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 |
---|---|
35275 | A strike did we say, for a Saturday pay- day? |
35275 | But why ask for particulars? |
35275 | Do you suppose that 50,000 or 100,000 men are going to starve and allow their families to die before their eyes without lifting a hand? |
35275 | Is it their fault that their employes do not all come back to them? |
35275 | It is naturally asked, therefore: Why this continued stoppage and stagnation in the building business? |
35275 | Now, last of all, what do we see at the Master Masons''headquarters? |
35275 | The Chicago union will not accept the offer, and where is it to get assistance from? |
30447 | ''What Union?'' 30447 Am I delayin''traffic?" |
30447 | An''if it does,said Patsy, stepping close in front of his questioner:"What''s it_ to_ you?" |
30447 | An''phot is it? |
30447 | An''we''ll have a bowl together, eh? |
30447 | An''what''s it_ to_ ye? |
30447 | And I like your nerve; now, what''s your pleasure? 30447 And can you substantiate these charges? |
30447 | And do you still vouch for this man? |
30447 | And how often shall I see you now? 30447 And if I''m late?" |
30447 | And let your old friend here be discharged, if not disgraced? |
30447 | And what do I care for his opinion or his prejudice? 30447 And what if you had?" |
30447 | And what if you had? |
30447 | And why should n''t she weep for you, Dannie? 30447 And why should she weep for any one else?" |
30447 | And you expect, when the strike is off, to go back to your old place? |
30447 | And you have been foreman in the Buffalo yards? 30447 And you told them that a gentleman had given the coat to you to sell because he was sorry for you?" |
30447 | And you, my friend? |
30447 | Anybody been here to- day? |
30447 | Are you a railroad man? |
30447 | Are you in the habit of carrying people on the Denver Limited who have no transportation? |
30447 | Are you sure? |
30447 | At what particular place have you lived or lodged since that time? |
30447 | Be quiet,said the Philosopher,"I''m going to let you go, but tell me, why did you want to do little Patsy, that everybody likes?" |
30447 | But the watchman could n''t run her in an emergency? |
30447 | But what brought you to this condition? 30447 But what was it, Mr. Moran, that you said about the train going in the ditch?" |
30447 | But you could hardly expect me to employ, in a responsible position, a self- confessed criminal? |
30447 | But you did not threaten to kill George? |
30447 | But you know the fireman''s story? |
30447 | By Jove, Watchem,said the railway man, advancing to meet his visitor,"I had nearly given you up-- what success?" |
30447 | Ca n''t you go no faster? |
30447 | Ca n''t you? 30447 Can you get me out of this so I can have a go at this pie- card?" |
30447 | Can you vouch for his honesty, Patsy? |
30447 | Did he pay a month in advance? |
30447 | Did you lick him? |
30447 | Did you sell an overcoat to this gentleman a little while ago? |
30447 | Do n''t you know better than to get onto a train without a ticket or money to pay your fare? |
30447 | Do you drink? |
30447 | Do you mean that seriously? |
30447 | Do you mean to say that you disbelieve this gentleman, who, at the risk of his life, arrested this ruffian and prevented murder? |
30447 | Do you mean to tell me that an experienced yardman, strong and intelligent as you appear to be, can sink so low without being a drunkard? |
30447 | Do you observe how the law operates? |
30447 | Does that proposition meet with the approval of the eminent counsel on the other side? |
30447 | Every dog has his day, eh? |
30447 | Good and plenty? |
30447 | Got any dough? |
30447 | Had n''t you better go? |
30447 | Have the men been arrested? |
30447 | Have ye''s anythin''to say? |
30447 | Have you been working? |
30447 | Have you got money? |
30447 | Have you still a mind to smash me? |
30447 | How fast were they going? |
30447 | How fast would she go, working''wide open in the first notch,''as you people say, down Zero Hill? |
30447 | Hur-- what''s this, boss? |
30447 | I believe,said the reporter,"that you predicted his death, or that the train would go in the ditch, did you not?" |
30447 | If my action makes me contemptible in the eyes of men, how much more contemptible must yours make you? 30447 Is the governor in?" |
30447 | Is this your report, sir? |
30447 | It may be possible for an honest man to be a tramp-- even a vag, but why did you steal? |
30447 | It''s rainin''ai n''t it? |
30447 | No,said the man,"I do n''t know when I''ve felt more comfortable; but for all that I guess I''m clean cut in two, ai n''t I, Dan?" |
30447 | No? 30447 Now what in thunder are you laughing at?" |
30447 | Now will you go and eat? |
30447 | Now, what are you thinking about? |
30447 | Now, what the divil you doin''caged up in this car? |
30447 | On the Q? |
30447 | Phat''s th''row hier, Tony? |
30447 | Plenty? |
30447 | Put-- me-- off? |
30447 | Reckon you do n''t own the sidewalk, do you? |
30447 | Tell me, Dan,said the master- mechanic,"had you that stick of dynamite when the detective arrested you? |
30447 | Then I reckon you''ve never stole, or what''s worse, scabbed? |
30447 | Then how can you refuse me this favor, that will cost you nothing? |
30447 | Then will you take the trouble to make your wishes known to the court? |
30447 | Then, how does it happen that you carried a woman from Galesburg to Chicago last night who had neither ticket nor money, so far as we know? 30447 There''s a lot of brakes that nobody is turning right now; come, you young rascal, will you go to work?" |
30447 | Varnished cars, eh? |
30447 | Well, Greene,said Dan,"what brings you abroad on a night like this?" |
30447 | Well, what do you fellows own? 30447 Well, what is it, old man?" |
30447 | What brings you here, Patsy? |
30447 | What did he say? |
30447 | What did you tell him? |
30447 | What did you tell him? |
30447 | What do you mean? |
30447 | What do you want of money? |
30447 | What sort of trick will you show me? |
30447 | What time is it, Bennie? |
30447 | What time is it? |
30447 | What were you in jail for? |
30447 | What''s that? |
30447 | What''s the matter with the North Western? |
30447 | What''s the matter with the regular conductor? |
30447 | What? |
30447 | What? |
30447 | What? |
30447 | When? |
30447 | Where have you been living since you left the workhouse? |
30447 | Where is it? |
30447 | Where you goin''? |
30447 | Where''s what? |
30447 | Where''s your ticket? |
30447 | Who''s trial? |
30447 | Why do you want to go to Chicago? |
30447 | Why not make that explanation now? 30447 Why, do n''t you know that thousands would rejoice at the news of your death and scarcely a man would mourn? |
30447 | Why, hello Greene, old hoss; is this you? |
30447 | Why, the dear boy has been gone an hour and a half, but I''m glad( wo n''t you come in?) 30447 Why?" |
30447 | Will I? |
30447 | Will you tell me why you carried this woman who had no ticket? |
30447 | Would you pay in advance? |
30447 | Yes, or No? |
30447 | Yes, or No? |
30447 | Yes, or No? |
30447 | You know this man? 30447 ''What you hidin''fur?'' 30447 And after all what right have you and your people to expect mercy at the hands of organized capital? 30447 Anybody else here? |
30447 | Are you afraid? |
30447 | Billy!--why do n''t you call me drunken Bill? |
30447 | CHAPTER FOURTH"Can you spare me a little money, George?" |
30447 | Can all the great men say as much?" |
30447 | Can you beat a game like that? |
30447 | Can you say as much? |
30447 | Come, will the North Western help your friend out?" |
30447 | Did n''t you get on to the message that blackguard received? |
30447 | Did you say home? |
30447 | Do I get the pass?" |
30447 | Do ye mind that, ye big duffer?" |
30447 | Does the Union show mercy to men like me? |
30447 | Does the magnitude of it all appal you-- do you want to quit? |
30447 | Drunk? |
30447 | Ever been on one of those big steamers, Dan?" |
30447 | Got a bot about you, ol''man? |
30447 | Have they offered to balm you with promotion?" |
30447 | Have you a ticket?" |
30447 | Have you been working in this strike?" |
30447 | How do you plead?" |
30447 | How fast will Blackwings go with four cars empty?" |
30447 | I feel confident, Dan, that he can be of service to you-- to the public at least-- will you see him?" |
30447 | I mean-- how soon-- when will Bennie be home again?" |
30447 | I think she has almost ceased to care for me, for of course she blames me for going out with the strikers, but how''s a man to know what to do? |
30447 | Is the foreman here?" |
30447 | Mind you, if an innocent man suffers I shall hold you accountable, do you understand?" |
30447 | Mrs. Cowels smiled a faint smile, and her husband asked:"Who is this fellow?" |
30447 | Now it''s black, and if it burns clear-- see there? |
30447 | Patsy turned to his questioner, closed his train- book and held out his hand:"Always room for the Irish; where are you tagged for?" |
30447 | Say, pardner, did you ever get so hungry that the hunger cramped you like cholera morbus?" |
30447 | See the yellow smoke hanging''round? |
30447 | Shall we go and peck?" |
30447 | That''s it,--see the black smoke? |
30447 | The big policeman glanced about and recognizing the foreman asked why the devil he did n''t"git th''felly out?" |
30447 | The latter laughed, then asked:"Why?" |
30447 | The silent striker had entered the saloon, the other paused in the door, looked back, nodded and asked:"Have something, Billy, b''fore you go?" |
30447 | What becomes of all this money, George? |
30447 | What do you say-- do I get the pass-- does mother see her railroad boy to- night?" |
30447 | What does it matter to the average attorney whether he convicts or acquits, so long as his side wins? |
30447 | What else have you been?" |
30447 | What have we been making? |
30447 | What is it that I am not to do again? |
30447 | What of it? |
30447 | What were you thinking about?" |
30447 | What would an engine without a bell be to a boy? |
30447 | When asked the usual question,''Guilty, or not guilty?'' |
30447 | When told that he was wanted to take out the Pacific express, the bum straightened up, hitched his suspenderless trousers and asked:"Who''re you?" |
30447 | Where were all the people who used to travel by this splendid train? |
30447 | Which was nearest, and which would last longest and pay best? |
30447 | Why did you stare at that lady''s feet, when she was climbing into the car?" |
30447 | Would n''t that be a better explanation?" |
30447 | Ye mind the time ye kicked me out at the round- house? |
30447 | Ye wo n''t grudge me a few moments with me friend, will ye? |
30447 | You are not in any pain now, are you?" |
30447 | any room for dead- heads to- night?" |
30447 | begorry, is that so? |
30447 | could n''t I? |
30447 | for attempting to blow up an engine?" |
30447 | how can I get funny when I''m already funny? |
30447 | how could they say such dreadful things?" |
30447 | is that all? |
30447 | mother?" |
30447 | now suppose I ask you to take a passenger train out to- night, will you do it?" |
30447 | said Greene,"now would n''t that drive you to cigarettes? |
30447 | said the general manager, pushing out his lips,"is this your notion of a reliable man, Patsy?" |
3646 | A lady-- eh-- what? |
3646 | About Mr. Ditmar? 3646 Ah, what''s eatin''you?" |
3646 | Ai n''t you never read Darwin? |
3646 | All alone to- night, Colonel? |
3646 | And how old is the tree? |
3646 | And what''s Mr. Ditmar''s goodness got to do with it? 3646 And where then? |
3646 | And why would n''t you? |
3646 | Anything happened-- what do you mean? 3646 Are the holes very deep?" |
3646 | Are there any stores near here? |
3646 | Are things any worse than in any other manufacturing city? |
3646 | Are you a painter, too? |
3646 | But how in thunder did you get rid of him? |
3646 | But look at me, was n''t I born in Meriden, Connecticut? 3646 But what does it prove? |
3646 | But what of it? 3646 But when you get to a point where private affairs become a public menace?" |
3646 | But why? |
3646 | But you-- aren''t you working? |
3646 | Ca n''t you say it to- morrow? |
3646 | D''you want to wake''em up? 3646 Did n''t I tell you I was sick of him? |
3646 | Did you wish anything more this evening? |
3646 | Do n''t you intend to answer your letters? |
3646 | Do you like your work here? |
3646 | Do you think I want anybody to take care of me? 3646 Do you think I want them from you?" |
3646 | Everything going all right up at the mills, Colonel? |
3646 | For God''s sake, why ca n''t you trust me? |
3646 | For God''s sake, why? |
3646 | Funny? 3646 Had n''t you better go after her?" |
3646 | Have I done something to offend you? |
3646 | He is great, I grant you,Chris would admit,"but vat is he if the vimmen leave him alone? |
3646 | Horrible? |
3646 | How are you this morning? |
3646 | How could I help you? |
3646 | How dare you say that? |
3646 | How did you know? |
3646 | How do you know? |
3646 | How do you mean-- you understand? |
3646 | How many generations? |
3646 | How would you know? 3646 How''s Mr. Bumpus this evening?" |
3646 | How''s everything else going? |
3646 | How? |
3646 | I do n''t blame you-- why should n''t you? |
3646 | I handed him the mit-- do you get me? |
3646 | I wonder whether you''d mind if I put on my old suit again, and carried this? |
3646 | If it is possible for the workingman to rise under a capitalistic system, why do you not rise, then? 3646 If there was a God, a nice, kind, all- powerful God, would he permit what happened in one of the loom- rooms last week? |
3646 | If you were-- if you could really understand those who are driven to work in order to keep alive? |
3646 | Is Frear wanted? |
3646 | Is it Anthony, the conqueror of Egypt and the East? 3646 Is n''t he working as hard as he can to send you to school, and give you a chance?" |
3646 | Is n''t it because these people want to live that way? |
3646 | Is n''t that pretty? 3646 Janet, do you calculate he means anything wrong?" |
3646 | Leave me alone-- can''t you? |
3646 | Lise, has anything happened to you? |
3646 | Lise, why do n''t you say something to your sister? 3646 No, no,"he stammered,"I did n''t mean--""What did you mean?" |
3646 | Now, what can I do for you? |
3646 | Oh Eda,she cried,"do you remember, we saw them being picked-- in the movies? |
3646 | Oh, is that why? |
3646 | Oh, she went through, did she? |
3646 | Or is it because you do n''t like me? |
3646 | Orcutt, what''s the matter with the opener in Cooney''s room? |
3646 | Push me into the gutter? |
3646 | Say, did I wake you? |
3646 | Say- isn''t he? |
3646 | She did n''t happen to mention where she was going, did she, Janet? |
3646 | Siddons? |
3646 | The cotton cards--? |
3646 | Then why do you do it? |
3646 | There ai n''t anything troubling you-- is there, Janet? |
3646 | This woman sued a man named Ferris-- is that it? |
3646 | Through with him? |
3646 | Vat you do? |
3646 | Vill you mention one great man-- yoost one-- who is not greater if the vimmen leave him alone? |
3646 | Well, if I am who''s going to blame me? |
3646 | Well, suppose something has happened? |
3646 | Well, what am I to do about it? |
3646 | Well, what do you think of the nerve of a man like that? |
3646 | Well, what if it was? |
3646 | Well, whose fault is it?.... |
3646 | Well, you''ve got one hundred and twenty- seven other ancestors of Ebenezer''s time, have n''t you? |
3646 | Well, young ladies,said a voice,"come to pay a call on your relations-- have ye?" |
3646 | Well-- what''s the trouble with it? 3646 Were you thinking of going shopping?" |
3646 | Were you-- were you coming to the office? |
3646 | What are you giving us? |
3646 | What are you trying to do? |
3646 | What can you do? |
3646 | What chance have I got, against him? |
3646 | What difference does that make? |
3646 | What do you mean? |
3646 | What do you want to say? |
3646 | What else can you do? |
3646 | What have you got there, angel face? |
3646 | What in the world happened to you, Janet? |
3646 | What kind of work would you like to do? |
3646 | What strikes you to- day? |
3646 | What''s he wanted for? |
3646 | What''s it to you? 3646 What''s the difference? |
3646 | What''s the matter? |
3646 | What''s the matter? |
3646 | What''s this I hear about giving the girls the vote, Chris? |
3646 | What, then? |
3646 | What? |
3646 | What? |
3646 | What? |
3646 | Where are you going? |
3646 | Where are you going? |
3646 | Where do you live? |
3646 | Which way were you going? |
3646 | Who is playing with them? |
3646 | Who is she? |
3646 | Who was that? |
3646 | Who''s Siddons? |
3646 | Why are you so proud of Ebenezer? |
3646 | Why did n''t you tell me? |
3646 | Why did you let the holes get so deep? |
3646 | Why did you run away from me last night? |
3646 | Why do n''t you go to bed? |
3646 | Why do you think it''s interesting? |
3646 | Why hurry back to Hampton? |
3646 | Why is it you never ask me? |
3646 | Why not? |
3646 | Why not? |
3646 | Why should I? |
3646 | Why should n''t they, if they want to? |
3646 | Why should you get me talked about? |
3646 | Why should you want me? 3646 Why would I be going out there?" |
3646 | Why? 3646 Why? |
3646 | Why? |
3646 | Working? |
3646 | Would n''t you like to see the letter? |
3646 | Would you mind staying a little while longer this evening, Miss Bumpus? |
3646 | Yes, there are stores, in the village,he went on,"but is n''t it a holiday, or Sunday-- perhaps-- or something of the kind?" |
3646 | Yes,retorted Ditmar,"and what then? |
3646 | You and me? 3646 You do n''t mean to say you agree with that kind of talk?" |
3646 | You do n''t tell me-- where''d you get it? 3646 You lika the olives?" |
3646 | You want beautiful things, do you? 3646 You wanted me for a friend?" |
3646 | You''ve never been through? |
3646 | A feeling of helplessness, of utter desolation crept over Janet; powerless to comfort herself, how could she comfort her sister? |
3646 | Ai n''t that Yankee enough for you?" |
3646 | Ai n''t you glad she''s got the place?" |
3646 | All those old trees on the side of a hill?" |
3646 | And Chris would as invariably reply:--"You have the dandruffs-- yes? |
3646 | And are n''t these conditions a disgrace to Hampton and America?" |
3646 | And how could she explain the motives that led to it? |
3646 | And suddenly the suggestion flashed into her mind, why should n''t she buy it? |
3646 | And what do you expect us to do? |
3646 | And what would become of her, Janet?... |
3646 | And why should you want to know me and see me outside of the office? |
3646 | And"gentlemen"? |
3646 | Anything happened?" |
3646 | Are n''t we descended from him?" |
3646 | Before one of these she paused, retaining Janet by the arm, exclaiming wistfully:"Would n''t you like to live there? |
3646 | But it''s common sense to make''em as comfortable and happy as possible-- isn''t it? |
3646 | But the point is"and here he cocked his nose--"the point is, where is he? |
3646 | But they?... |
3646 | But what did it mean? |
3646 | But why had the departure of the Irish, the coming of the Syrians made Dey Street dark, narrow, mysterious, oriental? |
3646 | Buy land and build flats for them? |
3646 | Caldwell?" |
3646 | Desire for what? |
3646 | Ditmar?" |
3646 | Ditmar?" |
3646 | Ditmar?" |
3646 | Do you see?" |
3646 | Do you?" |
3646 | Have you got another raise out of Ditmar?" |
3646 | He kept her waiting a moment, and then said, with apparent casualness:--"Is that you, Miss Bumpus? |
3646 | How had it happened to an honest and virtuous man, the days of whose forebears had been long in the land which the Lord their God had given them? |
3646 | How was I to know the highball was stiff? |
3646 | How?" |
3646 | I read an article in the newspaper about you today-- Mr. Caldwell gave it to me--""Did you like it?" |
3646 | I was sick of him-- ain''t that enough? |
3646 | If anything''s happened, it''s happened to me-- hasn''t it?" |
3646 | In obeying it, would she not lose all life had to give? |
3646 | In whose company had she become drunk? |
3646 | Is n''t it in the hope of freeing themselves ultimately from these very conditions? |
3646 | Is that your game?" |
3646 | It is n''t as hard as it would be in some other places, is it?" |
3646 | It''s good looking, is n''t it?" |
3646 | Lise, aroused from her visions, demanded vehemently"Ai n''t he a millionaire?" |
3646 | Longing for what? |
3646 | Me kiddin''you? |
3646 | Mr. Tiernan suddenly looked very solemn:"Kidding, is it? |
3646 | Now-- what colour would you paint it?" |
3646 | Occasionally, somewhat to Edward''s alarm, Hannah demanded:"Where are you taking Lise this evening?" |
3646 | Presently she inquired curiously:"Are n''t you sorry?" |
3646 | Standing on your feet all day till you''re wore out for six dollars a week-- what''s there in it?" |
3646 | The fog of Edward''s bewilderment never cleared, and the unformed question was ever clamouring for an answer-- how had it happened? |
3646 | Und vat vill you say of Goethe?" |
3646 | Was it not by grace of her association with him she was there, a spectator of the toil beneath? |
3646 | Was it not he who had lifted her farther above all this? |
3646 | Was it the coffee- houses? |
3646 | Was it the glance cast in her direction that had caused him to delay his departure? |
3646 | Was she in love with him? |
3646 | Was the woman''s admiration cleverly feigned? |
3646 | Were all the inhabitants of Silliston like him? |
3646 | Were not the strange peoples of the earth flocking to Hampton? |
3646 | What do you say?" |
3646 | What do you think of the car? |
3646 | What kind of gentlemen had taken her sister to Gruber''s? |
3646 | What right has a man to make you and me work for him just because he has capital?" |
3646 | What the devil was it in her that made him so uncomfortable? |
3646 | What was it about her that had attracted Ditmar? |
3646 | What would become of Lise? |
3646 | What you reformers are actually driving at is that we should raise wages-- isn''t it? |
3646 | What''s the difference? |
3646 | Where do you get such ideas? |
3646 | Where had Lise been? |
3646 | Where have you been keeping yourself lately? |
3646 | Where will he be tonight?" |
3646 | Where will you be, now?" |
3646 | Where would it lead? |
3646 | Where, she wondered, would it all end? |
3646 | Why do I not rise? |
3646 | Why had he never noticed her before? |
3646 | Why had she taken her money with her that evening, if not with some deliberate though undefined purpose? |
3646 | Why is it you''ll never give me a dance?" |
3646 | Why not?" |
3646 | Why should n''t she go away? |
3646 | Why should she feel her body hot with shame, her cheeks afire? |
3646 | Why should she not live by herself amidst clean and tidy surroundings? |
3646 | Why was it that doing wrong agreed with her, energized her, made her more alert, cleverer, keying up her faculties? |
3646 | Why?" |
3646 | Will you wear it?" |
3646 | Would Ditmar do that sort of thing if he had a chance? |
3646 | Would the sound never end?... |
3646 | Would you mind closing the door?" |
3646 | You could n''t come there-- don''t you see how impossible it is? |
3646 | You''ve got a right to look at his house, have n''t you?" |
3646 | an element refusing to be classified under the head of property, since it involved something he desired and could not buy? |
3646 | and if not beautiful-- alluring? |
3646 | at the Paris?" |
3646 | changed the very aspect of its architecture? |
3646 | or did she really look different, distinguished? |
3646 | this image she beheld an illusion? |
3646 | turned life from a dull affair into a momentous one? |
2908 | Well, then, why do you go on with it? |
2908 | ''Ave n''t''e got no shares in the Company? |
2908 | A message? |
2908 | A screen? |
2908 | All this-- all this-- and-- and what for? |
2908 | Am I a liar, a coward, a traitor? |
2908 | Am I to understand then, gentlemen, that your Board is going to make no concessions? |
2908 | An''what came of it? |
2908 | An''what did ye say about Chapel? |
2908 | And get turned out? |
2908 | And the women? |
2908 | And what about tin? |
2908 | Annie Roberts,''ow old were you, dear? |
2908 | Any one second that? |
2908 | Anything to eat, sir? |
2908 | Are n''t you coming, Dad? |
2908 | Are n''t you going to read the minutes, Tench? |
2908 | Are ye goin''to follow a man that ca n''t see better than that where he''s goin''? |
2908 | Are you any better? |
2908 | Are you ever violent, Frost? |
2908 | Are you goin''to desert him now''e''s down? |
2908 | Are you going to chuck him over, now''e''s lost''is wife? |
2908 | Are you to stay there, or are you to climb out? |
2908 | Barring the accident of money, are n''t they as good men as you? |
2908 | But Roberts was paid a lot of money, was n''t he, for discovering that process? |
2908 | But is it a fair fight, Father? |
2908 | But they''ve got their clubs, have n''t they? |
2908 | But why? |
2908 | But would he resign? |
2908 | But, man, what made ye come? |
2908 | But-- what-- why? |
2908 | Ca n''t we have done with this old- fashioned tug- of- war business? |
2908 | Ca n''t ye see? |
2908 | Ca n''t you persuade the men that their interests are the same as ours? |
2908 | Ca n''t you see that I want to help you all? |
2908 | Ca n''t you stop his going, Annie? |
2908 | Can I come in, Annie? |
2908 | Can I have a screen, Tench? |
2908 | Can I speak to you, Mr. Roberts? |
2908 | Can a man set an''see''is mother starve? |
2908 | Can one get dinner on that 6.30 train up? |
2908 | Can they get blacklegs? |
2908 | Can we squeeze them a little more?" |
2908 | Can''e now? |
2908 | Come now, is there? |
2908 | Coming to lunch, Scantlebury? |
2908 | Coming, Scantlebury? |
2908 | Contrary? |
2908 | Cut and run? |
2908 | D''ye hear me? |
2908 | D''ye mean that? |
2908 | D''you know, sir-- these terms, they''re the very same we drew up together, you and I, and put to both sides before the fight began? |
2908 | Did n''t you say it was dreadful going on with the men in this state? |
2908 | Did you try the whitebait last night? |
2908 | Do n''t Bulgin give you anythin''? |
2908 | Do n''t I know that? |
2908 | Do n''t let him go up? |
2908 | Do ye go lyin''down an''trustin''to the tender mercies of this merciful Nature? |
2908 | Do you know that man Roberts, Frost? |
2908 | Do you know what trying to bridge such a gulf as this is like? |
2908 | Do you really mean to fight to a finish, Chairman? |
2908 | Does Mr. Anthony think it brave to fight against women and children? |
2908 | Does he know how ill you are? |
2908 | Does he think it brave to set children crying with hunger, an''women shivering with cold? |
2908 | Down? |
2908 | Edgar-- anything? |
2908 | Excuse me, sir, is it-- is it worth it, sir? |
2908 | Expect it? |
2908 | Father in his room? |
2908 | Feeling better, are you? |
2908 | Get back to London, the men have nothing for ye? |
2908 | Hands together, and victory-- or-- the starvation you''ve got now? |
2908 | Has anything been said? |
2908 | Has he not? |
2908 | Have you gone silly? |
2908 | Have you heard this, sir? |
2908 | Have you thought what''ll happen if you''re beaten--[ she points]--in there? |
2908 | Have you tried? |
2908 | He always liked you, do n''t you remember? |
2908 | Home? |
2908 | How are you, Mr. Harness? |
2908 | How can he let all this suffering go on amongst you? |
2908 | How can we meet the shareholders with things in the state they are? |
2908 | How can you expect it, David? |
2908 | How can you tell what I feel? |
2908 | How goes it, my girl? |
2908 | How many more women are you going to let to die? |
2908 | How much has Thomas given up-- ten pounds or five, or what? |
2908 | I quite agree, but----[ ANTHONY Shakes his head] You make it a question of bedrock principle? |
2908 | I said to Mr. Anthony this morning:"Is it worth it, sir?" |
2908 | I''ve come on purpose to speak to you; will you come outside a minute? |
2908 | If the Union were going to withdraw their support from the men, as they''ve done, why did they ever allow them to strike at all? |
2908 | In the close season? |
2908 | Indeed? |
2908 | Indeed? |
2908 | Is Roberts out? |
2908 | Is it below the belt, Mr. Underwood? |
2908 | Is it my fault that they quarrelled with their Union too? |
2908 | Is it short enough and to the point? |
2908 | Is n''t that so? |
2908 | Is that clear enough for ye? |
2908 | Is that so, Thomas? |
2908 | Is that your opinion too, sir-- and yours-- and yours? |
2908 | Is there a man of you here that has less to gain by striking? |
2908 | Is there a man of you that had more to lose? |
2908 | Is there a man of you that has given up eight hundred pounds since this trouble here began? |
2908 | Is there anything else you want, Father? |
2908 | It was Roberts''s doing, was n''t it? |
2908 | Justice from London? |
2908 | Kick a man that''s down? |
2908 | Know? |
2908 | Look here, Annie, what can I do? |
2908 | Look you, if a man toes not trust me, am I going to trust him? |
2908 | Men of business are excused from decency, you think? |
2908 | Mr. Anthony is a rich man, I believe; does he think it brave to fight against those who have n''t a penny? |
2908 | Mrs. Roberts, you do n''t want no''arder winter, do you? |
2908 | No, M''m? |
2908 | No, Sir? |
2908 | No, Sir? |
2908 | No? |
2908 | Not seriously? |
2908 | Nothing I can get you, sir? |
2908 | Now is n''t it, Annie? |
2908 | Now then, what is it? |
2908 | Of course you do n''t; if you could only have proper--- Will you see my doctor if I send him to you? |
2908 | Oh, Ted? |
2908 | On our hands? |
2908 | Ought we to see the men before he comes? |
2908 | Roberts in? |
2908 | Seriously, Chairman, are you going to let the ship sink under you, for the sake of-- a principle? |
2908 | Shall I bring them in, sir? |
2908 | Shall I dispose of her, M''m? |
2908 | Shall I make the tea? |
2908 | Shall we get on with the business, or shall we go back to the other room? |
2908 | Sit there next the Chairman, Harness, wo n''t you? |
2908 | So-- they''ve done us both down, Mr. Anthony? |
2908 | Stay an''have a cup of tea, Mrs. Rous? |
2908 | Tea? |
2908 | Tell me, for all their talk, is there one of them that will consent to another penny on the Income Tax to help the poor? |
2908 | That''s what we been doin'', have n''t we? |
2908 | That''s where we''ve been makin''our mistake this long time past; and who''s to blame fort? |
2908 | There are some chairs there against the wall, Roberts; wo n''t you draw them up and sit down? |
2908 | They can stand what we can stand, I suppose, ca n''t they? |
2908 | They tell me I do n''t look like a dyin''woman? |
2908 | They''re welcome to the worst that can happen to me, to the worst that can happen to us all, are n''t they-- are n''t they? |
2908 | This is a beastly business, old girl?] |
2908 | Thomas? |
2908 | Ton''t you hear her, then? |
2908 | We are five members of this Board; if we were four against it, why did we let it drift till it came to this? |
2908 | We engineers have stood by you; ye''re ready now, are ye, to give us the go- by? |
2908 | We''re all here, Chairman; what do you say? |
2908 | Well, Thomas, how''s it to be? |
2908 | Well, what''s the proposition? |
2908 | Well, will you speak, or shall I speak for you? |
2908 | Well? |
2908 | Well? |
2908 | Well? |
2908 | What Miss Thomas-- d''you mean a----? |
2908 | What about Harper''s? |
2908 | What about lunch, Enid? |
2908 | What about the Union? |
2908 | What about the women? |
2908 | What are things coming to? |
2908 | What are ye laughing at? |
2908 | What are you talking about, Henry Thomas? |
2908 | What brought him down then, but''is own black obstinacy? |
2908 | What d''you imagine stands between you and your class and these men that you''re so sorry for? |
2908 | What did he mean by:"Done us both down?" |
2908 | What did he say? |
2908 | What did the Chairman tell me up in London? |
2908 | What do the men want? |
2908 | What do you know about necessity? |
2908 | What do you propose to do? |
2908 | What do you say to that, Chairman? |
2908 | What does Harness want this interview for? |
2908 | What does he want, for goodness''sake? |
2908 | What does the manager use? |
2908 | What does your father say? |
2908 | What does your husband use, Mrs. Underwood? |
2908 | What for? |
2908 | What good''s it doing you? |
2908 | What harm have I done you? |
2908 | What have ye done with our subscriptions? |
2908 | What have you come for, please? |
2908 | What have you to say for the men? |
2908 | What is it you want? |
2908 | What is it, Dad? |
2908 | What is it, Ted? |
2908 | What is it? |
2908 | What is it? |
2908 | What loss have we made by this strike, Tench? |
2908 | What sort of mercy do you suppose you''d get if no one stood between you and the continual demands of labour? |
2908 | What sort of state are they really in, Frank? |
2908 | What suffering? |
2908 | What time''ll the men be here? |
2908 | What would you do? |
2908 | What''s behind it? |
2908 | What''s made them strong? |
2908 | What''s that? |
2908 | What''s that? |
2908 | What''s the Union''s game, Tench? |
2908 | What''s the result of your meeting? |
2908 | What''s to be said to them? |
2908 | What''s to save them? |
2908 | What''s turned him round? |
2908 | What''s turned you to blacklegging? |
2908 | What''s your proposition, man? |
2908 | What-- what''s that? |
2908 | What? |
2908 | What? |
2908 | Where could they get''em then? |
2908 | Where is she? |
2908 | Where''s he? |
2908 | Which is it to be? |
2908 | Which is it to be? |
2908 | Which? |
2908 | Who are ye callin''blacklegs, Rat? |
2908 | Who said there was suffering? |
2908 | Who talks of dying? |
2908 | Who wants to surrender? |
2908 | Who wants to? |
2908 | Who was it? |
2908 | Who''s talkin''o''blacklegs-- mind what you''re saying, will you? |
2908 | Whom have I the pleasure of addressing, Ma''am? |
2908 | Why are you so bitter against my father? |
2908 | Why could n''t we have been told that before? |
2908 | Why did you send back the jelly? |
2908 | Why do n''t ye answer? |
2908 | Why do n''t you make the men come in? |
2908 | Why do you speak to me like that? |
2908 | Why is n''t Harness here? |
2908 | Why should they be humble? |
2908 | Why, you have n''t even got coals? |
2908 | Will that do, Mr. Wilder? |
2908 | Will ye support us in double pay overtime Saturdays? |
2908 | Will you come in, please? |
2908 | Will you pay your men one penny more than they force you to pay them? |
2908 | Will you want him? |
2908 | Wo n''t I? |
2908 | Wo n''t they have any tea, Frost? |
2908 | Wo n''t you go and have some lunch, Mr. Tench? |
2908 | Wo n''t you have a cup? |
2908 | Wo n''t you stop and eat, David? |
2908 | Wo n''t you? |
2908 | Would n''t I expect what I would do meself? |
2908 | Would n''t I starve an''rot rather than give in? |
2908 | Would n''t seem natural to''ave a dinner, would it, Mrs. Bulgin? |
2908 | Would you sign these for me, please sir? |
2908 | Ye have gone back on me? |
2908 | Ye have got it on its knees; are ye to give up at the last minute to save your miserable bodies pain? |
2908 | Ye wonder why I tell ye that? |
2908 | Ye''ve no wife? |
2908 | Yes, M''m? |
2908 | Yes, M''m? |
2908 | Yes, M''m? |
2908 | Yes, what does your father say? |
2908 | Yes? |
2908 | You accuse me of injustice-- of what amounts to inhumanity-- of cruelty? |
2908 | You chaps that live over the hill, an''go home dead beat in the dark on a snowy night-- don''t ye fight your way every inch of it? |
2908 | You do n''t suggest that we could have helped the poor thing? |
2908 | You do n''t want to hear me, then? |
2908 | You got that Friday''s laundry job? |
2908 | You have n''t come to a decision, Mr. Wanklin? |
2908 | You hear the consequences of your victory, Chairman? |
2908 | You listened to him, and what had he to say? |
2908 | You love their feet on your necks, do n''t you? |
2908 | You remember my maid Annie, who married Roberts? |
2908 | You say the furnace men''s paid enough? |
2908 | You think so? |
2908 | You want reason Mr. Harness? |
2908 | You were about to say something, I believe? |
2908 | You''ll listen to Sim Harness of the Union that''s treated you so fair; maybe you''ll listen to those men from London? |
2908 | You''re aware, sir, of what the doctor said, sir? |
2908 | You''re not well; need you go to the meeting at all? |
2908 | You-- don''t-- believe-- in-- barriers-- between the classes? |
2908 | the poor thing''s heart---- What makes you look at me like that? |
2908 | why would n''t she let me help her? |
3648 | A gatekeeper? |
3648 | A history? |
3648 | A little fresh caviar and a clear soup, and then a fish--? |
3648 | Am I being silly? |
3648 | An old master? |
3648 | And how is the woman now? |
3648 | And now? |
3648 | And the house? 3648 And the labour unions, have they aided you? |
3648 | And these? |
3648 | And you spoke of Mr. Ditmar''s death? |
3648 | And you? |
3648 | And your father-- did he paint beautiful pictures, too? |
3648 | And yours? |
3648 | And-- he wo n''t be back? |
3648 | And-- we shall be friends? |
3648 | Are n''t you coming? |
3648 | But ca n''t you send word to Mr. Ditmar, and tell him I want to see him? |
3648 | But he''s an Italian? |
3648 | But how are you working girls ever going to raise wages unless you get the vote? 3648 But how did he happen to come here to Hampton-- to be doing this?" |
3648 | But is n''t it rather a bad time? |
3648 | But love? |
3648 | But the father? |
3648 | But the gun? |
3648 | But there''s something unusual about her-- where did you find her? |
3648 | But to- morrow? |
3648 | But what can I do? |
3648 | But what kind of liberty? |
3648 | But what will become of us? |
3648 | But why not? 3648 But why?" |
