | Where are the other two men? |
45457 | Where are you hurt? |
45457 | Where could she go? |
45457 | Where do you girls want to go now? |
45457 | Where in the world have you been? |
45457 | Where is it? |
45457 | Where is she now? |
45457 | Where is your mother? |
45457 | Where would Jim see our old boat? |
45457 | Where''s Linda? |
45457 | Where''s Slats? |
45457 | Where''s Susie? |
45457 | Where''s your other man? |
45457 | Where? |
45457 | Where? |
45457 | Where? |
45457 | Which bank? |
45457 | Who can it be? |
45457 | Who is she, Auntie? |
45457 | Who? 45457 Why could n''t we make chicken soup, out of the bones and sea- water? |
45457 | Why do n''t they fly towards the coast-- towards Georgia? |
45457 | Why does n''t he come after us? |
45457 | Why not pick a job in Canada? |
45457 | Why not? |
45457 | Why not? |
45457 | Why the sigh, dear? |
45457 | Why? 45457 Why?" |
45457 | Why? |
45457 | Why? |
45457 | Will you have her filled with gas and oil, while I sign the contract? 45457 Will you please take my bag to your house, and leave the address with me?" |
45457 | Will you take the police along? |
45457 | With the police? 45457 Working?" |
45457 | Would I have to promise to do this all summer, if I took it on? |
45457 | Would n''t it be nice to stop and make some coffee? |
45457 | Would n''t you like to go off in my autogiro today? |
45457 | Would n''t you rather have your ankle fixed right, and not run the chance of being a cripple for life? |
45457 | Would you girls consider bringing your families out to our home, to spend the weekend with us? |
45457 | Would you have gone with me? |
45457 | Yes-- and weddings are so solemn-- so sort of sad, are n''t they, Auntie? 45457 Yes?" |
45457 | You are sure you can pilot her, Miss? |
45457 | You do n''t mean to say that you have been kidnapped? |
45457 | You do n''t mean to say you''ll take time to fly to Philadelphia, with all your engagements? |
45457 | You expect to give your whole time to flying? |
45457 | You foot the bill? |
45457 | You found it easy to fly, Miss Carlton? |
45457 | You girls gangsters? |
45457 | You know the way? |
45457 | You know, then, that one plane flying over a field can spray as many plants in a day as a hundred of the ordinary spraying machines? |
45457 | You mean they do n''t trust you? |
45457 | You mean you are actually willing to go back into that swamp? |
45457 | You mean you will pilot the plane yourself? 45457 You really are the girl who flew across the ocean alone, and won that big prize?" |
45457 | You really believe you can fix it in one day? |
45457 | You really expect to buy one today, Linda? |
45457 | You really expect to catch those two on that island? |
45457 | You stole the autogiro? |
45457 | You want to try it again in canoes? |
45457 | You wo n''t go to Green Falls-- with all the rest of the crowd? |
45457 | You''ll burn your old stuff, wo n''t you? |
45457 | You''re Miss Carlton, are n''t you? |
45457 | You''re not going to pull some new stunt on us, are you, Linda? 45457 You''re not too tired, are you, Linda?" |
45457 | You''re not wishing you were back again? |
45457 | Your aunt? |
45457 | Your business? |
45457 | Ai n''t he a good ad for his own cookin''?" |
45457 | Ai n''t that right?" |
45457 | Am I to have this particular one? |
45457 | And ai n''t your Bug the easiest thing to spot in the air?" |
45457 | And kept it all this time?" |
45457 | And what kind of plane do you intend to buy next, since you sold your Bellanca in Paris?" |
45457 | And will you ask one of the servants to waken me at seven o''clock?" |
45457 | And would the boat stop at their signal of distress? |
45457 | And-- would your friends care to go up with you?" |
45457 | Any news?" |
45457 | Anything breakable in it?" |
45457 | Are n''t we lucky to have that food?" |
45457 | Are n''t you the only girl who ever flew the Atlantic alone? |
45457 | Are you there?" |
45457 | Beneath the surface, she could see thick vegetation; would this, she wondered, support her weight if she were to attempt to walk in it? |
45457 | But do you mean you were going to shoot Linda?" |
45457 | But wait-- was she? |
45457 | But we have to stop in Jacksonville first.... Aunt Emily, could n''t you and Mrs. Crowley come to Jacksonville? |
45457 | But why do you want to go to Philadelphia, Linda?" |
45457 | By plane?" |
45457 | By the way, I''m rooming with you?" |
45457 | Can we go tomorrow morning? |
45457 | Can we go with him there?" |
45457 | Capturing a hundred thousand dollars by a clever trick----""Is there really that much?" |
45457 | Carlton?" |
45457 | Carlton?" |
45457 | Carter?" |
45457 | Clothing?" |
45457 | Could Dot and Linda have gone off in that?" |
45457 | Could I run after her?" |
45457 | Could it be the money? |
45457 | Could we have a piece of bread, or anything to eat?" |
45457 | Dared she suggest that the other girl deceive her husband-- or would she only be punished for such an idea? |
45457 | Did n''t he realize that she would never dare fly this autogiro where anyone could see her? |
45457 | Did n''t we have fun?" |
45457 | Did they mean to leave her on the island, or send her to South America? |
45457 | Did you, Lou?" |
45457 | Do we have to pass Black Jack Island to get out of the swamp?" |
45457 | Do you know them, or are they people I have met at Palm Beach sometime, one of those winters when we went to Florida?" |
45457 | Does n''t your Aunt Emily make you do that?" |
45457 | Fly the Pacific-- or the Arctic Ocean?" |
45457 | Flying to South America, or Alaska? |
45457 | Get me?" |
45457 | Give me a signal----""How?" |
45457 | Had her excitement over regaining her autogiro destroyed all her common sense? |
45457 | Had she lost control of the plane, and were they about to be dashed to pieces? |
45457 | Had the girls died of starvation, or was there foul play of some kind? |
45457 | Her blue eyes became pleading, and she asked, in an almost child- like tone,"You wo n''t tell on me, will you, Captain Magee?" |
45457 | Hiding from justice?" |
45457 | Hiding in the background, waiting to shoot them all down when they were off guard? |
45457 | How could he ever have doubted that she was of good family? |
45457 | How could she ever hope to be free from the stain of her last two years of living-- since her marriage to"Slats"? |
45457 | How could she have been so stupid? |
45457 | How could they ever tell these two men the terrible news? |
45457 | How''s everything?" |
45457 | I''m glad to get rid of that gang.... And, Linda-- how''bout if we be friends? |
45457 | If so, would n''t he perhaps be above the level of the others-- and might she not expect, if not sympathy, at least fair play from him? |
45457 | If these boys found it so dreadful, what must it have seemed like to Linda? |
45457 | If we rig up some kind of signal of distress----""What shall we use? |
45457 | Impatient at the delay, her husband demanded,"Got the idea how to run her?" |
45457 | Instead, she asked:"How soon do you go, Linda?" |
45457 | It''s dangerous-- you may be killed.... And, and, besides----""Besides, what?" |
45457 | Not hurt?" |
45457 | Nothing but ocean and sky.... Do you have your revolver handy, Dot?" |
45457 | Oh, are you all right? |
45457 | Or to die of thirst?" |
45457 | Or was he delirious, and thought he was talking to some other Linda? |
45457 | Pitcairn?" |
45457 | Remember the time you gave up a dance to fly one?" |
45457 | See the wind- mill on top?" |
45457 | Shall I send a wire?" |
45457 | Shall we fly over immediately, Sergeant Worth?" |
45457 | Shall we go there?" |
45457 | So if you would just get us a taxi, and send us to the best hotel in Havana----""In those rigs?" |
45457 | So ought n''t we to be privileged with the first ride?" |
45457 | Suppose the storm had washed the Ladybug away-- or even the whole island?" |
45457 | Ted, do you suppose they''re starved? |
45457 | That the police all over the country would be on the look- out for this very plane? |
45457 | The girls nodded, and Dot asked, with anxiety,"But who''s guiding the boat now, while Mr. Steve eats his supper?" |
45457 | Turning about, she saw Jackson behind her,"How do you do?" |
45457 | Was it possible that all this scare had risen to alarm the world for the simple reason that Linda Carlton had run out of gas? |
45457 | Was it possible that she was sick-- or only asleep? |
45457 | Was it possible that they had found the girls-- dead? |
45457 | Was it possible that this man was a physician? |
45457 | Was it possible that this man was an officer of the law, and the criminals were caught? |
45457 | Was n''t it only nerves after all? |
45457 | Was n''t your story in all the newspapers, tellin''all about this trip of your''n? |
45457 | Was the other occupant a woman? |
45457 | We ca n''t all four get into that canoe, so Susie and I had better stay here, had n''t we? |
45457 | We did n''t know it was going to spring a leak.... Would it take very long to run us to the coast, Mr.--Captain----?" |
45457 | Were Linda and Dot safe? |
45457 | Were the boys coming back so soon? |
45457 | What could you do with a girl like Linda? |
45457 | What does it feel like to starve to death? |
45457 | What have you girls got in that bag, that''s so important to deliver in a hurry?" |
45457 | What if she should drown now, in the midst of her own country-- after she had conquered the Atlantic Ocean successfully? |
45457 | What money?" |
45457 | What was the man going to do to her? |
45457 | What was the use of talking to a person like that? |
45457 | What would her niece be up to next? |
45457 | What?" |
45457 | When everything looked blackest----""You mean about being lost in the Okefenokee Swamp?" |
45457 | Where could she possibly be? |
45457 | Where did you see her?" |
45457 | Where is it located?" |
45457 | Where was he? |
45457 | Where was she going? |
45457 | Where was she? |
45457 | Where?" |
45457 | Why had she taken such a dislike to a young man as handsome as Jackson Carter? |
45457 | Why were n''t they there? |
45457 | Why, then, had n''t the girls come back? |
45457 | Why?" |
45457 | Will wonders never cease? |
45457 | Will you go with them, Worth?" |
45457 | Would that be enough to take her out of this"trembling land,"which was the meaning of the Indian word,"Okefenokee"? |
45457 | Would the rescue come in time? |
45457 | Would they torture her, perhaps, if her father refused to raise the ransom, and called the police to his aid? |
45457 | You could wire my aunt for me, could n''t you?" |
45457 | You have heard of that, no doubt?" |
45457 | You have matches in your pocket?" |
45457 | You have to put salt in it anyway, do n''t you?" |
45457 | You mean that?" |
45457 | You really have that money? |
45457 | You will come, wo n''t you, girls-- as soon as the whole party is together?" |
21714 | A slave- dealer? |
21714 | A what, Bumble? |
21714 | A wot? |
21714 | Ai n''t it beautiful? |
21714 | Ai n''t we all pursooers? 21714 All for_ one_ fish?" |
21714 | An''are they a- crownin''of him now? |
21714 | An''so you expec''s they''re goin''to make you a king for all that? |
21714 | An''the boat? |
21714 | An''warn''t the doctors right? 21714 And all,"continued Martha,"in consequence of his resolutely and obstinately, and wilfully and wickedly going to sea?" |
21714 | And do you think he''d be so mean as to tell? |
21714 | And how much is` so''much, Ailie? |
21714 | And so, sir,said Captain Dunning,"you call this your` misfortune?''" |
21714 | And they''ve got something to say to you about going to sea-- would you like to go? |
21714 | And what, my pretty one,he said,"what should we do with the fellow in the stern? |
21714 | And when are ye to be crowned, Bumble? |
21714 | And when''s that? |
21714 | And who''s to pay for our foretopsail- yard? |
21714 | Are not all serpents poisonous? |
21714 | Are you quite sure of that? 21714 Are you quite sure of that?" |
21714 | Ay, greedy; has any o''you lads got a dickshunairy to lend him? 21714 Been to sea as a cook?" |
21714 | Blowed away? |
21714 | But are you sure your messmates are as willing as you are to witness against the captain? |
21714 | But have you not seen Rokens or Briant? |
21714 | But what''s the fire for? |
21714 | But where did ye come from, an''why are they arter ye, lad? |
21714 | But, I say, lads,interposed Jim Scroggles, seriously,"wot''ll we do if it comes on to blow a gale and blows away all our purvisions?" |
21714 | By the bye, Millons, did n''t you once fall into a whale''s skull, and get nearly drowned in oil? |
21714 | Can it be? |
21714 | Can it have been Glynn? |
21714 | Can you? 21714 Can_ you_ get un for us?" |
21714 | Come now, avic, wot''s the raisin ye wo n''t go? 21714 Could n''t we have the tipple first?" |
21714 | Could you not,she said, in a half- whisper,"cut the rope, and then paddle away back while_ they_ are paddling down the river?" |
21714 | D''ye hear? |
21714 | D''ye see it, Ailie? 21714 Dear child, what can you possibly know about law?" |
21714 | Did anybody else ever see it? |
21714 | Did n''t you, ma''am? |
21714 | Did ye ever see that word in Johnson? |
21714 | Did you ever see_ three_ kittens together? |
21714 | Did you hear that? |
21714 | Did you not tell me a few minutes ago that the water was almost done? |
21714 | Do n''t I know wot''s best for ye? 21714 Do n''t ye know that_ we_ is the purshooers,''cause why? |
21714 | Do n''t you see your drogue has broke loose? |
21714 | Do n''t you think it will be required? |
21714 | Do n''t you think our house will fall, dear papa? |
21714 | Do n''t you think, dear, Martha, that there''s some more of that word on the next line? |
21714 | Do whales go to school? |
21714 | Do you ever swear? |
21714 | Do you see that mountain? |
21714 | Do you think that we can continue to exist if our daily allowance is reduced one- fourth? |
21714 | Does God work miracles still? |
21714 | Eh? 21714 Eh?" |
21714 | Even suppose we were strong enough to punish them, what good would it do? 21714 Fat you say, sare?" |
21714 | George,said Martha, drying her eyes, and speaking in tones of deep solemnity,"did you ever read_ Robinson Crusoe_?" |
21714 | Girl,said the captain, turning suddenly towards her,"is breakfast ready?" |
21714 | Harm? 21714 Have whales got brains?" |
21714 | Have you a madman on board your ship? |
21714 | Have you really anything to say to me about that ship? |
21714 | He said that, did he? 21714 Here you are, lassies; how are ye?" |
21714 | Here''s a puzzler wot''ll beat it, though,observed Tim Rokens;"suppose we all go on talkin''stuff till doomsday, w''en''ll the boat be finished?" |
21714 | How are you so sure it was n''t that? |
21714 | How can you, brother? |
21714 | How can you? |
21714 | How deep is it, Glynn? |
21714 | How do you know? |
21714 | How far? |
21714 | How many casks did you bury? |
21714 | How much do you claim for damages, George? |
21714 | How much? |
21714 | How so, Ailie? 21714 How would you like to go with me to the whale- fishery?" |
21714 | How? 21714 I ax yer parding, sir,"said Tim Rokens, addressing Dr Hopley;"but I''m curious to know if crocodiles has got phrenoligy?" |
21714 | I s''pose I may set here till ye come back? |
21714 | I say, Dr Hopley,remarked Captain Dunning, as he gazed intently into the gloom astern,"did you not hear voices? |
21714 | I suppose you mean a suggestion, eh? |
21714 | I think we may say, what has brought_ you_ here? |
21714 | I wonder why God made them? |
21714 | I''ll be the death o''that brute yet,said Gurney, wiping the perspiration from his forehead;"but go on, Rokens; what was it you saw?" |
21714 | I''m sorry for that,replied the child;"for a fire is_ so_ nice and cheery; and it helps to keep off the wild beasts, too, does n''t it?" |
21714 | If you are Jacko''s self- appointed uncle, and Miss Ailie is his adopted mother, wot relation is Miss Ailie to you? |
21714 | In course I do n''t; how should I? |
21714 | Is any one inclined to try it? |
21714 | Is everything snug, Mr Millons? |
21714 | Is he dead? |
21714 | Is it good? |
21714 | Is it? |
21714 | Is n''t Tim Rokens very funny, papa? |
21714 | Is n''t it strange, Glynn, that there are such ugly beasts in the world? |
21714 | Is n''t what funny? |
21714 | Is she? |
21714 | Is that a bit o''the wreck? |
21714 | Is that all? |
21714 | Is that another on ahead? |
21714 | Is there nobody to look arter these matters in Christian lands? |
21714 | Is your mistress at home? |
21714 | Is_ this_ your favourite tipple? |
21714 | Is_ who_ dead? |
21714 | It was rather odd,replied Glynn;"but where did you go after that?" |
21714 | It''s meself ca n''t tell,replied Briant;"d''ye know, Tim?" |
21714 | Like what, papa? |
21714 | Looking at the fish, Ailie, as usual? |
21714 | May he? |
21714 | Me ketch''i m? |
21714 | Me tell a story? 21714 Messmates,"said Tim Rokens, who for some time had leaned with both elbows on his oar and his face buried in his hands,"wot d''ye say to a bath? |
21714 | No, never,replied the captain;"what has that got to do with it?" |
21714 | Not goin''to be king? 21714 Not ready for supper?" |
21714 | Now, what am I to do with it? 21714 Now, what''s wrong?" |
21714 | O, why did ye kill her? |
21714 | Obey orders, will you? |
21714 | Oh, Glynn, is that you? 21714 Oh, it''s_ him_ you mean, is it? |
21714 | Oh, nonsense, why not? |
21714 | Oh, thank you, Glynn; but why did you go down so quick and stay so long? 21714 Oh, that''s a pity, is n''t it, Glynn?" |
21714 | Oh, then we went on, and on again, until we came to--"It''s your turn at the wheel, lad, ai n''t it? |
21714 | Oh, then you did_ not_ see the drogue attached to the whale? |
21714 | Plaze, sir, may I shoot him? |
21714 | Say, is it? 21714 See who?" |
21714 | Shall I give the order, sir? |
21714 | Shall we ever see land again? |
21714 | Shall we go back an''pick it up, sir? |
21714 | Shall we sleep here till morning? |
21714 | So he does,said Ailie;"is n''t it funny?" |
21714 | So much? 21714 Sure? |
21714 | Tell both of''em I''m here, then,said the captain, stepping into the little parlour without further ceremony;"and is my little girl in?" |
21714 | The eggs? |
21714 | Then I suppose you have no objection to try a glass of my favourite tipple, have you? |
21714 | Then why ai n''t Bibles sent to''em at once? |
21714 | Then why do n''t they git more funds? |
21714 | Then,argued Martha,"will you, can you, George, contemplate the possibility of your only daughter coming to the same dreadful end?" |
21714 | There''s ever so many Johnsons in the world; which on''em all do you mean? |
21714 | Too bad, indeed; yes, is n''t it? |
21714 | W''y? 21714 We are certain of nothing,"replied the captain;"but even suppose we were, how are we to get hold of them?" |
21714 | Well, Ailie,said Glynn, cheerfully, as he opened the door and peeped in;"how d''ye get on, dear? |
21714 | Well, Millons, what news? |
21714 | Well, and what does skulking mean, and shirking work? |
21714 | Well, it''s so long ago since I sung that song, shipmates,replied Gurney,"that I''ve bin and forgot it; but Tim Rokens knows it; where''s Rokens?" |
21714 | Well, we came up with a big whale, and fixed an iron cleverly in him at the first throw--"An iron? |
21714 | Well,began Ailie;"but where was I?" |
21714 | Were the other men as eager for the fight as you were? |
21714 | Werry good,returned Rokens;"but wot makes ye for to expect it?" |
21714 | What are they saying to you to- night? |
21714 | What are you going to do with the wood, papa? |
21714 | What d''ye say to dig a hole and stick the things in it? |
21714 | What do they spear them for? |
21714 | What do you mean by striking that fish? |
21714 | What has detained you, eh? |
21714 | What have you got to say, then? |
21714 | What is it? |
21714 | What is that? |
21714 | What mean you by stopping me? |
21714 | What mean you, sir? |
21714 | What mischief have you been about? |
21714 | What nonsense you talk, George; but I suppose you really do use pretty large hooks and lines when you fish for whales? |
21714 | What now? 21714 What right have you to ask?" |
21714 | What''s come of Glynn? |
21714 | What''s that? |
21714 | What''s that? |
21714 | What''s the very ticket? |
21714 | What? |
21714 | What? |
21714 | What_ can_ have done it? 21714 Where away now?" |
21714 | Where away? |
21714 | Which is it, doctor dear? |
21714 | Who from? |
21714 | Who''s Johnson? |
21714 | Who''s that? |
21714 | Who''s the` pursooers?'' |
21714 | Who, then? 21714 Who? |
21714 | Why did n''t you heave- to when I ordered you,he said,"and so save all this trouble and worry?" |
21714 | Why do n''t you go away when you''re told, eh? |
21714 | Why not? |
21714 | Why not? |
21714 | Why, Glynn, what has kept you, lad? |
21714 | Why, what have you got there? |
21714 | Why, what would you do with it, Dick? |
21714 | Why, what''s the matter, man? |
21714 | Why, what''s wrong? |
21714 | Why? |
21714 | Will it do you much harm, dear, papa? |
21714 | Will no one call out murder? |
21714 | With or without capers- sauce? |
21714 | Wo n''t I? |
21714 | Wo n''t he? |
21714 | Wo n''t we leave it, dear papa,said she,"to go up yonder?" |
21714 | Wo n''t you come in and say it here? |
21714 | Wos he a big or a little feller? |
21714 | Wot can it be a- doin''of here? |
21714 | Wot can it be? |
21714 | Wot then? |
21714 | Wot was it? |
21714 | Wot''s a Solon? |
21714 | Wot''s he bin doin''? |
21714 | Wot''s that there soup made of? |
21714 | Wot, do n''t ye know who Johnson is? |
21714 | Wot? |
21714 | Would you like a little more tart? |
21714 | Would you? |
21714 | Yes, Ailie; the one in the middle, you mean, do n''t you? 21714 You ai n''t afraid, air you?" |
21714 | You are quite sure that you saw it? |
21714 | You do n''t mane to tell me, now, that_ whalers_ comes in here for slaves, do ye? |
21714 | You do n''t mean it? |
21714 | You do n''t suppose I''d go fur to tell lies, do you? |
21714 | You do n''t, do n''t you? |
21714 | You may sit there till they turn you out; but come and take breakfast with me at the same hour to- morrow, will ye? |
21714 | You no tell what I go to say? 21714 You wants a cook, I b''lieve?" |
21714 | You''ll stay a long time with me before you go away to sea again, wo n''t you, dear papa? |
21714 | You''re a cook, are you? |
21714 | You''re quite sure of that? 21714 _ Quite_ dead?" |
21714 | ` We''ve been all''--I ca n''t make this word out, can you, dear? |
21714 | ` Why do n''t you ask himself?'' 21714 ` Will ye come an''see it this night?'' |
21714 | ` Wot''s all to do?'' 21714 ` Would n''t I?'' |
21714 | A dog- kennel, eh?" |
21714 | Ai n''t it? |
21714 | All ready?" |
21714 | And did n''t I hear the convarse o''all the doctors in the place? |
21714 | And did n''t they go through adventures that would have made the hair of mortals not only stand on end, but fly out by the roots altogether? |
21714 | Anything more?" |
21714 | Are you one?" |
21714 | Are you ready, my pet? |
21714 | At last Ailie held her hand towards it and said--"Wo n''t it come to me, dear, sweet pet? |
21714 | At last he emitted several strong puffs of smoke, and said--"Young man, did you ever_ see_ your own mind?" |
21714 | Being apparently satisfied with the man''s account of himself, Captain Dunning put to him the question--"Do you drink?" |
21714 | Besides, the rascals in front might take it into their heads to paddle after us, you know, and what then?" |
21714 | Both ladies exclaimed,"What point, George?" |
21714 | Business first, and pleasure, if ye can get it, arterwards-- them''s my notions, Nip-- Nip-- Nippi-- what''s your name?" |
21714 | But tell me, Ailie, how was it that you managed to keep afloat so long? |
21714 | Can you, Jane?" |
21714 | Come, Jim Scroggles, you can tell him what it means-- you''ve been to school, I believe, hain''t you?" |
21714 | D''ye see that whale now?" |
21714 | D''ye think the bottle o''brandy stole his- self?" |
21714 | Dear me, Martha, you and Jane-- look as if you had been running a race, eh? |