3648 | But you? |
3648 | But-- how? |
3648 | But-- you loved him? |
3648 | Ca n''t you see it''s a climax? 3648 Ca n''t you see that I love you?" |
3648 | Come in and see us again,said Insall, and Janet, promising, took her leave...."Who is she, Brooks?" |
3648 | Could n''t we take her to our little hospital at Silliston, doctor? 3648 Did I think of them?" |
3648 | Did I? 3648 Did n''t you know that, before the strike, she was Ditmar''s private stenographer?" |
3648 | Did she say that? |
3648 | Did the masters themselves ever respect it, or any other decrees of God they preached to the slaves? 3648 Did you ever find out anything about her family?" |
3648 | Did you make it for Mrs. Maturin? 3648 Dig up?" |
3648 | Do n''t you know that? |
3648 | Do n''t you sympathize with the strikers? |
3648 | Going where? |
3648 | Have n''t I? |
3648 | Have n''t we met before? |
3648 | Have you come to help us? |
3648 | Have you finished? |
3648 | He did n''t tell you why his daughter had joined the strikers? |
3648 | He has such a splendid,` out- door''look do n''t you think? 3648 How could I? |
3648 | How d''ye do? |
3648 | How did she take it? |
3648 | How hungry children eat, for instance? |
3648 | How is she? |
3648 | How? 3648 However they come?" |
3648 | I do n''t look as if I had an eye for business-- do I? 3648 I do n''t wish to pry, my dear, but does he-- does he realize? |
3648 | I guess that''s what you''ve come for, is n''t it? |
3648 | I? 3648 If you find one party wrong, can your state force it to do right? |
3648 | In the meantime--"What can your committee do? |
3648 | Is it not so? |
3648 | Is n''t that a pretty good reason for sympathizing with them? |
3648 | Is n''t that what you want-- you who are striking? |
3648 | Is that his name? 3648 Is that the end?" |
3648 | Is that why you are striking? |
3648 | Is that why you came to Hampton? |
3648 | Is that you, Janet? 3648 Is that-- all you do?" |
3648 | It was there you first met Brooks, was n''t it? |
3648 | It''s-- some one else? |
3648 | Janet, what has happened? 3648 Let me see-- did I advise larkspur?" |
3648 | Oh, Brooks, what is it-- what''s happened to her? |
3648 | Oh, Mrs. Maturin, you''ll believe me-- won''t you? |
3648 | Oh, Mrs. Maturin-- if you really want me-- still? |
3648 | Oh, do you think I believe that? |
3648 | Or-- are you on the other side, the side of the capitalists? |
3648 | Or-- can I be mistaken? |
3648 | Rolfe converted you? 3648 Shall I tell you who has planned and carried out this plot?" |
3648 | She did n''t say anything? |
3648 | Shoes? |
3648 | Something you''ve written? |
3648 | Studying what? |
3648 | The agent of the Chippering Mill? |
3648 | The proletariat? |
3648 | Then why did n''t you? |
3648 | Then why, in God''s name, did you do it? 3648 Then you do n''t believe in marriage?" |
3648 | Then you have n''t heard any of the speakers? 3648 Then-- why are you doing it?" |
3648 | This place-- it''s not connected with any organization? |
3648 | Unemployed? |
3648 | Was that reticence? |
3648 | Well, my dear? |
3648 | What are friends for, Janet,she asked,"if not to share sorrow with? |
3648 | What are you thinking? |
3648 | What could I do? |
3648 | What did you like about it, Janet? |
3648 | What did you say? |
3648 | What do you know about him? |
3648 | What do you mean, Brooks? |
3648 | What do you mean? 3648 What do you mean?" |
3648 | What do you mean? |
3648 | What does he write about? |
3648 | What have I got? |
3648 | What is it,he exclaimed,"but the survival of the system of property? |
3648 | What is it? |
3648 | What is it? |
3648 | What is right? |
3648 | What is she doing here? |
3648 | What name shall I say? |
3648 | What others? |
3648 | What''s the matter? |
3648 | What''s the trouble, Stepan-- swallowed your spoon? |
3648 | Where are you going? |
3648 | Where? |
3648 | Which way did that young lady go? |
3648 | While you have the chance? |
3648 | Who is he? |
3648 | Who is that man? |
3648 | Why did n''t you tell me? |
3648 | Why did you walk out? |
3648 | Why did you want to kill me? |
3648 | Why do n''t you ask her? |
3648 | Why do you say that? |
3648 | Why do you say that? |
3648 | Why do you say that? |
3648 | Why do you say you''re not going to get well, Janet? 3648 Why not? |
3648 | Why not? |
3648 | Why not? |
3648 | Why should n''t you be here? |
3648 | Why, my dear, do you mean to say you have n''t heard of Brooks Insall? |
3648 | Why-- what are you doing here? |
3648 | Why? 3648 Why?" |
3648 | Why? |
3648 | Will you have supper afterwards? |
3648 | With the capitalists? |
3648 | Work to- morrow? |
3648 | Working to- day? |
3648 | You American-- you comrade, you come to help? |
3648 | You admire writers? 3648 You allow visitors?" |
3648 | You did n''t know what to make of him, did you? |
3648 | You did n''t suspect that I loved you? |
3648 | You do n''t care to see him? |
3648 | You do n''t intend to-- to travel around with the I. W. W. people, do you? |
3648 | You do n''t sympathize with the workers? |
3648 | You do not work in the mills? |
3648 | You have been in America long-- your family? |
3648 | You have missed me, a little? |
3648 | You know where Headquarters is, in the Franco- Belgian Hall? |
3648 | You like them as much as that, Janet? |
3648 | You mean keeping the operatives out of the mills? |
3648 | You mean the I.W.W.? |
3648 | You mean, do I believe in votes for women? 3648 You mean,"said Janet, trembling,"that what happens to us makes us inclined to believe certain things?" |
3648 | You mean--? |
3648 | You say she''s in the strike? |
3648 | You think so? |
3648 | You want a vote? |
3648 | You want to join us? |
3648 | You worked in the Chippering, like me-- yes? |
3648 | You would take possession of the mills? |
3648 | You''ll come to Headquarters? |
3648 | You''ll come to- morrow? |
3648 | You''ll stay? |
3648 | You''ve never seen my clothing store, have you? |
3648 | You? 3648 Your name is Rolfe, is n''t it?" |
3648 | A famous one was headed"Shall Wool and Cotton Kings Rule the Nation?" |
3648 | And are the worst wages paid in these mills anything short of death? |
3648 | And do you suppose there''s any place, however bright, where sorrow has not come? |
3648 | And even if we do not win at once, it is better to suffer and die fighting than to have the life ground out of us-- is it not?" |
3648 | And here he is tryin''to put us out--ain''t that the limit?" |
3648 | And if there were a God who did interfere, why had n''t he interfered before this thing happened? |
3648 | And if there were a God, would he comfort her now, convey to her some message of his sympathy and love? |
3648 | And the question occurred to her-- did she really wish to? |
3648 | And was it fair for her, Janet, to permit Mrs. Maturin to bestow her friendship without revealing this? |
3648 | And when that attraction ceases, what is left? |
3648 | And when the workers were in possession of all, would not they be as badly off as Mrs. Brocklehurst or Ditmar? |
3648 | And you, why do you strike?" |
3648 | Are you?... |
3648 | Brocklehurst?" |
3648 | Brocklehurst?" |
3648 | But Ditmar was strong, he was powerful, he was a Fact, why not go back to him and let him absorb and destroy her? |
3648 | But how about Syndicalism and all the mysticism that goes with it? |
3648 | But she could n''t.... Where was Lise now?... |
3648 | But what is it? |
3648 | But you have you been back to Silliston since I saw you? |
3648 | Ca n''t he help you?" |
3648 | Can you legislators be impartial when you have not lived the bitter life of the workers? |
3648 | Could it be possible that he belonged to her class? |
3648 | Could she do it? |
3648 | Could she face it-- even the murky grey light of this that revealed the ashes and litter of the back yard under the downpour? |
3648 | Did Janet love him? |
3648 | Did you notice, Janet, how beautifully clean those logs had been cut by their sharp teeth?" |
3648 | Do n''t you think it''s a good one?" |
3648 | Do n''t you think so?" |
3648 | Do you investigate because conditions are bad? |
3648 | Do you know that feeling?" |
3648 | Do you know what picketing is?" |
3648 | Do you remember the pineapples?" |
3648 | Do you think I would have had this thing happen to you? |
3648 | Do you think I''ve not known it, too? |
3648 | Does n''t that prove it?" |
3648 | Had n''t she been foolish? |
3648 | Had the mill owners accepted their services? |
3648 | Have you any other plans?" |
3648 | Have you heard the arguments?" |
3648 | Have you seen it? |
3648 | He continued to look at her, and presently asked, in a gentler tone:--"Where did you wish to go, lady?" |
3648 | Her head was hot, her temples throbbed.... Night had fallen, the electric arcs burned blue overhead, she was in another street-- was it Stanley? |
3648 | How are you going to get rid of us? |
3648 | How could she wait until the dawn of another day?... |
3648 | How much do you get now?" |
3648 | How would these foreigners and the strange leaders who had come to organize them receive her, Ditmar''s stenographer? |
3648 | I guess you''ll be wanting your supper, wo n''t you? |
3648 | If she affects you this way, what will she do to me? |
3648 | In front of the Banner office she heard a man say to an acquaintance who had evidently just arrived in town:--"The Chippering? |
3648 | Insall?" |
3648 | Is it finished yet?" |
3648 | Is it not so?" |
3648 | Is it yours?" |
3648 | Is n''t that sensible?" |
3648 | Is the doctor coming?" |
3648 | Maturity thought that this child which was coming to her was sacred, too? |
3648 | Me or the Wool Trust?" |
3648 | Mrs. Brocklehurst continued to smile encouragingly, and murmured"Yes?" |
3648 | Poor child,--what can have happened to her? |
3648 | Say, had n''t you better let Minnie take it, and go home?" |
3648 | Shall all the happy shipmates then Stand singing brotherly? |
3648 | She had never been able to speak to him about his work and what did her opinion matter to him? |
3648 | She had wanted to kill him, yes, to kill herself-- but how could he ever have believed that she would stoop to another method of retaliation? |
3648 | She had wished to kill him-- would she remain desperate enough to ruin him? |
3648 | She was silent a moment, and then she demanded:"Why did n''t you tell me who you were? |
3648 | Stripped of the glamour of these, was not Rolfe''s doctrine just one of taking, taking? |
3648 | That''s fair, is n''t it?" |
3648 | That''s what they call syndicalism, is n''t it?" |
3648 | The legislature has shortened your hours,--but why? |
3648 | The rain from the roofs was splashing on the bricks of the passage.... What would Mr. Insall say, if he knew? |
3648 | Then she asked:--"Mrs. Maturin, do you believe in God?" |
3648 | Then why are you herewith us?" |
3648 | Then why had she run away from him? |
3648 | There''s a vacuum behind the small of your back, is n''t there? |
3648 | Was he like that?... |
3648 | Was he not pleading for himself rather than for the human cause he professed? |
3648 | Was it not courting destruction? |
3648 | Was it not true, if she had been of that class, that Ditmar would not have dared to use and deceive her? |
3648 | Was n''t that one reason why she wanted the child? |
3648 | Was there not somebody--God? |
3648 | We strike for them, too, is it not so?" |
3648 | Were all men like that? |
3648 | What could these do, what could she accomplish against the mighty power of the mills? |
3648 | What do they care how many they starve and make miserable? |
3648 | What do you intend to do when the strike is over?" |
3648 | What does it matter?" |
3648 | What had happened to stay her? |
3648 | What had happened, during his absence, to alienate the most promising of all neophytes he had ever encountered? |
3648 | What is fifty cents to them? |
3648 | What kind do you use?" |
3648 | What shapes, when thy arriving tolls, Shall crowd the banks to see? |
3648 | What was the secret of its flavour? |
3648 | What would happen to her?... |
3648 | When can you come?" |
3648 | Where do reason and intelligence lead us? |
3648 | Where does that spark come from? |
3648 | Who henceforth would receive her save those, unconformed and unconformable, sentenced to sin in this realm of blackness? |
3648 | Why could it not remain there always, to comfort her, to be nearer her than any living thing? |
3648 | Why could n''t she? |
3648 | Why could n''t she? |
3648 | Why did you do it?" |
3648 | Why did you not come before the strike?" |
3648 | Why do you want to know?" |
3648 | Why had he destroyed Lise? |
3648 | Why had she never thought of these things before?... |
3648 | Why had she taken the child into outer darkness, to be born without a father,--when she loved Ditmar? |
3648 | Why is it?" |
3648 | Why not? |
3648 | Why should you wish to crush us? |
3648 | Why was it that mere words, and their arrangement in certain sequences, gave one a delicious, creepy feeling up and down the spine? |
3648 | Why, indeed? |
3648 | Will you come to me?" |
3648 | Will you?" |
3648 | Would she find Him if she went in there? |
3648 | Would the other things be in place? |
3648 | Would they be able to hold out, to win? |
3648 | Would you arbitrate a question of life and death? |
3648 | You hain''t seen anything of your father?" |
3648 | You think so? |
3648 | You understand?" |
3648 | You understand?" |
3648 | You who toil miserably for nine hours and produce, let us say, nine dollars of wealth-- do you receive it? |
3648 | You''ll come-- yes?" |
3648 | and Mrs. Maturin? |
3648 | and the garden?" |
3648 | and those last lines:--''But thou, vast outbound ship of souls, What harbour town for thee? |
3648 | and would He help her? |
3648 | cut our heads off?" |
3648 | or because the workers broke loose and struck? |
3648 | or did she still remember Ditmar? |
3648 | taking advantage of her ignorance and desperation, of her craving for new experience and knowledge? |
3648 | why, even in her moments of passionate hatred she recalled having been surprised by some such yearning as now came over her? |
3647 | A beautiful time, is it? 3647 Afraid of putting up too much of a front, are you?" |
3647 | And if there''s anything more I can do, Miss Janet, you''ll be letting me know-- you''ll call on Johnny Tiernan, wo n''t you? |
3647 | And the Chippering? |
3647 | And the roses? |
3647 | And then--Janet spoke with difficulty,"and then you came down here?" |
3647 | And what do you suppose my family would say if I told them Mr. Ditmar had given it to me? |
3647 | And when I got there, what do you think? 3647 And why not?" |
3647 | Are n''t you going to bring them along? |
3647 | Are n''t you going to finish your letters? |
3647 | Are n''t you going to take it? |
3647 | Are you cold? |
3647 | Are you sure I''m worth it? |
3647 | Away and you let her go away? 3647 But-- when the law goes into effect? |
3647 | But--? |
3647 | Can you put it in to- morrow morning? |
3647 | Damn it, why did n''t they let me know yesterday? |
3647 | Did n''t come home? 3647 Do I understand? |
3647 | Do n''t you care for me a little? |
3647 | Do n''t you love me? |
3647 | Do n''t you think they''ll be safe here? |
3647 | Do you believe that? 3647 Do you ever run into it outside of the movies? |
3647 | Do you know me now? |
3647 | Do you love him? |
3647 | Do you love me?--will you love me always-- always? |
3647 | Do you suppose we''re going to let the mob run this country? |
3647 | Do you think I want to be taken care of? |
3647 | Do you think I''m after-- what you can give me? |
3647 | Do you think I''m going to let you butt into this? 3647 Do you think you can find her?" |
3647 | Does it bring you luck? |
3647 | Eddie,said Ditmar,"have you got a nice little table for us?" |
3647 | For God''s sake, what do you mean? |
3647 | For God''s sake-- you''re killing me-- don''t you know it? 3647 Gone where?" |
3647 | Has n''t Miss Bumpus come yet? |
3647 | Has n''t she been home? |
3647 | Have n''t I good friends in Boston? |
3647 | Have n''t you a pin? |
3647 | How about it, little girl? |
3647 | How are you this evening, now? 3647 How d''you like my new toque? |
3647 | How did you get here? |
3647 | I did n''t mean nothin'', I was only kiddie''you-- what''s the use of gettin''nutty over a jest? |
3647 | I have n''t run over one yet,--have I? |
3647 | I made a pretty good guess at the size-- didn''t I, Janet? |
3647 | I might have known it you never make a get- away until after six, do you? |
3647 | I so want you should be happy, Janet,said Hannah.... Was it so? |
3647 | I''ll see you to- morrow? |
3647 | Is Tim in? |
3647 | Is it something I''ve done? |
3647 | Is it you, Johnny? |
3647 | Is mother sick? |
3647 | Is n''t it cosy? |
3647 | Is n''t it there? |
3647 | Is she gone? 3647 Is that what you think I want?" |
3647 | It ai n''t going to spoil your happiness? |
3647 | It is n''t bad, is it? |
3647 | It''s meant to be Rome, is n''t it? |
3647 | Janet-- aren''t you happy? |
3647 | Let''s see, where was I? |
3647 | Let''s see, where were we? 3647 Lise?" |
3647 | Miss Bumpus-- would you mind coming into my room a moment, before you leave? |
3647 | Miss Lise? |
3647 | My God, what''s the trouble now? 3647 My God-- won''t you trust me?" |
3647 | No speaka Portugueso? |
3647 | Now do you feel better-- you little Puritan? |
3647 | Now how in thunder did that get into my right- hand pocket? 3647 Now that is over, we wo n''t discuss it again, do you understand? |
3647 | Now what can I be doing to serve you? |
3647 | Now? |
3647 | One of-- those houses? |
3647 | Only--"Only, what? |
3647 | Say, what are you going to do? |
3647 | Say, what is love? |
3647 | Say? |
3647 | Shall I light the fire, sir? |
3647 | She would n''t come home? |
3647 | So you were on to me? |
3647 | Then-- why did you come? |
3647 | Well, dreams never come up to expectations, do they? |
3647 | Well, this is cosy, is n''t it? |
3647 | Well, we''ve got to eat, have n''t we? |
3647 | Well, what is it? |
3647 | Well, what would you be doing by yourself-- a young lady? 3647 Well, what''s the matter with breakfast?" |
3647 | Well,he asked,"what''s the trouble now?" |
3647 | Well,he was able to answer,"we''re as good as married, are n''t we, Janet?" |
3647 | Well? |
3647 | Were you? |
3647 | What are you doing here? |
3647 | What are you going to do? |
3647 | What are you going to do? |
3647 | What are you saying? 3647 What did they say?" |
3647 | What did you ask him for, when you know? |
3647 | What did you say? |
3647 | What difference does that make? 3647 What do they suppose? |
3647 | What do you mean by letting them interfere with these workers? |
3647 | What do you mean? |
3647 | What do you take me for? 3647 What have I done to you, Janet? |
3647 | What shall we do to- day,she asked,"if it snows?" |
3647 | What the-- what brought you here? |
3647 | What you can buy for me? |
3647 | What''s chewin''you now? |
3647 | What''s that got to do with it? |
3647 | What''s the matter with it? |
3647 | What''s the matter with it? |
3647 | What''s the matter? |
3647 | What''s the trouble? |
3647 | What? 3647 What?" |
3647 | What? |
3647 | Where are you going? |
3647 | Where are you going? |
3647 | Where have you been?--where were you this morning? 3647 Where is she?" |
3647 | Where is the memorandum I made last week for Percy and Company? |
3647 | Where''ll I go? |
3647 | Where''s Lise? |
3647 | Where? |
3647 | Who are you? |
3647 | Who told you where I was? 3647 Why did n''t you telephone me? |
3647 | Why did n''t you tell me you were coming to this place? |
3647 | Why do n''t you put it on your watch chain? |
3647 | Why in hell do n''t you do your duty? |
3647 | Why in hell were n''t those gates bolted tight? |
3647 | Why not-- you''re mine-- aren''t you? 3647 Why not? |
3647 | Why not? 3647 Why not? |
3647 | Why not? |
3647 | Why not? |
3647 | Why not? |
3647 | Why not? |
3647 | Why should I tell-- you? |
3647 | Why should I? |
3647 | Why were you-- down there? |
3647 | Why? 3647 Why? |
3647 | Why? |
3647 | Wo n''t mention what? |
3647 | Would you believe that a man who''s been in this mill twenty- five years could be such a fool? |
3647 | Yes, what of it? |
3647 | Yes- me,cried Janet.--"And what are you going to do about it? |
3647 | You brought these-- for me? |
3647 | You forgive me-- you understand, Janet? |
3647 | You left her there, in that place? 3647 You mean-- about this afternoon?" |
3647 | You still love me? |
3647 | You want to marry me? |
3647 | You went there? |
3647 | You were jealous-- were you-- jealous of the mill? |
3647 | You''ll drop in and see the old people once in a while, Janet, you wo n''t forget us? |
3647 | You''re not going-- now? |
3647 | You''ve wanted to marry me all along? |
3647 | You? |
3647 | Your orders? 3647 ` What''s this for, Mister Ditmar?'' |
3647 | After all, he did not realize how could she expect him to realize? |
3647 | And Janet retorted, with almost equal vehemence:--"Somebody had to do it-- didn''t they? |
3647 | And after a moment''s silence she inquired:"Who''s this man that''s payin''her attention now?" |
3647 | And am I any different from her? |
3647 | And he stammered out, as he stood over her:--"What''s the matter?" |
3647 | And he stood gazing down into it, with an odd expression she had never seen before...."What''s the matter?" |
3647 | And now do you know what you are? |
3647 | And once it crossed her mind-- what would she think of another woman who did this? |
3647 | And the ever- recurring question presented itself-- was he prepared to go that length? |
3647 | And what do you mean when you say you were in that mob? |
3647 | And where would I come in? |
3647 | And yet what did it matter whether Lise knew or only suspected, if her words were true, if men were all alike? |
3647 | And-- what would they say if they knew what had happened to her this day? |
3647 | Any room for me?" |
3647 | Are n''t you glad to see me?" |
3647 | At last she said:"Ought n''t we to be going home?" |
3647 | Because you''re a part of it, do n''t you see? |
3647 | But now she asked herself again, was she worth it? |
3647 | But say,"the girl added,"it ai n''t right to cut our pay, either, is it? |
3647 | But she? |
3647 | But what was"right,"or"wrong?" |
3647 | Ca n''t you feel it? |
3647 | Ca n''t you get that through your head?" |
3647 | Ca n''t you see it? |
3647 | Can I have the pleasure of the next maxixe, Miss Bumpus?" |
3647 | Could he not feel it, too? |
3647 | Could it-- could it ever be developed now? |
3647 | Did n''t I say that? |
3647 | Did not both lead to destruction? |
3647 | Did she refuse to encourage Mr. Ditmar because it was wrong? |
3647 | Did they thank us? |
3647 | Ditmar?" |
3647 | Ditmar?" |
3647 | Do I love him? |
3647 | Do n''t you like it?" |
3647 | Do philosophies tend also to cast those who adopt them into a mould? |
3647 | Do you know where the Boat Club is on the River Boulevard? |
3647 | Do you remember that day last summer I was tinkering with the car by the canal and you came along?" |
3647 | Do you suppose I''d-- I''d do anything to insult you, Janet?" |
3647 | Do you think I could write any letters now?" |
3647 | Do you think this man will support you, stick to you? |
3647 | Do you understand?" |
3647 | Do you understand?" |
3647 | Far God''s sake, ca n''t you get''em out before they ruin the machines?" |
3647 | Funny is n''t it, that you should have come along? |
3647 | Had he not at least gained a signal victory? |
3647 | Had he not telephoned to Boston for the rooms, rehearsed in his own mind every detail of what had subsequently happened? |
3647 | Had her existence been like that? |
3647 | Had it not been in order to relieve their anxiety-- especially her mother''s-- on the score of her recent absences from home? |
3647 | Had she been a dupe as well as Lise? |
3647 | Had she smiled? |
3647 | Had that been heaven, and this of Lise''s, hell?... |
3647 | Had they not been drawn hither by the renown of the Republic''s wealth? |
3647 | Had this love which had come to her brought her any nearer to the unknown realm of light she craved?... |
3647 | How about you? |
3647 | How could she wait until then? |
3647 | How much does Ditmar give you, sweetheart?" |
3647 | How much is it?" |
3647 | How was he to conquer a woman of this type, who never took refuge in the conventional tactics of her sex, as he had known them? |
3647 | How will you find your sister?" |
3647 | I guess some of your ancestors must have come over with that Mayflower outfit-- first cabin, eh? |
3647 | I love you-- won''t you believe it?" |
3647 | I said, if we tried to cut wages down to a fifty- four hour basis we''d have a strike on our hands in every mill in Hampton,--didn''t I? |
3647 | I was almost crazy when I came back and found they''d been here in this mill-- can''t you understand? |
3647 | I''d come for you, to your house,"he added quickly,"but we do n''t want any one to know, yet-- do we?" |
3647 | I''m the only man that ever guessed it is n''t that so?" |
3647 | In Boston?" |
3647 | Is Johnny Tiernan downstairs?" |
3647 | It was sweeping them dizzily--whither? |
3647 | It''s your sister you want, is n''t it?" |
3647 | Janet''s problem was in truth, though she failed so to specialize it, the supreme problem of our time: what is the path to self- realization? |
3647 | Janet, are n''t you happy?" |
3647 | Light the fire and burn it-- frame and all? |
3647 | Lise''s ambition to be supported in idleness and luxury to be condemned because she had believed her own to be higher? |
3647 | My God, Orcutt, do n''t you know enough not to come in here wasting my time talking about the I. W. W.? |
3647 | Now was n''t that queer? |
3647 | Say, you ai n''t going to tell''em at home?" |
3647 | She did not appear to hear him, her eyes lingering on the room, until presently she asked:--"What''s the name of this hotel?" |
3647 | She had tasted it-- was it sweet?--that sense of being swept away, engulfed by an elemental power beyond them both, yet in them both? |
3647 | She was his-- what did it matter? |
3647 | She was living-- what did it all matter? |
3647 | So you love me like that, do you?" |
3647 | Stay here with him in this filthy place until he gets tired of you and throws you out on the street? |
3647 | Suddenly she said:--"You saw Lise?" |
3647 | That evening, as Janet was wiping the dishes handed her by her mother, she was repeating to herself"Shall I go-- or sha n''t I?" |
3647 | That we''re going to pay''em for work they do n''t do? |
3647 | That? |
3647 | There was always the excitement that the leash might break-- and then what? |
3647 | There''s plenty of time for that-- after things get settled a little-- isn''t there?" |
3647 | This is the best yet, is n''t it? |
3647 | Tiernan?" |
3647 | Twice, during the afternoon and evening, he had spoken those words-- or was it three times? |
3647 | Was Ditmar ashamed of her?... |
3647 | Was Ditmar there? |
3647 | Was he prepared to marry her, if he could obtain her in no other way? |
3647 | Was it a lack all women felt in men? |
3647 | Was it a misinterpretation, after all-- what Lottie Myers had implied and feared to say?... |
3647 | Was she in love with Ditmar? |
3647 | Was she shouting it, too? |
3647 | Was she, also, like that, indifferent and self- absorbed? |
3647 | Was she, as she seemed, taking all this as a matter of course? |
3647 | Was there a time she had forgotten? |
3647 | Was there any essential difference between the methods of Ditmar and Duval? |
3647 | Was this a hazard on Lise''s part, or did she speak from knowledge? |
3647 | Well, dearie, how does the effect get you?" |
3647 | Were her own any less tawdry? |
3647 | Were men so different?... |
3647 | Were not she and Lise of the exploited, of those duped and tempted by the fair things the more fortunate enjoyed unscathed? |
3647 | Were they contented? |
3647 | What business have you got sleuthing''round after me like this?" |
3647 | What did the weather matter? |
3647 | What do you mean?" |
3647 | What do you suppose I care, Janet? |
3647 | What had become of her? |
3647 | What have I done?" |
3647 | What obscure and passionate impulse had led her suddenly to defy and desert him, to cast in her lot with these insensate aliens? |
3647 | What right had society to compel a child to be born to degradation and prostitution? |
3647 | What she had felt indeed was not sadness,--but how could she describe it to him when she herself was amazed and dwarfed by it? |
3647 | What should he do with it? |
3647 | What should she do now? |
3647 | What should she do? |
3647 | What was behind her resistance? |
3647 | What was he like? |
3647 | What was she beside it? |
3647 | What was she struggling against? |
3647 | What were they thinking of her? |
3647 | What would his housekeeper say? |
3647 | What would it be like always to be daintily served, to eat one''s meals in this leisurely and luxurious manner? |
3647 | What would she think if it were Lise? |
3647 | What''d I do with a baby?" |
3647 | What''s happened to change you? |
3647 | What''s the matter with it?" |
3647 | What''s your reason? |
3647 | Where is she? |
3647 | Where is the house?" |
3647 | Where was she? |
3647 | Where were the police? |
3647 | Who else was there?" |
3647 | Who was she? |
3647 | Why are n''t you happy-- when we love each other?" |
3647 | Why do n''t you hand over your mill to the unions and go to work on a farm? |
3647 | Why do you want to ruin my life? |
3647 | Why had n''t she guessed it? |
3647 | Why not Russia? |
3647 | Why not have socialism right now, and cut out the agony? |
3647 | Why not the Ku Klux? |
3647 | Why should n''t you try to do with me what you''ve done with other women? |
3647 | Why should n''t you? |
3647 | Why should n''t you?" |
3647 | Why should she have, in Lise, continually before her eyes a degraded caricature of her own aspirations and ideals? |
3647 | Why should this woman have this extraordinary effect of making him dissatisfied with himself? |
3647 | Why should you marry me? |
3647 | Why wo n''t you come to me? |
3647 | Why would I be going home when I''ve been trying to break away for two years? |
3647 | Wo n''t you give me a chance to explain-- to put myself right? |
3647 | Wo n''t you tell me? |
3647 | Wo n''t you trust me? |
3647 | Would he hesitate for a moment to sacrifice her if it came to a choice between them? |
3647 | Would n''t that jar you? |
3647 | Would you marry me now-- with my sister there? |
3647 | You came here with the strikers? |
3647 | You did n''t make her come home?" |
3647 | You have n''t seen Lise, have you?" |
3647 | You let your sister go away and be a-- a woman of the town? |
3647 | You remember? |
3647 | You see how important it is, how much trouble an agitator might make by getting them stirred up? |
3647 | You''ll come? |
3647 | You''ll marry me?" |
3647 | You''ve forgiven me?" |
3647 | ` Say, George,''I said,` I did n''t forget you this morning, did I?'' |
3647 | and were these, even in supreme moments, merely the perplexed transmitters of life?--not life itself? |
3647 | because, if she acceded to his desires, and what were often her own, she would be punished in an after life? |
3647 | how achieve emancipation from the commonplace? |
3647 | or was Lise a mirror-- somewhat tarnished, indeed-- in which she read the truth about herself? |
3647 | or was it a dream, a nightmare from which she had awakened at last? |
3647 | or was it merely-- part of her price? |
3647 | that Authority, spelled with a capital, was a thing of the past? |
3647 | that conventions and institutions, laws and decrees crumble before the whirlwind of human passions? |
3647 | that human instincts suppressed become explosives to displace the strata of civilization and change the face of the world? |
3647 | that their city was not of special, but of universal significance? |
3647 | to beget, perhaps, other children of suffering? |
3647 | was there any real choice between the luxurious hotel to which Ditmar had taken her and this detestable house? |
3647 | when the operatives find out that they are not receiving their full wages-- as Mr. Holster said?" |
3647 | you were with that mob?" |
13034 | ''And maybe we can bungle through with a few bearings for a while, can we?'' 13034 ''So it stands to reason, does it?'' |
13034 | ... Do you love him, Helen? |
13034 | A shortage as big as that last year? 13034 All for me? |
13034 | All right, boys? |
13034 | And did n''t he ever come back? |
13034 | And last night he was in that car on the bridge.... Where do these Bols hang out? |
13034 | And suppose the red lamp had been disregarded? |
13034 | And then what did she ask you? |
13034 | And then what did she say? |
13034 | And then? |
13034 | And when Uncle Stanley dies-- what then? |
13034 | And you wo n''t let anybody run away with you until I''ve had another chance? |
13034 | And, indeed, why should n''t they be? 13034 Any of them married?" |
13034 | Anything I can do for you, Miss Mary? |
13034 | Anything wrong? |
13034 | Are n''t you going to kiss me, too? |
13034 | Are they going to boycott us? |
13034 | Are you forgetting a little detail like that? |
13034 | Are you ready? |
13034 | Are you sure your figures are right? |
13034 | Are you sure your women workers are turning out bearings so much cheaper than the men did? |
13034 | Besides,thought Mary,"she''d only say,''Oh, all right,''and yawn and change the subject-- and what could I do then?" |
13034 | But do n''t you think it''s altogether wrong,said Professor Marsh,"to deprive a child of the advantages of home life?" |
13034 | But how can they? |
13034 | But tell me: Is that why you are making so many additions to the factory-- because we are changing to a corporation? |
13034 | But what are you doing here? |
13034 | But who''ll run the factory? |
13034 | But would they be for ever blue? |
13034 | But, Helen-- don''t you think it''s just possible-- that you''ve been worrying him? |
13034 | Ca n''t you begin to see that the average woman has always worked harder than the average man? 13034 Can I come in?" |
13034 | Can a woman do a man''s work? 13034 Can you come down to the office early this morning?" |
13034 | Can you read it? |
13034 | Can you speak French? |
13034 | Could n''t you play the drum? |
13034 | Did Helen cry, when she saw how late it was getting? |
13034 | Did n''t you hear anything of this-- in Charleston? |
13034 | Did n''t you say you expected trouble? |
13034 | Did you get your copy of the annual report? |
13034 | Did you have a quarrel? |
13034 | Do n''t I think what, dear? |
13034 | Do n''t you feel well? |
13034 | Do n''t you know by now that it''s the one great thing in life? |
13034 | Do n''t you see? 13034 Do n''t you think that love is the greatest thing in life?" |
13034 | Do n''t you think we''ve waited long enough? |
13034 | Do you know if the piano''s here yet? |
13034 | Do you know what I would do if I were you? |
13034 | Do you love me a little bit now? |
13034 | Do you mind then if I start a subscription for the instruments? |
13034 | Do you think it''s fair? |
13034 | Do you think she''s as pretty as Mary? |
13034 | Do you think they are overworked? |
13034 | Do you think we had better try it a little longer and see how it works out? |
13034 | Do you, know you''re getting to be fashionable? |
13034 | Does it remind you of old times, the same as it does me? |
13034 | First you catch it in their eye and in their voice:''Are you sure you''re comfortable?'' 13034 Going to have an artists''colony up here?" |
13034 | Good news? |
13034 | Got all we can handle now, have n''t we? |
13034 | Got who? |
13034 | Has he asked you yet? |
13034 | Have you ever been the least bit sorry,he asked,"that you turned me down-- for a business career?" |
13034 | Helen,she said, when their visitor had gone,"do you really love Wally-- or are you just amusing yourself?" |
13034 | How are you getting on? |
13034 | How are you going to pass a law like that when women can vote? |
13034 | How did you do it? |
13034 | How long are you going to try it, do you think? |
13034 | How long does it take to break in an ordinary man? |
13034 | How many have been rejected today? |
13034 | How many men are out now? |
13034 | How''s Aunt Patty and Aunt Cordelia? |
13034 | How''s Wally? |
13034 | How? |
13034 | Hutch,he said in a quieter voice,"do n''t you remember me?" |
13034 | I can almost imagine that we''re an old married couple, sitting in here like this-- can''t you? |
13034 | I did n''t make much of a hit with the governor, but then you know I seldom do--"Where did you get the pictures? |
13034 | I guess it''s a question of pride on the man''s part-- as much as anything else--"Oh, Archey-- don''t you think a woman has pride, too? |
13034 | I understand,said Mary; and turning to the four she asked,"How do you feel about it?" |
13034 | I wonder what they would think of this? |
13034 | I wonder what they would think of women working here? |
13034 | I wonder who he is? |
13034 | I''ve just been in Helen''s room,she said,"and what do you think she has on her dresser?" |
13034 | If anything happens to young Josiah,I can imagine him thinking to himself with a grin,"I may own this place myself some day.... Who knows?" |
13034 | If that dam breaks, it will sweep away the factory and part of the town.... What are you going to do? |
13034 | If they can do it, we can do it, too-- don''t you think so? |
13034 | In what way? |
13034 | Is Miss Spencer in? |
13034 | Is Mr. Strauss here? 13034 Is Woman Really Man''s Equal?" |
13034 | Is it because the heirs expect too much? |
13034 | Is it you, Master Paul? |
13034 | Is n''t it true,she began,"that most of the machinery we use does n''t require a great deal of skill to run it?" |
13034 | Is that the bell now? |
13034 | Is their work fairly accurate? |
13034 | It is Archey; is n''t it? |
13034 | It sounds possible-- the way Miss Spencer puts it-- but will it work? |
13034 | It was Uncle Stanley''s idea, then? |
13034 | It would only bother them,she told herself,"and what good could it do?" |
13034 | Joe, will you please tell Mr. Woodward, Sr., that I would like to see him? |
13034 | Let''s take a stroll down there, shall we? |
13034 | Like them? 13034 Looking for somebody?" |
13034 | May I look at that? |
13034 | May we confer with you Monday at your office regarding situation at New Bethel? |
13034 | Might I ask, Miss Mary, of what nature is the subject? |
13034 | Mr. Edsol, is n''t it? |
13034 | Not mad at your uncle, are you, little girl? |
13034 | Not tired? 13034 Now first of all,"she said,"just how badly do you four women need your pay envelopes every week?" |
13034 | Now why did he save this clipping? |
13034 | Now,smiled Mary to the spokesman of the committee,"wo n''t you tell me, please, what fault you find with these four women?" |
13034 | Oh, dad,Mary had said, looking up and speaking on impulse,"did I hear you say last night that Burdon Woodward was in New York?" |
13034 | Oh, who do you think was there tonight? |
13034 | On what, for instance? |
13034 | Or is it because I have other things to think about? 13034 Patty,"said Miss Cordelia one day,"do you know that child of ours is seventeen?" |
13034 | Poor Brad-- didn''t I tell you? |
13034 | Quarrel with Burdon Woodward? |
13034 | Shall I tell the rest of the men? |
13034 | So have I,said Miss Patty in a low voice,"but where''s the letter?" |
13034 | Stopped him? 13034 Take Mr. MacPherson,"she thought;"how is he my natural enemy? |
13034 | Tell them what, Uncle Stanley? |
13034 | That we''re going to shut down till further notice? |
13034 | That''s all? |
13034 | The next thing we know,he said to Mary one day,"every man on the place will walk out, and what are we going to do then?" |
13034 | The only reason you wish these women discharged is because they are women, is that it? |
13034 | The present question is: How can we settle this matter to suit both sides? |
13034 | Then did you ever hear of any one in our family named Paul? |
13034 | Then why is it? |
13034 | There is n''t? 13034 Tired, dear?" |
13034 | Tired, dear? |
13034 | To college? |
13034 | Was n''t there a girl''s name which means bitterness? |
13034 | Wash the dishes? 13034 Well, do n''t you see? |
13034 | Well, have n''t you? |
13034 | Well, what can I do? |
13034 | Well? |
13034 | What are the men saying now? |
13034 | What are the men saying now? |
13034 | What are they striking for? |
13034 | What are us men going to do after a while? |
13034 | What are you going to do about Walter Cabot? |
13034 | What are you going to do when you have used up all your local women? |
13034 | What are you going to do with them? |
13034 | What are you laughing at? |
13034 | What can I do? |
13034 | What did he discharge you for? |
13034 | What did the garage man find was the trouble with your car? |
13034 | What do they see? |
13034 | What do you say if we have it printed in big type, and pasted on the bill- boards? |
13034 | What do you think, Helen? |
13034 | What do you think, Mary? |
13034 | What for? |
13034 | What is it, ma cherie, which you can not believe? |
13034 | What is it? |
13034 | What makes you think it''s going to spread? |
13034 | What more can I say? |
13034 | What on earth are you listening for? |
13034 | What time do we get there? |
13034 | What was it dad used to call me sometimes-- his''Little Hustler''? |
13034 | What would have happened if the oven had n''t been opened when the white light appeared? |
13034 | What would you do? |
13034 | What''s all this excitement about Martha? 13034 What''s the matter with Burdon down at the office lately? |
13034 | What''s the matter with them? |
13034 | What''s the matter with those men who are going out? |
13034 | What''s the matter, Archey? |
13034 | What''s the matter, Mary? |
13034 | What''s the matter, Wally? |
13034 | What''s the matter? 13034 What''s the matter?" |
13034 | What''s the use of having so many bath- bowls in this table,asked Professor Marsh,"when you only have two nurses to do the bathing?" |
13034 | What''s the use? |
13034 | What''s this? |
13034 | What? |
13034 | What? |
13034 | When is Mr. Woodward expected back? |
13034 | Where do they get their flowers? |
13034 | Where''s Burdon? |
13034 | Where''s the phone, Mary? 13034 Who discharged you?" |
13034 | Who says factory work is easier than housework? |
13034 | Who sent it? 13034 Who was that?" |
13034 | Who-- who did this? |
13034 | Who? 13034 Who?" |
13034 | Why are parents so careful? 13034 Why did our earnings fall down so low last year?" |
13034 | Why do n''t you audit his books and see who paid for that car? |
13034 | Why do n''t you take him? |
13034 | Why do you feel like ignoring it, if it''s such a natural question? |
13034 | Why does n''t it go over? |
13034 | Why not? |
13034 | Why not? |
13034 | Why not? |
13034 | Why not? |
13034 | Why not? |
13034 | Why should n''t they get as much as the men if they are going to do men''s work? |
13034 | Why, Ma''m Maynard,said Mary,"you do n''t think that all men are fools, too, do you?" |
13034 | Why, you want to be good; do n''t you? |
13034 | Why? |
13034 | Why? |
13034 | Why? |
13034 | Will you mark them with a tick, please-- those you ca n''t dance? |
13034 | Wo n''t you be seated for a few minutes? |
13034 | Would they want to go back to candles? |
13034 | Y- yes--"Who was he? |
13034 | Yes, and who knows? 13034 Yes, dear?" |
13034 | Yes? |
13034 | You know the old saying, do n''t you? |
13034 | You mean for the women to be making bearings? |
13034 | You mean to say they all kissed you? |
13034 | You mean to say they will go on strike before they will work with their own wives and sisters? |
13034 | You mean working for wages? |
13034 | You mean your friends? |
13034 | You think so, ma cherie? 13034 You think so?" |
13034 | You think so? |
13034 | You''ll do that, Miss Spencer? |
13034 | You''re sure it has nothing to do with this? |
13034 | You''re sure there''s nothing more I can do? |
13034 | You''re to go right back to your work,she said, and in a gentler voice,"Wally, can I speak to you, please?" |
13034 | You''ve never seen my daughter, have you? |
13034 | Your friends are n''t with you tonight? |
13034 | ''Are you sure you do n''t feel a draft?'' |
13034 | ''Are you sure you''re warm enough?'' |
13034 | ''What do you mean, rough stuff?'' |
13034 | ''What do you mean: good scares?'' |
13034 | ... Are you going to boycott us now?" |
13034 | ... You do n''t mean to say that they have made you an aunt already?" |
13034 | All those who would like to try it-- will they please stand up?" |
13034 | Aloud he said, pretending to yawn,"Great events, batuchka? |
13034 | Aloud she said,"What do you think of it?" |
13034 | And again"Is it you, Master Paul?" |
13034 | And aloud in quite a humouring tone he said,"We do n''t need men? |
13034 | And seeing that she hesitated he added, first looking cautiously over his shoulder,"Is it anything, for instance, to do wi''Mr. Woodward? |
13034 | And the babies? |
13034 | And the home? |
13034 | And then he said,''What time did you leave Mary''s?'' |
13034 | And why was he singing so sadly, so plaintively just underneath Mary''s window? |
13034 | Any better?" |
13034 | Archey?" |
13034 | At any other time she would have asked herself,"Why is he inquiring for Burdon?" |
13034 | Because who would hire a man at$ 21 a week after the war if they could get a woman to do the same work for$ 15?" |
13034 | But how are you getting on, Helen?.... |
13034 | But how did he know Helen was there? |
13034 | But what''s the woman going to do?" |
13034 | But you do n''t condemn the eight hour day-- do you?--just because it does n''t fit everybody?" |
13034 | But you would n''t call children natural enemies, would you-- or try to get along without them?" |
13034 | But you would n''t call food a natural enemy; would you? |
13034 | But-- if it was any other man than Stanley Woodward, I would say today that he was doing his best to-- to--""To''do''me?" |
13034 | CHAPTER I"Patty,"said Miss Cordelia one morning,"have you noticed Josiah lately?" |
13034 | Can we tell the men that they are going to get women''s wages?" |
13034 | Did he kiss you?" |
13034 | Did young Josiah want to leave the office early? |
13034 | Did young Josiah yearn for life and adventure? |
13034 | Do n''t you think that''s a good thing? |
13034 | Do you care to see them, or shall I tell them you are out?" |
13034 | Do you expect him tomorrow?" |
13034 | Does he understand it?" |
13034 | Does n''t that mean a lot to you, Aunt Patty? |
13034 | Edsol?" |
13034 | For great men would not spend their days in catching little fishes-- am I not right, batuchka?" |
13034 | For why? |
13034 | Have you a car here?" |
13034 | Helen appeared at the office soon after nine and the moment she saw Mary she said,"Has Wally''phoned you this morning?" |
13034 | Helen nodded and glanced at Mary with a look that said,"Did you hear him call me''Dear''?" |
13034 | How are you? |
13034 | How could you, if he were driving very fast?" |
13034 | How did they find time to do their washing and ironing? |
13034 | How did they train the women? |
13034 | How long is it since your bookkeeping system was overhauled here?" |
13034 | How?" |
13034 | I do n''t want to go to Miss Parsons''school--""Where do you want to go then?" |
13034 | I hope he brings his handsome son again-- don''t you?" |
13034 | I said to him,''that a woman ca n''t do a man''s work and get away with it? |
13034 | I think I ought to ask you something first, though.... Did any one ever tell you that you had a brother Paul? |
13034 | I thought he was leaving earlier than usual tonight; did n''t you? |
13034 | If I take you this morning, will you promise to be a good girl, and sit in the office, and not go wandering off by yourself? |
13034 | If women can do such wonderful things for the Red Cross, why ca n''t they do wonderful things in other ways?" |
13034 | If women enter the trades, what are the men going to do? |
13034 | Is it not because all the world knows well that a man can not be left to his own promise, but has to be bound by the law as a lion is held in a cage?" |
13034 | Is that your idea of woman''s work?'' |
13034 | It was the sight of him down there that reminded me: that''s all.... How has everything been running here? |
13034 | Life-- thankfulness for life-- a joy so deep that it was n''t far from pain-- hoping-- longing- yearning... for what? |
13034 | Mary; tell me you love me just a little bit; wo n''t you?" |
13034 | Me?" |
13034 | Now that she had the ballot and could no longer be legislated against, could she hold her own industrially on equal terms with man? |
13034 | One day Mary suddenly said to her father,"Who was Paul?" |
13034 | Or Archey Forbes? |
13034 | Or Judge Cutler? |
13034 | Or Wally Cabot?" |
13034 | Or sweep the streets? |
13034 | Or what?" |
13034 | Or, putting it as briefly as possible,"Could she make good?" |
13034 | Or, say, the conduct of the business?" |
13034 | Queer, is n''t it?" |
13034 | See?" |
13034 | See?" |
13034 | She kissed her cousin twice, quotation marks of affection which enclosed the whisper,"Do you mind if I stay all night?" |
13034 | She waited until her cousin paused for breath and then,"Did Burdon Woodward ride home with you tonight?" |
13034 | Smoothly, I hope?" |
13034 | So it''s silly to say''What''s the use?'' |
13034 | So, do n''t you see? |
13034 | Strauss?" |
13034 | Suppose last night, instead of coming home, he had turned the car toward Boston or New York, what would you have done then?" |
13034 | Suppose the idea spreads and after a while there are millions of women doing work that used to be done by men-- what are the men going to do?" |
13034 | That''s why I''m here.... Can I have my old room?" |
13034 | The accountant looked at her with the same quizzical air as an astronomer might assume in looking at a child who had just said,"What? |
13034 | The millionaire and the mill- hand-- somehow they always manage to leave less than every one expected--""Why is that?" |
13034 | The old familiar office seemed to be waiting for her, the pictures regarding her as though they were saying"Where have you been, young lady? |
13034 | The sun ninety million miles away from the earth? |
13034 | Then how about Worth, and those other big men dressmakers? |
13034 | Then how about that butler up at Miss Spencer''s?'' |
13034 | Then how about the chefs at the big hotels?'' |
13034 | Then how about the steam laundries where nearly all the shirt ironers are men?'' |
13034 | Then who''s to do the work?" |
13034 | There is so much work that has to be done in the world every day; is n''t there?" |
13034 | They returned to the office and when they were seated again, Mary said,"What is it you wanted to say?" |
13034 | This merry letter, for instance, which Mary read and smiled over-- who was the"Jack"who had written it? |
13034 | To show you how her mind worked, one night she asked her father,"What makes a machine squeak?" |
13034 | To stop improvements now would be inviting ruin-- They had their hands on the top rung of the ladder now; why let go and fall to the bottom--? |
13034 | Unless for demonstrated incapacity, upon what grounds shall we now deny them equal opportunities? |
13034 | Wally Cabot?" |
13034 | Wally out of town?" |
13034 | Was her equality theoretical-- or real? |
13034 | Was young Josiah late the next morning? |
13034 | Were n''t you surprised yourself when your idea worked out so well?" |
13034 | What about the children? |
13034 | What are the men going to do if the women take their jobs?" |
13034 | What are you doing there in Mary''s bed? |
13034 | What do you suppose reminded me of it?" |
13034 | What do you understand by a man''s work?'' |
13034 | What have you been doing to him?" |
13034 | What would a girl know about mergers, combinations, fundamental patents, the differences between common and preferred stock, and all that? |
13034 | What would everybody think if those new buildings stayed empty--? |
13034 | What''s the use of having things if you ca n''t enjoy them?" |
13034 | Who is she, anyway?" |
13034 | Why are chaperons require''--even in the highest, most culture''society? |
13034 | Why is marriage require''? |
13034 | Will there be work enough for everybody?" |
13034 | Will you please follow me?" |
13034 | Will you promise me that?" |
13034 | Woodward?" |
13034 | Woodward?" |
13034 | Would n''t it be awful if-- if we were to be married-- and then got like that, too?" |
13034 | Would n''t you like to see it go on?" |
13034 | You do n''t think he''d do anything to hurt Spencer& Son; do you?" |
13034 | You''ll promise to be here when I come back?" |
13034 | you and Wally?" |
16321 | A good bit of money? |
16321 | And very pretty, is she not? |
16321 | And what did you say to him-- for saving this house and all our lives? |
16321 | And you do n''t like him very well? |
16321 | Another visitor? 16321 Anybody in your light, you think? |
16321 | Are you sure they are flirting? |
16321 | Because I disagree with her? 16321 But if he won''t-- I wonder whether I ever could have the brass to do it? |
16321 | But not at once, surely? |
16321 | But what I mean is, if a young lady likes a young gentleman pretty well, how is she going to find out for sure whether he likes her? |
16321 | But what good would that do me? 16321 But what you goin''to do about it?" |
16321 | But why? |
16321 | But you surely do not intend to give up riding altogether? |
16321 | Can you sketch and talk too? |
16321 | Captain Farnham,she said,"when are you going to give that lawn- tennis party you promised so long ago? |
16321 | Captain,he said, saluting Farnham,"vot I shall do mit dis schnide?" |
16321 | Certainly-- what is it? 16321 Could I have a few moments''conversation with you, sir?" |
16321 | Did that bold thing go to call on him alone? |
16321 | Did they like it? |
16321 | Do I understand it will be without expense to my-- to the city government? |
16321 | Do n''t all the men you know love you? |
16321 | Do n''t you know? |
16321 | Do n''t you think he would like it better if you would write? |
16321 | Do you doubt it, Monsieur? |
16321 | Do you expect to give in? |
16321 | Do you wish to see the prettiest thing you ever saw in your lives? 16321 Gettin''pretty hot, ai n''t it?" |
16321 | Has anything ever been said against her? |
16321 | Have some more? |
16321 | Have they done anything new? |
16321 | Have you got it ready? |
16321 | Have you got them? |
16321 | Have you heard the news? |
16321 | Have you heered about Brother Bowersox? |
16321 | Have you spoke to Mattie yet? |
16321 | He evidently thinks nothing of it, and why should I? |
16321 | He had not got away? |
16321 | He is pretty well off, ai n''t he? |
16321 | Here, behind your right elbow, where I can look over your shoulder and observe the work as it goes on? |
16321 | How dare you? |
16321 | How long have you known this? |
16321 | How many of you do this? |
16321 | How''d you get along at Farnham''s? |
16321 | How''ll_ she_ like it? |
16321 | I am sure Mr. Farnham will not object to taking care of you a little while; and if he has n''t the time, Fergus will bring you home-- hm, Fergus? |
16321 | I suppose he may come in here? |
16321 | I wanted to ask how you would like me as a son- in- law? |
16321 | I wonder if father has sent him to me-- and how many more has he got in reserve there in the shop? 16321 I wonder whether I have mended matters? |
16321 | I would n''t take no advantage of a friend; but if Sam''s got no chance, as you say, why should n''t I try? 16321 Is he dead?" |
16321 | Is that all? |
16321 | Keen savey? |
16321 | Mamma,she asked,"did he say''Where is Alice?'' |
16321 | Mattie,he said one evening, when they happened to be alone together,"when are you and Sam going to make a match?" |
16321 | NOW DO YOU REMEMBER? |
16321 | Not this, sir? |
16321 | Now may I ask you to do a very disagreeable thing? 16321 Now you are going to side against me, are you? |
16321 | Now, look here,he pleaded,"you ai n''t a- going to take it that way, are you? |
16321 | Now, what a foolish question that is I''d like to know who built his greenhouses, ef I did n''t? |
16321 | Now, where shall I sit? |
16321 | Now, who do you think is going to believe that? |
16321 | Oh, Alice, what is this? |
16321 | Oh, Alice,the poor lady whimpered,"why do you talk so wildly? |
16321 | Oh, dear, no; how could you think so? |
16321 | Oh, you did? 16321 Oh, you do?" |
16321 | Say, Sam, you know Christy Fore, that hauls for the Safe Company? 16321 Say, mind your own business, wo n''t you?" |
16321 | See here,roared Sam,"are you crazy or am I? |
16321 | Shall I bring you back a Jinrickishaw? |
16321 | Shall I not bring you the loot of a temple or two? 16321 Shall we go into the house?" |
16321 | So glad to see you-- one sees so little of you-- I can hardly believe my good fortune-- how have I this honor? |
16321 | So it''s all done, is it? 16321 So you''ve finished, have you? |
16321 | Temple,he said,"how did you ever pick up this wine; and, if you will excuse the question, how did you know it when you got it?" |
16321 | That elegant young fellow who leads germans? 16321 That''s very pretty talk, Mr. Offitt; but where is all this wealth to come from?" |
16321 | The Indian women cook well, do they not? |
16321 | They have caught him, then? |
16321 | They have got the one I dropped from the window? |
16321 | They have? |
16321 | This is between us, ai n''t it? |
16321 | Trying to catch flies? |
16321 | Very well, Mr. Paul Pry, what was it? |
16321 | Vot''s dish? |
16321 | Well, I motion that we stop talkin''and commence doin''----"Do you suggest that a committee be appointed for that purpose? |
16321 | Well, of all the owdacious villains ever I struck---- Who do you think it is? |
16321 | Well, what do you want? |
16321 | Well, what of it? |
16321 | Well, what on earth are you doing here? 16321 Well, what''s the chance, and what would you do with it, ef you had it?" |
16321 | Well, what''s the matter? |
16321 | Well, what_ have_ you got to say? |
16321 | Well, who''s got anything to say against my daughter? |
16321 | Well, why? |
16321 | Well, you are president of the Library Board, ai n''t you? |
16321 | Were you wishing to see me about anything in particular? |
16321 | What about the mill hands? |
16321 | What are we, anyhow? |
16321 | What are you doin''? |
16321 | What becomes of this money? |
16321 | What could Temple want to see me about''most particular''? |
16321 | What did she say? |
16321 | What did that mean? |
16321 | What did you make that infernal racket with? |
16321 | What did you want to see me about tonight? |
16321 | What do you mean? |
16321 | What do you want of our names? |
16321 | What do you want? |
16321 | What in the world is that-- but, no matter what it is-- tell me, are you really going so soon? |
16321 | What is it? |
16321 | What is it? |
16321 | What is your special line of reform? |
16321 | What of that? |
16321 | What shall I do? |
16321 | What shall I do? |
16321 | What shall I say to him? 16321 What sort of fellow is he?" |
16321 | What sort will you have? |
16321 | What will become of that beautiful girl? 16321 What will it amount to?" |
16321 | What will they do if the strike should last? |
16321 | What would you like? |
16321 | What young person? |
16321 | What''s all this? |
16321 | What''s the use of calling names? 16321 What, you are engaged?" |
16321 | What? |
16321 | Where d''you get it? |
16321 | Where did he live? |
16321 | Where have you been, anyhow? |
16321 | Where was you ever in that business? |
16321 | Where was you last night from ten to eleven? |
16321 | Where''s the other one you was talking about? |
16321 | Who has identified this money? 16321 Who is it? |
16321 | Who was that? |
16321 | Who would have thought,he mused,"that Sam had such a devil of a temper? |
16321 | Who''s afraid of half a dozen cops? |
16321 | Who? |
16321 | Why are you carrying it around all day? |
16321 | Why can you ask? 16321 Why did n''t he come in?" |
16321 | Why did n''t you say so, then? |
16321 | Why did n''t you stay out all night? |
16321 | Why do n''t you go to the mayor? |
16321 | Why is n''t this a good chance? |
16321 | Why not all live together? 16321 Why not? |
16321 | Why should I go back? 16321 Why should I not allow myself this indulgence?" |
16321 | Why should that be? 16321 Why should you not give Miss Dallas herself an opportunity to decline the Tio Pepe?" |
16321 | Why would you like that? |
16321 | Why, Alice, what has got into you? |
16321 | Why, Mattie, how''s your head? |
16321 | Why, do n''t you understand me? 16321 Why, where are you going?" |
16321 | Why, why, why did mamma tell me that horrid story? 16321 Wo n''t you go and take a walk by the Bluff?" |
16321 | Yes, of course, but who knows it? 16321 Yes, yes,"she continued;"but have you any good news for me?" |
16321 | You and your wife would like to board with us when you are married? 16321 You are not hurt, are you, mamma dear?" |
16321 | You are quite sure you can do that? |
16321 | You did decline, then? |
16321 | You do love me, do you not? |
16321 | You have not seen him since last night? |
16321 | You know this is the genuine stuff, then? |
16321 | You must have heard of my father, General Offitt, of Georgy? 16321 You think her really improved?" |
16321 | You was, was you? |
16321 | You''ll never tell? |
16321 | You''ve been in Spain, have n''t you? |
16321 | _ How_ do you know? |
16321 | _ Mais, qu''est- ce que vous avez donc?_asked Euphrasia. |
16321 | ''Orders from where?'' |
16321 | ''What''s that?'' |
16321 | A moment after, the same voice said,"Have you got him?" |
16321 | A wild fancy assailed him for an instant-- was he killed in jumping from the window? |
16321 | Aber, Herr Gott, was machen Sie denn damit?" |
16321 | Above all, what could be done for her by a young and unmarried man? |
16321 | An aggressive feeling of disapproval of young Furrey took possession of him, and he said, sharply:"What a very agreeable young man Mr. Furrey is?" |
16321 | And I suppose you do n''t want to part with your last child-- now, do you? |
16321 | And say, tell me, ai n''t there a back way out? |
16321 | And who would the prettiest girl in Buffland prefer, you or the loafer? |
16321 | And you intend to let Mr. Loafer have it all his own way?" |
16321 | Any other fellow takin''your wind?" |
16321 | Are you going home now? |
16321 | Are you horse- thieves?" |
16321 | Arthur, will you please light that burner nearest you?" |
16321 | As he passed by the door of the shop, Saul hailed him and said with a smile,"What luck?" |
16321 | As she went out, she said,"May I pick a flower as I go?" |
16321 | Because she puts up her beauty for a higher bidder than any------""Now, shet up, will you?" |
16321 | Belding?" |
16321 | Bowersox turned to Offitt and said,"Why in---- did you let him go? |
16321 | Budsey evidently regarded him with no favorable eye; he said to Sleeny,"This person says he comes from Matchin''s; do you know him?" |
16321 | But he smiled to himself,"Why should I care for Sam''s reputation?" |
16321 | But she had neither the dignity nor the training required for the occasion, and all the reply she found was:"Oh, Mr. Offitt, how can you say so?" |
16321 | But she said,"You will stay till father comes, wo n''t you?" |
16321 | But tell me, how is your club getting on?" |
16321 | But what business is all this of mine? |
16321 | But what can you do alone? |
16321 | But what could be done for such a girl, so pretty, so uncultivated, so vulgarly fantastic? |
16321 | But what do I know about men? |
16321 | But what shall I do? |
16321 | But where is the gate?" |
16321 | Can you assist me in identifying them?" |
16321 | Can you detail a few policemen to patrol Algonquin Avenue, in case of a serious disturbance?" |
16321 | Captain Farnham, how shall I ever thank you? |
16321 | Could it be possible-- and all that money-- where did it come from? |
16321 | D''ye hear me?" |
16321 | Did he say nothing but''Alice''?" |
16321 | Did you ever see anything like it?" |
16321 | Did you go and punish him for me-- tell me that?" |
16321 | Did you notice just now? |
16321 | Do they begin by saying,''Have you been very gay lately?''" |
16321 | Do you hear me? |
16321 | Do you hear me? |
16321 | Do you not know? |
16321 | Do you think they are strikin''a match?" |
16321 | Does she pay you for her board?" |
16321 | Farnham at this addressed the last speaker and said,"Can you tell me what all this means? |
16321 | Farnham bowed, and rejoined:"My name is----"She laughed outright, and said:"I know well enough what your name is, or why should I have come here? |
16321 | Farnham gave no indication of his surprise at this burst of candor, but asked:"What do you propose?" |
16321 | Farnham gave way to the next comer, and said to Mr. Temple, who had pressed his hand in silence:"Did you want to see me for anything special to- day?" |
16321 | Farnham picked up a small photograph from the table near him, and said:"Do you recognize this?" |
16321 | Farnham thought he saw, and, after assenting to Pennybaker''s eager demand,"That''s all solid?" |
16321 | Farnham turned to Alice, who was still standing, and said,"Alice, my own love, can you not give me one word of hope to carry with me? |
16321 | Farnham was attacked and nearly murdered last night, and if you did n''t do it who did? |
16321 | Farnham?" |
16321 | Had Mattie given her word to this slab- sided, lanky fellow? |
16321 | Had she given Sam Sleeny the mitten for him? |
16321 | Had the shock deprived her of reason? |
16321 | Have you any tools for me?" |
16321 | Have you not sense enough to see how your ferocious attack on the witness damages you? |
16321 | He cabled back,''What shall I pay?'' |
16321 | He exclaimed,"Why, who does she know that''s got money?" |
16321 | He is entered for the races there, you know, and I did n''t want, by--------, to miss my engagements, understand? |
16321 | He looks almost as if he were asleep, does he not? |
16321 | He put many an extra stroke of fine work upon the servants''rooms he finished, thinking:"Who knows but my Mattie may live here sometime?" |
16321 | He said,"Can you put an advertisement for me in your afternoon editions?" |
16321 | He spoke out with quick and passionate earnestness:"Must I tell you then? |
16321 | He stared at Offitt blankly, and said,"Why, what are you givin''me now?" |
16321 | He stood before her without speaking, until she raised her eyes, and said sharply:"Well, Sam, what''s the matter?" |
16321 | He waited until they were gone, and then said:"Bolty, have you two dozen repeating rifles?" |
16321 | He was fingering at them when Sam seized him by the shoulder, and said:"Look here, Andy, what_ is_ your game, anyhow? |
16321 | His look of exultation caused Saul to say,"All settled, eh?" |
16321 | His voice sounded weak and distant as he said:"Now you will go with me, wo n''t you?" |
16321 | How about them marks on the door and the ladder? |
16321 | How can I breathe the same air with him, blushing like a peony whenever I think of him, and turning pale with shame when I hear his name? |
16321 | How can I separate myself from you?" |
16321 | How can a young lady find out whether a young gentleman is in love with her or not? |
16321 | How did he dare know I was n''t nearsighted? |
16321 | How do the young men amuse young ladies nowadays? |
16321 | I ai n''t that kind; I j''ined to do somethin'';--what''s to be done?" |
16321 | I wonder if she will go with me when I come tonight-- ready? |
16321 | I wonder whether he would make me mind? |
16321 | I wonder whether it is for herself or for some''Committee''? |
16321 | I wonder who the lawyer is that does the indicting of people?" |
16321 | I wonder whom she will care about here? |
16321 | I would n''t stand no chance at all against you-- hum?" |
16321 | I''ve got to speak it out, raw and plain, have I? |
16321 | If I am not to be your wife, I must never see you again; you know that, do n''t you?" |
16321 | If I lay the money at your feet, will you go with me? |
16321 | If it''s a fair question, how do you make your livin''?" |
16321 | Is it generally known in the city?" |
16321 | Is it necessary?" |
16321 | Is the fair one unkind?" |
16321 | Is there a fire in the drawing- room?" |
16321 | Is there any chance of getting one of those places? |
16321 | It''s like breaking your heart- strings, now, ai n''t it?" |
16321 | It''s up the spout, do you hear?" |
16321 | Its query is, How does heart meet heart in mutual knowledge?" |
16321 | Last night the drama of Algonquin Avenue was supplemented by the tragedy of Dean Street, and the public, aghast, demands''What next?'' |
16321 | Mattie, will you tell me good- by?" |
16321 | May I ask a favor of you?" |
16321 | My dear sir, why should that be?" |
16321 | No chance for Sam?" |
16321 | No? |
16321 | Now, Sam was precisely of the breed described by his friend, but what man ever lived who knew he was altogether ordinary? |
16321 | Now, gentlemen, is there anything I can do?" |
16321 | One evening she said to her father:"Did you ever see Captain Farnham?" |
16321 | One of them turned to me and insolently inquired,''Do you own this street, or have you just got a lien on it?'' |
16321 | Only----""Only what?" |
16321 | Pennybaker repeated his question a little anxiously:"That''s all solid, ai n''t it?" |
16321 | Pretty, was she? |
16321 | Returning to the shadow by the house, Farnham''s first question was,"Is anybody hurt?" |
16321 | She blushed and stammered, and then, rushing at it with desperation, she said:"That money-- where did you get it?" |
16321 | She finished, with a loud nourish of merriment, and then asked:"Did you ever hear anything so funny in your life?" |
16321 | She heard a timid rap at her door, and asked, sharply:"Who''s there?" |
16321 | She kissed him and said gently,"Now do you remember?" |
16321 | She lifted a bright glance through her tears and said, like a happy child to whom a new game has been proposed,"What shall we try?" |
16321 | She said to herself,"How can I live, hating a man as I hate that Captain Farnham? |
16321 | She stared at him an instant and said:"Where?" |
16321 | Temple''s?" |
16321 | That ugly creature who went up with Alice for the money-- you caught him? |
16321 | That you, Sam? |
16321 | That''s all solid, ai n''t it?" |
16321 | The man handed him his ticket without any reply, but turned to a friend beside him, and said,"Who is that cheeky brother that knows me so well?" |
16321 | The_ Bale- Fire_ began its leader with the impressive sentence:"Has a carnival of crime set in amongst us? |
16321 | Then Arthur came and caught me by the shoulder, and almost shook me, and said,''Where is Alice?'' |
16321 | Then a loud voice said:"Hello, Andy, you asleep?" |
16321 | Then she advanced with shy grace and took Arthur''s hand, and asked:"Do you begin to feel quite strong again?" |
16321 | Then turning to Matchin, he said, with professional severity,"What door did he generally come in by?" |
16321 | Then, striving desperately to add something more gracious, she stammered,"Mamma will be very----""Glad to see me in the drawing room?" |
16321 | They are having lively times over there, are they not?" |
16321 | They may all be-- but I did not think-- what business have I thinking about it? |
16321 | To go with me to the Morgue and see the remains of what I am now sure is the real criminal?" |
16321 | Was n''t it too perfectly ridiculous?" |
16321 | Was this to be a mere afternoon call after all, with no combat and no victory? |
16321 | What am I to do about that, I should like to know?" |
16321 | What business is it of yours, anyway?" |
16321 | What can I do for you?" |
16321 | What do you mean?" |
16321 | What do you think of that?" |
16321 | What do you want of him? |
16321 | What does it lack?" |
16321 | What is it you want, and how can I be of service to you?" |
16321 | What is there about Bowersox?" |
16321 | What shall I do if he never speaks to me again?" |
16321 | What shall I do?" |
16321 | What was the occasion of this assault?" |
16321 | What would you think of a thousand dollars a month?" |
16321 | What''s up?" |
16321 | What_ does_ a man want,"she asked, with her head thrown back and her nostrils dilated,"when he do n''t want me?" |
16321 | When Mrs. Matchin was asked, after that ceremony,"Who she was named for?" |
16321 | When did I see you last?" |
16321 | When he attacked her one day with the brusque exclamation,"Well, Mattie, what''s all this blame foolishness your ma''s being tellin''me?" |
16321 | When he had concluded he was shown the hammer which had been picked up on the floor at Farnham''s, and was asked,"Is that the hammer you refer to?" |
16321 | Where can her eyes be? |
16321 | Where can the---- thing be? |
16321 | Where do women keep their eyes? |
16321 | Where is he, by the way?" |
16321 | Where the devil is it?" |
16321 | Where''s Bott? |
16321 | Where''s Sam?" |
16321 | Who can answer for this young lady? |
16321 | Who is it?" |
16321 | Who is the best man,"he asked, with honest frankness,"you, or some high- steppin''snob whose daddy has left him the means to be a loafer all his days? |
16321 | Who is the man who shall ever kiss her between those straight brows? |
16321 | Why are you in such a terrible hurry?" |
16321 | Why can not you wait a while?" |
16321 | Why do n''t you come in?" |
16321 | Why do n''t you see?" |
16321 | Why should he put me down that way? |
16321 | Why?" |
16321 | Will you give it your approval?" |
16321 | Will you go?" |
16321 | Will you join her now?" |
16321 | You see?" |
16321 | You surely do not intend----""To strike Saul for a divvy? |
16321 | You think it''s horrid that I should say so, do n''t you? |
16321 | You thought I meant_ you?_"Bott went out of the door like a whipped hound, with pale face and hanging head. |
16321 | You''re not one of the common kind of cattle that think of nothin''but their fodder and stall-- are you?" |
16321 | and you, Mr. Temple? |
16321 | answered Maud, negligently,"you heard everything, did you? |
16321 | he asked,--"spelling, or civil service?" |
16321 | he began, with a jolly facetiousness,"what''s your noble game this evenin''? |
16321 | is that you? |
16321 | said Farnham, as they seated themselves,"how long has it taken you to grow to that stature? |
16321 | said the widow:"why are you not at home? |
16321 | that''s his window, ai n''t it?" |
16321 | why did I not think of that? |
49181 | _] MACK What are you reading? 49181 A VOICE Where''s his wings? 49181 A man could n''t come into another man''s house, and be welcomed, and then take the other man''s coat, without losing his self- respect... could he? 49181 About the Parish House... shall I tell my husband you''ll speak to Mr. Gilchrist? 49181 Ai n''t I found you with her when I came home unexpected? 49181 Ai n''t I seen you down town with her? 49181 Ai n''t it... you... Grubby? 49181 Ai n''t she home? 49181 Ai n''t you fellows on? 49181 Ai n''t you seen what he just done to me? 49181 All right; in God''s name, what_ are_ we to say? 49181 Am I costing you one blanket from your warm beds, or one stick of furniture from your comfortable homes, or anything else you''ll ever miss? 49181 Am I interruptin''your readin''? 49181 Am I late? 49181 And how about Buddha and Mohammed? 49181 And if he do n''t insist? 49181 And if they did, what does that matter? 49181 And if we want to keep it in our hearts, and never think about it or look it in the face, should n''t someone pry open the door and cry:Behold"?... |