21714 | Did Glynn speak to you within the last ten minutes?" |
21714 | Did I niver tell ye o''the Widdy Morgan, as had a ghost come to see her frequently?" |
21714 | Did any of ye iver study midsin?" |
21714 | Did n''t I say that I''d tell ye a story as would prove to ye that ghosts drink, more especially Irish ghosts? |
21714 | Did n''t he lamp two on''em with a rope''s- end once till they wos fit to bust, and all for nothin''but skylarkin''? |
21714 | Did n''t he make them talk, as mortals never talked before; and sing as mortals never dreamed of? |
21714 | Did n''t yer poor owld mother tell ye, Phil, that ye''d come to a bad end-- she did--""Are ye badly hurt?" |
21714 | Did you find out who the poor fellow is yet?" |
21714 | Do n''t they look so_ very_ like as if they were all painted black?" |
21714 | Do n''t you observe it''s''cause he han''t got none at all to see? |
21714 | Do n''t you think, captain, that we might have our breakfast to- night? |
21714 | Do you know which part of the whale struck your boat? |
21714 | Do you think it was the Holy Spirit who put them into my mind? |
21714 | Doctor, can you tell me now, which is the easiest of digestion-- a hard egg or a soft one?" |
21714 | Else, wherefore does the Father love it and care for it so tenderly? |
21714 | Glynn, Glynn Proctor,"roared the first mate from the deck--"where''s that fellow? |
21714 | Glynn,"exclaimed Ailie, in a whisper-- for she felt that things were beginning to look serious--"what_ are_ we to do?" |
21714 | God would not make me feel so happy if we were going to be lost, would He?" |
21714 | Have ye sich an article in these parts?" |
21714 | Have you breakfasted?" |
21714 | Have you caught any codlings, Bumble?" |
21714 | Have you had a glass this morning?" |
21714 | Have you thought?" |
21714 | He han''t got even the ghost of one, so how could ye expect anybody to see it?" |
21714 | He''ll take such famous care of me; now_ wo n''t_ you let me go, papa?" |
21714 | How came you to leave your cabin, dear? |
21714 | How d''ye know that?" |
21714 | How wos it, now, that you so mistook yer trade as to come for to go to sea?" |
21714 | I could only just make out the winder by the pale starlight that shone through it, but the moment I set my two eyes on it, wot does I see? |
21714 | I looks round in all directions, but I could n''t see nothin''--cause why? |
21714 | I was born at sea, d''ye see? |
21714 | I wonder if it was a poisonous serpent?" |
21714 | I''ve found ye, have I? |
21714 | Is floating on your back a miracle?" |
21714 | Is n''t that the usual way of serving these fellows out?" |
21714 | Is there a chorus to it?" |
21714 | It treats every one ill.""Wo n''t it treat Captain Dixon well, if he wins, aunt?" |
21714 | Jim says he never seed his own mind-- very good; and he says as how nobody else niver seed it nother; well, and wot then? |
21714 | Kit stowed and anchor tripped? |
21714 | Let me go, will ye?" |
21714 | Might it not have been the part of the fish near the tail, now, that struck you, or the fin just under the tail?" |
21714 | Not love our fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, wives? |
21714 | Now, what say you? |
21714 | Now, wot then?" |
21714 | Serves him right; do n''t it, Glynn?" |
21714 | So again I say, who cried` Shame?''" |
21714 | So it wos you stole the brandy, wos it? |
21714 | Tarquin?" |
21714 | The mate came close to the captain''s side and said,"Did you see, sir, the way them men on the mainyard were scramblin''down?" |
21714 | Then he thought,"What if I have turned just as I was coming up with her?" |
21714 | There ai n''t no ghosts, is there?'' |
21714 | W''at say you, doctor?" |
21714 | Was it grand, Glynn?" |
21714 | Was it not the_ third_ oar, now?" |
21714 | Was it the head?" |
21714 | Was n''t it funny? |
21714 | Was n''t it odd?" |
21714 | Was n''t it strange? |
21714 | Was n''t we all pursooing the whale together?" |
21714 | Was the drogue attached when the boat came up? |
21714 | Well, now, what have you to tell me about the_ Termagant_? |
21714 | Well, reader, and why not? |
21714 | Well, wan evenin''I wint to see her, an''says I,` Mrs Morgan, did ye iver hear the bit song called the Widdy Machree?'' |
21714 | Well, would ye b''lieve it, shipmates, at that same moment up starts the ghost again as bold as iver? |
21714 | Were the other men in your boat in a similarly unobservant condition?" |
21714 | What a very pretty bit of coral I see over there, close to the white rock; do you see it? |
21714 | What d''ye say, boys; shall we beat''em?" |
21714 | What do you say to go with me and Ailie on our next trip, sisters? |
21714 | What is that?" |
21714 | What more can you tell me? |
21714 | What say you?" |
21714 | What sort o''baccy d''ye smoke, Rokens?" |
21714 | What think you, Ailie, my pet, will you be able to stand it?" |
21714 | What was to be done? |
21714 | What''s that?" |
21714 | What_ is_ it, doctor?" |
21714 | Where have you been?" |
21714 | Where is he?" |
21714 | Where is it?" |
21714 | Who are you, and where bound?" |
21714 | Who are you, and where from?" |
21714 | Who has not? |
21714 | Who is it, did you say?" |
21714 | Who is? |
21714 | Who made it?" |
21714 | Why wo n''t ye, now?" |
21714 | Why, what are you making? |
21714 | Why?" |
21714 | Why?" |
21714 | Will you trust me?" |
21714 | Wot is to be done?" |
21714 | Wot more would ye have? |
21714 | Wot''s a ship without a''elm? |
21714 | Wot''s a song without a chorus? |
21714 | Wot''s plum- duff without the plums? |
21714 | Wot''s wrong wid ye, Bumble?" |
21714 | Wot-- supposin''ye had the chance-- would ye give, at this good min''it, for a biled leg o''mutton?" |
21714 | Would your lordship be so good as to note that? |
21714 | Yes or no?" |
21714 | Yes, well?" |
21714 | Yet why should I conceal from her the danger of our position? |
21714 | You know what fire- flies and glow- worms are?" |
21714 | ` Wot,''says I,` keep a garding, and plant taters, and hoe flowers an''cabidges?'' |
21714 | ` Would ye like to hear it, darlint?'' |
21714 | ` Ye ai n''t a- goin''to take spasms?'' |
21714 | ai n''t it swate?" |
21714 | am I?" |
21714 | and then followed it up with the abrupt question--"Do you drink?" |
21714 | at it yet? |
21714 | but I would like to have''em up in a row-- every black villain in the place-- an''a cutlass in my hand, an''--an''would n''t I whip off their heads? |
21714 | came down- stairs like an echo, from the region of Miss Martha Dunning''s bedroom, and was followed up by a"What is it?" |
21714 | capting,"exclaimed the wrathful Irishman, reproachfully,"sure ye would n''t spile the fun?" |
21714 | cried Ailie, laughing,"how can you?" |
21714 | cried Tarquin, looking fiercely round on his shipmates,"who cried shame? |
21714 | cried the captain, with lively interest;"and her captain?" |
21714 | do n''t he pull? |
21714 | do n''t you feel hungry?" |
21714 | doctor, have ye strength to set disjointed limbs?" |
21714 | echoed Rokens, in disgust;"why did n''t ye say, so at first? |
21714 | exclaimed Martha;"to whom do you refer?" |
21714 | exclaimed Phil Briant, all his blood rising at the mere mention of the horrible traffic;"could n''t we land, capting, and give them a lickin''? |
21714 | exclaimed Tim Rokens, withdrawing his pipe from his lips;"do you_ sell_ niggers?" |
21714 | he said,"that''s your game, is it? |
21714 | interrupted Glynn;"what''s that?" |
21714 | more wanting to go ashore?" |
21714 | morther, could n''t I burst?" |
21714 | not give our warmest affections to all these?" |
21714 | observed Rokens;"and d''ye suppose he''d give ye the right name?" |
21714 | said Aunt Jane indignantly;"but what could we expect? |
21714 | said Rokens;"d''ye mean, a ruler of this here country?" |
21714 | says I;`''av coorse ye are, bliss yer purty face; do n''t I know that ivery boy in the parish is after ye?'' |
21714 | shouted Tim Rokens;"wot boat''s that?" |
21714 | the bright, beautiful world that was made by God to be enjoyed? |
21714 | then ye married the widder, did ye?" |
21714 | what a funny bay that must be--`My dearest Sisters''--the darling fellow, he always begins that way, do n''t he, Jane dear?" |
21714 | what air they doin''wid the poor cratur now?" |
21714 | what can that be? |
21714 | what on airth--?" |
21714 | what''s wrong?" |
21714 | what, where?" |
21714 | what_ can_ that be, Jane?" |
21714 | when? |
21714 | where away, Phil?" |
21714 | where, child? |
21714 | who has been with you?" |
21714 | who''d ha''thought it? |
21714 | why, what about?" |
21714 | will ye take_ me_?'' |
21714 | willin''to go? |
21714 | wot you tink?" |
21714 | ye''ve bin to school, no doubt, have n''t ye?" |
21714 | yelled the bereaved one,"do n''t I know ye?" |
21714 | you prefer big spoons to little ones, my man, do n''t you?" |
21714 | you''re a to- teetler?" |
37954 | A dead man----"Any of ours? |
37954 | A dream? |
37954 | Ah...and presently,"As to that, am I wrong then in thinking that if you had not been here I would most likely not have been here either?" |
37954 | An''is it a thief you wud call me for taking these? |
37954 | An''she''s a good- looking bit of goods, eh? |
37954 | An''whaur may they be? |
37954 | And Captain Bain? 37954 And Madame Adélaide----? |
37954 | And Madame Elizabeth? 37954 And Mrs Carew? |
37954 | And did you make any strange discoveries? |
37954 | And have you fresh water? |
37954 | And he-- the mate,--when does he eat? |
37954 | And hooks? |
37954 | And how can ye tell that now? 37954 And if I should have found someone else?" |
37954 | And if things go badly? 37954 And is there any island?" |
37954 | And it does not attract you? |
37954 | And no one has come to you in all that time? |
37954 | And some shoes and stockings, think you? 37954 And the ink?" |
37954 | And the mate? |
37954 | And the tools? |
37954 | And this? 37954 And those horrid birds?" |
37954 | And we''ll take these two coats----"Whatever for? |
37954 | And what''s this? |
37954 | And when does she sail?'' |
37954 | And where do you live? |
37954 | And where is it? |
37954 | And where shall we find shelter and fire in this place? |
37954 | And why confesses? 37954 And why should they?" |
37954 | And women? |
37954 | And you and I and Macro here? 37954 And you can bear to think of living on and on and on here till-- the end?" |
37954 | And you have friends in America-- relatives perhaps? |
37954 | And you left no ties behind you there in England? |
37954 | And you told her it was me brought her ashore? |
37954 | And you''ve been all alone all that time? |
37954 | And you-- do you never go out there with him? |
37954 | And you? |
37954 | And you? |
37954 | And you? |
37954 | And you? |
37954 | And-- they were right? |
37954 | Any good? |
37954 | Anything to eat? |
37954 | Are there skeletons out there? |
37954 | Are they good, or is there false ones among them too? |
37954 | Are those really all birds? 37954 Are ye in trouble? |
37954 | Are you hurt? |
37954 | Are you prepared to trust me completely, Miss Drummond? |
37954 | Are you real? 37954 Are you speaking of Miss Drummond?" |
37954 | As things are, however...."As things are? |
37954 | Ay, could n''t you? |
37954 | But no more breakages? |
37954 | But what good is it all unless you can get away from here and turn it to some good use? |
37954 | But what took him, Job? 37954 But why?" |
37954 | But why? |
37954 | But you never knew what, beforehand? 37954 But you will come back?" |
37954 | But,--to leave us all and all this? 37954 Ca n''t we make a fire and roast some rabbit? |
37954 | Can ye pay? |
37954 | Can you build a house? |
37954 | Can you do it before dark? |
37954 | Can you feed yourself? |
37954 | Can you make a chimney? |
37954 | Can you make biscuit? |
37954 | Can you manage? |
37954 | Can you swim? |
37954 | Come and I''ll show you-- or will you take us along in the boat? 37954 Could I not come with you?" |
37954 | Could n''t we get it next trip? |
37954 | Could ye no alter them to your needs, mebbe? |