49181 | And that''s almost the same thing, is n''t it? |
49181 | And then what becomes of our influence? |
49181 | And what do you think? |
49181 | And what if she is... now? |
49181 | And you are, shall we say, twenty- nine in October? |
49181 | And you? |
49181 | And, if you_ could_, and_ did_, how in the name of God would that help the Community? |
49181 | Another says it was suggestion... believing... which is another way of saying faith, is n''t it? |
49181 | Anyway, do you think people are? |
49181 | Are n''t you? |
49181 | Are you looking for someone? |
49181 | BENFIELD All? |
49181 | BENFIELD Police duty? |
49181 | BENFIELD What the he---- GOODKIND What has that to do with it? |
49181 | BENFIELD What''s what? |
49181 | BENFIELD Why should you have? |
49181 | BENFIELD[_ Taking one_]: Thanks.... Why did n''t you go down to West Virginia? |
49181 | But do n''t you think... sometimes... you and the other women... that they cost you too much? |
49181 | But there''s a fellow named Joe Hennig.... GOODKIND Who''ll listen to reason? |
49181 | But where has that brought us? |
49181 | By doubling his wages? |
49181 | CLARE And for them you''d send me back to degradation? |
49181 | CLARE And love? |
49181 | CLARE And so-- you advise me to marry you? |
49181 | CLARE Are you... honestly... happy? |
49181 | CLARE But... he''s just_ got_ back.... Where have you been, Jerry? |
49181 | CLARE Do n''t you understand that I''m offering myself to you? |
49181 | CLARE Do n''t you want me? |
49181 | CLARE For what? |
49181 | CLARE Had dinner? |
49181 | CLARE He''ll be up in a moment... wo n''t you sit down? |
49181 | CLARE How can anybody be happy without money? |
49181 | CLARE I''m very grateful... but... JERRY But what? |
49181 | CLARE In just helping others? |
49181 | CLARE Is it true? |
49181 | CLARE Is that the truth? |
49181 | CLARE Mrs. Hennig? |
49181 | CLARE Must I go on forever paying for one mistake? |
49181 | CLARE What do you propose to give me? |
49181 | CLARE What_ is_ right? |
49181 | CLARE Why do you say that? |
49181 | CLARE Why, Jerry did n''t leave much before you, did he? |
49181 | CLARE Why? |
49181 | CLARE Why? |
49181 | CLARE Why? |
49181 | CLARE Will you, Doctor? |
49181 | CLARE You mean to Jerry? |
49181 | CLARE You mean you''re going on like this? |
49181 | CLARE You think_ that''s_ God''s will? |
49181 | CLARE You''ve got... everything... you want? |
49181 | CLARE[_ In almost speechless amazement_]: Dan; you''re not going to take that? |
49181 | CLARE[_ Looking at him squarely and significantly_]: Knowing all I_ do_ know about you? |
49181 | CLARE[_ Looking at the box_]: Another... substitute.... GOODKIND Substitute, for what? |
49181 | Can I do anything for you, sir? |
49181 | Can I do anything for you? |
49181 | Can you beat it? |
49181 | Comes down R._]: Yes? |
49181 | Could we have forgotten promises unkept, faith disappointed, aspirations unrealized? |
49181 | DANIEL About the money? |
49181 | DANIEL Am I costing you one cigar? |
49181 | DANIEL And then? |
49181 | DANIEL And you have everything_ you_ want? |
49181 | DANIEL Are you? |
49181 | DANIEL Are you? |
49181 | DANIEL But how? |
49181 | DANIEL But in this day-- in this practical world-- can any man follow the Master? |
49181 | DANIEL Caught in what act, Joe? |
49181 | DANIEL Do n''t drive me to---- GOODKIND To what? |
49181 | DANIEL Do n''t you? |
49181 | DANIEL Does n''t it mean-- telling the truth? |
49181 | DANIEL Forget? |
49181 | DANIEL From you? |
49181 | DANIEL He accused..._ you_? |
49181 | DANIEL How about the money? |
49181 | DANIEL How can anybody be happy_ with_ it? |
49181 | DANIEL How is Jerry? |
49181 | DANIEL How many rooms do you live in at the same time? |
49181 | DANIEL I only mean is n''t there something worth more than good clothes and a good time? |
49181 | DANIEL If you''ll only let me explain.... GOODKIND Explain_ what_? |
49181 | DANIEL In God''s name, who are you? |
49181 | DANIEL In what way? |
49181 | DANIEL Is it any more comfortable than this? |
49181 | DANIEL Is n''t it worth trying? |
49181 | DANIEL Left... Jerry? |
49181 | DANIEL Like it? |
49181 | DANIEL Little bird tell you that? |
49181 | DANIEL Meaning? |
49181 | DANIEL Money? |
49181 | DANIEL Mr. Henchley''s_ what_? |
49181 | DANIEL No; I just slipped up here to read a while before we put our gifts on the tree.... Where''s Grubby? |
49181 | DANIEL Not even as an advance? |
49181 | DANIEL Oh, is that all? |
49181 | DANIEL Pearl Hennig? |
49181 | DANIEL Suppose we ask the police to look for her? |
49181 | DANIEL The secret? |
49181 | DANIEL What are you doing? |
49181 | DANIEL What can I buy with it that I have n''t got? |
49181 | DANIEL What do you mean... worse? |
49181 | DANIEL What do_ you_ want, Clare? |
49181 | DANIEL What good can one man do? |
49181 | DANIEL What? |
49181 | DANIEL Who said that? |
49181 | DANIEL Who told you that? |
49181 | DANIEL Why did you have to get mixed up with Pearl Hennig? |
49181 | DANIEL Why do n''t you give it to him? |
49181 | DANIEL Why do you say that, Hennig? |
49181 | DANIEL Why not in place of the Venus who fell on her nose? |
49181 | DANIEL Why not? |
49181 | DANIEL Why not? |
49181 | DANIEL Why open wounds that are beginning to heal? |
49181 | DANIEL Why? |
49181 | DANIEL Yes; do n''t you? |
49181 | DANIEL You do n''t want_ my_ advice? |
49181 | DANIEL"And on earth, Peace, good will toward men"? |
49181 | DANIEL[_ Crossing to C._]: How are you, Jerry? |
49181 | DANIEL[_ Laughs_]: Is generosity a fault in a husband? |
49181 | DANIEL[_ Quickly_]: What do you---- CLARE I mean anything special to do? |
49181 | DANIEL[_ Sits on bench in front of table_]: Well? |
49181 | DANIEL[_ Smiling_]: Are_ you_ going to advise me to carry a pistol? |
49181 | DANIEL_ How_ do you know? |
49181 | DILLY What could be sweeter? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM And that is? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM Ca n''t I help? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM Do you know the truth, Daniel? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM How can you make them try? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM In addition to his salary? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM Is n''t that a little mandatory? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM Oh, how do you do, Miss Jewett? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM Shall we go into my study? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM What strike? |
49181 | DR. WADHAM Wondering? |
49181 | Did he bring her in here... an''keep her... against her will? |
49181 | Did he? |
49181 | Did n''t I always say you were a nut? |
49181 | Did n''t he tell you he was a Son of God? |
49181 | Did n''t he tell you that, Jimmie? |
49181 | Did you know Gilchrist proposes to preach a Christmas sermon about the strike? |
49181 | Dilly''s looking well today, is n''t she, Mr. Goodkind? |
49181 | Do n''t you think there might have been a compromise? |
49181 | Do you know that your young trouble- hunter has given away nearly one- tenth of his capital in three months? |
49181 | Do you know what they''re planning to do now? |
49181 | Do you remember... in your church... a Mrs. Thornbury? |
49181 | Does it occur to you that may have been because_ he_ was n''t in Black River? |
49181 | Does n''t every man-- in his heart? |
49181 | Does that offend your reverence? |
49181 | For the rest-- we need n''t bother each other too much.... What do you say? |
49181 | GOODKIND And what''s the answer? |
49181 | GOODKIND Any opinion? |
49181 | GOODKIND Anyway, what do I know about coal mining? |
49181 | GOODKIND Are you making a profit? |
49181 | GOODKIND But if everybody lived your way, what would become of the world''s work? |
49181 | GOODKIND Dead? |
49181 | GOODKIND Happy? |
49181 | GOODKIND He wo n''t listen to reason? |
49181 | GOODKIND He''s coming back--[_ Servant enters R._] Yes; what is it? |
49181 | GOODKIND How do you do, Doctor? |
49181 | GOODKIND How do, Stedtman? |
49181 | GOODKIND How''re you going to do it? |
49181 | GOODKIND How? |
49181 | GOODKIND Huh? |
49181 | GOODKIND Is it? |
49181 | GOODKIND Married? |
49181 | GOODKIND May I come in? |
49181 | GOODKIND Oh, is that all? |
49181 | GOODKIND Umanski? |
49181 | GOODKIND We''re agreed that if he insists on preaching about the strike---- BENFIELD He goes? |
49181 | GOODKIND Well, there you are, and what I wanted to talk about privately is... what''s got into the boy? |
49181 | GOODKIND What can you buy with fifty---- DANIEL What have_ you_ bought? |
49181 | GOODKIND What do you want? |
49181 | GOODKIND What kind of a man? |
49181 | GOODKIND Who ever heard of a poor Jew? |
49181 | GOODKIND Who said so? |
49181 | GOODKIND Who''s in this delegation? |
49181 | GOODKIND Why? |
49181 | GOODKIND You''re hanging, and what have you got? |
49181 | GOODKIND You''re not going to turn down fifty thousand dollars a year? |
49181 | GOODKIND[_ Crisply_]: Mr. Gilchrist? |
49181 | GOODKIND[_ Goes to her_]: You''re not crying? |
49181 | GOODKIND[_ Hardly believing his own ears_]: To ask for... WHAT? |
49181 | GOODKIND[_ Lights his cigar_]: Well... how are things in Black River? |
49181 | GOODKIND[_ Looking off after his son_]: Jerry do n''t like you much, does he? |
49181 | GOODKIND[_ Offering cigars_]: Smoke? |
49181 | GOODKIND[_ Pushes back papers_]: What have you got there? |
49181 | GOODKIND[_ To_ DAN]: Had a doctor look her over? |
49181 | GRUBBY What for? |
49181 | GRUBBY What''s_ your_ job? |
49181 | Gilchrist applied a little soft soap-- BENFIELD Soft soap or gold dust? |
49181 | Golden slippers? |
49181 | Got anything on your mind, Dan? |
49181 | Had n''t we better retire to my study if we''re going to discuss Mr. Gilchrist? |
49181 | Happier than the people who just have enough? |
49181 | Has he gone crazy? |
49181 | Have you? |
49181 | He is consoled by her very presence_] What''s happened to the choir? |
49181 | His slow mind has been thinking out the earlier declaration._] UMANSKI What about this here twelve- hour day? |
49181 | How are we going to be married if you go on giving things away? |
49181 | How do you know when I left? |
49181 | I did n''t go for pleasure... did I, Gilchrist? |
49181 | I hate the breed, but what are you going to do about it? |
49181 | I knew you was stuck on her, and I warned you to stay away... did n''t I? |
49181 | I wanted to ask had I better send for the police? |
49181 | I''m_ engaged_ to Mr. Gilchrist, and he loves me, and believes in me, and your sense of decency and fair play... JERRY Inherited from my father? |
49181 | If it could be done then, why not now, and, if it was ever worth the doing, why not now? |
49181 | Impatiently_] What is it, Barnaby? |
49181 | In early, are n''t you? |
49181 | In the blackness, he hears a step._ THE POOR MAN_ has come on through the open door L._] Who''s there?... |
49181 | Instantly, of course, she sees the figure in the chair, and conceals the package beneath her apron._ MARY MARGARET Mr. Gilchrist? |
49181 | Is a man dead whose ideal lives? |
49181 | Is it possible he was_ gassed_--or something? |
49181 | Is it true the boss''ll give you an overcoat? |
49181 | Is it true you''ve been giving away-- well-- large sums of money? |
49181 | Is n''t it worth the price? |
49181 | Is that the Star of Bethlehem? |
49181 | Is this Overcoat Hall? |
49181 | Is this day different from any other? |
49181 | Is this the first time of conflict between flesh and spirit? |
49181 | It is n''t too late? |
49181 | It_ is_ a lie? |
49181 | JERRY Alone? |
49181 | JERRY Did you see Gilchrist? |
49181 | JERRY Do you? |
49181 | JERRY Going to take my job? |
49181 | JERRY I''ve said:"What''s the use bluffing?" |
49181 | JERRY No? |
49181 | JERRY No? |
49181 | JERRY Wha''d''ya mean--_son_? |
49181 | JERRY What part of the mines? |
49181 | JERRY When you worked you had enough to eat, did n''t you? |
49181 | JERRY Where''s father? |
49181 | JERRY Where? |
49181 | JERRY Where? |
49181 | JERRY Who''s the girl? |
49181 | JERRY Why not? |
49181 | JERRY Why not? |
49181 | JERRY Why? |
49181 | JERRY With whom? |
49181 | JERRY Would n''t I? |
49181 | JERRY You''re_ what_? |
49181 | JERRY[_ Cynically_]: To put on before you pray? |
49181 | JERRY[_ Insolently_]: Are you ready? |
49181 | JERRY[_ Sneers_]: When? |
49181 | JERRY[_ Turning quickly_]: What''s the use of starting a hulla- ba- loo? |
49181 | JOE And you came again... did n''t you? |
49181 | JOE Did n''t I warn you? |
49181 | JOE Well, you''re workin''for him, ai n''t you? |
49181 | JOE Why do I say it? |
49181 | JOE You''ll play around_ my_ wife, will you? |
49181 | JOE[_ Cries_]: How''m I gon na be sure? |
49181 | MACK Are you working here? |
49181 | MACK Is_ anybody_ working here? |
49181 | MACK Think she''ll tell_ him_? |
49181 | MACK What girl? |
49181 | MACK What''d you do then? |
49181 | MACK What''s the catch? |
49181 | MACK What? |
49181 | MACK Where_ is_ he? |
49181 | MACK Who''s she? |
49181 | MACK[_ Laughs_]: Are you going into the baby business? |
49181 | MARY MARGARET Ai n''t you well, Mr. Gilchrist? |
49181 | MARY MARGARET And if He do n''t? |
49181 | MARY MARGARET Could God do that for me? |
49181 | MARY MARGARET He''s been good to you, ai n''t he? |
49181 | MARY MARGARET That''s right.... You mean, if God wants me to be well, some day He''ll make me well? |
49181 | MARY MARGARET What was the matter with her? |
49181 | MARY MARGARET What''re you going to do if you''re happy? |
49181 | MARY MARGARET Where? |
49181 | MISS LEVINSON That''s it; is n''t it? |
49181 | MR. BARNABY Why do n''t he go over to the Synagogue instead of hanging around a Christian Church? |
49181 | MR. HENCHLEY What''s the matter? |
49181 | MRS. GILLIAM A dance at this hour? |
49181 | MRS. GILLIAM Is n''t Dilly looking_ wonderful_? |
49181 | MRS. GILLIAM What do they do it for? |
49181 | MRS. GILLIAM Where does she get all her money? |
49181 | MRS. GILLIAM You''ll be sure to fix it? |
49181 | MRS. HENCHLEY I s''pose you ai n''t read"The Sheik"? |
49181 | MRS. HENCHLEY What''ve you been reading? |
49181 | MRS. THORNBURY Are those your husband''s men-- on the front steps? |
49181 | MRS. THORNBURY Testaments? |
49181 | MRS. THORNBURY[_ Holding up two dolls_]: What are we going to do with these? |
49181 | MRS. THORNBURY[_ Turns and is appalled at his burden_]: What have you got? |
49181 | MRS. TICE And will you put us in the car? |
49181 | MRS. TICE Ca n''t I drive you home? |
49181 | MRS. TICE Do you know what he said, Doctor? |
49181 | Money? |
49181 | Oh, do n''t you see, my dear,_ that''s_ been your_ great_ mistake? |
49181 | Only... since you''ve insisted on the truth.... Dan, when_ did_ my husband leave Black River? |
49181 | PEARL For Christ''s sake, ai n''t you done with me now? |
49181 | PEARL[_ Uncertainly_]: Mr. Gilchrist? |
49181 | POOR MAN Did they? |
49181 | POOR MAN What does it matter? |
49181 | POOR MAN Why do n''t you try? |
49181 | POOR MAN Why not? |
49181 | Preach your Christmas sermon, and afterward---- DANIEL Yes? |
49181 | STEDTMAN Pearl Hennig? |
49181 | Something half way? |
49181 | TONY Why you send for me? |
49181 | Takes cigars from his pocket_]: Smoke? |
49181 | The conspicuous feature of her costume is a pair of soiled gold slippers that once set off a ball gown._] MACK Do n''t he try to reform you? |
49181 | The_ SERVANT_ enters R._] SERVANT Did you ring, sir? |
49181 | There is a pause._] GOODKIND Smoke? |
49181 | There was a telegram, and he read it, and---- JOE And came here to ask Gilchrist: Where''s my wife? |
49181 | They got onto you, did they? |
49181 | This fellow, Max Stedtman, got into the union five or six years ago, and now he''s one of the delegation they''ve sent up to me.... Where''s Jerry? |
49181 | To_ MACK,_ who has been stealing surreptitious glances at the overcoat_] And you? |
49181 | UMANSKI And the twenty- four- hour shift? |
49181 | UMANSKI How I gon na learn English-- work twelve hours a day? |
49181 | UMANSKI That little box-- what you pay for him? |
49181 | UMANSKI Then what good we gain by strike? |
49181 | UMANSKI[_ Threatening with his free fist_]: Shall I? |
49181 | VOICES IN THE GANG You remember Teresa Malduca? |
49181 | Was Christ eccentric? |
49181 | Was Confucius a fool? |
49181 | Was the world never practical before? |
49181 | We all feel that Gilchrist has gone too far, and we''re agreed---- BENFIELD Does he preach tomorrow? |
49181 | We wanted to make up a couple of tables at bridge, but, with the men in here... as usual.... Where''s Jerry? |
49181 | We''re postin''bills, in seven languages, saying:"Why should workmen mistrust the company? |
49181 | We''ve had centuries of"fear, and hate, and greed"--and where have they brought us? |
49181 | Well, why would n''t it be? |
49181 | Were they failures, or were they the great successes of all Time and all Eternity? |
49181 | Were they fools, or were they wise men and women who had found the way to peace and happiness? |
49181 | Wha''d''ya expect of a man kicked out of his church for Bolshevism? |
49181 | What about happiness? |
49181 | What are the conditions? |
49181 | What are you complaining about? |
49181 | What do we get out of it now? |
49181 | What do you want? |
49181 | What have you there? |
49181 | What is success? |
49181 | What stopped it? |
49181 | What was the idea of the high sign? |
49181 | What would Mrs. Tice say if I invited them to sleep in her pew? |
49181 | What''re you giving us? |
49181 | What''s he do it for? |
49181 | What''s she doing here? |
49181 | What''s the difference between us? |
49181 | What''s this? |
49181 | When he does n''t, she returns._] Do n''t you think you''re making a terrible mistake? |
49181 | When he left, I went in to have a little talk with Joe... alone.... See? |
49181 | Where I get air-- sunshine-- milk-- eggs? |
49181 | Where I get him? |
49181 | Where are you going, Grubby? |
49181 | Where are your crutches? |
49181 | Where were you yesterday? |
49181 | Where were you? |
49181 | Where''s the Star of Bethlehem? |
49181 | Where''s your overcoat? |
49181 | Where''ve you got my wife? |
49181 | Which of us is the rich man? |
49181 | Who would n''t go to church to get a squint at Douglas Fairbanks? |
49181 | Who wrote that,"Luck is Work"? |
49181 | Whoever heard of the lights working on a Christmas Tree? |
49181 | Why ca n''t you keep your nose out of other people''s business? |
49181 | Why did you have to date my leaving Black River? |
49181 | Why did you keep your mouth shut when I lost my temper? |
49181 | Why did you turn the other cheek? |
49181 | Why not try love? |
49181 | Why not you carry a pistol? |
49181 | Why should I? |
49181 | Why would n''t I say he was crazy? |
49181 | Will you see if you can fix it? |
49181 | Wo n''t you come in? |
49181 | Wo n''t you take me, dear? |
49181 | Would n''t it be more fitting to preach from the text,"Glory to God in the Highest"? |
49181 | You do n''t forbid that, do you? |
49181 | You do n''t mean that because I''m trying to help---- GOODKIND Help... whom? |
49181 | You do n''t want to keep on-- coming down,_ do_ you? |
49181 | You expect me to believe that when you admit---- Why did you pull that hero stuff? |
49181 | You see what I mean? |
49181 | You were saying, Miss Levinson? |
49181 | You will... will you?... |
49181 | You''re a good man, Doctor, and, honestly, what would you say tomorrow if your wife told you she''d sold her rings, and given the money to the poor? |
49181 | You''ve had my son''s wife down here, have n''t you? |
49181 | [ MR. BARNABY_ re- enters L. The door closing attracts_ MRS. GILLIAM] MRS. GILLIAM Oh, Mr. Barnaby, how about the lights? |
49181 | [_ A pause._] CLARE You want me to go back? |
49181 | [_ All laugh._] PEARL Ai n''t you heard? |
49181 | [_ Bringing forth a small case_] What''s the matter with the Star of Bethlehem? |
49181 | [_ Comes down_] What''s the matter with the window? |
49181 | [_ Gets his hat._] CLARE Where''s your coat? |
49181 | [_ He assists her, but his mind is afar._] What''s the matter with you, Dan? |
49181 | [_ He exits._] UMANSKI What''s_ he_ doing down here, Mr. Gilchrist? |
49181 | [_ He follows the man back into the room._] Have n''t I seen you somewhere before? |
49181 | [_ He gives her the box, and exits L. A pause._] GOODKIND Everybody gone? |
49181 | [_ He has put down the bills, and brought forth an English grammar._] How about I go upstairs and study? |
49181 | [_ He laughs_] And that you''ve refused to take part of your income? |
49181 | [_ He lounges against the ladder._] What''s the use bluffing? |
49181 | [_ He remembers_]_ You''re_ not the Pole who came to my house last year with a delegation? |
49181 | [_ He rises_] Why....[_ Words fail_] What is this? |
49181 | [_ He sits._] GOODKIND How are things with you? |
49181 | [_ He wheels about and exits._] GOODKIND[_ Taking cigars from humidor_]: Smoke? |
49181 | [_ Looks around_] So you''re reduced to this, are you? |
49181 | [_ Looks up_] What''s this we''re wearing? |
49181 | [_ Shakes hands_] Have you come down to look us over? |
49181 | [_ She stands"Mama''s Treasure"atop a bookcase L._] It looks good, do n''t it? |
49181 | [_ The_ SERVANT_ exits_] What''s it all about, Stedtman? |
49181 | [_ They laugh._] CLARE When did you get in? |
49181 | [_ They sit_--JERRY_ down L._; BENFIELD_ left of the table_; GOODKIND_ back of it_; STEDTMAN_ R._] GOODKIND Well? |
49181 | [_ Throws the card on the table_] What the h---- GOODKIND What are labor conciliators? |
49181 | [_ To_ CLARE] Now do you think I was lying? |
49181 | [_ To_ DANIEL]: Did n''t you tell''em you was a Son of God? |
49181 | [_ To_ JERRY] Anything the matter with that bell? |
49181 | [_ To_ MRS. THORNBURY]_ We''re_ young and we''ve got to have life and gaiety; have n''t we, Mrs. Thornbury? |
49181 | [_ Together_] GOODKIND_ Your_ son? |
49181 | [_ Together_] MRS. HENCHLEY Is there any danger? |
49181 | [_"Everybody"returns the greeting_] Who are those people on the church steps? |
49181 | _ Making conversation_]: You live in Black River? |
49181 | honest?... |
41242 | ''And give our lives, if need be?'' |
41242 | ''For all time; shall we say it?'' |
41242 | ''Fraid of your soldiers? |
41242 | ''Is that the thing,''said I,''They talk so much about?'' |
41242 | ''Twas more like anger; did n''t you see his face? |
41242 | ''What go ye out into the wilderness for to see?'' |
41242 | (_ A pause_) Have you had too much punch, or what''s the trouble? |
41242 | (_ A pause_) Mother, while I think of it, has father Had any trouble with Jergens? |
41242 | (_ A pause_) Mother? |
41242 | (_ Appears beside her_) What is it? |
41242 | (_ As Anderson returns_) Do n''t you know That when a sentry challenges a man He''s got the right to shoot him in his tracks? |
41242 | (_ As the Second Sentry passes him_) It''s steel you''re shooting, ai n''t it? |
41242 | (_ Calling after the men_) And you will go away And leave this great cause hanging in mid air? |
41242 | (_ Calls back to the Governor_) Does it meet your expectations? |
41242 | (_ Cheers_) Did n''t they leave_ their_ Union? |
41242 | (_ Clinging to his hand_) What is it, papa? |
41242 | (_ Comes from the crowd to the militiamen_) Servin''the papers on the mine, you think? |
41242 | (_ Comes right and takes Harry Egerton''s two hands in his_) Well, boy? |
41242 | (_ Comes running forward_) I''ll have my car now, wo n''t I, daddy, daddy? |
41242 | (_ Comes sliding down the pole_) What''s the trouble? |
41242 | (_ Comes to Anderson_) In the line of work, What have you ever done? |
41242 | (_ Coming forward, notices the casts upon the ground_) You''re searching for the mine? |
41242 | (_ Coming toward him_) What business is it of yours what these men do? |
41242 | (_ Entering with the First Sentry_) Have you gone crazy, Buck? |
41242 | (_ Enters with the Chief of Police_) How large a force Did you send to the station? |
41242 | (_ Exasperated by the delay_) What''s the matter there, Melazzini? |
41242 | (_ Fills his pipe_) Is this the Company''s property out here? |
41242 | (_ Following Dicey_) Why in the hell do n''t you leave? |
41242 | (_ From above_) Who will go down Where all is sorrow, woe, and strife, Where unshaped things are jostling into life? |
41242 | (_ From back in the mill_) What did he say? |
41242 | (_ From the crowd_) Well? |
41242 | (_ From the crowd_) Well? |
41242 | (_ From the crowd_) Who makes the law? |
41242 | (_ From the crowd_) Will we get our places back? |
41242 | (_ From the crowd_) You''d have us starve? |
41242 | (_ From the edge of the crowd_) What are they sayin'', Mike? |
41242 | (_ From the group_) If you do n''t like it, Wes, why do n''t you leave? |
41242 | (_ Glancing up_) You Egerton? |
41242 | (_ Goes near the men and gets their line of vision_) That? |
41242 | (_ He sees Wes Dicey who, with Jim King and Rome Masters, has just come in, right_) What do you want? |
41242 | (_ Hurrying from the mill- yard_) What was that? |
41242 | (_ Joining the group_) What''s up? |
41242 | (_ Looking at his brow_) Have you been hurt? |
41242 | (_ Looks over in the car_) Did you find any hair- pins in the car This morning? |
41242 | (_ Mysteriously_) Harry, you say? |
41242 | (_ Mysteriously_) Why? |
41242 | (_ Near the door_) Who''s to be judge what''s for the Public Good? |
41242 | (_ Patten nods_) How''s the strike? |
41242 | (_ Peering about, sees the Figures_) What does this mean? |
41242 | (_ Points to the mountains_) Were those just weeds up there That''s been cleared off to get a better view? |
41242 | (_ Points toward the mill, then to the ground_) And if we go down, then where''s your Union? |
41242 | (_ Provoked_) What? |
41242 | (_ Running forward_) Who is it? |
41242 | (_ Speaks back as though into the bedroom_) You think the guard would let him come right through? |
41242 | (_ Stands for a moment collecting himself_) Men, my friends, What is it you are about to do? |
41242 | (_ Starts for the mill- gate, then turns_) Who said''shut up''when some man back there cried''Hurrah for Egerton''? |
41242 | (_ Starts for the room, then stops_) What shall I tell them, father? |
41242 | (_ Stopping midway between the bedroom and Anderson, to the strangers_) What do you say? |
41242 | (_ Takes the will from his pocket_) Why did you give me this? |
41242 | (_ The stranger goes out_)(_ Ardsley calls toward the room, forward left_) What''s the news from the mill, Charles? |
41242 | (_ To Anderson, who is walking about_) How much does this assay? |
41242 | (_ To Egerton_) You do n''t have strikes up there? |
41242 | (_ To Harry Egerton_) And this is final, eh? |
41242 | (_ To Harvey Anderson_) Do n''t you know better than do such a thing? |
41242 | (_ To Harvey Anderson_) You here alone? |
41242 | (_ To the Butler_) Why do you stand that way? |
41242 | (_ To the Doctor_) And you''ll attend to everything? |
41242 | (_ To the Second Sentry_) Eh? |
41242 | (_ To the crowd_) God playing Santa Claus among the pines-- Why ai n''t you fellows had your stockings up? |
41242 | (_ To the militiaman, irritably_) Who''s in command here, I should like to know? |
41242 | (_ Vaguely_) The men? |
41242 | (_ Who has been watching_) Know what you''re doing, Buck? |
41242 | (_ Who has just come in, left_) Clean off whose feet? |
41242 | (_ Who has started to follow the men_) What is it, Harvey? |
41242 | (_ With a stick he has picked up comes from the mill- yard_) What do you mean by interfering here? |
41242 | (_ With a swift glance toward Dicey, King and Masters_) And give our lives, if need be, for this thing? |
41242 | (_ With interest_) From the mill down in Foreston, you mean? |
41242 | A little horn? |
41242 | A riot? |
41242 | Ah, what is this? |
41242 | Ai n''t Braddock, too, a slave? |
41242 | Ai n''t I stood by her, boys? |
41242 | Ai n''t it the strain Of breaking with his family? |
41242 | Ai n''t that true, boys? |
41242 | Ai n''t they all Wantin''to work? |
41242 | And Dicey----? |
41242 | And back there red- skins striking fire from flint? |
41242 | And besides that--(_ Calls toward the gate_) What''s up? |
41242 | And friends are so much closer, do n''t you think? |
41242 | And her new necklace, did you notice it? |
41242 | And how far am I from it? |
41242 | And how''ll they not own you? |
41242 | And if I do n''t you''ll back the men, eh? |
41242 | And if you say the Law''s the same for all, Then why ca n''t we take theirs when we need bread? |
41242 | And in the camps? |
41242 | And it had the sign cut in the bark, eh? |
41242 | And knowing what, my dear? |
41242 | And on whose terms? |
41242 | And shall we as we climb to better things Reach down no help to others, but hold fast To all we get? |
41242 | And these men that ca n''t work, they stand for that, Having no voice at all in their affairs? |
41242 | And to see Chadbourne----Are you listening? |
41242 | And we need something bigger than we are, Do n''t we, if they do with their mills and lands? |
41242 | And what are forests for but to cut down? |
41242 | And what we''ve won, What is it that keeps it won? |
41242 | And what''s the price? |
41242 | And where''s the mine that you was goin''to share? |
41242 | And wo n''t give up? |
41242 | And you expect men to obey a law That gives no hope of anything but this? |
41242 | And you think this idea''s capable of extension? |
41242 | And you''ll go back then to the fishing grounds And sink your nets again? |
41242 | And you, And you back there, you of the Living Mill-- For all time, shall we say it? |
41242 | And you, You, Governor, do you go before the people With all you know? |
41242 | Are others leaving? |
41242 | Are things so bad Down at the mill, my friends, that you must leave? |
41242 | Are we one, comrades? |
41242 | Are you Sam? |
41242 | Before this search, you mean? |
41242 | Boys, suppose they say,''First come, first served, and we do n''t need the rest''? |
41242 | But ghosts of trees? |
41242 | But if the Company should n''t choose to sell? |
41242 | But in this struggle are you men alone? |
41242 | But look here, pards, are you calling off this sale Or simply trying, as it seems to me, To make him take the goods at the old price? |
41242 | But what can I do? |
41242 | But where would this land be? |
41242 | But why just now? |
41242 | By sun- down, do n''t it? |
41242 | Came down from where? |
41242 | Captain, will you get my overcoat? |
41242 | Come up to shake hands, eh, and say, Good- bye? |
41242 | Coming to see me, eh? |
41242 | Could n''t I show my derricks on the walls? |
41242 | Did n''t expect it? |
41242 | Did n''t you see these soldiers? |
41242 | Did you ever see Anything to equal that reception hall? |
41242 | Do n''t settle it with you, eh? |
41242 | Do n''t you know, Harvey, About the rolling stone? |
41242 | Do n''t you see through his game? |
41242 | Do n''t you see? |
41242 | Do you hear? |
41242 | Do you understand? |
41242 | Drinking and gambling? |
41242 | Editor Ardsley? |
41242 | Egerton? |
41242 | Eh? |
41242 | Eh? |
41242 | Eight kegs, you say? |
41242 | Flowers, my child? |
41242 | For every man I met Seemed just about to ask,''What side are you on?'' |
41242 | From Foreston, I mean? |
41242 | Further, Great Master? |
41242 | General Chadbourne? |
41242 | Get tired? |
41242 | Got to accept his terms or not work, eh? |
41242 | Governor? |
41242 | Grub for another cruise? |
41242 | Hain''t you the rubies? |
41242 | Harry, are you well? |
41242 | Harry, is it true You kept the men from going back to work? |
41242 | Has God no place in business, my young brother? |
41242 | Has he never, never mentioned Donald''s name In his delirium? |
41242 | Has n''t he failed, and miserably, with the men? |
41242 | Have I done anything that you know, Harvey, That could have wronged the men or any of them? |
41242 | Have millions, would n''t he? |
41242 | Have the men gone back? |
41242 | Have they brought in more men? |
41242 | Have you asked your father? |
41242 | Have you some place in mind? |
41242 | How came you by this thing? |
41242 | How did it happen, dad? |
41242 | How do you mean? |
41242 | How is he now? |
41242 | How large a force is it they''re counting on? |
41242 | How long have you been hunting for this thing? |
41242 | How so? |
41242 | How would you spiritualize the oil business? |
41242 | How''s he seem to be? |
41242 | I recollect, and it''s not years ago, Receiving a petition, and a large one-- Some six or seven thousand? |
41242 | I think I heard you say That you were with the rangers at San Juan? |
41242 | I wonder who it is? |
41242 | I? |
41242 | If it was fair last week, then why not now? |
41242 | If they come back, You''ll give the boys the places that they had, All of them? |
41242 | In Egerton, you mean? |
41242 | In any way? |
41242 | Is he as bad as that? |
41242 | Is his name Egerton That planted all those pines? |
41242 | Is it because the earnings have increased? |
41242 | Is it because they own the mills and lands? |
41242 | Is n''t it strange? |
41242 | Is n''t that Captain Haskell? |
41242 | Is n''t that some one? |
41242 | Is n''t there aspiration in all this,(_ Indicating the house_) A reaching out toward God, and a love, too, Of all that God hath made? |
41242 | Is the Doctor with him? |
41242 | Is there no way, no way? |
41242 | Is there something I can do? |
41242 | It ai n''t the faction? |
41242 | Jergens, is he One of our men? |
41242 | Just get''em in your pen, eh? |
41242 | Just where is Foreston? |
41242 | Lie down a while, Wo n''t you? |
41242 | Make''em a little speech? |
41242 | Mill- hands? |
41242 | Mother, has no word come? |
41242 | Mother, where is Harry? |
41242 | No secrets, not a one? |
41242 | No? |
41242 | No? |
41242 | Non- Union? |
41242 | Nothing at all? |
41242 | Now it''s this side; see? |
41242 | On what foundations, Harry? |
41242 | Or Christmas trees? |
41242 | Or cotton? |
41242 | Or do you intend henceforth never to lift The voice of protest, silent whatever comes? |
41242 | Or have they starved you till you''ve lost your grit? |
41242 | Or if you have, what are you doing here Weighing yourselves out on the same old scales, Men against bread? |
41242 | Or is it that you think the few should rule? |
41242 | Or is it their mercy that you''re counting on? |
41242 | Or oil? |
41242 | Or say the lad we''ve got in Washington-- What if he said,''If you do n''t like my way, There''s ships there in the harbor?'' |
41242 | Our homes? |
41242 | Out on the plains, my boy, Tending your cattle, did you speak with them And reason with them? |
41242 | Pard, let me ask you this: Suppose you do land with your Union boat, The bosses on the shore saying all right; What is it you land for? |
41242 | Provoking, is n''t it? |
41242 | Purchase it? |
41242 | See anything of Egerton coming up? |
41242 | Seen the evening papers? |
41242 | Shall I take charge of him, Mr. Egerton? |
41242 | Sing to your cattle? |
41242 | Suppose they shut down till the ice blocks there? |
41242 | Suppose they_ do n''t_ start up? |
41242 | Suppose you''d made your fortune out of copper? |
41242 | Tended cattle, eh? |
41242 | That would remove the causes, would it not, Of the misunderstanding? |
41242 | That''s east? |
41242 | That''s the point; on whose terms? |
41242 | The Butler appears_) Has no word come? |
41242 | The Governor? |
41242 | The black cap, eh? |
41242 | The great unknown Contributor to the Citizens''Relief? |
41242 | The guard will be off duty? |
41242 | The mansion all lit up-- what''s going on? |
41242 | The question now is, had n''t we better make For this shore here? |
41242 | Them that''s had it all these years? |
41242 | Then how''s it their affair if we unite? |
41242 | Then our forefathers with their tallow- dips Watching the easy drills slip up and down? |
41242 | Then what do I mean? |
41242 | Then what''s the trouble? |
41242 | Then what''s your proposition? |
41242 | Then where''ll we be? |
41242 | Then who is responsible? |
41242 | Then why do you let Jergens run the mill? |
41242 | Then why not weeks ago When there was strife? |
41242 | There is a road? |
41242 | They''ll think twice, wo n''t they, before they stay out? |
41242 | Things going all right, Sam? |
41242 | Things going pretty well? |
41242 | Think she can see us, pa? |
41242 | Think we do n''t know you, eh? |
41242 | Think we''d leave? |
41242 | Think you could govern men and round them up If need be? |
41242 | This Williams, I suppose, has gotten rich Controlling all these men? |
41242 | To look about for what? |
41242 | War or submission, eh? |
41242 | Was n''t it strange that he should hear the bells? |
41242 | Well, my tin soldiers? |
41242 | What about us whose places have been filled? |
41242 | What business have you here? |
41242 | What did he say? |
41242 | What did she mean by that? |
41242 | What do they care for Country or for Art, Or any of the higher things of life? |
41242 | What do you mean? |
41242 | What do you mean? |
41242 | What do you mean? |
41242 | What do you say, Sam? |
41242 | What do you say, kids? |
41242 | What do you say, my father? |
41242 | What do you say, pard? |
41242 | What do you say? |
41242 | What do you say? |
41242 | What do you say? |
41242 | What do you think of that? |
41242 | What does he mean by that? |
41242 | What for? |
41242 | What have you got to do with it? |
41242 | What have you to do with it? |
41242 | What homes? |
41242 | What if Donald knew Who''s kept the strike afoot? |
41242 | What if he said,''If you do n''t like my way, If you ai n''t satisfied, there''s the road off there?'' |
41242 | What is it that gives him power to talk that way? |
41242 | What is it you hear? |
41242 | What is it you''ve done, Harry? |
41242 | What is it, Editor Ardsley? |