37954 | D''ye hear me? 37954 D''you feel like going out yonder?" |
37954 | Dead? |
37954 | Dead? |
37954 | Dead? |
37954 | Deserted? 37954 Did it reach you?" |
37954 | Did you feel that? |
37954 | Did you find out who she is and where she hails from? |
37954 | Did your friend get me any clothes? 37954 Do ships ever call there?" |
37954 | Do you dare to think I would touch your dirty pilferings? |
37954 | Do you know what it means? |
37954 | Do you not then talk much with Mr Macro? |
37954 | Do you notice anything strange? |
37954 | Do you see Macro over there? |
37954 | Do you think they know? |
37954 | Do you think you could twist two or three of these into a fishing- line? |
37954 | Does he look upon us as his servants, then? |
37954 | Does she take any passengers? |
37954 | Dream? |
37954 | Edward of Kent? |
37954 | Et''s for the auld man to say----"The Captain? |
37954 | Fine feathers-- fine birds? |
37954 | First claim?--for what? |
37954 | For ever?--Never to get back to the larger life of the world as long as you lived? |
37954 | For good and all? |
37954 | From the wrecks? |
37954 | Going away, Wulf? 37954 Hang you? |
37954 | Has he done that before? |
37954 | Has she come round? |
37954 | Have I shown signs of discontent, then? 37954 Have you any idea where we are, then?" |
37954 | He did his worst.... What were you going to do with that? |
37954 | He did not come again? |
37954 | He has gone? |
37954 | He is a good man.... How long have you been here? |
37954 | He is not all English? |
37954 | How came you here? |
37954 | How do you catch your rabbits? |
37954 | How in name of sin did they get there? |
37954 | How much shall we say? 37954 How on earth have you lived? |
37954 | How will you keep it rolled tight like that? |
37954 | How? |
37954 | I wonder where he''s got to? |
37954 | Is it bad? |
37954 | Is it now? 37954 Is it often like this?" |
37954 | Is it very bad? |
37954 | Is n''t it possible there''s an opening to the sea over yonder? |
37954 | Is such wickedness possible? |
37954 | Is that all? 37954 Is there no getting away then? |
37954 | Is your mistress worse, Job? |
37954 | It can not wash it all away, can it? |
37954 | It is all at your service... to the very last drop.... How begin better than by setting down here that we are one till death? |
37954 | It was n''t his fault, you know----"It was his---- fault putting Blackbird at that---- Old Road after the run we''d had, was n''t it? 37954 Man alive!--no spirits? |
37954 | Might I ask your name-- since we are like to be neighbours for the rest of our lives? |
37954 | More fancy coats? |
37954 | Must we? 37954 Name of a ship-- or name of a man? |
37954 | No manner o''use? |
37954 | No spoons? |
37954 | Perhaps you will choose out the things you think most suitable from all that the mate brought over from the wrecks? |
37954 | Really? |
37954 | She ai n''t agoing to die, Doctor? |
37954 | So that''s it, is it? |
37954 | Strange notion? 37954 Sun? |
37954 | Swim? |
37954 | That gal Mollie says you better come up and see th''missus----"Why? 37954 Them clothes all right?" |
37954 | Three ply will be strong enough? |
37954 | Tools? 37954 Two days ago?" |
37954 | Wait a moment,he would say, breaking into her flow of reminiscence,"''Monsieur''is----?" |
37954 | Was it eatable? |
37954 | We will try to keep clear of them,--if you are quite sure----"Have we got to swim, as that man said? |
37954 | Well, Job? 37954 Well, what''s wrong with you?" |
37954 | Well? 37954 Well?" |
37954 | Well?--how is my lady this morning? |
37954 | Were you in the top bunk? |
37954 | Were you thinking that when you did this? |
37954 | What about all that stuff? |
37954 | What about our water? |
37954 | What about the cover of the big hatchway there? 37954 What can I do for you, Mrs Carew?" |
37954 | What cross? |
37954 | What do we do first? |
37954 | What do you make of it, Bo''s''un? |
37954 | What do you make of it? |
37954 | What do you make of that? |
37954 | What does Mollie know about strokes? |
37954 | What does he find-- besides strange old clothes? |
37954 | What for d''ye no want to go in a passenger- ship? 37954 What is it like?" |
37954 | What is it, I wonder? |
37954 | What is it? 37954 What is it?" |
37954 | What is it? |
37954 | What is it? |
37954 | What is it? |
37954 | What luck? |
37954 | What makes Mollie think your mistress has had a stroke? |
37954 | What on earth are all these things for? |
37954 | What was the name of your ship? |
37954 | What will you do? |
37954 | What would I do? 37954 What would you do?" |
37954 | What would_ your_ friends think if they saw you so? |
37954 | What''s all this? |
37954 | What''s in your mind then? |
37954 | What''s it mean? |
37954 | What''s that? 37954 What?" |
37954 | Whatever are all those? |
37954 | Whatever kind of a ship-- you did say a ship, did you not? 37954 Where am I? |
37954 | Where are you going? |
37954 | Where could I see him? |
37954 | Where did you get it? |
37954 | Where does she go to? |
37954 | Where in heaven''s name are we? |
37954 | Where in---- ha''we got to? |
37954 | Where on earth can he have got to? |
37954 | Where shall we go? |
37954 | Where to? |
37954 | Where''d we make it? 37954 Where?" |
37954 | Which way? |
37954 | Who are''we''? |
37954 | Who says that? |
37954 | Why do you laugh at me then? 37954 Why that, Job?" |
37954 | Why that? 37954 Why then?" |
37954 | Why trouble about him? 37954 Why? |
37954 | Why? 37954 Will he die?" |
37954 | Will she go down? |
37954 | Will you bring some back with you? |
37954 | Will you have to watch again? |
37954 | Will you let me remind you that I am a doctor? 37954 Will you mind stopping below while I dispose of him?" |
37954 | Wo n''t, eh? |
37954 | Would you get me some salt, if you please? 37954 Yes? |
37954 | You are quite sure they will not hang me? |
37954 | You are sure he is dead? |
37954 | You are then----? |
37954 | You did n''t come across any tools, I suppose? |
37954 | You do not repent you of this we are about to do? |
37954 | You feel better for the fresh water? |
37954 | You had no trouble from them? |
37954 | You have eaten fish all your life, have n''t you? |
37954 | You have kept count? |
37954 | You have no butter-- lard-- dripping-- fat-- nothing? |
37954 | You have not been burning anything? |
37954 | You quarrelled? |
37954 | You will go again tomorrow? |
37954 | You will not mind being left? 37954 You will take us home?" |
37954 | You wo n''t get yourself lost? |
37954 | You''re Scotch, are n''t you? 37954 You''re sure he wo n''t fly at you?" |
37954 | _ You_? 37954 ---- it, man, ca n''t you understand I''d liefer go at once? |
37954 | ----"The law? |
37954 | --with a contemptuous slap at the innocent dough.--"To do all his work without so much as a''Thank you''?" |
37954 | ... And you did not kill him?" |
37954 | ... Dead men?" |
37954 | ... Did he not beg me to get him that stuff he used for the rats? |
37954 | ... Who are you?" |
37954 | ... Who was with him when he died? |
37954 | ... Will those cases be coffee?" |
37954 | ... You wo n''t let them hang me?" |
37954 | ..."with all the reproach she could put into it, and anxiously,"You will come again soon?" |
37954 | ..._ You_ made the mistake?" |
37954 | A ship?" |
37954 | An''I put it to him-- has he so much as set eyes on a tool out yonder since we come ashore?" |
37954 | And did I not get it for him? |
37954 | And have you considered the matter from your own point of view? |
37954 | And protection to the utmost of his powers she should have.... Was he justified in slaying the man? |
37954 | And she? |
37954 | And when do you sail?" |
37954 | And where would you be if I had n''t helped you on to the raft yon first night? |
37954 | And who found you? |
37954 | And why should he? |
37954 | And you can tell that by feeling at''em?" |
37954 | And you must not come back for an hour... Oh, what are those? |
37954 | Are you alive?" |
37954 | Are you quite warm?" |
37954 | At the"Wilt thou----?" |
37954 | BOOK V GARDEN OF EDEN LXI Happy? |
37954 | But from simple pity, in remembrance of the time when the greater love had been possible? |
37954 | But have you these?" |
37954 | But how do you know they do n''t feel it just as much, in their own dull way, as the pig did from which we get our pork?" |
37954 | But how would it be as the weeks dragged into months, and the months into years? |
37954 | But should we not go on further first? |
37954 | But that wo n''t stop my doing my best to get away if the chance offers.... And you?" |
37954 | But they are not all real stones----""And how can ye tell that now?" |
37954 | But was it fair fighting-- to see your enemy in a hole and make no effort to save him? |
37954 | But what if there is?" |
37954 | But what was the good? |
37954 | But when they began dancing excitedly on their hill- top their father called,"What is it you see, Cubbie?" |
37954 | But why do you talk of such unpleasant things when the sun is shining and the waves are sparkling? |
37954 | But-- for always? |
37954 | Ca n''t any man make a little mistake like that? |
37954 | Ca n''t it wait till I can help?" |
37954 | Ca n''t you let him die?" |
37954 | Can we not leave that out? |
37954 | Can you not smell it?" |
37954 | Can you rip up a board for a paddle?" |
37954 | Carew?" |
37954 | Could I perhaps come too?" |
37954 | Could we not untwist some and make a cord? |
37954 | Could you not bring yourself to certify death as result of the accident? |
37954 | Dare you stop here while I go back?" |
37954 | Did it pitch you out of your bunk?" |
37954 | Did men ever tell all? |
37954 | Did you sleep?" |
37954 | Do they never attack you?" |
37954 | Do you know what I would do if you were not here?" |
37954 | Do you know what the law will call it?" |
37954 | Do you marry in a dead man''s clothes?" |
37954 | Do you think you can light on any out yonder?" |
37954 | Do you understand you are asking me to swear to a lie? |
37954 | Do you want more clothes if I can find them?" |
37954 | Does n''t it feel odd to be so close to the shore? |
37954 | Does no one ever come here?" |
37954 | Does the arm hurt much?" |
37954 | Every nation has distinctive qualities of its own, is it not so?" |
37954 | Folks is such silly fools''bout such things----""What things?" |
37954 | Found anything?" |
37954 | Four months ago we did not know of one another''s existence----""Is n''t it wonderful?" |
37954 | From every worldly point of view you would be right----""What have we to do with worldly points of view? |
37954 | Had he told her all? |
37954 | Happy? |
37954 | Has the arm been hurting?" |
37954 | Have ye heard ony talk yet as t''who''s going to tek on th''pack?" |
37954 | Have you ever heard of the Countess d''Ormont?" |
37954 | Have you left any for yourself?" |
37954 | He is a good man?--to be trusted?" |
37954 | He led Mrs Carew to the couch and made her lie down there, and explained matters to the girl by asking her,"Does he throw things at you too?" |
37954 | His practice would be ruined, for who would trust a doctor capable of so fatal a mistake? |
37954 | How can I get on board?" |
37954 | How did it get on fire?" |
37954 | How long can we count on this weather?" |
37954 | How long will you want it?" |
37954 | How that?" |
37954 | How was it?" |
37954 | How? |
37954 | I can not possibly tell you in words, but-- do you know?..." |
37954 | I was a perpetual reminder, you see----""And there is another Countess d''Artois?" |
37954 | I will leave you----""Could n''t you possibly say he died as result of the accident, Wulf?" |
37954 | I''m going over there to see....""Can you see anything of him?" |
37954 | If he told her all that was in his heart, would he startle her out of this most pleasant companionship? |
37954 | If not, what was to be done, and how? |
37954 | If we work hard and get''em ashore before the weather breaks again we''ll live in clover.... What''s this now? |
37954 | Indeed, why should they? |
37954 | Is a strain of foreign blood a sin in your eyes then, Monsieur le Docteur?" |
37954 | Is n''t that so, gentlemen?" |
37954 | Is there any chance of any of the others being alive?" |
37954 | Is there anything else you would like?" |
37954 | It has been here for probably thirty or forty years----""And you-- have you been here all that time?" |
37954 | It is a somewhat sorry story, but I think you will understand.... My name told you nothing?" |
37954 | It is possible that Scottish law runs there.... We can take one another for man and wife and place it on record....""How?" |
37954 | It will be held here---""Here?" |
37954 | Let me see-- who was she?" |
37954 | Mebbe some day a boat''ll come ashore not so broke but we can patch her up.... How''d ye like to be afloat in a home- made boat a night like this?" |
37954 | Miss Drummond had turned with obvious relief to the Doctor and said,"These things do not interest you?" |
37954 | No harm done.... What is it?" |
37954 | Nor salt?" |
37954 | Nothing? |
37954 | Nova Scotia is but a hundred miles away, he says,----""So close?" |
37954 | Now what do you make of the owner of this fine thing?" |
37954 | Now why could n''t we build some kind of a boat and get across to Nova Scotia? |
37954 | Now?" |
37954 | Oh... what is that?" |
37954 | Or was it still too soon? |
37954 | Poisoned ony one? |
37954 | Resurrectionist, mebbe?" |
37954 | Shall I tell you of school- days-- of college-- of the hospitals-- of my patients and their ailments?" |
37954 | Shall we take some?" |
37954 | She was silent for a moment and then said,"I''m afraid I did break something, but I couldn''t----""Broke something? |
37954 | Suppose he said to her-- here and now,--"Avice, dearest, do you know what you are to me? |
37954 | Suppose he saved this wretched man, and was worsted by him later on, what of The Girl? |
37954 | Suppose, by any dire misfortune, he were to be taken away,--what would happen to them? |
37954 | Sure you have no other damages?" |
37954 | Tell me that, will you? |
37954 | That you again? |
37954 | The veiled eyes watched him cautiously, charged with what?--suspicion? |
37954 | Then I shall feel much happier.... And you really think we shall never get away from here?" |
37954 | Then he said,"Ay? |
37954 | Then how? |
37954 | Then they went ashore, filled a bucket with fresh water, got half a dozen rabbits and a supply of the pungent herbs...."Why so many?" |
37954 | They''re mebbe all right... What the deil wud folks want mixing bad stuff wi''good like that?" |
37954 | Those barrels are pork, but they are too heavy for us to handle----""Could n''t you break one open?" |
37954 | To whom are we answerable?" |
37954 | Was it reasonable? |
37954 | Was she ready to be asked? |
37954 | Was there any reasonable hope of a change for the better in him? |
37954 | We will sign our names to it, and we can do no more to comply with man''s law.... Is that your will, my dear?" |
37954 | Were there many such men in the world, she wondered, and why had she never met any of them before? |
37954 | What about your mother? |
37954 | What brought you?" |
37954 | What does he want with these?" |
37954 | What does she carry?" |
37954 | What for do you want to get away so quick? |
37954 | What have ye found?" |
37954 | What in---- does it mean?" |
37954 | What is it you want me to do?" |
37954 | What made that chain break, I wonder? |
37954 | What manner of men could they be who, consorting with her daily and on terms of equality, had failed to capture a heart so made for loving? |
37954 | What more could any man want, unless it were to get away from it all? |
37954 | What more could the soul of man desire? |
37954 | What noise is that?" |
37954 | What shall we do if she does n''t come right side up again? |
37954 | What time do you expect to clear out?" |
37954 | What use would that have been if you had n''t brought me back to life?" |
37954 | What will be the end of it all?" |
37954 | What will he do next?" |
37954 | What would we want tools for?" |
37954 | What would you do?" |
37954 | What would you have thought of me if I had done so?" |
37954 | What''s it now?" |
37954 | What''s the good of it all if you ca n''t make any use of it?" |
37954 | What''s wrong with her?" |
37954 | What?" |
37954 | Whatever has happened?" |
37954 | When does your friend come back?" |
37954 | When it came to--"Who giveth this woman to be married to this man?" |
37954 | When shall we go? |
37954 | When will you begin to build a boat for us to get away in?" |
37954 | Where are you?" |
37954 | Where did you learn to swim?" |
37954 | Where is he?" |
37954 | Where is it going to?" |
37954 | Where is it?" |
37954 | Where is it?" |
37954 | Where to and for how long?" |
37954 | Where''ll we begin?" |
37954 | Which way now?" |
37954 | Which way shall we go? |
37954 | Who are you?" |
37954 | Who lives there?" |
37954 | Who''d desert ships afloat like that? |
37954 | Why could they not build a boat? |
37954 | Why did you not tell me before?" |
37954 | Why not tell her, here and now? |
37954 | Why not yourself now, Doctor?" |
37954 | Why not? |
37954 | Why on earth should anyone want to hang you?" |
37954 | Why were you going out?" |
37954 | Will it make any difference?" |
37954 | Would she say as much if he asked her more? |
37954 | Would they have looked as well, stripped of their trappings? |
37954 | Would you sooner stop here or go back to the''Jane and Mary''?" |
37954 | XXXVII"Is it often like this?" |
37954 | Ye dinnot care for jewels?" |
37954 | Ye wouldna care for a ring or two, or mebbe a bracelet or a brooch?" |
37954 | You are quite sure he has gone to the wreckage?" |
37954 | You can perfect it.... Will you?..." |
37954 | You have n''t found any bones there, have you?" |
37954 | You have no seasonings of any kind-- no? |
37954 | You need have no further fears----""They will not hang me?" |
37954 | You see----""No salt?" |
37954 | You slept well?" |
37954 | You think so, do you? |
37954 | You will not mind?" |
37954 | You wo n''t go out too far? |
37954 | hatred? |
37954 | treachery? |
14172 | ''And what do you want me to do with you?'' 14172 ''And what right, sir, have you to think it is wrong, or to judge the acts of your superiors? |
14172 | ''But the lugger?'' 14172 ''But what about the_ Hoboken_?'' |
14172 | ''Glad to hear it; and what latitude does he hail in now?'' 14172 ''How d''ye do, old fellow?'' |
14172 | ''How so?'' 14172 ''Is it underground, ye mane, yer honor? |
14172 | ''Is that all you have to tell me?'' 14172 ''Kathleen is dead, then?'' |
14172 | ''Och, yer honor? 14172 ''Shoot a dead body,''said I,''where''s the harm?'' |
14172 | ''Ten thousand What''s- a- names,''cried Sam,''where''s my steak?'' 14172 ''Then you will not allow me to join my captain in his adversity?'' |
14172 | ''Then,''said he, quietly,''am I to understand you refuse?'' 14172 ''Well, commissary,''says I,''suppose I knock you down here on the spot, will that do?" |
14172 | ''Well, my good woman, what have you got down there? |
14172 | ''Well,''said the lieutenant,''I should like to take a share in waking the defunct-- what''s her name?'' 14172 ''Were you not aboard a Yankee cruiser some months back?'' |
14172 | ''What_ Hoboken_?'' 14172 ''Where in all the earth did you hail from?'' |
14172 | ''Yes, certainly,''''Is it possible?'' |
14172 | ''You know something of Cork, my man, I believe?'' 14172 ''You wish me to do so?'' |
14172 | A blow in earnest? |
14172 | A caboose and a nigger? |
14172 | A cloud if you like, Willis; but do you know the weight of it you carry on your shoulders? |
14172 | A habit that you contracted on board ship; eh, Willis? |
14172 | A portrait of_ Notre Dame de Bon Lecours_, I should n''t wonder,said Jack;"but what had that to do with hot codlins: a codlin is a fish, is it not?" |
14172 | A tiger? |
14172 | A tribe of Southern Africa, is it not? |
14172 | According to you, then,said Fritz, levelling his rifle at a petrel,"the misfortunes of the one constitute the happiness of the other?" |
14172 | According to your story, then, that does not say very much in his favor? |
14172 | After all,inquired Frank,"what is the wind?" |
14172 | Ah, you think so, Jack, do you? 14172 Am I, then, to understand that you offer to risk your life in this forlorn hope?" |
14172 | An admiral, Jack? |
14172 | And across water? |
14172 | And another interposition of Providence? |
14172 | And by what sort of compasses has this speed been measured, Master Ernest? |
14172 | And by whom? |
14172 | And do you suppose that would be sufficient? |
14172 | And does that state of matters continue any length of time? |
14172 | And have you found a surgeon? |
14172 | And how did you escape? |
14172 | And how does sound operate with regard to solid bodies? |
14172 | And if I gave you that right? |
14172 | And if a vacuum be formed? |
14172 | And if so, what shall we say? |
14172 | And if some lightning tearing through the clouds were added? |
14172 | And if the voyagers do not wish to go quite so far? |
14172 | And it causes the simoon,persisted Jack,"that lifts the sand of the desert and overwhelms entire caravans; how can you justify such ravages?" |
14172 | And mother? 14172 And not a bad one either,"continued Becker;"but how? |
14172 | And not having that, you abandoned the idea? |
14172 | And now, Ernest, what profession do you intend to adopt? 14172 And should there be only a few seeds?" |
14172 | And suppose a fever was to break out in this ship whilst I am absent, what do you imagine is to become of the officers and crew? |
14172 | And the Stoics? |
14172 | And the ephemeride, that dies an instant after its birth, do you suppose that it dies of grief? |
14172 | And the inhabitants of the planets,said Fritz,"what are they about?" |
14172 | And the natives? |
14172 | And the remainder of the crew? |
14172 | And the room, where is that to be? |
14172 | And the second steak disappeared like the first? |
14172 | And the sloop? |
14172 | And the wool for the carpet? |
14172 | And their inhabitants? |
14172 | And these young men? |
14172 | And this friend, no doubt, sent him a couple of tigers all ready trussed? |
14172 | And what are the principal islands between? |
14172 | And what are they? |
14172 | And what becomes of these minutes? 14172 And what causes this commotion in the elements?" |
14172 | And what did Sam conclude from that incident? |
14172 | And what did he say? |
14172 | And what did it say, child? |
14172 | And what did you do? |
14172 | And what does that consist of? |
14172 | And what if Cecilia''s father had been ruined instead of Herbert''s? |
14172 | And what if there were? |
14172 | And what if we refuse? |
14172 | And what is a molusc? |
14172 | And what is that, Master Frank? |
14172 | And what is that, Miss Sophia? |
14172 | And what is that, Willis? |
14172 | And what is that? |
14172 | And what shall we say to the ladies, father? |
14172 | And what would you have said, child? |
14172 | And when does our calendar begin? |
14172 | And when there? |
14172 | And when you took your hands away? |
14172 | And who invented the calendar? |
14172 | And who was One- eyed Dick? |
14172 | And who was the inventor of the compass? |
14172 | And why not? 14172 And with a young man? |
14172 | And you say that Bill Stubbs has been trapped on board this ship by such means? |
14172 | And you, Miss Sophia? 14172 And you, young ladies, what would you wish?" |
14172 | And your mother consented to such a dangerous proceeding, did she? |
14172 | And your mother? |
14172 | And, when you see this, why not adopt so commendable a course? |
14172 | Another Admiral? |
14172 | Any thing else? |
14172 | Are there not a thousand accidents to cause a ship to deviate from her route? |
14172 | Are there not always plenty of poor and helpless human beings upon whom to bestow their love? 14172 Are you determined to follow up the profession of surgery, then?" |
14172 | Are you really determined to turn the world upside down, Master Fritz? |
14172 | Are you speak''ng to me, sir? |