41242 | What is it, Harry? |
41242 | What is it, Harvey? |
41242 | What is it, partner? |
41242 | What time is it? |
41242 | What will to- morrow be and the next day And years to come if you surrender now? |
41242 | What will we do, Sam? |
41242 | What will we do? |
41242 | What would it be? |
41242 | What would we better do? |
41242 | What would you do? |
41242 | What would you have men do? |
41242 | What you mean? |
41242 | What you mean? |
41242 | What''s in the boy that these men follow him, And all his life so quiet, almost timid? |
41242 | What''s it all mean? |
41242 | What''s it to you? |
41242 | What''s the matter, daddy? |
41242 | What''s the matter? |
41242 | What''s the matter? |
41242 | What''s the news now? |
41242 | What''s the poor to do, Things goin''up an''wages goin''down? |
41242 | What''s the poor to do? |
41242 | What''s the trouble? |
41242 | What''s the trouble? |
41242 | What''s the word, Cap.? |
41242 | What''s this mean? |
41242 | What''s time to do with right and wrong, my brother? |
41242 | What''s underneath it all? |
41242 | What''s underneath the forest? |
41242 | What''s your name? |
41242 | What''s your opinion of the trouble, Bishop? |
41242 | What''s your opinion of these mysteries, Bishop? |
41242 | What, daddy? |
41242 | What? |
41242 | What? |
41242 | When are you fellows going to dry your nets, Haul up your boat and say,''Let''s weigh the fish''? |
41242 | When you know you''re losing friends who love what''s right? |
41242 | Where did he go? |
41242 | Where did you leave off? |
41242 | Where in the hell do you hail from any way? |
41242 | Where will you go? |
41242 | Where will you go? |
41242 | Where would this be, This beautiful thing that Colonel Egerton Has built with so much labor and so much taste? |
41242 | Where''s Gladys? |
41242 | Where''s all that gone? |
41242 | Who are you? |
41242 | Who are you? |
41242 | Who had twelve hundred dollars in the bank, A present from a Christmas long ago? |
41242 | Who is it, Harvey? |
41242 | Who is it? |
41242 | Who is this Harvey Anderson? |
41242 | Who knows? |
41242 | Who signed this name here? |
41242 | Who will go down? |
41242 | Who''ll get the catch This time? |
41242 | Who''phoned it in? |
41242 | Who''s Harvey Anderson? |
41242 | Who''s got a cigarette to trade for news? |
41242 | Who''s that? |
41242 | Whose voice was that? |
41242 | Why ai n''t that enough? |
41242 | Why did n''t you stay out on the mountains? |
41242 | Why did n''t you think of it when you first went out? |
41242 | Why did you tell Aug. Jergens that you would? |
41242 | Why do n''t you show them? |
41242 | Why do you ask? |
41242 | Why do you men keep going out that way? |
41242 | Why do you not Go to those places that have been prepared By charitable, Christian men and women For this very purpose, to relieve distress? |
41242 | Why do you put it that way? |
41242 | Why do you say too late? |
41242 | Why is it he can do that,(_ Lifts his hand_) and trains come in With soldiers? |
41242 | Why should n''t they? |
41242 | Why wait until the starving time is past? |
41242 | Why? |
41242 | Why? |
41242 | Will you Put the guards on? |
41242 | Will you be stronger then a year from now, Your Union broken up, your wages less, And this defeat behind you dampening all? |
41242 | Will you, when you know you''re wrong? |
41242 | With the cattle? |
41242 | Wo n''t I? |
41242 | Wo n''t you? |
41242 | Worked all these years and yet you''ve got no bread? |
41242 | Would that be right? |
41242 | Would there be any valid reason then Why Peace should not return and all be friends As formerly? |
41242 | You a Union man? |
41242 | You ai n''t heard nothin''from the station yet? |
41242 | You ai n''t took no offence at what I said? |
41242 | You do n''t belong To a Union? |
41242 | You give it up? |
41242 | You going in? |
41242 | You got some grub that you can spare, boys? |
41242 | You had men pose for this? |
41242 | You know the Editor of the Courier? |
41242 | You know the way? |
41242 | You know the way? |
41242 | You made it plain that he must come at once? |
41242 | You mean to tell us that you planned all this? |
41242 | You mean you''ll still hold on? |
41242 | You mean you''ll stir up mutiny again? |
41242 | You reckon they''ll go back, sir? |
41242 | You see those lights down there? |
41242 | You surely have not spoken of this to him? |
41242 | You think he recognized me? |
41242 | You think we''re running a menagerie? |
41242 | You think you''d be As patient if the prize was for yourself? |
41242 | You understand that, do you? |
41242 | You want old Egerton to have it, eh? |
41242 | You want us all to go down, eh? |
41242 | You wronged them? |
41242 | You''d better be off, Bentley, do n''t you think? |
41242 | You''ll have a band play too? |
41242 | You''re going to the city? |
41242 | You''re of the force that''s huntin''for the mine? |
41242 | You''ve filed your claim though? |
41242 | You''ve noticed any change these past few days? |
41242 | Your purpose then is to retain the mill? |
41242 | _ My_ bayonets? |
41242 | _ Will_ you be good? |
31485 | ''Meenx,''she mimicked,"''you mek to defy me in my own house? |
31485 | ''What you say,_ ma chérie_? 31485 A lexicon? |
31485 | A minion? |
31485 | A socialist? |
31485 | Am I? 31485 Analysis?" |
31485 | And get another job? |
31485 | And just what might that mean, Bennie? |
31485 | Another kind of book to make you tear up flowers? |
31485 | Are we let out? |
31485 | Are you determined to resign? |
31485 | Are you related to that Hartwell at the mill? |
31485 | Are you with us, or are you going down alone? |
31485 | At ze mine ze boy get two stick powdaire, four candle, all day, eh? 31485 But my brother?" |
31485 | Ca n''t you give me my answer, dear? 31485 Cable jump sheave? |
31485 | Can we take our bunks till morning, sir? |
31485 | Can you walk now? |
31485 | Contract it, eh? |
31485 | Did Long work last night? |
31485 | Did Nine and Ten run all night? |
31485 | Did n''t I get a bad pair of boots out of the commissary, and did n''t he give me another pair in their place? 31485 Did they know you would meet me to- day?" |
31485 | Did you? |
31485 | Do n''t you ever get mad? |
31485 | Do n''t you ever pick flowers? |
31485 | Do n''t you want to see my garden? |
31485 | Do you feel like gasping here? |
31485 | Do you supply the men as liberally as you do your own table, Firmstone? |
31485 | Does the altitude trouble you? |
31485 | Get for what? |
31485 | Getting scared, Frenchy? 31485 Go back to the mine to- night----""And miss all the fun down here?" |
31485 | Have you found the names of these? |
31485 | Have you nothing to say to this? |
31485 | Have you told Élise that Pierre is not her father? |
31485 | He keeps too much ze glass- eye on ze plate, on ze stamp, heh? |
31485 | He''s not bin populaire wiz ze boy? |
31485 | How are the contractors making out? |
31485 | How can you get up there? |
31485 | How do you find their names? |
31485 | How is that? |
31485 | How long am I expected to wait? |
31485 | How long before I can expect an answer? |
31485 | How long did you go to school? |
31485 | How long you bin work in ze mill? |
31485 | How much did the company put up to stand you off? |
31485 | How much did you get? |
31485 | How much he bin discount? |
31485 | How much she bin? |
31485 | How old are you? |
31485 | How old are you? |
31485 | How you bin mek me, heh? |
31485 | How you know she bin feefty tousand dollaire hin ze safe? |
31485 | How''s Jim? |
31485 | How''s that? |
31485 | How? |
31485 | If one man breaks five tons of ore a day, and another man breaks only one, will the union see that both get the same pay? |
31485 | If you are ever in trouble you will let me know? |
31485 | If you know not where she is, how shall you call her? 31485 In danger?" |
31485 | Is it Morrison, or hang up? |
31485 | Is it very hard to learn? |
31485 | Is it? |
31485 | Is that all? |
31485 | Is that an invitation? |
31485 | Is the union organised? |
31485 | Is there no way to stop it? |
31485 | Is your breakfast all right? |
31485 | Is your case all in? |
31485 | Is Élise in trouble? |
31485 | Jack Haskins''s gang comin''? |
31485 | Just what might that mean? |
31485 | Looks as if I were a pretty bad lot, does n''t it? 31485 May I go if I give my answer?" |
31485 | Me? |
31485 | Meestaire Firmstone, he bin come from ze mine? |
31485 | Meestaire Hartwell will do me ze honaire to mek ze drink? |
31485 | Miss who? |
31485 | No; why do you ask? |
31485 | No? |
31485 | Oh, is that all? |
31485 | Oh, is that all? |
31485 | Oh, you''ve been to school, then, have you? |
31485 | Only what? |
31485 | Pets, is it? 31485 Pierre wants her to marry that Morrison?" |
31485 | Really, have n''t you been laughing at me, all this time? 31485 Shall I call her?" |
31485 | Shall I carry the sack for you? |
31485 | Shall I go on? |
31485 | Shall I lay off the men? |
31485 | So you are the old man, are you? |
31485 | Suppose I do neither? |
31485 | The old man? |
31485 | The question is,resumed Firmstone,"was the safe taken from the stage before the accident?" |
31485 | The union ai n''t going to take up no private grievance? |
31485 | The union will equalise the pay? |
31485 | The union will run the company, but who''ll run the union? |
31485 | The whole push fired? |
31485 | Then, if the safe is never recovered, we have only your word that the bullion was put in there, as you stated? |
31485 | There''s Thompson, the mine foreman----"Jim Thompson? 31485 They ai n''t, heh? |
31485 | They''ll make the company ventilate the mines and keep bad ground timbered? |
31485 | They? 31485 Things quieting down at the mine?" |
31485 | To hell wiz Firmstone, heh? |
31485 | To school? 31485 To school?" |
31485 | To what difficulties do you refer? |
31485 | To what li''l game you refer? |
31485 | Under the circumstances, do n''t you think it is of the utmost importance that the safe be recovered? |
31485 | Uses his own tape and rod, eh? |
31485 | Well, do n''t you? |
31485 | Well, how are you? |
31485 | Well, what I can do for you this time? |
31485 | Well, what do you make of it? |
31485 | Well, what in hell you up here for? 31485 Well, what now?" |
31485 | Well, what of it? |
31485 | Well,Hartwell looked up abruptly;"how are things going?" |
31485 | Well,he asked,"how do you find things?" |
31485 | Well? |
31485 | Well? |
31485 | Well? |
31485 | Well? |
31485 | Well? |
31485 | What are you doing here? |
31485 | What are you doing to those flowers? |
31485 | What are you feeding us? |
31485 | What are you supposed to know? |
31485 | What are you talking about? |
31485 | What batteries did these two come from? |
31485 | What did you mean, then? |
31485 | What do you make of it? |
31485 | What do you make of that? |
31485 | What do you make out of that? |
31485 | What do you mean by that? |
31485 | What do you mean? |
31485 | What do you mean? |
31485 | What do you mean? |
31485 | What do you propose, then? |
31485 | What do you say to this? |
31485 | What do you think? 31485 What do you want?" |
31485 | What does that mean? |
31485 | What else are you out here for? |
31485 | What else did you study? |
31485 | What for? |
31485 | What for? |
31485 | What have I to say? |
31485 | What have you been talking about? |
31485 | What if it had exploded? |
31485 | What is it, Luna? |
31485 | What is it, mammy? 31485 What is it? |
31485 | What is that? |
31485 | What kind of a racket, for instance? |
31485 | What kind of a trip did you have out? |
31485 | What little book are you talking about? |
31485 | What makes you think so? |
31485 | What makes you think that Pierre hates the old man? |
31485 | What sort of a crowd are they? |
31485 | What time ze bank open, eh? |
31485 | What will I do with these sacks? |
31485 | What you mean in hell? |
31485 | What''s a fellow to do? |
31485 | What''s a minion? |
31485 | What''s a socialist? |
31485 | What''s going on? |
31485 | What''s that you''re saying? |
31485 | What''s the matter with Morrison? |
31485 | What''s the matter with letting off a box or two of powder under the tram? |
31485 | What''s the matter, Bennie? |
31485 | What''s the use of barking our shins, climbing for last year''s birds''nests? 31485 What''s up, Zephyr?" |
31485 | What? |
31485 | When are you going to send Élise away to school? |
31485 | When can you begin? |
31485 | When will that special be here? |
31485 | When will you have? |
31485 | When ze wattaire bin mek ze godown, you bin find her, heh? |
31485 | Where are you going? |
31485 | Where did the book get the names? |
31485 | Where is Zephyr? |
31485 | Where is he? |
31485 | Where is Élise? |
31485 | Where under the sun did you get these? |
31485 | Where''s Firmstone? |
31485 | Where''ve you been this long time? |
31485 | Who are you, anyway? |
31485 | Who discovered, amidst toils and dangers and deprivations and snowslides, these rich mines of gold and silver? 31485 Who have you got strung?" |
31485 | Who is Cassandra? |
31485 | Who measures up? |
31485 | Who mek ze troub'', heh? 31485 Who opened these mountain wilds?" |
31485 | Who saw you put the bullion in the safe? |
31485 | Who works on Nine and Ten? |
31485 | Who''s Webster? |
31485 | Who''s going to open up? |
31485 | Why are n''t you helping Madame at the Blue Goose? |
31485 | Why ca n''t you talk sense? |
31485 | Why do n''t you speak? 31485 Why do they always call him the old man? |
31485 | Why do you ask? |
31485 | Why not? |
31485 | Why, howdy, Jim? 31485 Will you give me a blank?" |
31485 | Will you take the job? |
31485 | Will you teach me? |
31485 | Will you tell me what this means? |
31485 | Wo n''t you come in? |
31485 | You are aware, of course, that I shall have to make a full report of the accident to the stage to our directors? |
31485 | You are n''t common folks, are you? |
31485 | You are reliable people to trust with a convalescent, are n''t you? 31485 You are sure I''ll not trespass?" |
31485 | You bin got hall you want, Meestaire Firmstone? |
31485 | You came to warn me? |
31485 | You get ze check every month? |
31485 | You go in the tram? |
31485 | You know the last lot of ore you pinched? 31485 You mean Marshall Pass?" |
31485 | You say you can give no explanation of this? |
31485 | You think, then, the bullion was never put into the safe? |
31485 | You thought you would scare me; now, did n''t you? |
31485 | You understand from this, do you not, that the gold recovered from the plates should then be twenty- two dollars and twenty- five cents a ton? |
31485 | You understand, then, that the ore taken from the mine and sent to the mill in May averaged twenty- five dollars a ton? |
31485 | You will? 31485 You''ll teach me; will you? |
31485 | You''re an out- and- out socialist, are n''t you? |
31485 | You''re game? |
31485 | You''re getting too high- toned for common folks, ai n''t you? |
31485 | You''re not going now, are you? |
31485 | You''re sure he''s at the mine? |
31485 | You''re with me? |
31485 | Ze men no mek ze talk''bout feefty tousand dollaire, no mek ze talk''bout honly pig lead, heh? |
31485 | _ Bien!_ Sunday an''ze holiday? |
31485 | _ Bien!_ You mek ze kick for noddings? |
31485 | _ Bien!_ You tink you bin damn smart, heh? 31485 _ Bien!_ Ze safe, where she bin now?" |
31485 | _ Moi?_He shrugged his shoulders. |
31485 | _ Moi?_Pierre replaced the bottle of acid on the shelf and picked up a pair of tongs. |
31485 | _ Moi?_he asked. |
31485 | ''Vaire is my whip, my dog whip? |
31485 | ''Élise bin seexten to- day, heh? |
31485 | After six months''trial, in which we have allowed you a perfectly free hand, can you conscientiously say that you have bettered our prospects?" |
31485 | Ai n''t I do all right by Élise?" |
31485 | Ai n''t she just fed me and flowered me and coddled me general? |
31485 | And Firmstone? |
31485 | And you want to help them same poor devils?" |
31485 | Are n''t you almost ready? |
31485 | Are you heeled?" |
31485 | Are you on?" |
31485 | As for God, who ever saw him? |
31485 | Bimeby she tink to liv''her hol''daddy and her hol''mammy and bin gone hoff wiz anodder feller,_ hein_?'' |
31485 | But what instinct is there to guide the human soul that, quickened by unselfish love, is yet walled in by the Stygian darkness of an ignorant life? |
31485 | But, man to man, Mr. Hartwell, ai n''t the superintendent got a thousand chances to steal, and steal big, where a common workman ai n''t got one?" |
31485 | Can you wait a few minutes?" |
31485 | Comprenny?" |
31485 | Did any of it get away?" |
31485 | Did you go through square root?" |
31485 | Do I not have plenty ze troub'', but you mus''mek ze more? |
31485 | Do all the big folks back East have to have books and go to school to learn such things? |
31485 | Do n''t I know him now? |
31485 | Do n''t I know how hard it is?" |
31485 | Do n''t I tek good care, also? |
31485 | Do n''t you know what I want to ask? |
31485 | Do n''t you understand?" |
31485 | Do they say much about him?" |
31485 | Do you agree?" |
31485 | Do you get it? |
31485 | Do you get your pay for the fifteen days? |
31485 | Do you hear? |
31485 | Do you hear? |
31485 | Do you think I will ever grow into a dear, sober old thing like you? |
31485 | Do you think she will ever be ashamed of me?" |
31485 | Do you want me to teach you square root?" |
31485 | For what end? |
31485 | From behind, Madame felt two soft hands close on her straining eyes, and a sympathetic voice:"Has daddy been scolding you again? |
31485 | Get on to anything at the bridge?" |
31485 | Glancing at the miner, he remarked, benevolently:"Smelling trouble, and pulling out, eh?" |
31485 | Got another Camp Bird?" |
31485 | Had she not thought of all this a thousand times? |
31485 | Hall ze res''ze time wiz no li''l Élise? |
31485 | Hartwell?" |
31485 | Have n''t you got something good in your pack? |
31485 | Heh? |
31485 | Heh? |
31485 | Heh? |
31485 | Heh?" |
31485 | How about the magazine?" |
31485 | How are you coming on with the organisation?" |
31485 | How did it happen?" |
31485 | How did you find out all that?" |
31485 | How did you learn to make flowers?" |
31485 | How do you propose to help it?" |
31485 | How long is he going to keep either a thief or a fool in your place?" |
31485 | How many times have you fired up?" |
31485 | How would it have been with Madame had she years ago chosen him instead of Pierre? |
31485 | How''s things at the mine?" |
31485 | I----"But Morrison interrupted:"You''ve been squealing, have you? |
31485 | If Haskins''s gang is wiped out to- morrow, and that glass- eyed supe with them, who''ll get jumped? |
31485 | If Pierre cared so much for li''l Élise how much more reason had she to care? |
31485 | If the mine and mill both get blowed up, who''s done it? |
31485 | If we ca n''t stop him can we get rid of him?" |
31485 | If you do n''t know your business what are you there for, and how long are you going to stay? |
31485 | In the first place, how did you find out that I had been subjecting the men to this humiliating espionage, as you call it?" |
31485 | Is n''t that so?" |
31485 | Is that our job?" |
31485 | Is there any more information you want that you wo n''t get?" |
31485 | It would cut her off from them forever, and what was her gain? |
31485 | It''s grub, is it? |
31485 | Just what does it assay?" |
31485 | Madame did not fully understand, but what did it matter? |
31485 | Me? |
31485 | Me? |
31485 | Minion?" |
31485 | Morrison''s eyes fell from before her; but he demanded:"Where did you pick up that-- that scab?" |
31485 | No take ten, fifteen stick, ten, fifteen candle, use two, four, sell ze res''?" |
31485 | No weapons? |
31485 | Nor of rods that made a hole three feet, when it was four?" |
31485 | Now what I want to know is this: Have n''t the men just as good a right to post notices as the company has?" |
31485 | Of course, the law will take your time before the company''s; but what does that amount to? |
31485 | Of what value is it to a man to do two others, if he gets soaked in the neck himself?" |
31485 | Only, if I was there, I could n''t be here, and it''s just glorious here, is n''t it? |
31485 | Or will you allow me?" |
31485 | Perhaps she did not realise the danger, but was he to hold it of less value on that account? |
31485 | Pierre? |
31485 | Say, Goggles, how are you off for chuck? |
31485 | Self- defence?" |
31485 | Shall we hang up ten, or put on Morrison?" |
31485 | She mek no complain, heh?" |
31485 | She no say,''Madame Marie, tek my li''l babby back Eas''to my friend,_ hein_? |
31485 | Sixtin year? |
31485 | So she learn speak gran''? |
31485 | So she tink of me, Pierre, one li''l Frenchmens, not good enough for her, for mek her shame wiz her gran''friends? |
31485 | Suppose we go out one by one and shoot back? |
31485 | Suppose you go out like lambs? |
31485 | Suppose you want your money right away, do you get it?" |
31485 | Taking a nap?" |
31485 | That was an awful long time ago, though, was n''t it?" |
31485 | The idea was revolting, but what could he do? |
31485 | The question is, how are we going to stop him? |
31485 | Then addressing Firmstone,"I suppose our quarters upstairs are in order?" |
31485 | Then, after a moment''s pause, he asked, explosively,--"Was there that amount?" |
31485 | Think I ca n''t run a mine?" |
31485 | Tipped me the grand ha- ha; did you? |
31485 | Was he lavish in his garnishment of the Blue Goose? |
31485 | Was he to accept what she gave him, and then through fear of malicious tongues abandon her to her fate without a thought? |
31485 | Was it because I ran away this morning? |
31485 | Was it necessary to force the choice? |
31485 | We mek good care of ze li''l Élise, me and you, heh? |
31485 | We sen''away Élise? |
31485 | What are you going to do? |
31485 | What did you call it?" |
31485 | What do you do? |
31485 | What do you say?" |
31485 | What have you been saying?" |
31485 | What if Pierre had fiercely protected her from the knowledge of the more loathsome vices of a mining camp? |
31485 | What if it is murder and one of the gang is pulled? |
31485 | What if the clutch should slip that held the bucket in place? |
31485 | What is it?" |
31485 | What makes the rich richer? |
31485 | What matter? |
31485 | What new kind of bug is biting you?" |
31485 | What next?" |
31485 | What next?" |
31485 | What was it about this time? |
31485 | What you tink, heh? |
31485 | What''s a lexicon?" |
31485 | What''s it for, then? |
31485 | What''s the matter?" |
31485 | What''s the trouble, Zephyr? |
31485 | What''s up?" |
31485 | What''s zoo-- what did you call it-- about?" |
31485 | What, then? |
31485 | When ze wattaire mek ze godown, you not find ze safe?" |
31485 | Where are you going, Arthur?" |
31485 | Where did you learn them?" |
31485 | Where in hell''s Jack?" |
31485 | Where''s the Rainbow trail?" |
31485 | Where''s your nerve?" |
31485 | Who are they?" |
31485 | Who but the honest sons of honest toil? |
31485 | Who else?" |
31485 | Who else?" |
31485 | Who made them accessible by waggon trail and railroads and burros? |
31485 | Who mek her grow up strong? |
31485 | Who mek ze care for ze li''l babby? |
31485 | Who''s to blame?" |
31485 | Why did n''t you tell me about Élise?" |
31485 | Why do n''t you go?" |
31485 | Why had he not thought of it before? |
31485 | Why had she not thought of them before? |
31485 | Why is it that a poor labouring man is always suspected and looked out for, and those as has bigger chances goes free? |
31485 | Why not talk this over sensibly?" |
31485 | Why not telephone?" |
31485 | Why should she? |
31485 | Why?" |
31485 | Will Miss Hartwell be down soon?" |
31485 | Will you attend to your business and leave my affairs alone?" |
31485 | Will you come back some time for mine?" |
31485 | Will you give me the right to ask?" |
31485 | Will you take the job?" |
31485 | With which of them was Zephyr most familiar, and was there any one by means of which Zephyr could thwart him by threatening exposure? |
31485 | Wo n''t Frenchy pull the long face when he hears of your find?" |
31485 | Wo n''t you be seated?" |
31485 | Wo n''t you share our lunch?" |
31485 | Would n''t you like to go as far as the Falls? |
31485 | Would you like to have me teach you?" |
31485 | You ai n''t in no hurry?" |
31485 | You are quite sure you wo n''t get tired waiting? |
31485 | You bin see her, heh?" |
31485 | You do n''t object to music, Goggles?" |
31485 | You do n''t want me to leave you; do you? |
31485 | You got a gun?" |
31485 | You keep your own time; but what does that amount to? |
31485 | You know I was sixteen my last birthday, just a week ago?" |
31485 | You mek me, Pierre, you, grow hol''wiz noddings? |
31485 | You never heard of tapes that measured thirteen inches to the foot, did you? |
31485 | You remember? |
31485 | You said at the Devil''s Elbow?" |
31485 | You see that? |
31485 | You sit on him, heh? |
31485 | You wan''mek me give up_ la bonne_ Élise? |
31485 | You want to organise a union?" |
31485 | You want Élise restored to her friends?" |
31485 | You will, heh?" |
31485 | You''ll eat a breakfast after my cooking?" |
31485 | You''re going? |
31485 | You''ve heard of my new claim, Bennie?" |
31485 | Zey find no feefty tousand dollaire-- only pig lead, heh?" |
31485 | _ Baste!_ She read, she write, she mek ze figure, is it not suffice? |
31485 | _ Comment?_ I show you." |
31485 | _ Comment?_"Luna''s courage was returning in the light. |
31485 | _ Hein?_ Ansaire!'' |
31485 | _ Hein?_ M''sieu Mo- reeson. |
31485 | _ P''quoi, M''sieur?_ For this. |
31485 | _ P''quoi?_ Mek Meestaire Firmstone quit, eh? |
31485 | _ P''quoi?_ Mek Meestaire Firmstone quit, eh? |
31485 | _ P''quoi?_ So she learn mek_ teedle, teedle_ on ze piano? |
31485 | _ P''quoi?_ So she learn mek_ teedle, teedle_ on ze piano? |
31485 | _ P''quoi?_ Ze company say Meestaire Firmstone one good man; he mek ze boy kick. |
31485 | _ P''quoi?_"His face blazed again as he looked up wrathfully. |
31485 | Élise go school in one beeg city, heh? |
41154 | A general talk? 41154 A letter?" |
41154 | Against youse? |
41154 | All right? |
41154 | An''why do they say it, eh? 41154 And a strike,--how about that?" |
41154 | And after you win, there''ll be a strike? |
41154 | And he''s alive? 41154 And if I do n''t do it?" |
41154 | And in the second place? |
41154 | And the''if''? |
41154 | And why did you have to? |
41154 | And yet you could-- stay away two months?--till I sent for you? |
41154 | And you believe this? |
41154 | And you worked for a couple of days on the St. Etienne Hotel? |
41154 | And you''ve been talking this? |
41154 | And you''ve done that, Tom Keating, after what I, your wife, said to you only last week? 41154 Anna scared? |
41154 | Any remarks? |
41154 | Anybody kilt? |
41154 | Anything new? |
41154 | Are n''t you coming to bed? |
41154 | Are they for you? 41154 Are you all in for Baxter''s plan?" |
41154 | Are you running my business, or am I? |
41154 | Are you sure you ca n''t work at your trade? |
41154 | As I was sayin'', do n''t youse think your foreman on the St. Etienne job is a pretty bum outfit? |
41154 | Baxter, the contractor-- Baxter& Co.? |
41154 | Beatin''? |
41154 | Been? 41154 But I do n''t know what you did it for?" |
41154 | But are n''t you going to protest the election? |
41154 | But are you certain we can buy Foley off? |
41154 | But can you afford to? |
41154 | But do you think he''ll win the strike? |
41154 | But how about the rest of us fixers? 41154 But how?" |
41154 | But is there no other way of getting at the men except by seeing them one by one? |
41154 | But is your evidence first- hand information? |
41154 | But suppose things turn out with Foley in control o''the strike? |
41154 | But what about Keating? |
41154 | But what can you do? |
41154 | But what do you think will be done with him? |
41154 | But what kind of a deal will you make with Connelly? 41154 But what shall be our plan? |
41154 | But what''ll they think after they''ve read the papers? |
41154 | But what''s in it for us? |
41154 | But what''s your plans, Buck? |
41154 | But where''ve you been? |
41154 | But would you have me stand for all the dirty things he does? |
41154 | But you have n''t met Mrs. Barry, have you? |
41154 | Ca n''t one o''youse hold him? |
41154 | Ca n''t youse see I''m busy? |
41154 | Can I have something to eat,--and quick? |
41154 | Can you begin at once? |
41154 | Come, what''s your side of the story? |
41154 | Could n''t you keep out of his way-- as I asked you to? 41154 D''I keep youse waitin''?" |
41154 | D''you ever hear of a boss payin''more wages''n he had to? 41154 D''you get the book?" |
41154 | D''you hear Keating has been fired? |
41154 | D''you know anything good for it? |
41154 | D''you notice how the ring''s all gone out o''his voice? |
41154 | D''you see Pete? |
41154 | D''you think there''s much danger of your losin'', Tom? |
41154 | D''you want any more speeches? |
41154 | D''youse hear the election returns? |
41154 | D''youse know I can drive youse clean out o''New York? 41154 D''youse see the asphalt?" |
41154 | D''youse think I do nothin''but sleep? |
41154 | D''youse think so? 41154 De union? |
41154 | Did I ask you here? |
41154 | Did Mr. Keating say, in this story he proposes to tell, whether we offered Mr. Foley money to sell out, or whether Mr. Foley demanded it? |
41154 | Did n''t I say I was busy? |
41154 | Did n''t he tell youse? |
41154 | Disgrace the union by murder? |
41154 | Do n''t it make you feel like an anarchist when people do that? |
41154 | Do n''t you know what a bath- tub''s for, Johnson? 41154 Do n''t you remember me, Brother Keating?" |
41154 | Do n''t you see? 41154 Do n''t you think the suggestion should-- ah-- come from him?" |
41154 | Do n''t you think you''re goin''at''em pretty rough, Buck? |
41154 | Do n''t youse know? 41154 Do you know the sort Foley is? |
41154 | Do you know what you''re throwing away? 41154 Do you know where Mrs. Baxter is?" |
41154 | Do you mean to say you believe the lies those blackguards told this morning? |
41154 | Do you mean to threaten me? 41154 Do you need anything?" |
41154 | Do? |
41154 | Does the witness speak from his own knowledge, or what he surmises? |
41154 | Doomed? 41154 Dreamer? |
41154 | Duncan-- Smith-- O''Malley? |
41154 | Elizabeth,he said at length,"do you know how much we spent last year?" |
41154 | Enough? |
41154 | Even if it is, what can we do? |
41154 | Fired? 41154 Fired? |
41154 | Foley''s work, I suppose? |
41154 | Goin''to have a fist sociable to- night? |
41154 | Got work on your job for a couple more men? |
41154 | Hain''t your foolishness learnt you anything yet? 41154 Hain''t youse fellows got no vest pockets?" |
41154 | Has it occurred to you, Pete, that maybe Foley is up to some deep trick? |
41154 | Has n''t my work been satisfactory? |
41154 | Have you boys heard anything about Foley? |
41154 | Have you seen Nels lately? |
41154 | He did n''t? 41154 How are things at home?" |
41154 | How are you, Petersen? |
41154 | How can he? |
41154 | How could I help knowing all? 41154 How could you do it?" |
41154 | How could you? 41154 How de union tank I live? |
41154 | How do you propose to defeat Foley? 41154 How is it you were n''t?" |
41154 | How long youse been gettin''it? |
41154 | How much d''you want? |
41154 | How much do you think it''ll take? |
41154 | How much this time? |
41154 | How much? |
41154 | How much? |
41154 | How soon? |
41154 | How''d you get it, Pete? |
41154 | How''ll you get the Association to give you the money then? |
41154 | How''re we goin''to live cheaper? |
41154 | How''s that? |
41154 | How''s that? |
41154 | How''s that? |
41154 | How''s things? |
41154 | How, Pete? |
41154 | How? 41154 How?" |
41154 | How? |
41154 | How? |
41154 | How? |
41154 | How? |
41154 | I do n''t s''pose youse know there was doin''s at the union last night? |
41154 | I guess youse''ve got an idea in your nuts as to what''s doin''? |
41154 | I have thought of you often? |
41154 | I s''pose youse''re from Baxter? |
41154 | I suppose most of you have been held up by Foley? |
41154 | I suppose you do n''t mind telling why you left? 41154 I suppose you settled the strike last night?" |
41154 | I suppose you''re wife''ll help in this, too? |
41154 | I thought I sent word to you I was too busy to see you? |
41154 | I wonder if that was a trick? |
41154 | I wonder if you have anything to propose? |
41154 | I wonder if you''d care to know what I think of you? |
41154 | I wonder what Foley thinks? |
41154 | If Mr. Driscoll do n''t know, how can I? |
41154 | Is Mr. Baxter at home? |
41154 | Is Mr. Baxter in? |
41154 | Is Mr. Driscoll in? |
41154 | Is Mr. Keating at home? |
41154 | Is anything wrong? |
41154 | Is he in? |
41154 | Is that a threat? |
41154 | Is that all it''s worth to you? |
41154 | Is that so, now? 41154 Is that what youse all think?" |
41154 | Is there going to be a strike? |
41154 | Is this your only way of winning an election? |
41154 | It really would n''t? |
41154 | It''s really good advice, ai n''t it? 41154 Jim, ai n''t we goin''to be in on this fight against Foley?" |
41154 | Kill him?--what punishment is that? 41154 Know all?" |
41154 | Leave? |
41154 | Lookin''great, ai n''t it? |
41154 | Married? |
41154 | Me? 41154 Mebbe youse knows what happened to a few other gents that started on the road youse''re travelin''?" |
41154 | Mebbe youse''d like to have me tell youse why youse sent for me? |
41154 | Miss Arnold, did you ever see a jelly fish? |
41154 | Mr. President, are youse goin''to let that man go on with his lies? |
41154 | My beer? |
41154 | Nice afternoon, ai n''t it? |
41154 | Not Keating? |
41154 | Nothing else? |
41154 | Now wha''d''you think o''that? |
41154 | Now what have you to say for yourself? |
41154 | Now who the--some pirate words--"done that?" |
41154 | Now why do youse keep up that little game with me, Baxter? 41154 Now, do n''t you like that?" |
41154 | Now, the strike, Tom; what d''you think about the strike? |
41154 | Now, what was your fool idea in blowing up the Avon? |
41154 | Oh, that!--Well? |
41154 | Police? |
41154 | Remember the little promise I made youse t''other day? 41154 S''pose I was to say,''how''?" |
41154 | Say, Johnson, wha''d''you suppose I want a bath- tub for? |
41154 | Say, Petersen, ai n''t you goin''my way? 41154 Say, Tom, guess where Petersen''s movin''?" |
41154 | See here, Buck Foley, are you looking for a fight? 41154 See here, are youse talkin''business?" |
41154 | Shall I tell you all? |
41154 | Shall we not take a walk? |
41154 | Show him what? |
41154 | So much as that? 41154 So you''re going to fire me?" |
41154 | Some work for me? |
41154 | Stiff? |
41154 | Suppose a man could fool the committee? 41154 Suppose a man could fool the committee?" |
41154 | Suppose a man could fool the committee? |
41154 | Suppose that was our purpose? |
41154 | Take me to him for a minute, wo n''t youse? |
41154 | That? 41154 The addresses? |
41154 | The future? |
41154 | Then there''s no way of getting it? |
41154 | Then you''re firing me because Foley orders you to? |
41154 | Then youse ai n''t goin''to fire the scabs? |
41154 | Then... you know all? |
41154 | These the worst youse got? |
41154 | This much? |
41154 | Threats, huh? |
41154 | To the jail? |
41154 | Vot day do? |
41154 | Vot? |
41154 | Vy should I not vork? 41154 Vy? |
41154 | Was Rosie there? |
41154 | We''ve got to get rid of him some time, have n''t we? |
41154 | Well, I''d like to know what else they could do? |
41154 | Well, here it is: Do n''t youse think youse got a pretty bum foreman on the St. Etienne job? |
41154 | Well, suppose I go to work at three dollars, how do we keep from being discovered? |
41154 | Well, that''s a purty nice piece o''writin'', ai n''t it, now? |
41154 | Well, what can I do for you? |
41154 | Well, what did youse want to talk to me about then? |
41154 | Well,--how much? |
41154 | Well,--suppose I am? |
41154 | Well-- what are you going to do about it? |
41154 | Well-- what''s_ your_ price? |
41154 | Well? |
41154 | Well? |
41154 | Well? |
41154 | Well? |
41154 | Well? |
41154 | Well? |
41154 | Well? |
41154 | Well? |
41154 | Well? |
41154 | Well? |
41154 | Wha''d''youse want to see him''bout? |
41154 | Wha''d''youse want? |
41154 | What are you doing? |
41154 | What are you going to do? |
41154 | What are you going to do? |
41154 | What are you reading, Maggie? |
41154 | What business is that of yours? |
41154 | What can I do? |
41154 | What can I say to you-- what? |
41154 | What could I do? |
41154 | What d''you suppose he''d say? |
41154 | What d''you think about the strike? |
41154 | What d''you think of Foley? |
41154 | What d''you want to see me about? 41154 What do you know?--think you know?" |
41154 | What do you mean? |
41154 | What do you mean? |
41154 | What do you mean? |
41154 | What do you propose that we do? |
41154 | What do you think it should be? |
41154 | What do youse think? |
41154 | What else can I do? |
41154 | What experience have you had? |
41154 | What for? |
41154 | What game? |
41154 | What good would a bomb here or there do? 41154 What guarantee have I of your silence?" |
41154 | What is it, brother? 41154 What is it?" |
41154 | What is it? |
41154 | What is it? |
41154 | What is it? |
41154 | What is it? |
41154 | What is it? |
41154 | What is the opinion of you other gentlemen? |
41154 | What of that? |
41154 | What time d''you want the book again? |
41154 | What was that? |
41154 | What will be done with him? |
41154 | What will you do now? |
41154 | What would you say? |
41154 | What would you say? |
41154 | What youse drivin''at? |
41154 | What''ll I have to do to settle it? |
41154 | What''re you going to do with that? |
41154 | What''s doin''? |