14172 | Are you sure of that, Willis? |
14172 | Are you sure of your man? |
14172 | At first he said, How d''ye do, Willis? |
14172 | At what rate does the wind travel? |
14172 | Because it has been refreshed on crossing the ocean that separates the two continents? |
14172 | Both William and Harold were originally Danes, were they not? |
14172 | But are you sure, Willis? |
14172 | But could you carry over my kisses, Willis, and distribute them amongst my children every morning and evening, like rations of rice? |
14172 | But do the laws recognize them? |
14172 | But have you not determined to which of the muses you will throw the handkerchief? |
14172 | But how did it get there? |
14172 | But how did you obtain possession of her? |
14172 | But how do you know it is for that? |
14172 | But how do you manage for a lawyer to convey it? |
14172 | But how is it, then, that the immense bulk of a seventy- four moves so easily in the water? 14172 But how?" |
14172 | But how? |
14172 | But how? |
14172 | But if dismasted and leaky? |
14172 | But if it is the_ Nelson_? |
14172 | But now, my friends, what do you say to going down to the shore to meet the pinnace, and perhaps the_ Nelson_? |
14172 | But surely you do not call such a poetical exordium a profession? |
14172 | But the dogs? |
14172 | But the fly- trap, father, what of that? |
14172 | But the savages? |
14172 | But the water? |
14172 | But the year is now the unit, is it not? |
14172 | But to acquire a profession, is not instruction and practice necessary? |
14172 | But what became of Herbert? |
14172 | But what has that to do with your pulse? |
14172 | But what is the good of such an expedition? |
14172 | But what is the use of exposing yourself here? |
14172 | But what say you to Plato? |
14172 | But what, in all the world, has that to do with the Pacific Ocean? |
14172 | But where are the tables and chairs to come from? |
14172 | But where would have been the evil? |
14172 | But who is the great Rono? |
14172 | But why do you ask such a question now? |
14172 | But would the stickleback answer me, Master Fritz? |
14172 | But,said Willis,"the parole can be given up, can it not?" |
14172 | By land or water, Willis? |
14172 | By the way, Mrs. Wolston, how does our worthy invalid get on? 14172 By the way, Willis,"inquired Jack,"do you ever recollect having lived without breathing?" |
14172 | By the way, girls,said Mrs. Wolston,"have you forgotten your lessons in tapestry?" |
14172 | By the way, talking about acquaintances, Willis, have you obtained any further intelligence from your friend Bill,_ alias_ Bob? |
14172 | By what conveyance, then? |
14172 | Can I come in now? |
14172 | Can you describe the ceremony to which you refer? |
14172 | Can you make it out? |
14172 | Can you make it out? |
14172 | Certain of what? |
14172 | Certainly; it is impossible to become a proficient in any art or science by mere study alone; but before sowing a field, what is done? |
14172 | Clever, very; but are you not wounded? |
14172 | Curious how things do turn up, is n''t it, Willis? |
14172 | Did she believe that? |
14172 | Did the Pope manage to get entirely rid of the fraction? |
14172 | Did you ever see a hare or a pheasant come and stare you in the face when you were going to shoot it? |
14172 | Did you heave that sigh just now, Master Fritz? |
14172 | Did you not say, brother, that the_ Nelson_ might hear our signals without our hearing hers? 14172 Did you observe the formidable dentilated horn?" |
14172 | Divided? |
14172 | Do the conductors not prevent the lightning from doing harm? |
14172 | Do you believe in omens, Jack? |
14172 | Do you feel feverish? |
14172 | Do you know me, captain? |
14172 | Do you know of any European settlements on these islands? |
14172 | Do you know the latitude and longitude of this coast, Willis? |
14172 | Do you know the nature of the disease? |
14172 | Do you know what water weighs? |
14172 | Do you observe how downcast my father looks? |
14172 | Do you really mean me to believe that yarn? |
14172 | Do you remember the answer you gave me? |
14172 | Do you suppose that Toby has learned embroidery in the same way that the parrot learned grammar? |
14172 | Do you think the pigeon will find its way with the letter from here to New Switzerland? |
14172 | Do you think,inquired Ernest,"that plants and bushes are utterly without sensation?" |
14172 | Do you think,whispered the captain to Fritz,"that Willis is all right in his upper story?" |
14172 | Do you wish to leave us? |
14172 | Do you? |
14172 | Doctor,said he,"would you do myself and my brother a great favor?" |
14172 | Does it displease you? |
14172 | Does slavery and its horrors not still exist, for example, in Russia and the United States of America? |
14172 | Does the creature speak? |
14172 | Does the earth invariably pass the same point at that interval? |
14172 | Dying, say you? |
14172 | Fatherinquired Fritz,"shall we go any farther?" |
14172 | For what purpose, my friend? |
14172 | Foresight? |
14172 | From what? |
14172 | Good? |
14172 | Had she no doubts as to their identity? |
14172 | Have I not paid you a visit of this kind before, Willis? |
14172 | Have any of you been at Falcon''s Nest lately? |
14172 | Have not,continued Ernest,"six thousand three hundred and sixty- two eyes been counted in one beetle? |
14172 | Have you been to sea since we saw you last? |
14172 | Have you both made up your minds? |
14172 | Have you composed a sonata yet? |
14172 | Have you not sheep? |
14172 | Have you seen the Flying Dutchman? |
14172 | Have you, then, been desperately wicked, Willis? |
14172 | He did not buy Cecilia a doll, did he? |
14172 | He was let down from a window in a basket, was he not? |
14172 | Heart or instinct, where is the difference? 14172 Holloa, sire,"cried Jack,"where are you off to?" |
14172 | Holloa,exclaimed Fritz,"Polly loves everybody now, does she?" |
14172 | How can that be? |
14172 | How can you fancy such a thing, mamma? |
14172 | How d''ye do, Bill? |
14172 | How do they manage to grind their corn then? 14172 How far do you suppose we are from Sydney?" |
14172 | How have you contrived to obtain so satisfactory a certificate in so short a period? |
14172 | How in all the world did Willis contrive to get transported to Shark''s Island? |
14172 | How is it, father, that the almanac makers can predict changes in the weather? |
14172 | How is it, then,inquired Willis,"with this continual multiplication always going on, the inhabitants of land and sea do not get over- crowded?" |
14172 | How is the letter to be sent on shore? |
14172 | How old are you, Willis? |
14172 | How so, Willis? |
14172 | How so, Willis? |
14172 | How so? |
14172 | How stands the contest? |
14172 | How, Willis? |
14172 | How, then, do these companies make it pay? |
14172 | How? |
14172 | I am going to take a turn in the pinnace to- morrow,said Willis, quietly;"who will go with me?" |
14172 | I am insensible, am I not? |
14172 | I can not discredit the evidences of my own senses, can I? |
14172 | I dare say, Willis, had there really been an accident, and you had been on board, you would not have felt yourself entitled to escape? |
14172 | I do n''t know, Master Jack; are you? |
14172 | I go a- hunting? |
14172 | I may add,observed the sailor,"that, as we were steering for the plantation, myself on the starboard and Jack on the larboard--""On the what?" |
14172 | I observed your thoughtful mother hang a sack on one of your shoulders, which appeared tolerably well filled-- where is it? |
14172 | I suppose it rises in the air just as an empty bottle well corked rises in the water? |
14172 | I think it is useless; what say you, Willis? |
14172 | I wish you could think of some other sort of gift,suggested Willis;"what do you say to a couple of seal or shark skins?" |
14172 | I wonder why God, who is so good, has not made houses grow of themselves, like pumpkins and melons? |
14172 | If a balloon were allowed to ascend without hindrance where would it stop? |
14172 | If you are determined to be a conqueror, let it be by the pen rather than by the sword-- or, what do you say to oratory? 14172 If you were not, captain, how could you come to my cabin every night and ask me questions?" |
14172 | In a dream? |
14172 | In that case, whom do you refer to yourself, Miss Sophia? |
14172 | In the Pacific Ocean? |
14172 | In the first place, I am in perfect health, am I not? |
14172 | In the sea? |
14172 | Is death, then, inevitable? |
14172 | Is it a hyena or a bear? |
14172 | Is it all over? |
14172 | Is it not-- to speak of a young person of thirteen''s doll? |
14172 | Is it very dreadful? |
14172 | Is land dear in these parts? |
14172 | Is she not dead, then? |
14172 | Is that all? |
14172 | Is that not rather long? |
14172 | Is that, then, your secret? |
14172 | Is the coast accessible? |
14172 | Is the coast inhabited? |
14172 | Is there any other influence that affects sound besides the wind? |
14172 | Is there no trace of the_ Nelson_? |
14172 | Is this the only savage you have seen? |
14172 | Is your son in orders then, madam? |
14172 | It does not, then, spring from a family feud, as Jack supposed? |
14172 | Just when they are about to leave? |
14172 | Keel- hauled? |
14172 | Look there, Willis-- what do you see? |
14172 | May I inquire,said he,"to what we owe this intrusion on our privacy, gentlemen?" |
14172 | May I know what your knight- errant is saying to you, Mary? |
14172 | May I request you, Master Ernest, to draw a conclusion from that as regards sowing the seeds of a future career? |
14172 | May it not have been a large monkey,suggested Jack,"who has resolved to play us a trick for having massacred its companions at Waldeck?" |
14172 | May not the warder discover our escape, and raise an alarm in time to retake us? |
14172 | Might it not,she asked herself,"be egotism to imprison their young lives in the narrow limits of maternal affection?" |
14172 | Might they not as well consist of multitudes of insects piled heaps upon heaps? |
14172 | Might they not as well say they had forgotten a tool or a pocket handkerchief? |
14172 | Miss Sophia,inquired he gravely,"are you rich?" |
14172 | Miss Sus--"What? |
14172 | Miss Wolston,said he,"did you not tell me that you had brought Toby up, and that you were very fond of him?" |
14172 | My falling in with the_ Nelson_ astonished you, did it not? |
14172 | My life, then, is nothing? |
14172 | Naturally; and what then? |
14172 | No, but suppose you were to plant it upside down, with the plantule above and the radicle below; do you think it would grow that way? |
14172 | No, stop a bit; we were in hopes of falling in with Captain Littlestone, were we not? |
14172 | Nor am I either, Willis; but let me ask you how it is that the waves do not carry you along with them? |
14172 | Not even to the paroquette Fritz gave you? |
14172 | Not from the ant, I presume? |
14172 | Not in our time, I suppose? |
14172 | Now, Jack, do you see how gallantly the wind behaves, prostrating the strong and sparing the weak? 14172 Of whom then, may I ask?" |
14172 | Oh, father,cried Sophia,"how can you tease us so?" |
14172 | Oh, is that all? 14172 Oh, then, you are an advocate for the birch, are you?" |
14172 | Oh, then,cried Jack laughing,"it is another doll story, is it?" |
14172 | Oh, then,said Jack,"the power of spinning depends upon the bulk of the spinner?" |
14172 | On foot? |
14172 | One of the_ Nelson''s_ crew? |
14172 | Oviparous? |
14172 | Perhaps not; but if I had fallen into the sea, you would have allowed the sharks to swallow me, would you not? |
14172 | Pressed on board? |
14172 | Right; I prefer that, do n''t you, Willis? |
14172 | Shall I not have compensation in your daughters? |
14172 | So it would appear,observed Jack;"but are you not aware the captain is asleep?" |
14172 | So much? |
14172 | So that to venture to sea in it would be to incur imminent danger? |
14172 | So you are a pal of One- eyed Dick''s, are you?'' 14172 So you wo n''t give me your gazelle?" |
14172 | So, then,objected Willis,"if two persons were to talk in what you call a vacuum, they would not hear each other?" |
14172 | Still, it is my idea that the Pope was not much smarter at taking a latitude than Mr. Julius Cæsar-- but what are you laughing at? |
14172 | Suppose you met Ernest or Frank in the street to- morrow, pale, meagre, and in rags, would you recognize them? |
14172 | Thanks, Willis; but what right have I to expect courage from them, if I exhibit weakness myself? 14172 That he does not smoke here,"remarked Becker,"I can easily understand; but why conceal it?" |
14172 | That, of course; and I presume another ship anchored in Safety Bay? |
14172 | The inhabitant of the moon? |
14172 | The islands to the west are those discovered by Cook, Vancouver, and Bougainville, are they not? |
14172 | The navigation along shore, then, is extremely perilous? |
14172 | The probabilities of another vessel touching here are small, are they not? |
14172 | The remedy is certainly simple; but are your figures perfectly square? 14172 The steak had really disappeared then?" |
14172 | The wood, yes; but the cannon, the cargo, and the crew? |
14172 | Then I promised to come and talk to you about your Susan every day; and did I not keep my word? |
14172 | Then he disappeared, did he not? |
14172 | Then how did France get mixed up in the affair? |
14172 | Then it occurred to you that you had neither a printer nor readers, and you broke your lyre? |
14172 | Then my sweetheart will be alone on his island, like an exile? |
14172 | Then the coral reefs, that render navigation so perilous in unknown seas, are the work of insects? |
14172 | Then was your honor present when I was christened? 14172 Then you have been in Spain, papa?" |
14172 | Then you have stumbled upon a miracle, have you, Willis? |
14172 | Then you think it is a terrific affair to kill a tiger or two? 14172 Then,"said Jack,"you do not admit the claims of the Chinese and Hindoos, who assert priority in the discovery?" |
14172 | There are no hopes of the_ Nelson_, are there? |
14172 | There is the gallery, is there not? |
14172 | They are a sort of trap set for the lightning, are they not? |
14172 | They are not acquainted with the use of fire- arms, are they? |
14172 | To have found whom? |
14172 | To no one? |
14172 | True, Willis, but did you suppose I had no heart? 14172 True; but do you not see that I am sick of dry land, and that I am getting rusty for the want of a little sea air?" |
14172 | True; but might not these bars have been sawn through before? 14172 Very good,"observed Willis;"this Malebranche, as you call him, must have been an admiral?" |
14172 | Very good; but how is it that these ponderous waves, coming down upon you, do not crush you to atoms by their mere weight? |
14172 | Very good; but if, on the other hand, there is a continual increase, how can the population continue the same? |
14172 | Very likely; and if such be the case as regards water, may it not be so also as regards air? |
14172 | Was it going round the corner of a street that you stumbled upon it, Willis? |
14172 | Was it taking a walk, Willis? |
14172 | Was it wrapped up in a white sheet? |
14172 | Was that not going a little too far, Willis? |
14172 | Was the pipe alone, brother? |
14172 | Was this right ever enforced? |
14172 | We have always been dutiful sons, have we not, mother? |
14172 | We have never caused you any uneasiness, have we? |
14172 | We were disappointed, were we not? |
14172 | Well, Willis, you that are so fertile in ideas, what would you have done in such a case? |
14172 | Well, admitting these necessities, what profession will each of you select? 14172 Well, but how does it move? |
14172 | Well, can you tell me why the same wind is cooler on the east coast of America? |
14172 | Well, did you catch him? |
14172 | Well, how did he manage about the fish? |
14172 | Well, look here; Captain Littlestone is either dead or alive, is he not? |
14172 | Well, what about the plank? |
14172 | Well, what is to be done? |
14172 | Well, will you embark with us for New Switzerland? |
14172 | Well, you see, Willis, we want for nothing on board the pinnace, not even a what- do- you- call- it? |
14172 | Well,he inquired, on landing,"was I wrong?" |
14172 | Well,inquired Willis,"was I not right in wishing to have the cage of Sir Marmaduke here?" |
14172 | Well,inquired the child,"have you seen them?" |
14172 | Were you very sorry when Frank and Ernest were going to leave us? |
14172 | What about that? 14172 What about?" |
14172 | What are they, mother? |
14172 | What are your Majesty''s commands? |
14172 | What becomes of it when it is caught? |
14172 | What becomes, in the presence of these facts, of the metaphysics and cosmogonies that have succeeded each other for two thousand years? 14172 What business had the laws to interfere with these things, I should like to know?" |
14172 | What character do the inhabitants bear? |
14172 | What continent is nearest us? |
14172 | What could I do? 14172 What country?" |
14172 | What did he say to you? |
14172 | What did the Englishman do then? |
14172 | What did you say? |
14172 | What do you say to a ton or so, old fellow? |
14172 | What do you say, Master Jack? |
14172 | What do you think of this boat? |
14172 | What else could it be for? 14172 What else could you take in your hand for such a purpose, O Rono?" |
14172 | What for? |
14172 | What had he to do with it? |
14172 | What if I wanted to know it to- night? |
14172 | What if you should fall in with a ship? |
14172 | What is England and France always fighting about, Willis? |
14172 | What is a Lama, father? |
14172 | What is all this signalling about? |
14172 | What is it, then? |
14172 | What is more natural than to reckon the fraction, if we are desirous of obtaining absolute precision? 14172 What is that you call Blinky?" |
14172 | What is that? |
14172 | What is the matter? |
14172 | What is the matter? |
14172 | What is the matter? |
14172 | What is the name of your craft? |
14172 | What is the subject of your principal work in this line? |
14172 | What is the_ Times_? |
14172 | What is this? |
14172 | What islands do you suppose are nearest us, Willis? |
14172 | What makes you think so? |
14172 | What objections have you to the others? |
14172 | What planets do you mean? |
14172 | What relation is there, for example,inquired Jack,"between an oyster and a horse?" |
14172 | What shall I call him? |
14172 | What sloop? |
14172 | What sort of vegetable is the bread- fruit? |
14172 | What then do you say to pottery? |
14172 | What then? 14172 What things?" |
14172 | What was your father saying when you shut up your ears? |
14172 | What would you have? |
14172 | What wreck? |
14172 | What, Willis? |
14172 | What, do you admit fear to be one of your accomplishments, Miss Sophia? |
14172 | What, father, am I not then to go alone, and so bear the penalty of my own fault? |
14172 | What, motive, then, did you urge, Willis? |
14172 | What, the Union Jack? |
14172 | What, then, became of the pistols and the French horn? |
14172 | What, then, do these shoals of creatures live upon? |
14172 | What, then, is sound, that the wind can blow it about, most learned brother? |
14172 | What, then, is the thunderbolt? |
14172 | What, then, is the use of military schools? |
14172 | What, then, is to become of adventures by the way, road- side inns, and banditti? |
14172 | What, then, is to become of the boys? 14172 What, then, will you do, my poor friend?" |
14172 | What, then? |
14172 | Whatever can he be driving at? |
14172 | Whatever can he mean? |
14172 | Whatever can we think, Willis? |
14172 | Whatever hove you up then, Willis? |
14172 | Whatever is the matter, Willis? |
14172 | Whatever is the matter? |
14172 | Whatever the distance? |
14172 | When did he find out that Cecilia was married? |
14172 | Where are the top boots to come from? |
14172 | Where are you going, Willis? |
14172 | Where are you going? |
14172 | Where away? |
14172 | Where away? |
14172 | Where do you come from? |
14172 | Where do you hail from? |
14172 | Where is Willis? |
14172 | Where is he then? |
14172 | Where, then, are the skins to come from? 14172 Where?" |
14172 | Where? |
14172 | Where? |
14172 | Where? |
14172 | Whether it moves or not, we shall all see by and by; but do you not observe this monster''s young ones gambolling by its side? |
14172 | Which you would like to prove to us by caging ourselves, eh? |
14172 | Who are all these personages? |
14172 | Who are you? |
14172 | Who knows, Master Jack? |
14172 | Who? 14172 Who?" |
14172 | Whoever would have thought of trusting the staff of human life to such slender support as stalks of straw? |
14172 | Whom? |
14172 | Why February? |
14172 | Why did he stay away five years without writing? |
14172 | Why do a people that call their county a refuge for the down- trodden nations of Europe suffer such abominations? |
14172 | Why not, if it is polite and well bred? |
14172 | Why not? |
14172 | Why so, Master Frank? |
14172 | Why so, madam? |
14172 | Why so? |
14172 | Why threadbare? |
14172 | Why, Willis? |
14172 | Why, then, are these men held up as models for our imitation? |
14172 | Why, then, do they make you an exception? |
14172 | Why? 14172 Why?" |
14172 | Why? |
14172 | Why? |
14172 | Why? |
14172 | Will you promise not to speak of it? |
14172 | Will you tell me,inquired she,"what happened whilst I had my ears closed up, Jack?" |
14172 | Will you, Master Jack? |
14172 | Willis, to reach Europe from here, what course do you think would be best? |
14172 | Willis,inquired Jack,"what difference is there between a mist and a cloud?" |
14172 | Willis,said he,"have you any objections to state what the engagements are, that require you to leave us at pretty much the same hour every day?" |
14172 | With what sort of magic wand did he propose to do that? |
14172 | Would it not be offending Providence,hazarded Mary Wolston,"for one of God''s creatures to abandon himself to certain death?" |
14172 | Would you not have acted, under similar circumstances, precisely as we suppose Captain Littlestone to have done? |
14172 | Wrong about what? |
14172 | Yes, what about the rascal? |
14172 | Yes; but what then? |
14172 | You are about to announce to your sons their departure? |
14172 | You are not angry with us, Willis, are you? |
14172 | You are not sufficiently up in arithmetic to do that, Willis? |
14172 | You are safe and sound, I hope? |
14172 | You are well pleased with us then? |
14172 | You asked me just now what course I should steer for Europe, did you not? |
14172 | You believe in visitations from the other world then, Willis? |
14172 | You did not break any of the commissary''s bones, did you? |
14172 | You do n''t happen to mean that the_ Flying Dutchman_ has appeared on the Scotch coast, do you, Willis? |
14172 | You have been over the way again, then? |
14172 | You surely do not call sitting down there being on your way to meet us, do you? |
14172 | You think I am mad, no doubt, do you not? |
14172 | You want to color a popular outbreak, do you not? |
14172 | You wilful boy, may I ask where, in all the world, you have been? |
14172 | You will at least return before night? |
14172 | You will not attempt to embark in weather like this? |
14172 | You will spin yarns for us, Willis, will you not? |
14172 | You will, at all events, be free to try, will you not? |
14172 | ''Did she require water?'' |
14172 | ''I thought you were dead and gone?'' |
14172 | ''Is that you, Bill Stubbs,''says I,''at last?'' |
14172 | ''Provisions?'' |
14172 | ''Then Willis has deserted?'' |
14172 | ''Will you have a mouthful of grog to warm your inside? |
14172 | And when that course is cleared off, what do you think is produced next?" |
14172 | Are not falcons, hawks, and other birds used in the chase, types of foxes and dogs? |
14172 | Are they allowed to run up another score?" |