41154 | What''s he want to strike for? 41154 What''s serious?" |
41154 | What''s that? |
41154 | What''s that? |
41154 | What''s the job? |
41154 | What''s the latest war news? |
41154 | What''s the matter with a check? |
41154 | What''s the matter with your beer? |
41154 | What''s the matter? |
41154 | What''s the use holdin''on? |
41154 | What''s the use punchin''a man after he''s give in? |
41154 | What''s the use trying to destroy people that''re already doomed? |
41154 | What''s this I hear about a strike? |
41154 | What''s this funny business you''ve been up to now? |
41154 | What''s this mean? |
41154 | What''s traditions? |
41154 | What''s your game? |
41154 | What''s your objection? |
41154 | What, do n''t it appeal to you? |
41154 | What? 41154 What?" |
41154 | What? |
41154 | When d''you think you''re livin''? 41154 When''ll the men go back to work?" |
41154 | Where are you going? |
41154 | Where have you been, Maggie? |
41154 | Where is he? |
41154 | Where on earth''ve you been? |
41154 | Where''bouts? |
41154 | Where''ll I hit you first, Rosie? 41154 Where''s Ferdinand?" |
41154 | Where''s Pete? |
41154 | Where''s the danger, since the money''s to go to the men for waiting time? |
41154 | Where? |
41154 | Who put''em to work? |
41154 | Who''s hurt if I increase my salary to something like it ought to be at the expense of the bosses? |
41154 | Who''s that? |
41154 | Who''s there? |
41154 | Who? |
41154 | Why are n''t you getting that ironwork up? |
41154 | Why ca n''t this thing be settled right off? |
41154 | Why do n''t you shake hands with a man, like a gentleman? 41154 Why do you suppose I left the committee?" |
41154 | Why not make use of Foley and win it in three weeks? |
41154 | Why not send a letter to every member? |
41154 | Why not? 41154 Why not?" |
41154 | Why should n''t she be? |
41154 | Why should we be losing money just because you and your men ca n''t agree? 41154 Why, what''s the matter with your eyes, Jake?" |
41154 | Why, what''s the matter? |
41154 | Why, what''s the matter? |
41154 | Why? |
41154 | Why? |
41154 | Why? |
41154 | Why? |
41154 | Will you have any trouble putting it back in the office? |
41154 | Wo n''t he lend it to you? |
41154 | Wo n''t you help us in our work? |
41154 | Wo n''t you let me look after that for you? |
41154 | Wo n''t you tell me what you are going to do? 41154 Wo n''t youse have a drink first?" |
41154 | Wo n''t youse have a drink? |
41154 | Wonderful, ai n''t it, how quick news travels? |
41154 | Would you be willing to join the union? |
41154 | Would you be willing to testify against them-- not upon the explosion, which you did n''t see, but upon their character? |
41154 | Would you like to go down and have a look at''em? |
41154 | Yes, how? |
41154 | Yes, what about it? |
41154 | Yes? |
41154 | Yes? |
41154 | You are here, Tom? |
41154 | You can prove it? |
41154 | You do n''t mind my receiving you in my room, do you? |
41154 | You do n''t need a little money, do you? |
41154 | You don''t-- care for me? |
41154 | You have something to tell me? |
41154 | You know he''s for sale? |
41154 | You know what''ll happen to you if you lose? |
41154 | You mean we would legislate solely in our own interests? 41154 You mean-- we should not meet again?" |
41154 | You really decided to come home, did you? |
41154 | You remember him, do n''t you?--one of the foremen? |
41154 | You tank not? |
41154 | You tank not? |
41154 | You think not? 41154 You think so?" |
41154 | You think so? |
41154 | You threaten me? 41154 You were not at work yesterday?" |
41154 | You''ll not see him? |
41154 | You''ll not see him? |
41154 | You''re going to turn him out then? |
41154 | You''re runnin''again''Foley again in six months is all right, but where''s the use our tryin''to get more money? |
41154 | You''ve always found you could count on me, ai n''t you? |
41154 | You''ve been talking about Foley some more, then? |
41154 | Young man, d''you know who you''re talking to? |
41154 | Your name''s Petersen, ai n''t it? |
41154 | Youse saw''em? |
41154 | Youse''re goin''to keep your mouth goin''then? |
41154 | ''You b''long to union?'' |
41154 | Ai n''t you got no respect for the traditions o''the workin''class?" |
41154 | All rich people have their poor relatives, I suppose? |
41154 | An''how near youse come to takin''the trip to Sing Sing? |
41154 | An''if we lose"--she tried to smile--"why, I ai n''t much of a consumptive, am I? |
41154 | An''why did I make the motion? |
41154 | An''why did n''t they get done on time? |
41154 | And d''youse think I''ve forgotten the past-- your high- nosed, aristocratic ways? |
41154 | And his wife, how could she bear this? |
41154 | And how to get them? |
41154 | And now, aside from the benefit which we are to secure by the change, how does your plan concern me?" |
41154 | And so you''re to be walking delegate, hey? |
41154 | And that means a strike?" |
41154 | And we''d have to go to Atlantic City this summer, or some other such place!--and who goes to Atlantic City? |
41154 | And what are you doing for yourself in the union? |
41154 | And what are you going on? |
41154 | And what have you got to show for it all?" |
41154 | And what of it? |
41154 | And why''s this come on us? |
41154 | Are they havin''zero weather in hell?" |
41154 | As he was going out Tom heard a thin voice ask,"Is Mr. Keating in?" |
41154 | As his hand was on the knob Baxter''s even voice reached him:"But suppose a man could fool the committee?" |
41154 | At dinner that night little was said, till Maggie asked with a choking effort:"Did you see Foley to- day?" |
41154 | Brother, is that just? |
41154 | Buck Foley usually keeps his promises, do n''t he-- hey?" |
41154 | But at length Mr. Driscoll, restless at the dead subjects they were discussing, avoided his guard and asked:"Anything new in the Avon business?" |
41154 | But by what plan? |
41154 | But how should he tell her-- how, so that the woman, and not the religious enthusiast, would be reached? |
41154 | But how''ll we live?" |
41154 | But if youse knew the lion''d never make its last jump, youse would n''t go into the occupation o''throwin''fits, now would youse?" |
41154 | But instead she asked:"Do you think he''s the sort of a man to do a thing of that sort? |
41154 | But keep it up, if youse like it? |
41154 | But suppose I gave to the papers what I''ve said to you? |
41154 | But what can I do? |
41154 | But what d''you think we ought to do?" |
41154 | But would it avail to continue the fight against Foley? |
41154 | But you did n''t think I''d go away without thanking you?" |
41154 | Ca n''t we get together to- night and have a talk?" |
41154 | Ca n''t you come in and help me with the spieling?" |
41154 | Ca n''t you have mass- meetings?" |
41154 | Can I see you as soon''s you''re through?" |
41154 | Can youse see to that?" |
41154 | Convincin''--hey? |
41154 | Could Mr. Baxter meet him in fifteen minutes in the lobby of the Waldorf- Astoria? |
41154 | Could Mr. Baxter see him in half an hour on a matter of importance-- of great public importance? |
41154 | Could anything be more in harmony with the smooth scheme by which he fooled the committee? |
41154 | Could you get it late, and take it back the next morning?" |
41154 | D''you hear? |
41154 | D''you know what that means? |
41154 | D''you think you can make me keep still? |
41154 | D''you understand?" |
41154 | D''youse think I was born yesterday?" |
41154 | Did n''t I mention that the job is in Chicago?" |
41154 | Do n''t you never read the papers? |
41154 | Do n''t youse remember when youse made an undertaker''s job out o''Fleischmann? |
41154 | Do n''t youse see he''s shootin''hot air into youse?" |
41154 | Do you know why Foley''s got it in for me?" |
41154 | Driscoll?" |
41154 | Driscoll?" |
41154 | Finally Pete asked of him:"Where d''you stand, Buck?" |
41154 | First of all, youse''ll fire the scabs?" |
41154 | Foley?" |
41154 | Foley?" |
41154 | Had n''t we had trouble enough? |
41154 | Half- way to the door Foley stopped, and addressed the crowd at large:"Where''s Keating?" |
41154 | Has n''t every class that ever came into power done that? |
41154 | Have n''t we come up? |
41154 | Have you heard from Nels?" |
41154 | He let several seconds pass, the while he got hold of himself, then asked in a hard voice:"And what are you going to do?" |
41154 | He paused, then asked abruptly:"Where''s Keating?" |
41154 | He''s alive?" |
41154 | How are we to live? |
41154 | How are we to live?" |
41154 | How are you goin''to bring the union around?" |
41154 | How are you?" |
41154 | How are you?" |
41154 | How can I give you a job?" |
41154 | How can we help it? |
41154 | How could Nels join the union? |
41154 | How could he explain to her, who believed him nothing but honor, once this story was out? |
41154 | How could he? |
41154 | How could you come to see me as you have, and you married?" |
41154 | How youse stackin''up this mornin''?" |
41154 | How''re we going to do it, Miss Arnold? |
41154 | How''re we going to do it?" |
41154 | How''re you feelin''?" |
41154 | How''re you, boys?" |
41154 | How''re youse? |
41154 | How''s your husband?" |
41154 | How''s your strike?" |
41154 | I s''pose these days youse''re trainin''your legs for the job?" |
41154 | I suppose you know he''s a grafter?" |
41154 | I think that''s enough, ai n''t it?" |
41154 | If I had n''t''a''made it, but had opposed it, where''d I''a''been? |
41154 | If by talking an hour we can devise a plan by which this can be saved, it''s worth while, is it not?" |
41154 | If he exposed Mr. Baxter it would bring himself great credit and prominence, but what material benefit would that exposure bring the union? |
41154 | If you want to work, why do n''t you get into the union?" |
41154 | If you were to look ahead and say in a hundred years from now it''ll be 2000, would you call that a dream?" |
41154 | In some hotel, or some secret place? |
41154 | Is n''t that all right?" |
41154 | Is seven hundred a year enough?--when we risk our lives every day we work?--when we''re fit for work only so long as we''re young men? |
41154 | Is that the sort o''treatment you''d like to get?" |
41154 | Is there something on your mind?" |
41154 | It began to be said:"If there''s no chance of winning the strike, why do n''t we settle it at once, and get back to work?" |
41154 | Keating?" |
41154 | Let''s see; I''m paying you thirty a week, ai n''t I?" |
41154 | Maggie answered it, and he heard a thin yet resonant voice that he seemed to have heard before, inquire:"Is Mr. Keating in?" |
41154 | My family?--me? |
41154 | Not-- not-- murder?" |
41154 | Now ai n''t we had enough o''Keating''s wind? |
41154 | Now can any one o''youse say Buck Foley ever failed to keep his part o''the agreement?" |
41154 | Now d''you suppose I''m going to quit the union in that shape?" |
41154 | Now how d''youse suppose I could sell out with four men watchin''me-- an''one o''them a friend o''Keating?" |
41154 | Now see here, Petersen, where''ve you been?" |
41154 | Now that there''s no money in it, d''youse s''pose I''m goin''to stand it any longer? |
41154 | Now who ordered you to blow up the Avon, and threatened to have you''done up''if you did n''t?" |
41154 | Now you''re scheming to put off settling the strike, ai n''t you?" |
41154 | Now, are youse goin''to quit this job quiet, or do I have to get youse fired?" |
41154 | Oh, how could you?" |
41154 | Or do we want to give in an''say we''ve had enough? |
41154 | Or what harm?" |
41154 | Petersen?" |
41154 | Seven dollar?" |
41154 | Shall we say a thousand a side?" |
41154 | She was silent for a dozen paces, then asked impulsively:"Have you had lunch yet?" |
41154 | Should he tell her? |
41154 | So she covertly scribbled the following note to Tom: MY DEAR MR. KEATING: Are you sure Mr. Foley is not playing the union false? |
41154 | Suddenly, she broke in:"Do n''t you think the women''d have some influence with their husbands?" |
41154 | Suppose nothin''does come of it, what have we lost?" |
41154 | Tell me that, Tom Keating? |
41154 | That''s simple enough, ai n''t it?--and strong enough? |
41154 | That''s so, ai n''t it?" |
41154 | The fight came off last Wednesday night----""And who won? |
41154 | The question is, do we both want to keep on losing money-- indefinitely?" |
41154 | The union was right in principle, but what was mere correctness of principle in the presence of such a situation? |
41154 | Then Pete asked:"What''s your plan?" |
41154 | Then he asked steadily:"Are you ready for the question?" |
41154 | Then he said suddenly, in a conversational tone:"Boys, how much youse gettin''?" |
41154 | Then she asked:"You were out all night?" |
41154 | Then youse ai n''t goin''to take my advice?" |
41154 | Then, abruptly, and with more sarcasm:"But how much are we paying Foley?" |
41154 | To such as were his friends he said:"Any o''that Keating nonsense bein''talked on this job?" |
41154 | Tokens of appreciation? |
41154 | Tom could only answer helplessly:"But why do n''t he join the union?" |
41154 | Tom hesitated; and he was thinking of his wife when he said,"How about your house?" |
41154 | Tom, who had watched this action through with dumb amazement, now broke out:"Where d''you get all that money? |
41154 | Two of the papers printed interviews with Mr. Driscoll upon the question, why had he done it? |
41154 | Vy?" |
41154 | Was the man crazy? |
41154 | We''ve said other unions are managed decently, honestly-- why should n''t ours be? |
41154 | Well, what are you standing there for? |
41154 | What at?" |
41154 | What can I do for you?" |
41154 | What can a man with a family do in New York on seven hundred dollars a year? |
41154 | What chance does he have of being elected?" |
41154 | What d''you want?" |
41154 | What do you mean?" |
41154 | What else can I do? |
41154 | What else''s it for?" |
41154 | What for?" |
41154 | What for?" |
41154 | What if we did? |
41154 | What is it?" |
41154 | What more do you want in a husband? |
41154 | What sort of a damned society call d''you call this?" |
41154 | What then? |
41154 | What then? |
41154 | What would you say?" |
41154 | What you got against smashin''a few scabs?" |
41154 | What''ll happen to youse about then? |
41154 | What''s a hundred thousand when you''ve got to spend money on yachts, champagne an''Newport, an''other necessities o''life? |
41154 | What''s he done? |
41154 | What''s his proof? |
41154 | What''s seventy- five more to youse?" |
41154 | What''s the matter with gettin''it Saturday night an''usin''it Sunday?" |
41154 | What''s your idea in following me around like this?" |
41154 | When d''you want the book?" |
41154 | When the laughter died down one cried out:"What''s the matter with Keating?" |
41154 | Where do you suppose he met Baxter? |
41154 | Where have n''t I been? |
41154 | Where youse workin''now?" |
41154 | Where''d we be if Foley blacklisted us?" |
41154 | Where''s the chance for quiet? |
41154 | Where''ve you been?" |
41154 | Who by?" |
41154 | Who''s been right every time?" |
41154 | Who?" |
41154 | Whom do you mean?" |
41154 | Why d''youse s''pose I''ve stood it? |
41154 | Why did youse get the contracts for the Atwell building and the Sewanee Hotel-- the two jobs that put youse at the head o''things in New York? |
41154 | Why do n''t you put a decent man in as your business agent?" |
41154 | Why do they stand for him? |
41154 | Why do youse get through on time? |
41154 | Why has this trouble come on us?" |
41154 | Why not?" |
41154 | Why?" |
41154 | Will I bother you men much if I look for''em?" |
41154 | Will it hurt you to hear me? |
41154 | Yes, an''fix youse so youse ca n''t get a job in the iron trade in the country? |
41154 | You beat Buck Foley? |
41154 | You do-- hey? |
41154 | You have n''t been fired?" |
41154 | You know that?" |
41154 | You say you worked last for Driscoll on the St. Etienne job?" |
41154 | You throw away money that''s as much mine as yours!--you make me suffer for it!--and yet you expect me never to say a word, do you?" |
41154 | You understand?" |
41154 | You will have given your-- ah-- your information away, and how much better off are you for it?" |
41154 | Youse knew all about it already?" |
41154 | Youse really could n''t afford any more delays on the job, could youse?" |
41154 | Youse understand?" |
20068 | ''''Ave you''eard that Luke Mickleroyd nearly lost his little Ruth in the night?'' |
20068 | ''''Ave you, my dear?'' |
20068 | ''''Ow dare you talk similar to that, Sarah?'' |
20068 | ''A hundred?'' |
20068 | ''Ah, Sykes, you want your wages? |
20068 | ''Ah, how''s that?'' |
20068 | ''And I thought you came to Ousebank to do some business?'' |
20068 | ''And do n''t you?'' |
20068 | ''And get it copied at once?'' |
20068 | ''And if it is, what good will it do you to know it, even if she owned up, which she wo n''t, you may be sure?'' |
20068 | ''And now, I suppose, we can go and have our dinner?'' |
20068 | ''And that''s what you wanted to do-- amuse yourself with the sight of infuriated Yorkshiremen?'' |
20068 | ''And what about me? |
20068 | ''And what are you two lasses doing in Ousebank alone and on foot?'' |
20068 | ''And what do you suppose he expects to happen?'' |
20068 | ''And where''s the police?'' |
20068 | ''And you used that five minutes''power to give the men their way? |
20068 | ''And, who knows? |
20068 | ''Apologise? |
20068 | ''Are you coming, mother?'' |
20068 | ''Are you hitting at me?'' |
20068 | ''Are you ill, miss? |
20068 | ''Are you sorry?'' |
20068 | ''Are you sure the danger''s over?'' |
20068 | ''Are you?'' |
20068 | ''Begging your pardon, I have n''t eaten anything yet; and talking of grub, what do you say to coming and having some? |
20068 | ''Besides what?'' |
20068 | ''Bonfire of weeds? |
20068 | ''Build it up again? |
20068 | ''But I do n''t suppose I am allowed to buy it wholesale like this?'' |
20068 | ''But am I to sleep here? |
20068 | ''But are you going to keep this as a rink? |
20068 | ''But how did you do it? |
20068 | ''But if he wo n''t have any by- and- by, why do n''t you save it up for then?'' |
20068 | ''But she is a very nice girl, mamma, and I may go, may n''t I?'' |
20068 | ''But the fire? |
20068 | ''But where is Naomi, and why was my dress not put out for me?'' |
20068 | ''But why did they suddenly do that? |
20068 | ''But, Sarah, if there is any chance of such a thing, why do n''t you begin to save up?'' |
20068 | ''But, do n''t you see? |
20068 | ''But, my dear, w''yever did n''t you mention it before we started? |
20068 | ''Ca n''t we all go on our way to the mills? |
20068 | ''Can I see my father, sir?'' |
20068 | ''D''ye think I''m a fool? |
20068 | ''Dear mater, what does it matter whether you are learned or not? |
20068 | ''Did n''t I always laugh and make jokes at school? |
20068 | ''Did n''t you? |
20068 | ''Did you ask them to help us?'' |
20068 | ''Dinner?'' |
20068 | ''Do they? |
20068 | ''Do what?'' |
20068 | ''Do you believe that?'' |
20068 | ''Do you believe that?'' |
20068 | ''Do you mean that you think mother is n''t safe at Balmoral?'' |
20068 | ''Do you mean to say it costs a thousand a week to keep the mills going?'' |
20068 | ''Do you mean you thought I was a heathen?'' |
20068 | ''Do you particularly want to walk home, Horatia?'' |
20068 | ''Do you really mean that? |
20068 | ''Do you really want to go? |
20068 | ''Do you think he really is my father?'' |
20068 | ''Does n''t it make them deaf or make their heads ache?'' |
20068 | ''Eh, what, are you a Yorkshire lassie, then, that you talk so pat about ginnels? |
20068 | ''Excuse me, but this is my business, and my orders must be obeyed.--Get out of this, do you hear, Tom Fox?'' |
20068 | ''Father,''cried Sarah indignantly,''how can you think such a dreadful thing of me? |
20068 | ''Fire?'' |
20068 | ''For the minute? |
20068 | ''George, what are you thinking of?'' |
20068 | ''George, what do you think he''s going to do?'' |
20068 | ''George,''said Sarah after lunch,''what''s he up to?'' |
20068 | ''Going out, George? |
20068 | ''Had n''t you better go after him?'' |
20068 | ''Had n''t you better tell them to come in?'' |
20068 | ''Has n''t father gone to the mill?'' |
20068 | ''Has n''t the new dye taken at all?'' |
20068 | ''Has the gong gone? |
20068 | ''Have n''t I got any money?'' |
20068 | ''Have the hands gone back, Naomi?'' |
20068 | ''Have you got right yet?'' |
20068 | ''Have you paid every one else?'' |
20068 | ''How am I changed? |
20068 | ''How can I tell? |
20068 | ''How can they if they''re foreigners?'' |
20068 | ''How can you be surrounded by carpets?'' |
20068 | ''How could they get an air- ship?'' |
20068 | ''How dare you accuse me of such mean behaviour? |
20068 | ''How dare you drive my car at that speed, with my daughter and the Duke of Arnedale''s granddaughter in the car? |
20068 | ''How did I do it? |
20068 | ''How did he get in? |
20068 | ''How did he get them?'' |
20068 | ''How did it happen? |
20068 | ''How did you hear about it?'' |
20068 | ''How do you do, Mr Clay? |
20068 | ''How do you know that?'' |
20068 | ''How do you know what things I do n''t like?'' |
20068 | ''How do you know? |
20068 | ''How do you know?'' |
20068 | ''How do you mean for life or death?'' |
20068 | ''How does she do it, Naomi? |
20068 | ''How has he done it?'' |
20068 | ''How much longer can you hold out?'' |
20068 | ''How on earth did that tree catch fire,''Horatia suddenly ejaculated as a tall poplar was seen blazing,''and after such a wet day as yesterday?'' |
20068 | ''How should I know, miss? |
20068 | ''How should one rink when people_ are_ looking? |
20068 | ''How''s the market, dad?'' |
20068 | ''How, then? |
20068 | ''However can they keep on their feet with they wheels under their boots?'' |
20068 | ''I always wonder how many more entertainments Mark Clay will hold out for?'' |
20068 | ''I ca n''t go to the mills-- our own mills, Naomi? |
20068 | ''I do n''t see how you are obliged to do anything unless you like; but was that what they wanted you to do?'' |
20068 | ''I say, mother, would you mind if I went for a week''s shooting to Scotland?'' |
20068 | ''I say, will it come off?'' |
20068 | ''I suppose you are talking about me; but do n''t I show you any feeling, Luke?'' |
20068 | ''I suppose you''d mind dreadfully if we did lose all our money?'' |
20068 | ''I thought Sykes was seeing to all that, and housing the people till we could settle with them?'' |
20068 | ''I thought you wanted to see the mill?'' |
20068 | ''I wonder if I ought to tell mother?'' |
20068 | ''I''ve a right to be proud of my children, have n''t I? |
20068 | ''I? |
20068 | ''If she wants to fish, why should n''t she?'' |
20068 | ''If we give up the mills, what have we to live on? |
20068 | ''Is Sarah callin''us stalled oxen?'' |
20068 | ''Is Uncle Howroyd''s money gone?'' |
20068 | ''Is it near the house?'' |
20068 | ''Is my father-- dead?'' |
20068 | ''Is my mother dressed for dinner?'' |
20068 | ''Is n''t this horrid, Sarah?'' |
20068 | ''Is she an orphan, and what does she mean by being all alone? |
20068 | ''Is that a joke, or do you expect me to believe you''d rather live in the workhouse than this place?'' |
20068 | ''Is that really Balmoral? |
20068 | ''It''s better than a magic- lantern, is n''t it, my dear?'' |
20068 | ''It''s not a bad word, is n''t that? |
20068 | ''It''s not near the house, Uncle Howroyd; it''s only a bonfire.--What are you all so upset about?'' |
20068 | ''It''s not quite so lovely, is it, after all?'' |
20068 | ''It''s not really bad, my lad?'' |
20068 | ''It''s the dinner- gong, then?'' |
20068 | ''Knew what? |
20068 | ''Know what? |
20068 | ''Liza Anne''s in Clay''s Mills, is n''t she?'' |
20068 | ''Lying down with Horatia?'' |
20068 | ''Make me deaf? |
20068 | ''Mercy on us, Sarah, w''atever''appened to the car or Tom? |
20068 | ''Miss Horatia, my dearie, what are you thinking about? |
20068 | ''Miss Sarah, suppose anybody is in the house?'' |
20068 | ''Miss''Oratia, w''at is it? |
20068 | ''Mother, do n''t you hear? |
20068 | ''Naomi, have you seen the mills to- day? |
20068 | ''Naomi, was Jane Mary in this?'' |
20068 | ''None of us, ma''am? |
20068 | ''Nonsense; he couldn''t.--How did you get past the pickets, George?'' |
20068 | ''Not been croaking, has he?'' |
20068 | ''Now then, now then; have I just come in time for fireworks?'' |
20068 | ''Now, Sally, what are you looking so glum about? |
20068 | ''Now, what villainy have you been up to?'' |
20068 | ''Now? |
20068 | ''Of mine? |
20068 | ''Oh George, do you think we are ruined, or anything?'' |
20068 | ''Oh George, how on earth did you get here?'' |
20068 | ''Oh Mrs Clay, what have I done? |
20068 | ''Oh Naomi, what is it?'' |
20068 | ''Oh Uncle Howroyd, is n''t it lovely? |
20068 | ''Oh dear,''ave they''urt''i m?'' |
20068 | ''Oh uncle, why did you come so soon? |
20068 | ''Oh, ai n''t she beautiful on they things? |
20068 | ''Oh, and what may you want to know?'' |
20068 | ''Oh, are we going straight home? |
20068 | ''Oh, but he wo n''t fail.--Will you, George?'' |
20068 | ''Oh, dear Bill, I''ope there''s nothin''wrong between you an''Mark? |
20068 | ''Oh, did I ask a lot of questions?'' |
20068 | ''Oh, have n''t you seen the lakes?'' |
20068 | ''Oh, have you got a mill, and can I come and see it?'' |
20068 | ''Oh, have you really? |
20068 | ''Oh, of course, if your mother does not allow it, we ca n''t; but do you think I had better apologise to your man?'' |
20068 | ''Oh, the hands? |
20068 | ''Oh, were they? |
20068 | ''Oh, what is it? |
20068 | ''Oh, what is it?'' |
20068 | ''Oh, will they? |
20068 | ''Oh, you do n''t, do n''t you? |
20068 | ''Oh, you think I''ve more than my share, do you, like all the rest of them? |
20068 | ''Oo are you w''isperin''to out there?'' |
20068 | ''Oo do you want to shoot, Sykes?'' |
20068 | ''Oo''s she goin''to shoot? |
20068 | ''Ought to be? |
20068 | ''Ow can I order a man about in''is own''ouse? |
20068 | ''Ow could you earn enough money to buy a gown like that, do you suppose? |
20068 | ''Put the pieces on what?'' |
20068 | ''Sarah, tell me, why wo n''t Naomi''s sister come near Balmoral?'' |
20068 | ''See that speck yonder? |
20068 | ''See whom-- Uncle Howroyd?'' |
20068 | ''Shall I go and see who it is? |
20068 | ''Shall we be fined?'' |
20068 | ''She''s a nice young lady, Mark, this friend o''Sarah''s, is n''t she?'' |
20068 | ''She''s a nice, dear girl, is n''t she, Mark?'' |
20068 | ''Sir John? |
20068 | ''So you prefer Bill Howroyd''s way? |
20068 | ''So you think the men will laugh the last? |
20068 | ''So you''ve been to Howroyd''s Mill messing with his dyes, have you? |
20068 | ''Stalled oxen? |
20068 | ''Stalled oxen?'' |
20068 | ''That''s awfully nice of you, mater; but why did n''t you ask me about it? |
20068 | ''The Red House?'' |
20068 | ''The marble staircase wo n''t burn, will it?'' |
20068 | ''Then I suppose you''ll be giving them all the profits next, and we shall see you working as a hand yourself?'' |
20068 | ''Then it''s one fashion thee''ll ha''to onlearn, dost hear? |
20068 | ''Then what do you mean by telling me such a story? |
20068 | ''Then what do you mean to do? |
20068 | ''Then what on earth are you making this fuss about? |
20068 | ''Then what''s the good of their doing work if no one will buy it?'' |
20068 | ''Then will you come and see father? |
20068 | ''Then you do know something about it?'' |
20068 | ''Then you do n''t know?'' |
20068 | ''There are none so ignorant as those that wo n''t know, eh, Naomi?'' |
20068 | ''They are not sold, then?'' |
20068 | ''Thinking of? |
20068 | ''To- day, Miss Sarah? |
20068 | ''Uncle Howroyd, do you think it is a sinking ship?'' |
20068 | ''W''at did''e call''isself Mr Brown for, then? |
20068 | ''W''atever do you mean by talkin''such nonsense?'' |
20068 | ''W''atever do you mean, Mark?'' |
20068 | ''W''y, Sairey, ai n''t you goin''to begin to dress? |
20068 | ''W''y, you do n''t never mean to say that, George, an''after all the pounds dad''s paid for''er? |
20068 | ''Wanted?'' |
20068 | ''Wants to see me? |
20068 | ''Was that really what you wanted to ask me?'' |
20068 | ''Wat''s the good o''talkin''nonsense, Sarah? |
20068 | ''Well, George, anything wrong?'' |
20068 | ''Well, Miss Horatia, what will you touch with your fairy wand next, eh? |
20068 | ''Well, Naomi, what is it? |
20068 | ''Well, boy, what''s this story? |
20068 | ''Well, it''s this: why do you hate being rich?'' |
20068 | ''Well, men, is t''mill burnt down that I ca n''t even eat my dinner in peace, but must come at once to speak with you?'' |
20068 | ''Well, mother, have you got victuals for seventy or so?'' |
20068 | ''What are you after now, lass?'' |
20068 | ''What are you going to do there? |
20068 | ''What are you going to do with my approval, my lad?'' |
20068 | ''What are you sighing for, Sarah? |
20068 | ''What are you so pleased for, then?'' |
20068 | ''What ca n''t he do?'' |
20068 | ''What can he be thinking of? |
20068 | ''What did the papers say? |
20068 | ''What did you expect them to look like?'' |
20068 | ''What do you mean by that?'' |
20068 | ''What do you say, sir? |
20068 | ''What do you think they''ll do?'' |
20068 | ''What do you want to ask me about?'' |
20068 | ''What do you want, my lass? |
20068 | ''What does he mean about your being a millionaire for five minutes?'' |
20068 | ''What does he mean?'' |
20068 | ''What does she mean? |
20068 | ''What does this mean, Miss Cunningham?'' |
20068 | ''What does?'' |
20068 | ''What else did Naomi say?'' |
20068 | ''What food have they, and how did you get enough in for them?'' |
20068 | ''What has happened, Naomi? |
20068 | ''What has happened? |
20068 | ''What have you done, sir?'' |
20068 | ''What in the world are you talking about? |
20068 | ''What is it, mother? |
20068 | ''What is it?'' |
20068 | ''What is odd about it?'' |
20068 | ''What is the matter with father?'' |
20068 | ''What is the matter, Mary? |
20068 | ''What is the matter, Naomi?'' |
20068 | ''What is the name of the house?'' |
20068 | ''What kind of trouble?'' |
20068 | ''What nonsense are you talking, Nanny? |
20068 | ''What question? |
20068 | ''What question? |
20068 | ''What story? |
20068 | ''What tone?'' |
20068 | ''What was it?'' |
20068 | ''What was that, Miss Sarah?'' |
20068 | ''What were you talking to Uncle Howroyd about?'' |
20068 | ''What would you do? |
20068 | ''What''ll he be going to do at t''old mills?'' |
20068 | ''What''s a Yorkshire welcome like? |
20068 | ''What''s a fettler, and what is to fettle a machine?'' |
20068 | ''What''s a"ligger- on,"Naomi?'' |
20068 | ''What''s going to be the end of it all?'' |
20068 | ''What''s he wanting?'' |
20068 | ''What''s no joke? |
20068 | ''What''s the governor been doing to upset her now?'' |
20068 | ''What''s wrong with Clay? |
20068 | ''What''s your plan, Mr Clay?'' |
20068 | ''Whatever could they have been thinking of to leave it there? |
20068 | ''Whatever would be the good of that, Miss Sarah, upsetting of Mr Clay for nothing, let alone that I never told no story? |
20068 | ''Where are you going, George?'' |
20068 | ''Where do they sleep, and what do they eat?'' |
20068 | ''Where is it?'' |
20068 | ''Where is this house?'' |
20068 | ''Who can that be?'' |
20068 | ''Who is Mr Blakeley?'' |
20068 | ''Who should there be in the house? |
20068 | ''Who''s talking about Buckingham Palace?'' |
20068 | ''Why am I so nasty to him?'' |
20068 | ''Why did n''t you tell us before?'' |
20068 | ''Why do n''t you say we''re all ignorant and vulgar? |
20068 | ''Why do n''t you want visitors, father?'' |
20068 | ''Why does she hate him? |
20068 | ''Why is every one nasty to him? |
20068 | ''Why not wear your white flannel? |
20068 | ''Why not, lad? |
20068 | ''Why not? |
20068 | ''Why not?'' |
20068 | ''Why of course?'' |
20068 | ''Why should it be something horrid?'' |
20068 | ''Why should n''t he be? |
20068 | ''Why this excitement? |
20068 | ''Why, Nanny, who would have thought you''d be such a coward? |
20068 | ''Why, is he shaky?'' |
20068 | ''Why, what can you find to enjoy already?'' |
20068 | ''Why, what''s been doing here? |
20068 | ''Why? |
20068 | ''Why? |
20068 | ''Why?'' |
20068 | ''Why?'' |
20068 | ''Will be in a rage? |
20068 | ''Will you wait till this afternoon, father?'' |
20068 | ''Wo n''t you come and have some tea?'' |
20068 | ''Wool''s going up, you hear? |
20068 | ''Would you like me to go and see if he is still there?'' |
20068 | ''Would you like me to say what I really think?'' |
20068 | ''Yes I do, a little; but why should you think so much about education and titles and things? |
20068 | ''You are really going, dear?'' |
20068 | ''You are sure you did n''t come to beg these people off their punishment?'' |
20068 | ''You can scarcely expect me to feel very secure, can you?'' |
20068 | ''You did n''t say a word about what them young lads said they''d do-- you know what?'' |
20068 | ''You do n''t know? |
20068 | ''You do n''t want me to go carrying tales from the servants''hall, do you? |
20068 | ''You know that story, surely, do n''t you, miss?'' |
20068 | ''You mean he might make himself unpleasant?'' |
20068 | ''You mean that I tell untruths?'' |
20068 | ''You mean that the foreigners have gone-- without a minute''s warning?'' |
20068 | ''You mean the hands, father?'' |
20068 | ''You wo n''t leave to- night, miss?'' |
20068 | ''You''re sure there''s no mistake, mother? |
20068 | ''You''ve seen it, then? |
20068 | After Sykes''s offer, and Tom Fox''s? |
20068 | All your beautiful, expensive education an''all?'' |
20068 | Am I light- headed, Polly, or what''s that bell I heard?'' |
20068 | An''''ow can you want your poor father to open''is eyes an''look upon the ruins o''''is beautiful mansion? |
20068 | An''what might you know about wool? |
20068 | And Tom Fox here---- Why do n''t you speak up, Tom?'' |
20068 | And how could they do the work? |
20068 | And if I write and tell them''----''Tell them what, pray?'' |
20068 | And now, what are you going to do with an empty mill, whose hands have all struck, and whose head is lying unconscious?'' |
20068 | And what brought you back a week before your time?'' |
20068 | And what has her grandfather to do with it?'' |
20068 | And what particular one do you want to go up-- the ginnel against my mill?'' |
20068 | And where''s the rest of you? |
20068 | And who''s to settle that but me?'' |
20068 | And why has it only been saved for the minute? |
20068 | Any relation to the great Nelson?'' |
20068 | Any truth in it? |
20068 | Anything special on?'' |
20068 | Are n''t they behaving all right?'' |
20068 | Are the chimneys all standing just as usual?'' |
20068 | Are they burnt down or damaged in any way?'' |
20068 | Are you Miss Clay, then?'' |
20068 | Are you so fond of this schoolfellow, or do you find home dull?'' |
20068 | Are you sure you''re not sorry that your friends are going to get into trouble, eh? |
20068 | At the title, the youth in the arm- chair roused himself, and said in quite a different tone,''Were you reading that, mater? |
20068 | Besides, where did he get them from, and when did they come? |
20068 | Besides, you do n''t know their faces, do you?'' |
20068 | Build up Balmoral again? |
20068 | But I ca n''t imagine why you should n''t; she looks a very nice girl, and you are great friends, are n''t you? |
20068 | But all your book- learnin''--w''at are you goin''to do wi''all that? |
20068 | But are you ill, Miss Sarah?'' |
20068 | But do you suppose they wo n''t know you, miss?'' |
20068 | But how did mother take it?'' |
20068 | But that would be cutting off his nose to spite his ears, would n''t it? |
20068 | But the mills, and my father-- are you sure that-- that he''s alive and well?'' |
20068 | But what difference would that make? |
20068 | But wherever''s she going? |
20068 | But why did n''t you coom to dinner, lad?'' |
20068 | But, I say, George, why did you go and suggest my inviting Horatia Cunningham to come and stay here? |
20068 | But, I say, you have n''t got company, I hope?'' |
20068 | Ca n''t we send a special messenger? |
20068 | Ca n''t you wait till then?'' |
20068 | Could n''t you ask some one to stay with you-- one of your schoolfellows, perhaps?'' |
20068 | Could n''t you have waited one day more?'' |
20068 | Did he get burnt? |
20068 | Did he talk business, eh?'' |
20068 | Did n''t Sarah tell you? |
20068 | Did n''t you know I was staying there?'' |
20068 | Did n''t you tell me Miss Horatia was to be of the party? |
20068 | Do n''t excuse yourself, but take yourself off this moment, and never show your face in Ousebank again, or I''ll have you locked up, do you hear?'' |
20068 | Do n''t you know it''s dinner- time?'' |
20068 | Do n''t you look grand to- night, Sairey?'' |
20068 | Do n''t you see you''d be runnin''them on''is credit? |
20068 | Do they go in for politics at that school, then?'' |
20068 | Do you hear? |
20068 | Do you know anything, or do n''t you?'' |
20068 | Do you know of any plot to burn the house? |
20068 | Do you know, Nanny?'' |
20068 | Do you mean not even me?'' |
20068 | Do you mean to say that you thought my father''s behaviour refined this afternoon?'' |
20068 | Do you see that the mills are workin''again?'' |
20068 | Do you see what''s happened at Balmoral?'' |
20068 | Do you suppose I should be here and not with her if she were n''t?'' |
20068 | Do you think they''ll burn the mills down?'' |
20068 | Do you want to ride?'' |
20068 | Does every one have one here?'' |
20068 | Does he want to come to terms, do you think?'' |
20068 | Does n''t he mind about the fire?'' |
20068 | Does n''t she work in his mills?'' |
20068 | For I suppose that''s what you''ve come for, is n''t it?'' |
20068 | For the life of her, Sarah could not show any great joy, but only inquired,''Has he asked for me, or is it only George he wants to see, mother?'' |