14172 | Are they not somewhat behind in cookery?" |
14172 | Are thirty minutes more or less on the dial of your watch of no signification to you?" |
14172 | Becker?" |
14172 | Besides, if the project were divulged, might not Frank and Ernest insist upon their right to share its dangers? |
14172 | Besides, what is that salt there for?'' |
14172 | But do you think it is safe to land amongst such a set of barebacked rascals, Willis?" |
14172 | But how is it done?" |
14172 | But to return to plants, Ernest; you say they have nerves?" |
14172 | But what did you say to him?" |
14172 | But where have you all come from?" |
14172 | But who could have dreamt of any one being foolhardy enough to attempt the rescue of a ship in a nutshell that scarcely holds two persons?" |
14172 | But why not three- quarters or six- eighths, they would do as well?" |
14172 | But, by the way, do you recollect the chimpanzee?" |
14172 | But, to return to the pigeon, supposing it is possible for it to find its way, how long do you suppose it will take to get there?" |
14172 | By the way, is there anything the matter with my nose?" |
14172 | Can you say you bought them at the furrier''s? |
14172 | Can you tell me what causes lightning?" |
14172 | Commissary?'' |
14172 | Did I not tell you not to come ashore?" |
14172 | Did Providence will, exact, or pre- ordain all these calamities? |
14172 | Did you ever see a windmill?" |
14172 | Do not peacocks, turkeys, and the common barn- door fowl bear a striking affinity to oxen, cows, sheep, and other ruminating animals?" |
14172 | Do you know when I feel most happy?" |
14172 | Do you recollect it, Fritz?" |
14172 | Do you want to be handed over to the drummer, and to cultivate an acquaintance with the cat?'' |
14172 | Does it blow? |
14172 | Does somebody go behind and push it, or is it dragged in front by sea- horses and water- kelpies?" |
14172 | Everybody asked, what would the Emperor do with him? |
14172 | Fritz re- established order, enjoined silence, and said,"I am determined this time to follow the affair up; who will accompany me?" |
14172 | From what fathomless reservoirs do the Amazon and the Mississippi receive their endless torrents?" |
14172 | Had she not waited long enough for him?" |
14172 | Had some of the peep- o''-day boys been burning down farmer Magrath''s ricks again? |
14172 | Has nobody told you of it?" |
14172 | Have I ever complained? |
14172 | Here Becker thought it necessary to interfere; and, summoning all the courage he could muster to the task, said--"Why should they not go? |
14172 | How could I look on quietly whilst you were surrounded by a mob of ferocious- looking men?" |
14172 | How is it that the petrel you are aiming at does not come and perch itself quietly on the barrel of your rifle?" |
14172 | How is this? |
14172 | How is this?" |
14172 | How often does it not happen, in our pilgrimage through life, that we have the wind against us? |
14172 | How, then, could such wishes be met in a way to satisfy all? |
14172 | I have not seen him lately, however-- how goes it with him now?'' |
14172 | I on board?" |
14172 | I trust, if it be so, that when he gets into port he will report me keel- hauled?" |
14172 | If it is done in the case of grape- shot, why may it not be done when the artillery is a thousand times more effective?" |
14172 | If it is night, the moon should be introduced; and if it is day, the sun-- and so on?" |
14172 | If you add a day every four years, do you not overleap the earth''s fraction?" |
14172 | If you dream about it during the night, you will not be angry with me for telling you?" |
14172 | If you had wings, would you not fly straight off in the direction of the Bass Rock or Ailsa Craig, to hunt up your old arm- chair?" |
14172 | If you were to lose Knips, would the first monkey that came in your way replace him in your affections?" |
14172 | If, for example, I were to ask you what air consists of? |
14172 | In the first place, it requires no interpreter between itself and the public;--what, for example, remains of a melody after a concert? |
14172 | Is it finished?" |
14172 | Is it for eating? |
14172 | Is it not so, Miss Wolston?" |
14172 | Is mortal power capable of overcoming every difficulty? |
14172 | Is pain and suffering not our lot from the cradle to the tomb? |
14172 | Is six months of your time of no value? |
14172 | Is the owl, which prowls about only at night, not a type of the cat? |
14172 | Is this the first expedition they have undertaken?" |
14172 | Let me ask if there is any one here who regrets his present position?" |
14172 | Lucullus, Nero, Achilles, Peter, Paul, Tyre and Sidon, Semiramis and Elizabeth-- queens, saints, and philosophers, are all passed in review, and why? |
14172 | May I not like them? |
14172 | May my sufferings not be agreeable to me? |
14172 | Might not the wish be father to the thought, and the thought produce the fancy? |
14172 | Mr. Wolston and the captain?" |
14172 | Now do you believe in miracles?" |
14172 | Now, can you calculate the weight of the water that is on your back and pressing on your sides when you swim?" |
14172 | Shall I run for some brandy, Willis?" |
14172 | That has not made you ill, has it?" |
14172 | The cormorants and herons, that live upon fish, are they not the otters and beavers of the air? |
14172 | The dummies will, of course, not condescend to reply, and then-- but what matters? |
14172 | There might have been a reason for the death of Mary Wolston-- who knows? |
14172 | They do not carry an almanack in their pockets, do they?" |
14172 | Trace the cause to its source, and what think you is invariably found? |
14172 | Very likely the passer- by has asked himself, Why is this house not as neglected, tattered, and dirty as its wretched neighbors? |
14172 | Very provoking, is it not, when all the other animals in the house talk?" |
14172 | Was Willis also dreaming with his eyes open? |
14172 | Was he on his way to the Capitol or to the Gemoniae? |
14172 | Was it necessary that Mary Wolston should be thrown into the sea, and that she should afterwards die in consequence of the accident? |
14172 | Was this a common mode of welcoming strangers? |
14172 | Were they happier in consequence? |
14172 | Were we going to besiege Paddy, in his own peaceable city of Cork? |
14172 | What are the obstacles? |
14172 | What could it all mean? |
14172 | What could you do then?" |
14172 | What do you mean to do with the chimpanzee?" |
14172 | What is it made of? |
14172 | What is the good of useless regrets?" |
14172 | What is the use of that disaster? |
14172 | What reason have you for supposing that the_ Nelson_ may not return with colonists?" |
14172 | What right have you to impose a remedy upon me that is a thousand times worse than the malady? |
14172 | What say you, minister?" |
14172 | What system do you pursue in educating him-- the Pestalozzian or the parochial?" |
14172 | What would he not have given for the power to bid them one last adieu? |
14172 | What would you think of Jenner, with his finger on his brow, searching for a means of preserving humanity from the scourge of the small- pox?" |
14172 | What, then, is to prevent us paying a visit to some of Ernest''s friends in the skies?" |
14172 | What, then, would they have governed? |
14172 | Whativer d''ye want wid an old woman, and niver a livin''sowl in the house''cept meself and Kathleen in her coffin?'' |
14172 | When it is found that I had been left on shore, the questions will be,''Was the_ Nelson_ in want of repairs?'' |
14172 | When shall we start?" |
14172 | When the lightning flashes, the electric spark is discharged, is it not?" |
14172 | When they pass the perihelion--""The what?" |
14172 | When we had secured the whole lot of them in this way--"''Lieutenant,''said I, winking,''will you permit me to send a ball into that coffin?'' |
14172 | Which eye is opened first after fainting?" |
14172 | Who built the first ship?" |
14172 | Why are the just oppressed? |
14172 | Why this evil? |
14172 | Why, they ask, do the wicked triumph? |
14172 | Will you accept the office?" |
14172 | Will you commission me to whisper a few words in their ear?" |
14172 | Willis, are all the old crew on board?" |
14172 | Willis; you have bathed sometimes?" |
14172 | Wolston?" |
14172 | Wolston?" |
14172 | Wolston?" |
14172 | Would he be imprisoned or banished? |
14172 | Would he go to New Switzerland? |
14172 | Would you like to air yourself in Paris a bit?" |
14172 | Would you like to hear something about how the system is carried out?" |
14172 | You recollect my comrade, Bill,_ alias_ Bob, of the_ Hoboken_?" |
14172 | You smoked at sea, did you not?" |
14172 | You, who modestly call yourself the best horseman on the island, how would you do, if you had nothing to ride upon?" |
14172 | a pilot on horseback?" |
14172 | again without water?" |
14172 | amongst dried peas and preserved plums?" |
14172 | and as many as thirty- four thousand six hundred in a butterfly? |
14172 | and at what? |
14172 | and is not this coquetry an indication of something more than mere instinct?" |
14172 | and the ladies?" |
14172 | are there not orphans and homeless creatures whom they might adopt?" |
14172 | are you sure?'' |
14172 | brave this storm in a wretched seal- skin cockle- shell like that?" |
14172 | can it be possible?" |
14172 | cried Fritz, laughing,"what, to shut up the game first and shoot it afterwards?" |
14172 | cried Sam, like to burst his sides with laughing,''they expect to frighten me with bones, do they? |
14172 | cried Willis,"so you have come to your senses at last, have you? |
14172 | cried Willis,"you are not going to get up such another scene as we witnessed an hour or two ago?" |
14172 | cried she, pushing aside the hair from their brows, the better to observe their features,"you thought to deceive your mother, did you?" |
14172 | cried the landlord,''Dick in a schooner off the Irish coast?'' |
14172 | cried the officer through a speaking trumpet,"who are you?" |
14172 | croaked the voice,''whativer are ye kicking up such a shindy out there for? |
14172 | do you call bears and tigers game?" |
14172 | exclaimed Becker,"what do you call a hurricane then?" |
14172 | exclaimed Ernest,"is the Pilot a triton then, that he could dispense with the canoe?" |
14172 | exclaimed Jack;"what use has a pilot for oars?" |
14172 | exclaimed Sophia angrily;"when did Jack find out that I had a doll?" |
14172 | exclaimed Sophia,"did they not arrest and drag him to prison?" |
14172 | exclaimed the captain in passing,"do n''t you intend to take part in the skirmish?" |
14172 | exclaimed the missionary, starting up;"you come then from the Pacific Ocean?" |
14172 | have they no forks?" |
14172 | how do you make that out?" |
14172 | in Havre?" |
14172 | inquired Jack--"Phil Doolan?" |
14172 | is it on the starboard or larboard? |
14172 | or was there a private still to be routed out and demolished? |
14172 | roared the lieutenant,''what has honor to do with it, sir? |
14172 | said Becker,"you have been able to make something of him, then?" |
14172 | said Ernest, parodying Jack''s witticism about the oars,"what does a pilot care about surf and breakers?" |
14172 | said the lieutenant,''and where is Phil Doolan?'' |
14172 | says he,''is that you, Pilot?'' |
14172 | she cried with an air of alarm,"what horror is that?" |
14172 | sixteen thousand in a fly? |
14172 | take you prisoner?'' |
14172 | than you are dead?'' |
14172 | that is the way you insure your lives, is it, trusting to the priests rather than to Providence? |
14172 | the captain of the_ Hoboken_?" |
14172 | the commander- in- chief of cavalry on an island?" |
14172 | the man who had both his legs shot off, and died in consequence of his wounds?" |
14172 | the sloop?" |
14172 | what are these?" |
14172 | what is your dream of the future?" |
14172 | you can speak, can you? |
14172 | you here?" |
14172 | you think that her Majesty''s blue jackets can disappear in that way, like musk- rats? |