20068 | George Clay lit a cigarette, with a''May I?'' |
20068 | George understood his sister better, and, answering her look, said,''What''s the matter, Sarah? |
20068 | Has anything more happened?'' |
20068 | Has she no guardian or chaperon?'' |
20068 | Have they been tried and let off? |
20068 | Have you got into any mess? |
20068 | He gave no sign of anything at all unusual being amiss, for he was always very grave, till his master said in a grim tone,''Had any visitors, Sykes?'' |
20068 | Horatia was not only a year younger than her schoolfellow, but she was far less fond of study, and she said frankly,''What''s intuition? |
20068 | How are you going to get poor? |
20068 | How could he? |
20068 | How could the mills work without the hands? |
20068 | How is she?'' |
20068 | How much did tha gown cost? |
20068 | How much will that be?'' |
20068 | How should I know why Naomi''s sister hates Mr Clay? |
20068 | How would you like that, pray?'' |
20068 | How''s that? |
20068 | I do n''t want her to come here; ca n''t you see why not? |
20068 | I said so, did n''t I, Nanny?'' |
20068 | I saw some country men and women get in, and I just followed them; and, oh Sarah, what does"ginnel"mean, and a"fettle"?'' |
20068 | I shall only be too thankful to have her safe by me; though who knows whether any of us are safe anywhere?'' |
20068 | I suppose he does some good with his money? |
20068 | I suppose he''s gone to the mills?'' |
20068 | I suppose it is hidden behind those trees?'' |
20068 | I suppose it would n''t be safe for one of you to leave the gate?'' |
20068 | I suppose it''s some o''your college friends as''ave asked you? |
20068 | I suppose you did n''t know anything about it beforehand? |
20068 | I suppose you do n''t think we''re grand enough for your duchess- friend? |
20068 | I thought we could, perhaps, go to Fountains Abbey to- day, and you would come with us?'' |
20068 | I thought you used it as a barn in the autumn and winter?'' |
20068 | I wo n''t be a minute,''Horatia answered her; and then, stepping into the passage, she said hurriedly,''Nancy, who told you that? |
20068 | I would like''----''To have mud thrown at you?'' |
20068 | I''m glad to be your child; but, oh, why did you marry that man? |
20068 | I''m going to see her this morning, so will you, please, go to the mills with Horatia?'' |
20068 | I''m only good to make money, eh?'' |
20068 | If you got on wi''your father there''d be no occasion for''er to do as she does; but if she''adn''t interfered to- night w''at would''ave''appened? |
20068 | If you remember, I said to you when we first came here that it was no place for us, and now you see how true my words have come?'' |
20068 | In a different way?'' |
20068 | Incite them to more outrages? |
20068 | Is Tom Fox, the chauffeur, ill, and have I got to do his work?'' |
20068 | Is it all goin''to be wasted? |
20068 | Is it any use my trying?'' |
20068 | Is it different from any other kind of welcome?'' |
20068 | Is it my copy?'' |
20068 | Is it the house that''s on fire, and which part?'' |
20068 | Is mother ill?'' |
20068 | Is n''t that how it goes?'' |
20068 | Is there any chance of it?'' |
20068 | Is there no one to tell me anything?'' |
20068 | It would be too silly of them, to begin with; and, besides, why should they burn the trees? |
20068 | It''s hot, is n''t it?'' |
20068 | Look what this man can do? |
20068 | May I do what I like just for the first day or two?'' |
20068 | More trees burnt?'' |
20068 | Mr Mark Clay is it?'' |
20068 | Now then, what are ye scowling at?'' |
20068 | Now, Horatia, as will have been noticed, acted and spoke upon impulse, so she now asked eagerly,''What trouble has it saved? |
20068 | Now, skating I can understand; it''s healthy exercise, and you might make use of it in cold countries; but rinking-- what''s the use on''t?'' |
20068 | Now, what would you like to hear-- the opera at Covent Garden, the Queen''s Hall concert, or what?'' |
20068 | Oh, do you mean that I was right about father''s revenge?'' |
20068 | Oh, whether there''s any chance of your ever going to the workhouse?'' |
20068 | Oh, whether there''s anything to croak about? |
20068 | Oh,''as a thought struck her,''is there anything the matter? |
20068 | One hears of kings becoming beggars, so why not Mr George Clay?'' |
20068 | One of the pickets, you say? |
20068 | Our hands have gone out on strike?'' |
20068 | Perhaps I ought not to have asked to go over your mill? |
20068 | Perhaps you are busy, and do n''t want us, like Mr Clay?'' |
20068 | Perhaps you prefer his home to mine? |
20068 | Sally? |
20068 | Sarah shot a quick look of surprise at her friend, who added,''You said I might choose what I liked best to do every day, did n''t you, Sarah?'' |
20068 | She''s really jolly, ai n''t she? |
20068 | So I have been teaching you your holiday- lesson, have I?'' |
20068 | So she felt no shyness with Mr Blakeley, and said,''What difference do the changes make, Mr Blakeley? |
20068 | Speak up, my lass; why are they ringing my bell? |
20068 | Suddenly she lifted her head--''What holiday- essay are you going to write this summer?'' |
20068 | Suppose he had heard his brother called an"old buffer"?'' |
20068 | Surely they''ve never left those beautiful cars to burn themselves up?'' |
20068 | Surely you were n''t coming to Ousebank without coming to see me?'' |
20068 | Tell me, is there? |
20068 | That is your wish, is it not?'' |
20068 | The band, a local one, struck up''La Rinka,''and even Mr Clay exclaimed,''That''s something to look at, Polly, ai n''t it? |
20068 | The chauffeur told you so, do n''t you remember? |
20068 | Then out spake brave Horatius... And how can man die better Than facing fearful odds, For the ashes of his fathers And the temples of his gods? |
20068 | Then what are you going to do? |
20068 | There''s been an accident''----''An accident? |
20068 | This time it was George who spoke, inquiring,''Is there anything to croak about, then?'' |
20068 | To whom?'' |
20068 | To- morrow?'' |
20068 | To- night?'' |
20068 | W''at should be the matter? |
20068 | W''at''as Ruth got?'' |
20068 | W''atever can you mean?'' |
20068 | W''ere''s the good of''avin''riches if you ca n''t enjoy it?'' |
20068 | W''y did n''t you come in time for it, Bill? |
20068 | W''y should Naomi want a gun to shoot wi''? |
20068 | W''y''asn''t Naomi put out your things?'' |
20068 | Was it in honour of little, insignificant me? |
20068 | We got home in seven minutes last time; do you think we could do it in five to- day?'' |
20068 | We shall be friends again then as we used to be, sha''n''t we?'' |
20068 | Wear it at your big reception, will you?'' |
20068 | Were you all going to strike if he had n''t seen you?'' |
20068 | What am I to do if you go off and leave me all alone? |
20068 | What are you going to do to- day? |
20068 | What are you living on to- day-- air or excitement? |
20068 | What are you looking at me like that for? |
20068 | What can I do? |
20068 | What d''ye say lads, shall we let her come into t''town if he wo n''t let us go into his park, or shall we turn her back same as he did us?'' |
20068 | What did Naomi say?'' |
20068 | What did she stain her hands for? |
20068 | What did you go to him for, and what did he say?'' |
20068 | What do I pay to the hospitals for if it is n''t for them to be useful to me? |
20068 | What do you mean? |
20068 | What do you mean? |
20068 | What do you mean? |
20068 | What do you suppose the mistress would say to that?'' |
20068 | What do you think she said yesterday? |
20068 | What do you want to go there for when you could come to mine, eh? |
20068 | What do you want to rink for? |
20068 | What has my father done now?'' |
20068 | What have I said wrong now?'' |
20068 | What have you heard or seen? |
20068 | What is the girl like?'' |
20068 | What is the name of the house, then?'' |
20068 | What kind of place is the barn?'' |
20068 | What made you think anything was wrong?'' |
20068 | What on earth can it be, Sarah? |
20068 | What on earth for, George? |
20068 | What ought I to wear? |
20068 | What will he do or say?'' |
20068 | What will you do with them?'' |
20068 | What''s doing?'' |
20068 | What''s gone crooked between you two?'' |
20068 | What''s her mother there for?'' |
20068 | What''s the matter?'' |
20068 | What''s wrong with the others, eh?'' |
20068 | Whatever did she go to see you for? |
20068 | When Horatia saw what she had done she made a funny little face, and said in an undertone to Sarah,''I say, Sarah, ca n''t we walk to your house?'' |
20068 | When are they going to set fire to the house? |
20068 | When could we have them? |
20068 | When was it done? |
20068 | Where is he?'' |
20068 | Where on earth did you spring from?'' |
20068 | Where t''been?'' |
20068 | Where''s Sarah? |
20068 | Where''s the difference?'' |
20068 | Who do you think you''re talkin''to? |
20068 | Who told you so?'' |
20068 | Who''d trust George if they thought''e was responsible? |
20068 | Who''ll help to save a Yorkshireman''s home, however much he has blundered, for a Yorkshire family?'' |
20068 | Why are you so nice to my father?'' |
20068 | Why did n''t she stop and say good- mornin''to her dad? |
20068 | Why did n''t you say Uncle Howroyd would stand surety, and refer them to Hurst? |
20068 | Why did n''t you stop?'' |
20068 | Why did you come?'' |
20068 | Why do n''t you do the same thing?'' |
20068 | Why do n''t you go?'' |
20068 | Why do n''t you weave a lot of coat- lengths of that new shade? |
20068 | Why does it interest you so much?'' |
20068 | Why does that frighten you so? |
20068 | Why should we pack up and go away just because a granary and a few trees are burnt down? |
20068 | Why, what''s the matter, Miss Sarah? |
20068 | Will you take me to my father?'' |
20068 | With a little cry Naomi turned, to see herself confronted by Sykes, who exclaimed,''Whatever are you up to, Naomi? |
20068 | Work?'' |
20068 | Would you, Horatia?'' |
20068 | You do n''t expect them to nod to me, do you?'' |
20068 | You do n''t want to be the talk of the town, do you? |
20068 | You''ll only lose it, an''then w''ere will you be?'' |
20068 | You''re sure he_ is_ my father? |
20068 | You''ve made money, then, Sykes?'' |
20068 | You''ve often been up a passage, I suppose?'' |
20068 | Your eyes must be sharper than mine,''he remarked; and then turning to Tom Fox, he said,''Can you see aught, Tom?'' |
20068 | beard the lion in his den? |
20068 | ca n''t you see my place is burning?'' |
20068 | cried Horatia;''or is it a gramophone?'' |
20068 | did you hear what yon man said?'' |
20068 | how dare you go guessing at your uncle''s private affairs like that?'' |
20068 | however could you? |
20068 | is n''t that just like a woman? |
20068 | it''s you, is it? |
20068 | who would have thought it? |
20068 | you, Sally?'' |
21361 | ''Tack a what? |
21361 | Ai n''t it a cruel shaame? |
21361 | Ai n''t you well, Mester Jacob? |
21361 | All the men come yet? |
21361 | Am I to come after you? |
21361 | Am I? |
21361 | An''so you fun''em in the wheel- pit, did you, Mester Jacob? |
21361 | And are we going there? |
21361 | And bears no malice? |
21361 | And before then, I suppose, we are to be killed? |
21361 | And fire the fuse? |
21361 | And have you brought a regiment of soldiers with you, gentlemen? |
21361 | And have you-- are you sure? |
21361 | And make them bring back our bands? |
21361 | And the men who beat you like that? |
21361 | And when I broke my arm, after getting up the rock after the gulls''eggs, did n''t you tell me about the Spartan boys? |
21361 | And will he tell? |
21361 | And will it hold a man, Pannell? |
21361 | And will you hev this? |
21361 | And wished yourself at home? |
21361 | And would you do this, my man? |
21361 | And you can find nothing wrong? |
21361 | And you''re going to set a big trap to catch that there--_poof_--"that theer very big rat, eh?" |
21361 | Any on it come on you, mester? |
21361 | Are we being laughed at? |
21361 | Are we going to lay this before the police? 21361 Are you cold?" |
21361 | Are you coming? |
21361 | Are you glad, mun? |
21361 | Are you hurt? |
21361 | Are you out of work? |
21361 | Are you ready? |
21361 | Are you? |
21361 | Arn''t it a bit too thick, Mester? |
21361 | As who are, Cob? |
21361 | Attempts to frighten us? |
21361 | Ay, did n''t you know? |
21361 | Because we had such an example of the safety of the place and the needlessness of the task? |
21361 | Brought a what? |
21361 | But are they mountains? |
21361 | But could n''t you prove it against him? |
21361 | But his education as an engineer? |
21361 | But how came you to find''em, mester? |
21361 | But how was it? |
21361 | But is it likely? |
21361 | But not serious attacks? |
21361 | But tell me,I whispered,"will it?" |
21361 | But the men; will they come again? |
21361 | But was that an honest demonstration? |
21361 | But was the fuse alight? |
21361 | But what for? |
21361 | But what have we done beyond taking possession of a building for which we have paid a large sum of money? |
21361 | But what have you been doing? |
21361 | But what''s to be done? |
21361 | But when should I have to go? |
21361 | But where did you get him? |
21361 | But where has Uncle Jack gone then? |
21361 | But where?--how? |
21361 | But will you be able to find me again? |
21361 | But you are not hurt? |
21361 | But you do n''t know who they were? |
21361 | But you will turn upon them for this, Pannell, will you not? |
21361 | But you''ll be friends? |
21361 | But you''re scarred of a pistol, eh lad? 21361 But, my dear boys--""There, it''s of no use; is it, Bob?" |
21361 | But, say, lad, is n''t it time wuck began again? |
21361 | But, uncle, I may come to you, may I not? |
21361 | But, uncle,I cried, clinging to his arm,"do you really think I may believe that my sleepiness came from being drugged?" |
21361 | But--"Do n''t you want to go? |
21361 | Ca n''t we do something, uncle? |
21361 | Ca n''t we make them see that we are working for them instead of against them? |
21361 | Can you crawl to me? 21361 Can you get a short ladder?" |
21361 | Can you see him, Cob? |
21361 | Can you see where you are going, Dick? |
21361 | Can you turn him over? |
21361 | Can you? |
21361 | Come,I said, as I bent over him;"shall I undo it for you?" |
21361 | Confess now,said Uncle Bob;"have n''t you often felt very much alarmed at having to keep watch of a night in that lonely factory?" |
21361 | Cured? |
21361 | Did n''t bring it with you, I suppose? |
21361 | Did n''t take return tickets, did you? |
21361 | Did n''t they, mester? |
21361 | Did you do that in a fit of passion or sulks? |
21361 | Did you feel that? |
21361 | Did you save me? |
21361 | Did you see where those men went as they got off the raft? |
21361 | Did you see which way it went? |
21361 | Did you see who the others were? |
21361 | Did you take anything last night after I left you? |
21361 | Did you, now? |
21361 | Do n''t care for rats? |
21361 | Do n''t they know? 21361 Do n''t you call that saying I telled on''em, wi''out the poother in my forge this morning?" |
21361 | Do n''t you think you ought to have pistols? |
21361 | Do n''t you understand? |
21361 | Do you hear? |
21361 | Do you mean to fight, then? |
21361 | Do you mean what you say, Gentles? |
21361 | Do you notice one thing, Cob? |
21361 | Do you really feel that you would like Jacob to go with you? |
21361 | Do you say you tried to wake him? |
21361 | Do you think I do n''t know better than that? |
21361 | Eh, what about''em? |
21361 | Eh, you be-- be you? 21361 Eh?" |
21361 | Eh? |
21361 | Eh? |
21361 | Eh? |
21361 | Fed Piter? |
21361 | Feel what, Cob? |
21361 | For fear of getting into trouble with his mates? |
21361 | Go down? |
21361 | Go home and get off your wet things and go to bed,said Uncle Jack,"and do n''t come worrying us again-- do you hear?" |
21361 | Goin''to open wucks, and let''s get on again, lad? |
21361 | Going a wallucking, Mester Jacob? |
21361 | Going to introduce new inventions, eh? |
21361 | Got in at Arrowfield, did n''t you? |
21361 | Had n''t we better turn back now? |
21361 | Has it, uncle? |
21361 | Have I been asleep? |
21361 | Have a drink? |
21361 | Have n''t you three fellows been teaching me ever since I was a little tot, to try and be a man? |
21361 | Have you done with the soap? |
21361 | Have you looked under the desks, and in the cupboards? |
21361 | Here, how came you in this condition? |
21361 | Hot, Dick? |
21361 | How are we to find out who is the scoundrel? |
21361 | How are we to get on then if one of the legs on which we stand-- you, sir, gives way? 21361 How are you, Cob?" |
21361 | How came you here? |
21361 | How came you to set the trap there? |
21361 | How deep is it, I wonder? |
21361 | How did you come there? |
21361 | How did you know I was in there? |
21361 | How did you know I was there? |
21361 | How do we know who''s a- watching an''listening? 21361 How is the child?" |
21361 | How long would it have burned? |
21361 | How was that? |
21361 | How''s the place, Pannell? |
21361 | Hurt, Jack? |
21361 | I ca n''t say, my boy-- who can? 21361 I s''pose you''ll tek a look round?" |
21361 | I say, Pannell, what did the men think about it? |
21361 | I say, Pannell,I said, after glancing round and seeing that we were quite alone,"how came you to throw our bands in the wheel- pit?" |
21361 | I say, have you done with the metaphorical soap? 21361 I was thinking, Uncle, suppose they were to set fire to us some night, what should we do?" |
21361 | I''d better butter a couple more cakes, had n''t I, gentlemen? |
21361 | If you know, why do n''t you speak out like a man? |
21361 | Is Mr Jacob a bit sadly, gentlemen? |
21361 | Is anything wrong? |
21361 | Is he dead? |
21361 | Is he dead? |
21361 | Is it black? 21361 Is it customary for your people here to fire canisters of gunpowder in the workshops of those who are newcomers?" |
21361 | Is it likely I could forget it? |
21361 | Is it, Uncle Jack? |
21361 | Is n''t it? |
21361 | Is n''t something dreadful the matter? |
21361 | Is she better? |
21361 | Is that a coal- pit? |
21361 | Is that gunpowder? |
21361 | Is that meant sulkily, or is it manly frankness? |
21361 | Is that so? |
21361 | Is your master in? |
21361 | Iver try to ketch any o''them long eels, Mester Jacob? |
21361 | Look here, Pannell, do you see this? |
21361 | Look here, mester,he began in a low threatening tone,"do you know what''s meant by keeping thy tongue atween thy teeth?" |
21361 | Look ye here, then,cried Pannell, flourishing his hammer round as if he were a modern edition or an angry Thor;"does anyone say I telled on''em? |
21361 | May I go? |
21361 | May I take it with me,I said,"and eat it as I go along?" |
21361 | May what? |
21361 | Mester Jacob,said Pannell,"I ca n''t see a bit wi''this towel round my head; look uppards and downards; any o''the chaps coming?" |
21361 | Much hurt? |
21361 | My dear Cob,said Uncle Jack,"why will you be so wilfully blind to what is good for you?" |
21361 | Nay, but what''s good o''thee wanting to grind? 21361 No precipices here, are there?" |
21361 | No threats or anything of that sort? |
21361 | No, my lad, one do n''t know whom to trust here; but how came you to think of that? |
21361 | Nor you neither, my good women? |
21361 | Not dying? |
21361 | Not give up and go like cowards? |
21361 | Nothing at all? |
21361 | Now are you satisfied? 21361 Now do you see?" |
21361 | Now then,he cried,"yer give in, do n''t yer? |
21361 | Now what''s the meaning of it all? |
21361 | Now, look here, Alick,said Uncle Dick,"do n''t you think he''ll learn as much with us down at the new works as in any London place?" |
21361 | Now, my lads,said Uncle Jack,"you do n''t want us to catch cold?" |
21361 | Now, then, have you anything here belonging to you? 21361 Now, then, who''s first?" |
21361 | Now, then, who''s for some lunch, eh? |
21361 | Now, then,said Uncle Dick as we reached the street,"what is it? |
21361 | Now, what in the world are you going to do with a clothes- line and two meat- hooks? |
21361 | Of an extra piece of meat every day, uncle? |
21361 | Oh, Uncle Richard, was it? |
21361 | Oh, it''s powder, then, is it? |
21361 | Oh, that''s what you think, is it, Gentles? |
21361 | Oh, that''s what you think, is it, lad? |
21361 | On''y, what am I to say if thee coots theesen? |
21361 | Oppose machinery, do they? |
21361 | Or to yow, youngster? |
21361 | Same length as the one that was run in the furnace- house? |
21361 | See that? 21361 Shall I speak?" |
21361 | Shall I tell him? |
21361 | Shall I undo it? |
21361 | Shall I? |
21361 | Shall we give up, be frightened, and run away like dogs with our tails between our legs? |
21361 | Shall we run after them? |
21361 | Shall we take any notice-- appeal to the men-- advertise a reward for the sender? |
21361 | Shall you go to the police about this? |
21361 | Shall you try and punish them? |
21361 | Shall you warn the police? |
21361 | So did our works sometimes, did n''t they? 21361 So it makes you think of Canonbury, does it, Bob?" |
21361 | Some one must have floated down the dam in a boat,I thought in a flash; but no explanation came to the next part of my question, what was it for? |
21361 | Something breathing against us? |
21361 | Swept away? |
21361 | That you have done with the trades- union, Pannell,I cried,"and mean to be on our side?" |
21361 | The small grindstones are theirs, are they not? |
21361 | Then Piter is? |
21361 | Then how do you know it''s powder? |
21361 | Then if someone invented a new kind of grindstone to grind tools and blades in a quarter of the time, what would they do? |
21361 | Then why are you a bad one? |
21361 | Then why do n''t they smash up the grindstones they use now? 21361 Then why do n''t you speak?" |
21361 | Then why should they interfere? |
21361 | Then you do n''t expect any more troubles of this kind? |
21361 | They have not tried to blow you up? |
21361 | Think this here noo steel''s better than owd fashion stoof? |
21361 | Think this''ll sattle''em? |
21361 | To be sure I will, Dunning; but tell me, how do the men seem now? |
21361 | Two miles on the road? |
21361 | Uncle Bob, are they making fun of me? |
21361 | Uncle Jack, you tell me then; what''s it like? |
21361 | Very often? |
21361 | Very tiresome,said Uncle Dick, who was growing impatient;"but are you going to get these people out? |
21361 | Was it anywheers about here-- anywheers about here? |
21361 | Was the dog asleep too? |
21361 | We do n''t want to save it then? |
21361 | Well, Pannell,I said,"arn''t you sorry to have to work so hard again?" |
21361 | Well, Pannell,I said,"you''ve heard about the cowardly trick done in the shops?" |
21361 | Well, Philosopher Cob,he said,"what do you say? |
21361 | Well, boys,he said,"how do you bring it in? |
21361 | Well, my man, what is it? |
21361 | Well, s''pose they hev? 21361 Well, that''s all over now, Gentles, and you''ve come to apologise?" |
21361 | Well, what about the wheels? |
21361 | Well, what is it? 21361 Well, what is the difference?" |
21361 | Well, what''s to be done, boys? |
21361 | Well, who do you think did it? |
21361 | Well, why do n''t you speak, man; what is it? |
21361 | Well,he cried,"why do n''t you go, mate? |
21361 | Well,he said all at once,"want another trap?" |
21361 | Well,said Uncle Bob,"what would you have done-- drowned them?" |
21361 | Well,said my father,"am I to speak?" |
21361 | Well? |
21361 | Well? |
21361 | What are you doing here? |
21361 | What are you going to bait with? |
21361 | What are you going to do with the rope? |
21361 | What are you going to do? |
21361 | What are you going to do?--carry on the old forging and grinding? |
21361 | What are you going to send him away for? |
21361 | What are you staring at, Cob? |
21361 | What did I tell thee? |
21361 | What did you hear? 21361 What do I want, eh?" |
21361 | What do you mean? |
21361 | What do you mean? |
21361 | What do you mean? |
21361 | What do you say, Bob? |
21361 | What do you say, Cob? |
21361 | What do you say, Jack? |
21361 | What do you say? 21361 What do you say?" |
21361 | What do you think of that? |
21361 | What do you want, Pannell? |
21361 | What do you want? |
21361 | What do yow want wi fower- and- twenty boockets? |
21361 | What does that mean, oh, boy of mystery? |
21361 | What does this mean? |
21361 | What good ud that do? |
21361 | What has been thrown in here-- some bundles of wire or steel rods? |
21361 | What have you been doing? |
21361 | What have you to say? |
21361 | What is it, Cob? 21361 What is it, Uncle Jack?" |
21361 | What is it, old fellow? |
21361 | What is it? |
21361 | What is it? |
21361 | What is it? |
21361 | What is it? |
21361 | What is the matter? |
21361 | What is there to attract you, my lad? 21361 What is, boy?" |
21361 | What shall I do? |
21361 | What shall we do with the powder, then? |
21361 | What should you advise-- warrants against the ringleaders? |
21361 | What time is it? |
21361 | What time shall I start? |
21361 | What took place when I stuck that last threat on the door? |
21361 | What was that? |
21361 | What was that? |
21361 | What with? |
21361 | What would you do, Cob? |
21361 | What''s that light? |
21361 | What''s that yow, Mester? |
21361 | What''s that? |
21361 | What''s the matter? 21361 What''s the matter?" |
21361 | What''s the matter? |
21361 | What''s this, then, and this, and this? |
21361 | What''s this? |
21361 | What''s to be done next? |
21361 | What''s to be done? |
21361 | What''s wrong? |
21361 | What, are you going to try for eels that way? |
21361 | What, by men? |
21361 | What, down there by the wheel? |
21361 | What, hold him? |
21361 | What, in yonder? |
21361 | What, that we are just going to put out in the yard for the clean clothes? 21361 What, wi''that line, Mester?" |
21361 | Wheer is he then, boy? 21361 Wheer? |
21361 | Wheerabouts? 21361 When do we begin, uncle-- to- morrow?" |
21361 | When? |
21361 | Where are you, boy? |
21361 | Where are you? 21361 Where did you mean to put that can of powder?" |
21361 | Where do they keep their wheat? |
21361 | Where does the noise come from? |
21361 | Where is Uncle Dick? |
21361 | Where was the powder? |
21361 | Where''s Dick? |
21361 | Where''s Uncle Bob? |
21361 | Where''s that scoundrel lying asleep? |
21361 | Where, uncle? |
21361 | Where? |
21361 | Which is millstone- grit? |
21361 | Which is the house? 21361 Which on''em''vented this here contrapshion?" |
21361 | Which way now? |
21361 | Who are yow? 21361 Who did it?" |
21361 | Who is it? 21361 Who poisoned lad?" |
21361 | Who says so? |
21361 | Who set you on, I say? |
21361 | Who''s for a walk? |
21361 | Who''s that,I said,"on the other side of the dam? |
21361 | Who''s there? |
21361 | Who''s''venting the noo steel? |
21361 | Who? 21361 Whom will you ask to direct us?" |
21361 | Whose bairn is it? |
21361 | Why do n''t you set that trap? |
21361 | Why do n''t you speak? |
21361 | Why do n''t you speak? |
21361 | Why do n''t you take our side, Pannell; my uncles are your masters? |
21361 | Why do n''t you tell me, then, who threw the bands in the wheel- pit, so that he could be discharged? |
21361 | Why does n''t he come in? |
21361 | Why not all four go? |
21361 | Why not ask the world to stand still, sir? |
21361 | Why not get fresh hands altogether? |
21361 | Why not give up watching the place and let it take its chance? |
21361 | Why not wait till after tea? |
21361 | Why not? |
21361 | Why should I? |
21361 | Why should they throw them in here? |
21361 | Why, Cob,he said huskily,"did you get hold of that?" |
21361 | Why, Pannell, do n''t you know me? |
21361 | Why, Pannell,I cried,"what''s the matter?" |
21361 | Why, how could I? |
21361 | Why, my lad,he said,"yow do n''t think I''m going to tell, do''ee?" |
21361 | Why, what brings you two here? |
21361 | Why, what did I do but what you three dear old fellows taught me? 21361 Why, what hev yow been doing to theeself, Mester John?" |
21361 | Why, what''s all this? |
21361 | Why, you are going to stop all night,I cried,"so as to be there before the men?" |
21361 | Why? |
21361 | Why? |
21361 | Why? |
21361 | Will I come? |
21361 | Will you come, my lad? |
21361 | Will you lend me the hooks? |
21361 | Will you tell me? |
21361 | Would Piter warn us, do you think? |
21361 | Would he bite a man hard? |
21361 | Would it? |
21361 | Would you put the matter in the hands of the police? |
21361 | Yes, but you-- are you all right? |
21361 | Yes, exactly; but how came you in the yard? |
21361 | Yes, is n''t the place on fire? 21361 Yes, pistol, do yer hear?" |
21361 | Yes, who was it? |
21361 | Yes,said Uncle Jack sternly as he turned to Uncle Dick;"what do you mean to do?" |
21361 | Yes; how did you know? |
21361 | You can hear the rush and rumble of machinery, ca n''t you? |
21361 | You did n''t show them the difference, did you, Cob? |
21361 | You do n''t mean to say that? |
21361 | You have n''t been to sleep, have you? |
21361 | You have packed up? |
21361 | You know who tried to poison our poor dog and tried to blow up the furnace, now do n''t you? |
21361 | You see now the danger from which you escaped? |
21361 | You think then that there is no occasion for us to watch, Cob? |
21361 | You will not take any notice of this insolent letter? |
21361 | You would n''t find, eh? 21361 Yow here agen?" |
21361 | Yow lookye here,said the big grinder, taking off his jacket and baring his strong arms;"yow called me a coward, did you?" |
21361 | Yow''ll let a mon shek hans wi''thee, lad? |
21361 | About the outrages?" |
21361 | All this was a matter of moments, and it seemed to be directly after my fellow- passenger had spoken first that he roared out,"Do you hear, sir? |
21361 | And leave the place to its fate?" |
21361 | And now what was I to do? |
21361 | Anything very wrong?" |
21361 | Are yo''deaf?" |
21361 | Are you all here, lads?" |
21361 | Are you ready?" |
21361 | Are you tired of it already?" |
21361 | Are you very angry with me?" |
21361 | But Piter; what did he have?" |
21361 | But how? |
21361 | But is n''t he a beauty, Cob?" |
21361 | But what are they going to do in revenge?" |
21361 | But what of the future, if these blind savages will do such things as this?" |
21361 | But will you lend me a couple of meat- hooks?" |
21361 | By the way, anyone know how he is?" |
21361 | Ca n''t you think? |
21361 | Can he forge a bill- hook or a scythe blade?" |
21361 | Can they forge?" |
21361 | Can you hear him?" |
21361 | Cob, what do you say? |
21361 | Cob,"he whispered huskily,"ought we to go on watching?" |
21361 | Come, Uncle Dick, what sort of a place is Arrowfield?" |
21361 | Could I hang there till then? |
21361 | Could n''t feel bottom, eh?" |
21361 | D''ye think I''m going to hev my bairns grow up such shacks? |
21361 | D''yer hear? |
21361 | Dare you?" |
21361 | Did I ivver come and say word to anny of you?" |
21361 | Did I tell on''em, mesters? |
21361 | Did I?" |
21361 | Did n''t they hear in the night?" |
21361 | Did n''t you say that you drank a little water and afterwards grew sleepy?" |
21361 | Did you ever know a boy yet who did not want to know how deep a piece of water was, when he saw it? |
21361 | Did you find out what became of poor old Jupiter?" |
21361 | Didn''I tell ye?" |
21361 | Do n''t you hear the rats?" |
21361 | Do tell me what sort of a place it is?" |
21361 | Do you bet?" |
21361 | Do you know what happens then? |
21361 | Do you mean to say those men remember what I used to do?" |
21361 | Do you think they are settling down?" |
21361 | Do you want your can of powder? |
21361 | Eh?" |
21361 | Got the rope?" |
21361 | Grindstones, sir? |
21361 | Had he been let loose? |
21361 | Had n''t we better go off here?" |
21361 | Have a cigar first?" |
21361 | Have they a different kind of engines?" |
21361 | Have you got your foot entangled? |
21361 | Have you unlocked the gate?" |
21361 | He was going to take it from me, and if he got it what was he going to do? |
21361 | Hedn''t the mesters better give in, and not make no more noofangle stoof?" |
21361 | Here about the works?" |
21361 | Here, you shall tell me this, who set you on?" |
21361 | Him wi''the biggest head?" |
21361 | How are you?" |
21361 | How can I be friends,"I cried,"with a man like you?" |
21361 | How did you come there, sir?" |
21361 | How did you get in? |
21361 | How far is it from thinking to sleeping and dreaming? |
21361 | How long has the dog been uneasy?" |
21361 | How was the poor lad to make use of them? |
21361 | How would it go if it did burst?" |
21361 | I cried impetuously;"are you not going to search for Uncle Dick?" |
21361 | I cried, passionately turning to him,"why do n''t you go to the police?" |
21361 | I cried,"what made you do that?" |
21361 | I cried;"have you had some accident?" |
21361 | I cried;"what''s the matter, old fellow?" |
21361 | I cried;"you are not hurt?" |
21361 | I do n''t know what I should have said and done then, as Uncle Jack exclaimed:"Have I said right, Dick, Bob?" |
21361 | I exclaimed,"where am I?" |
21361 | I fancy I hear some one say;"how''s that done?" |
21361 | I give that bit o''steel a crack, and it was a bad un, but I ca n''t take that back, can I?" |
21361 | I read in it reproach, and he seemed to be saying to me,"Oh, how could you do it?" |
21361 | I said in a confused way,"did I have it?" |
21361 | I say, was I right in coming?" |
21361 | I suppose you never tried to drive an eel? |
21361 | I was one moment for shouting,"Who''s there?" |
21361 | I''m sure he does not want to take any steps; do you, Cob?" |
21361 | In the watter?" |
21361 | Is Uncle Bob hurt?" |
21361 | Is he, boys?" |
21361 | Is this the one that had the mouse, Cob?" |
21361 | It was n''t you, was it?" |
21361 | Look ye yonder; what did I say?" |
21361 | Me, mester? |
21361 | Mester Jacob, are you theer?" |
21361 | Mester Jacob,"he said,"when''s this here unhappy strike going to end?" |
21361 | My uncles?" |
21361 | No? |
21361 | Not drink a little drop of mild stuff like that? |
21361 | Now can I?" |
21361 | Now did n''t you?" |
21361 | Now what can I do for you?" |
21361 | Now, boys, what next?" |
21361 | Now, do n''t you think you had better let the matter stand as it is? |
21361 | Now, how about telling the men?" |
21361 | Now, lads, what''s to be done?" |
21361 | Say, think they''ve got pistols?" |
21361 | Shall I fire some and try?" |
21361 | Should I run away? |
21361 | So yow got in trap too?" |
21361 | Some un push thee?" |
21361 | Tell me this-- Did I ivver tell on anny on''em?" |
21361 | That''s better: how did you fall in?" |
21361 | The police might trace out one of the offenders; but if they did, what then? |
21361 | Then he would be dragged out of the water, swung round, and--"Do you hear, Cob?" |
21361 | There was a cheer at this, and then, as soon as he could get silence, Uncle Jack shouted:"Is anyone here?" |
21361 | They all gone to Kedham?" |
21361 | Think the mesters''ll give in, Mester Jacob, sir?" |
21361 | To- night?" |
21361 | Uncle Jack looked down on the man, and then said quickly:"And you, what will you do?" |
21361 | Uncle Jack''s manner was so fierce that the man moaned out feebly:"If I tell''ee wilt tek off the trap?" |
21361 | Want to tak''work out o''poor men''s hands?" |
21361 | Was it not an accident?" |
21361 | Was it thou as set the big trap ketched my mester by the leg?" |
21361 | Was it you, Uncle Jack?" |
21361 | Well, Cob, what do you think of Arrowfield?" |
21361 | Well, my man, what is it?" |
21361 | Well, my man,"he cried roughly,"what is it?" |
21361 | Well, once more, Cob, you will not mind being left?" |
21361 | Were they getting in?" |
21361 | Were we to stay there all night in the darkness, shivering with cold and damp? |
21361 | What are the men doing?" |
21361 | What are you-- a fairy changeling? |
21361 | What could it be? |
21361 | What could it mean? |
21361 | What could it mean? |
21361 | What d''ye want? |
21361 | What did it mean-- what was going to happen? |
21361 | What did it mean? |
21361 | What did spoiling mean? |
21361 | What did they want to coom here for?" |
21361 | What do you say, my young friend?" |
21361 | What do you say-- divide in two watches as we proposed, and take turn and turn?" |
21361 | What do you want?" |
21361 | What for? |
21361 | What had happened? |
21361 | What is it?" |
21361 | What is it?" |
21361 | What is it?" |
21361 | What is the matter?" |
21361 | What should I do-- stop and try to hear more? |
21361 | What time was it? |
21361 | What was I to do? |
21361 | What was I to do? |
21361 | What was going to happen? |
21361 | What would be the consequences of a burst, Jack?" |
21361 | What would thy poor moother say if she saw thee this how?" |
21361 | What''s holding you down? |
21361 | What''s that?" |
21361 | What''s this?" |
21361 | What''s to be done?" |
21361 | What, Arrowfield? |
21361 | Whatever is the use of watching a float that will not bob? |
21361 | Wheer is he then?" |
21361 | When d''yow think it''ll be?" |
21361 | When dyer want it, lad?" |
21361 | Where are you going?" |
21361 | Where are you, Cob?" |
21361 | Where are you?" |
21361 | Where are you?" |
21361 | Where did you mean to put the powder can?" |
21361 | Where did you put the lantern?" |
21361 | Where from?" |
21361 | Where had the child tumbled in? |
21361 | Where''s Uncle Dick? |
21361 | Where''s the powder can?" |
21361 | Where''s your light?" |
21361 | Who can answer that question? |
21361 | Who did this cowardly act-- was it someone in the neighbourhood, or one of our own men?" |
21361 | Who wanted to catch a great water- rat that had plumped off the bank into the water? |
21361 | Who will stay?" |
21361 | Why are you going?" |
21361 | Why do n''t you speak?" |
21361 | Why not go steadily on with manufacturing in the regular way? |
21361 | Why, how can I? |
21361 | Will you come?" |
21361 | Will you excuse me if I have a cigar? |
21361 | Wonder whether we could have stuck Cob''s head on again if it had been cut off?" |
21361 | You are n''t the man to be scarred of a pop- gun, are yo''?" |
21361 | You ca n''t walk? |
21361 | You do n''t suppose they will come again?" |
21361 | You do n''t want to get me knocked on the head?" |
21361 | You know what that is?" |
21361 | You remember the night of the fire?" |
21361 | You''ve not been asleep too, have you?" |
21361 | You, Cob? |
21361 | Yow mean wuck, eh, mates?" |
21361 | Yow''ll--""Look here,"said Uncle Bob, mimicking the fellow''s broad rough speech,"had n''t yow better go home and take off your wet things?" |
21361 | asked Uncle Bob;"save it to hoist some of the scoundrels with their own petard?" |
21361 | he cried, making the blood flush to my face, and then run back to my heart--"why, what''s the matter, boy, are n''t you well?" |
21361 | he cried,"what''s this?" |
21361 | he said at last hoarsely;"are you glad? |
21361 | he shouted again;"where away?" |
21361 | panted Mrs Gentles,"wheer did he go in?" |
21361 | said Uncle Bob;"the forge blast? |
21361 | said Uncle Dick,"Fun that the frogs suffered when the boys stoned them, eh?" |
21361 | shrieked Mrs Gentles;"ca n''t you see him-- there?" |
56528 | A strike? 56528 Afraid of what? |
56528 | And Cécile? |
56528 | And Lydie? |
56528 | And Maheude? |
56528 | And is your company rich? |
56528 | And let it be well glazed, wo n''t you? |
56528 | And my mother, eh, and the little girl? 56528 And school, mother?" |
56528 | And that imp, Jeanlin,cried the mother;"where is he now, I should like to know? |
56528 | And that makes you cough so? |
56528 | And the doctor? |
56528 | And the little one? |
56528 | And the means of execution? 56528 And the soup? |
56528 | And what steps do you decide on? 56528 And where do you come from?" |
56528 | And why pillage me? |
56528 | And you, my little darlings,asked Deneulin of his daughters;"have they broken any of your bones?" |
56528 | And you-- nothing new, always from bad to worse? 56528 Are our brawlers getting angry at last?" |
56528 | Are the little ones back? |
56528 | Are there factories at Montsou? |
56528 | Are they going to bed here? |
56528 | Are we Cossacks? |
56528 | Are we at the end? |
56528 | Are you a coward? 56528 Are you here?" |
56528 | Are you in pain? |
56528 | Are you never thirsty? |
56528 | Are you ready? 56528 Are you sorry?" |
56528 | Are you sure you have not made a mistake? |
56528 | But I shall see you again? |
56528 | But what has taken you? 56528 But where shall we go, mother? |
56528 | But, anyhow, do you know where to go to? |
56528 | But,said Négrel,"what in the name of creation have you come up for, then? |
56528 | Can I come down yet? |
56528 | Come down, will you? |
56528 | Did I beat her when she took this Chaval? |
56528 | Did n''t I say so? |
56528 | Did n''t I tell you that they care nothing? |
56528 | Do they want a hand here for any kind of work? |
56528 | Do you remember? |
56528 | Do you see that scoundrel, Rasseneur, over there on the threshold of the public- house? |
56528 | Do you see them? |
56528 | Do you think you will benefit me if you stop work at my place? 56528 Do you think, then, that I''ve got thousands coming in? |
56528 | Do you think,he asked,"if I''m not punished, that they''ll give me a month''s leave in two years?" |
56528 | Do you understand? |
56528 | Does it concern you? |
56528 | Eh, are you the father? |
56528 | Eh? 56528 Eh? |
56528 | Eh? 56528 Eh? |
56528 | Father, what is it? |
56528 | Getting up at this hour? |
56528 | Has it been windy? 56528 Have n''t the Piolaine people told you to go and see them?" |
56528 | Have n''t they ugly faces? |
56528 | Have the children had any of it? |
56528 | Have you anything to tell me? |
56528 | Have you been working long at the mine? |
56528 | Have you got money, then? |
56528 | Have you got one of your two rooms free, and will you give him credit for a fortnight? |
56528 | Have you seen in the paper about Pluchart''s success at Paris? |
56528 | He''s robbing us, Lydie, is n''t he? 56528 Here we are, are we not, Dansaert?" |
56528 | Here we are,said the former to Étienne;"will you come in?" |
56528 | Here, I owe you six francs; would you like to settle it? 56528 How are things going with Pluchart?" |
56528 | How can one stir with a child that''s always screaming? 56528 How can they live in such dirt?" |
56528 | How is the old man? |
56528 | How much have you in the fund? |
56528 | How the devil did I come to get such a jade? 56528 I say, Mouquet,"whispered Zacharie in the lander''s ear,"are we off to the Volcan to- night?" |
56528 | I say, then, is this how you make fun of people? |
56528 | I say,she murmured, all at once coming and putting her arms round him prettily,"why do n''t you like me?" |
56528 | I suppose no one has been left at the bottom? |
56528 | I thought,said Madame Grégoire,"that the Company gave you lodging and firing?" |
56528 | If I were to take the box? |
56528 | If Jean- Bart bothers you as much as that,said he, laughing,"why do n''t you give it up to us?" |
56528 | Is Jeanlin working? |
56528 | Is Rasseneur in? |
56528 | Is he going to drag me about long? |
56528 | Is it a nickname? |
56528 | Is it blood? |
56528 | Is it deep? |
56528 | Is it serious, then, that you look at us like this? 56528 Is it true, then,"asked Maheu of Chaval, whom he met before the Estaminet Piquette,"that they''ve played the dirty trick?" |
56528 | Is n''t it a pity, all this nonsense? |
56528 | Is not my husband with you? |
56528 | Is that meant for me? |
56528 | It is n''t that big Chaval now? |
56528 | Jealous of what? |
56528 | Just leave me alone, will you? 56528 Just leave me alone, will you?" |
56528 | Let me go, do you hear? |
56528 | Long? 56528 Mates, what is your decision? |
56528 | Now, come, decide; where would you like me to take you? 56528 On her? |
56528 | Over where? 56528 People can find lovers when they all live together, ca n''t they?" |
56528 | Rasseneur,called Étienne,"bring a glass, will you?" |
56528 | Shall I tell you what it is? |
56528 | Since the Company professes to leave us free,he repeated,"what is there to fear? |
56528 | Souvarine, wo n''t you have one? |
56528 | Tell me, what have you got in your skin, at your age? |
56528 | That''s it, old man, is n''t it? 56528 The little one? |
56528 | Then Maheude is not coming this morning? |
56528 | Then if you think the game''s lost,asked Rasseneur,"why do n''t you make the mates listen to reason?" |
56528 | Then it is at night that the moles come out? 56528 Then it''s to me that you''re saying that?" |
56528 | Then what''s your name? |
56528 | Then you are against the strike? |
56528 | Then you put yourself against me, wench? 56528 Then you''ll keep me, and it will be all right this time?" |
56528 | Then you''ll stay? |
56528 | Then you''re not afraid? |
56528 | Then you''re still going? |
56528 | Then, sir, that is all that you reply? 56528 Then, there''s no news?" |
56528 | Then, what? 56528 Then,"he murmured,"if I were to ask you to put a hundred thousand francs in my affair you would refuse?" |
56528 | Then,said Madame Grégoire,"you have worked for a long time at the mines?" |
56528 | Well, are you going to take it? |
56528 | Well, do you refuse? |
56528 | Well, my good man,said the father,"you have a cold, then?" |
56528 | Well, philosopher, what troubles you? 56528 Well, what are you going to do?" |
56528 | Well, what do you think of it? |
56528 | Well, what has that to do with us? 56528 Well, what''s going on then, my lads?" |
56528 | Well, what? |
56528 | Well, wo n''t you come in and drink a little glass? |
56528 | Well,he asked,"what have you to say to me?" |
56528 | Well,he asked,"what would you do in my place? |
56528 | Well,replied Mouquette, in a good humour,"what''s that to do with you? |
56528 | Well? |
56528 | What are we stuck here for, blast it? 56528 What are you angry about? |
56528 | What are you doing up there? |
56528 | What are you up to there, all of you? 56528 What do you mean, the Black Man?" |
56528 | What do you say about it, eh? |
56528 | What do you say? 56528 What do you want?" |
56528 | What do you want? |
56528 | What do you want? |
56528 | What does that matter, if it amuses her? 56528 What does that matter? |
56528 | What does that matter? |
56528 | What for? |
56528 | What have you come after here, you pack of meddlers? |
56528 | What have you done that for? |
56528 | What have you got to say, eh, about their society? |
56528 | What ideas? |
56528 | What is it now? |
56528 | What is it they have at the end of that stick? |
56528 | What is it, then? |
56528 | What is it? |
56528 | What is she doing, then? |
56528 | What is that lazy Chaval up to? 56528 What is that, then?" |
56528 | What on earth have you come here for? |
56528 | What other one? |
56528 | What the devil''s that to do with you? |
56528 | What would you have? 56528 What would you have? |
56528 | What''s that there? 56528 What''s that, then?" |
56528 | What''s to be done? |
56528 | What''s up with you? |
56528 | What''s up? |
56528 | What, then? |
56528 | What? 56528 What? |
56528 | Where are you going to? |
56528 | Where are you off to? |
56528 | Where are your sweethearts? |
56528 | Where is Jeanlin? |
56528 | Where is Poland, then? |
56528 | Where is she, then, your mother? |
56528 | Where''s my coffee and my sugar and the meat? 56528 Where, then, is Chaval?" |
56528 | Who does it all belong to, then? |
56528 | Who is it? |
56528 | Who is that? |
56528 | Who is that? |
56528 | Who says so? 56528 Who, then?" |
56528 | Whom do you mean? |
56528 | Whom do you mean? |
56528 | Why did you lie? |
56528 | Why, did n''t she have the cheek to say just now that she would strangle Catherine if she were to come to that? 56528 Why? |
56528 | Will you be still, vermin? |
56528 | Will you come and dine with me? |
56528 | Will you come for a moment, my child? |
56528 | Will you drink, by God? 56528 Will you drink?" |
56528 | Will you have a game? |
56528 | Will you hold your tongue, eh? 56528 Will you make them be still?" |
56528 | Will you share with me? |
56528 | Work for an engine- man? 56528 Would you rather he had remained below?" |
56528 | Yes, the Man-- you know? 56528 You after Chaval; and after you another, eh? |
56528 | You believe in those stupid things? 56528 You belong to Belgium, perhaps?" |
56528 | You come and gorge yourself here, when we are dying of hunger up above? |
56528 | You do n''t eat? |
56528 | You must be about fourteen then? |
56528 | You only have these two? |
56528 | You will allow me, will you not, my good woman? |
56528 | You''ll have a glass with me? |
56528 | Your notion, then, is to pillage over there? |
56528 | A bit of veal, eh? |
56528 | A little glass of sweet, wo n''t you?" |
56528 | A thing which we ca n''t get into our heads, do n''t you see? |
56528 | After an awkward silence he made up his mind:"Poland? |
56528 | All sorts of confused questions came before him: Why are some miserable? |
56528 | Already there was not enough to eat, and what would happen if wages were still further lowered? |
56528 | Am I not right to act as I do? |
56528 | And as he hesitated:"Then you''re still afraid of me?" |
56528 | And do n''t say anything, will you, if you want to be kind?" |
56528 | And first, who says that my wife said so?" |
56528 | And from behind, the Levaque woman added, more violently:"Must we eat you to get through? |
56528 | And he quickly spoke to the manager:"It has come, then? |
56528 | And he took her again and pressed her, out of bravado, crushing his red moustache against her mouth, and continuing:"Will you leave us alone, eh? |
56528 | And he went on calling to the men; did not the goods in there belong to the colliers? |
56528 | And his dream of popular leadership again soothed him: Montsou at his feet, Paris in the misty distance, who knows? |
56528 | And how can we set about it?" |
56528 | And how were they to prevent these furious people from impaling themselves? |
56528 | And it''s you that pay him, eh? |
56528 | And she questioned him; had she been seen so, without even a handkerchief around her waist to cover her? |
56528 | And the other struggled and protested furiously:"What''s all this for? |
56528 | And the others? |
56528 | And then, you silly beast, how can I divide eleven sous into three? |
56528 | And what do they pay you in your house, your wife and the gentleman who is this minute wearing out her skin?" |
56528 | And what have you invented instead? |
56528 | And what would be the end of it all if no help arrived, and starvation came to beat down their courage? |
56528 | And what''s to be done? |
56528 | And where do you go?" |
56528 | And who was cutting them, when the men were below? |
56528 | Another girl given a tumble on a pile of stones? |
56528 | Another? |
56528 | Any work here?" |
56528 | Are they going to send us any money?" |
56528 | Are they to come in here?" |
56528 | Are you coming, up there?" |
56528 | Are you going to fill your tub? |
56528 | Are you going to let your mates be carried off to prison? |
56528 | Are you going to try and create a section at Montsou?" |
56528 | As to the masters, they''re often rascals; but there always will be masters, wo n''t there? |
56528 | At last he said:"I suppose I ought to jump on the boss? |
56528 | At what spot should they cut into the bed? |
56528 | Besides, where could they fly? |
56528 | Besides, who would hear them? |
56528 | But at that moment Madame Hennebeau''s voice called from the first story:"Is that you, Paul? |
56528 | But he could not understand its presence here: how could it have got into Paul''s bed? |
56528 | But one thinks, does n''t one? |
56528 | But what could one do? |
56528 | But what was the good? |
56528 | But what was to be done? |
56528 | But why? |
56528 | Can it be possible? |
56528 | Can you believe that the Company has not as much to lose as you have in the present crisis? |
56528 | Chase them away on their return from Marchiennes, like stinking animals whom he would no longer have beneath his roof? |
56528 | Could he anticipate, for instance, that his followers in the settlement would one day stone him? |
56528 | Could it be that any were cowardly enough to go back on their word? |
56528 | Could they not go away quietly? |
56528 | Could you give it me back?" |
56528 | Did he frighten her, that she always refused? |
56528 | Did he still desire her, that he felt so troubled, gradually warmed at the heart by a fresh longing? |
56528 | Did he want to hurt such a little darling, who was as soft as silk, so tender that he could have devoured her? |
56528 | Did it matter a hang what the Company wanted? |
56528 | Did not my great- grandfather gain, and hardly, too, the sum originally invested? |
56528 | Did she not love him enough? |
56528 | Did she want, then, to remain in the pit to die of hunger? |
56528 | Did you hear? |
56528 | Did you see anything?" |
56528 | Do I know you? |
56528 | Do they want to make fools of people?" |
56528 | Do you call yourself a man to lower yourself like that before one of these beasts who devour us?" |
56528 | Do you know that it is beastly to stuff yourself like this? |
56528 | Do you see? |
56528 | Do you think the bourgeois would ever consent to work as we do?" |
56528 | Do you understand? |
56528 | Do you understand?" |
56528 | Do you vote for the strike to go on?" |
56528 | Do you want the strike to go on? |
56528 | Does it work? |
56528 | Does n''t Zacharie owe us any respect? |
56528 | Double the timbering-- do you understand?" |
56528 | Eh, do you hear? |
56528 | Eh, what do you say to it?" |
56528 | Eh? |
56528 | Eh? |
56528 | Eh? |
56528 | Eh? |
56528 | Eh? |
56528 | Eh? |
56528 | Eh? |
56528 | Eh? |
56528 | Even if he mended the cables and lit the fires, where would he find men? |
56528 | Had n''t we enough misery, that He had to make her ill too, just when I ca n''t even give her a cup of warm gruel?" |
56528 | Had she let her tongue fall? |
56528 | Had she not been with a man? |
56528 | Had she not made him suffer with the same suffering here, on this Réquillart road, when she had given herself to that man? |
56528 | Had she not suffered too much already? |
56528 | Had they not the right to take back their property from this thief who had exploited them so long, who was starving them at a hint from the Company? |
56528 | Have n''t we got enough to do with our misery? |
56528 | Have n''t you got it in your own power to make yourselves happy on earth?" |
56528 | Have they not a Provident Fund?" |
56528 | Have we not run all the risks of the enterprise, and do I today make a bad use of my income?" |
56528 | Have you examined?" |
56528 | Have you got nothing?" |
56528 | Have you just a little vermicelli by way of loan?" |
56528 | He asked:"Then Monsieur Hennebeau owns the mine?" |
56528 | He discussed no more, he simply said:"We have gone far; shall we go back?" |
56528 | He had, in fact, arrived, and another voice cried from the bottom of the cutting:"Well, is this the way to treat people? |
56528 | He has cost us something, has n''t he? |
56528 | He hesitated at first: was it indeed she, that young girl in the coarse blue dress, with that bonnet? |
56528 | He remained a moment motionless, then added, in his hollow voice:"What is it that you want? |
56528 | He said in a low voice, with abstracted gaze, as if to himself:"Raise wages-- how can you? |
56528 | He said, smiling:"Will you come and see?" |
56528 | He was expecting the postman at two o''clock; ought he at once to ask for troops? |
56528 | He was sleeping, then? |
56528 | He went on:"Do you see that? |
56528 | He went on:"Where is the beast who does not understand that? |
56528 | His anxiety became extreme, every minute was of importance; what decision should he take? |
56528 | His eyes lifted and his face was very pale; he said softly to his companion:"Did I ever tell you how she died?" |
56528 | His voice changed, his eyes grew bright, he fixed them on Étienne, directly addressing him:"Now, do you understand that? |
56528 | How can one tell how things are going to turn out? |
56528 | How can we make the strike general if we do n''t force all the mates to be on our side?" |
56528 | How can you do good to such creatures?" |
56528 | How can you talk such folly, you who ought to know the enormous risks which capital runs in industry-- in the mines, for example? |
56528 | How could Bonnemort, nailed to his chair, have been able to seize her throat? |
56528 | How could he defend these buildings, open on every side? |
56528 | How could he keep his engagements? |
56528 | How could she come back now if the miners were to prolong their joking? |
56528 | How do you expect me to go on? |
56528 | How do you reckon to set about it?" |
56528 | How far ought they to flee to reach shelter at the end of this abominable day, beneath this leaden cloud which also seemed about to crush the earth? |
56528 | How is it with you?" |
56528 | How many hours passed by thus? |
56528 | How was this known? |
56528 | How were nine people to live for a fortnight on fifty francs? |
56528 | How were they to live, seven persons without counting Estelle, on his three francs? |
56528 | How would the nations spring up again? |
56528 | I said nothing; and who told you so?" |
56528 | I say, you knew Roussie?" |
56528 | If any class must be devoured, would not the people, still new and full of life, devour the middle class, exhausted by enjoyment? |
56528 | Is it cooked, then?" |
56528 | Is it honest, whenever a crisis comes, to leave the workers to die with hunger in order to save the shareholders''dividends? |
56528 | Is it not so? |
56528 | Is it not true that all citizens are equal since the Revolution, because they vote together? |
56528 | Is it possible to make oneself so wretched through wanting justice?" |
56528 | Is it ready yet?" |
56528 | Is it you lighting up, Catherine?" |
56528 | Is n''t a man free? |
56528 | Is n''t it best for us to join this association?" |
56528 | Is n''t it enough, then, all these abominations? |
56528 | Is n''t it true, Alzire, that we have all had some?" |
56528 | Is n''t the good God making fun of us? |
56528 | Is that little chat nearly done?" |
56528 | Is that nice?" |
56528 | It is not the Emperor''s fault, perhaps; but why should he go and fight in America? |
56528 | It was Maheude who replied:"To mass, sir? |
56528 | It was good that they should want their work paid for at what it was worth, but why occupy oneself with such things as the bourgeois and Government? |
56528 | It was the downfall of their very life; what was the good of living, now that they would have to live without her? |
56528 | It was the end; what could they expect, reduced to this niche where they dared not move, exhausted, starving, having neither bread nor light? |
56528 | It''ll do, wo n''t it? |
56528 | It''s filling, then, to live on other people''s deaths?" |
56528 | It''s nothing, is it?" |
56528 | It''s the neighbour that you want? |
56528 | It''s to spare your arms, eh? |
56528 | It''s true, is n''t it, old un, that the doctor''s mistaken, and that you can still work?" |
56528 | Just tell me you did n''t say so, eh?" |
56528 | Let them pay you more, eh? |
56528 | M. Grégoire began again:"And everything goes well at the pit?" |
56528 | Maheu asked him another question:"Is it the Voreux''s turn now?" |
56528 | Maheude? |
56528 | Must I spit in your face before people to get your spirits up?" |
56528 | Must he leave his carcass behind a wall, like a strayed dog? |
56528 | Must he still push them on in obstinate resistance, now that there was neither money nor credit? |
56528 | Need one be so particular with these damned soldiers who were worrying the colliers in their own homes? |
56528 | No one knew exactly, the shouts made it impossible to hear; were they going to bed there? |
56528 | No politics, no conspiracies, is it not so? |
56528 | Nothing at Piolaine, nothing at Maigrat''s: then where? |
56528 | Négrel, who was exhausted, shouted to the overseers:"Ca n''t you make them be still? |
56528 | On what were they to count now since even their brothers had abandoned them? |
56528 | Only I say things as they are, and I know neighbours who could n''t say as much, do n''t you think?" |
56528 | Only what will that lead you to?" |
56528 | Perhaps it required a lawyer, a learned man, able to speak and act without compromising the mates? |
56528 | Pierronne, is it? |
56528 | Put some potatoes on to boil; we''ll eat them with a little butter and some coffee, eh? |
56528 | Say it''s time to get up?" |
56528 | Shall I go and fetch her?" |
56528 | Shall I try and get you credit somewhere?" |
56528 | She had then consented? |
56528 | She looked at him without listening, and said at last, speaking familiarly:"Eh? |
56528 | She said again, stammering:"What would you have? |
56528 | She was always there, looking at him with her large fixed eyes, laughing her good- natured laugh, as if to say:"Are you willing?" |
56528 | She was astonished; what had that got to do with politics? |
56528 | Should he remain? |
56528 | So what was to be done?--to go elsewhere, to die of hunger, to yield beneath the blows of every man who might pass? |
56528 | Speaking as though they had left each other good friends an hour before, he simply asked:"Have you looked down below? |
56528 | Strangle Pierronne and the others, and fight the whole settlement? |
56528 | Suddenly he called out:"I say there, Maheu; have you no care for life? |
56528 | The Company was, then, in luck since the terrible Montsou wrestler had come back to it to ask for bread? |
56528 | The best is, is it not, to try and live honestly in the place in which the good God has put us?" |
56528 | The former said at last:"Is it Chaval you''re waiting for? |
56528 | The little urchins came back hungry, they wanted to eat; why could they not have something to eat? |
56528 | The lodger, hiding his timid gentleness in his great beard, protested and stammered:"Oh, that? |
56528 | The manager went on:"But, as a matter of fact, is it our fault? |
56528 | The other man wanted to interrupt him, but he added:"Why do n''t you be frank? |
56528 | The other turned pale and his lips trembled; then, with a movement of excuse:"What would you have? |
56528 | The water had already filled that hole, then? |
56528 | Then he cried:"Have n''t you got any blood in your veins, by God?" |
56528 | Then he imagined that Catherine must be ill."I say, is it you? |
56528 | Then he made a gesture of resignation: what was the good? |
56528 | Then someone was dead? |
56528 | Then the colliers were no longer masters in their own place? |
56528 | Then they wanted to turn him into the street? |
56528 | Then what was to be done? |
56528 | Then what would they do afterwards? |
56528 | Then Étienne asked, pointing to the sombre pile of buildings at the foot of the platform:"A pit, is n''t it?" |
56528 | Then, as he still scraped, he added proudly:"Is n''t it comfortable in my house? |
56528 | Then, when he had expectorated and wiped the black froth from his lips, he replied in the rising wind:"Eh? |
56528 | There is nothing to say to them; what could you do? |
56528 | There was, then, not even passion, not even jealousy at the bottom of this persistent sensuality? |
56528 | There were twenty of them; were those bloody bosses going to abandon them thus? |
56528 | They are delicious, are they not?" |
56528 | They do tell stories--""Eh? |
56528 | They went back towards the Voreux slowly, and he added, after a few paces:"Have you seen the new placards?" |
56528 | They were known to be there; why weary oneself more? |
56528 | To listen to you talking useless foolery? |
56528 | Toussaint Maheu, is it not? |
56528 | Towards whom should they go, since no once appeared to be there? |
56528 | Unfortunately, the difficulty began when the question arose, What could be done? |
56528 | Was Darwin right, then, and the world only a battlefield, where the strong ate the weak for the sake of the beauty and continuance of the race? |
56528 | Was So- and- so among them? |
56528 | Was he going to be left on the road, hanging in the blackness? |
56528 | Was he, then, a coward? |
56528 | Was he, then, making fools of people? |
56528 | Was it his fault if they had left that fat lazy fellow to come to him? |
56528 | Was it not a cry of famine that the March wind rolled up across this naked plain? |
56528 | Was it not fearful? |
56528 | Was it not the common lot? |
56528 | Was it not what he always met, girls tumbled over at the bottom of every ditch, beggars who crammed themselves with the only joy that cost nothing? |
56528 | Was it possible to kill oneself at this hard toil, in this deadly darkness, and not even to gain the few pence to buy one''s daily bread? |
56528 | Was it resolved to destroy them? |
56528 | Was it some mates, then, who had also found the road barred and were returning? |
56528 | Was it the thunder of a landslip bringing on to their heads the enormous mass which separated them from the light? |
56528 | Was it true? |
56528 | Was it true? |
56528 | Was it, then, all over? |
56528 | Was it, then, done with for ever? |
56528 | Was life worth living when one had to keep one''s daughter''s fatherless children while she went off with her lover? |
56528 | Was n''t it so?" |
56528 | Was not justice on the side of the miners? |
56528 | Was not that Maheude beneath the beetroots, with bent back and hoarse respiration accompanying the rumble of the ventilator? |
56528 | Was not that a superb effort, a campaign in which justice would at last triumph? |
56528 | Was not that better than to roam the streets like a vagabond? |
56528 | Was that all? |
56528 | Was that the terrible thing which blew everything up? |
56528 | Was that the urchin whom he had seen in breeches, with her head in the canvas cap? |
56528 | Was the old social order cracking this very evening? |
56528 | Was there anything in life worth more? |
56528 | We are not going to leave off eating, I suppose?" |
56528 | We ca n''t pass through the cuttings, then?" |
56528 | We do n''t ask a man to cut his own throat, do we? |
56528 | We have left her free, have n''t we? |
56528 | We want five centimes more, do n''t we, you others?" |
56528 | We''ll go, eh? |
56528 | Well, are you coming, Louis? |
56528 | Were his eyes out? |
56528 | Were there, then, neither soldiers nor police at the Victoire? |
56528 | Were these people going to bed at the Maheus''? |
56528 | Were they being made fun of? |
56528 | Were they going to abandon the meeting? |
56528 | Were they making fun of people? |
56528 | Were they not very fortunate? |
56528 | Were they to let themselves be worried much longer? |
56528 | Were they very dirty? |
56528 | What a hustling, eh? |
56528 | What accident could thus have driven away their mates? |
56528 | What are you doing, then?" |
56528 | What do I want to do with the singers? |
56528 | What do they want me to do with him?" |
56528 | What do you think they can do with that? |
56528 | What does it matter to you? |
56528 | What does that matter?" |
56528 | What fault had she committed, then, that misfortune would never give her any rest? |
56528 | What for? |
56528 | What good would it do us, what you ask, now that I have a lover and you have a woman yourself?" |
56528 | What had he got in his bones, then? |
56528 | What has she got in her skin, then, not to be able to wait till I married her after she had helped to get us out of difficulties? |
56528 | What have we done, then, that we should have such troubles-- some under the earth, and the others with nothing left but to long to get there too? |
56528 | What he wants I''m obliged to want too, are n''t I? |
56528 | What is the good of letting men be killed for nothing?" |
56528 | What is the matter?" |
56528 | What is your aim?" |
56528 | What more could she take off? |
56528 | What now? |
56528 | What now? |
56528 | What rancour, unknown to himself, by some slow process of poisoning, had risen from his bowels to his brain? |
56528 | What right have they to freeze us in this way?" |
56528 | What shall we do with all this?" |
56528 | What should he do to them? |
56528 | What should he do with a putter? |
56528 | What stories?" |
56528 | What the devil are you doing there?" |
56528 | What the devil was she doing down there? |
56528 | What then had happened that they did not meet a soul? |
56528 | What then? |
56528 | What then? |
56528 | What then? |
56528 | What was going on, then, to bring all these people into the roads? |
56528 | What was it, then? |
56528 | What was the good of a scandal? |
56528 | What was the good of anything else? |
56528 | What was the good of bothering over the strike? |
56528 | What was the good of destroying the galleries? |
56528 | What was the good of disturbing him? |
56528 | What was the good of explaining, for she would not understand in her grief? |
56528 | What was the good of having a possible act of cowardice on one''s conscience? |
56528 | What was the good of it all? |
56528 | What was the good of knocking? |
56528 | What was the good of persisting? |
56528 | What was the good of risking a useless massacre? |
56528 | What was the good of stirring up this abomination? |
56528 | What was the good of this dream of fraternizing with the soldiers? |
56528 | What was the good? |
56528 | What was the good? |
56528 | What was the matter with her, then, today? |
56528 | What was the matter, then? |
56528 | What was the use? |
56528 | What was to be done? |
56528 | What was to be done? |
56528 | What was to become of them if Maigrat persisted in cutting short their credit, and if the Piolaine people would not give them the five francs? |
56528 | What will become of us, eh, if our children begin at once to work for others? |
56528 | What would his wife do, and what would become of them if she were to return with empty hands? |
56528 | What would you do? |
56528 | What would you have? |
56528 | What''s the use of doing it?" |
56528 | What''s the use of racking your brains over those things?" |
56528 | What''s this?" |
56528 | What, then, was going on outside? |
56528 | What, then, was happening? |
56528 | What, then, was happening? |
56528 | When a man came up, she rose and questioned him with her eyes: Nothing? |
56528 | When he saw Étienne he asked, with contemptuous surprise:"What''s that?" |
56528 | When justice came, would it be thanks to the cartridges distributed by the middle class? |
56528 | When one has right on one''s side, do n''t you think it gives you heart, and one ends always by being the strongest?" |
56528 | When one has to work, one works; is n''t it true? |
56528 | When shall it be?" |
56528 | When the young man had folded the letter, she questioned him:"Is the news good? |
56528 | When they had finished their omelette and cheese, the engine- man proposed to depart, and as the other tried to detain him:"What for? |
56528 | Where am I to get it from, eh? |
56528 | Where are you going to?" |
56528 | Where could he be? |
56528 | Where do the bandits spring from?" |
56528 | Where should he go, and what was to become of him in this country famished for lack of work? |
56528 | Where should they go to? |
56528 | Where the devil could that madcap Paul have stuffed it? |
56528 | Where was he going? |
56528 | Where was it, over there? |
56528 | Where was it, that Plogof which had appeared to him beneath the dazzling sun? |
56528 | Where was it, then? |
56528 | Where was it? |
56528 | Whispers ran around:"It''s Trompette, is n''t it? |
56528 | Who are those who want to work?" |
56528 | Who could say that the workers had had their reasonable share in the extraordinary increase of wealth and comfort during the last hundred years? |
56528 | Who had ever seen such boobies? |
56528 | Who knows whether Alzire had sponged over the table? |
56528 | Who then was the guilty one? |
56528 | Who thought of it first, eh?" |
56528 | Who was it? |
56528 | Who was the fool who placed earthly happiness in the partition of wealth? |
56528 | Who would dare to be first to speak of submission? |
56528 | Who would have expected such a thing? |
56528 | Who would pay the interest on the sums his friends had confided to him? |
56528 | Why are you going over to the bourgeois?" |
56528 | Why could he not imitate others, demand a part for himself, obtain shares, succeed in something at last? |
56528 | Why could no one say? |
56528 | Why could not things be done coolly? |
56528 | Why cut the cables? |
56528 | Why did he want her to leave her man? |
56528 | Why had Cécile come near? |
56528 | Why had he found her ugly? |
56528 | Why had she not seen them in the settlement? |
56528 | Why had the strikers gone to Deneulin instead of attacking one of the Company''s pits? |
56528 | Why had they not come across any soldiers? |
56528 | Why him, more than any one else?" |
56528 | Why lose a lunch that was already cooking? |
56528 | Why mix oneself up with other people''s affairs, when one would get nothing out of it but hard knocks? |
56528 | Why not hold this meeting? |
56528 | Why risk displeasing fate by doubting it? |
56528 | Why should he be so zealous, this man who had sold himself? |
56528 | Why should he interfere? |
56528 | Why should he not talk with this soldier? |
56528 | Why should it prove the stronger in this war of labour against gold? |
56528 | Why should the worker remain the slave of the master who pays him? |
56528 | Why should they not take a lodger? |
56528 | Why should they thus sulk against what they desired? |
56528 | Why, then, at the same idea to- day did she feel repugnance and something like regret? |
56528 | Why, was he afraid of a glass? |
56528 | Why?" |
56528 | Why?" |
56528 | Will it be soon? |
56528 | Will that hold? |
56528 | Will you be good enough to look over there if we are at it?" |
56528 | Will you come?" |
56528 | Will you just fill your tram and push?" |
56528 | Will you listen?" |
56528 | Would he then end as a murderer? |
56528 | Would it not be better if they were to shut up their bellies, and press their thighs together, as at the approach of misfortune? |
56528 | Would it not be better to die at once in the effort to destroy this tyranny of capital, which was starving the worker? |
56528 | Would it not soon be done with, this cursed life of misfortune? |
56528 | Would the Company refuse to take them on again? |
56528 | Would the settlement itself pass into it? |
56528 | Would they never dare to love each other some day, now that they were free? |
56528 | You are going to flog our daughters, are you?" |
56528 | You do n''t want to have anything to do with me?" |
56528 | You see if she is confined, and obliged to marry, what shall we do for a living then?" |
56528 | You were bothered, eh? |
56528 | Zacharie, is it done?" |
56528 | a bit of grilled cod? |
56528 | all that belong to? |
56528 | and if so, what do you expect to do to beat the Company?" |
56528 | and that one? |
56528 | and the marriage with little Négrel?" |
56528 | and this one? |
56528 | and why had this child just killed a soldier whose very name he did not know? |
56528 | and why this demand? |
56528 | and you, what do you say about it?" |
56528 | are you alone?" |
56528 | are you asleep?" |
56528 | asked Étienne again;"do you bring her here sometimes?" |
56528 | could tubbing be demolished like that? |
56528 | cried Chaval,"what the devil have you come here for?" |
56528 | did I tell you? |
56528 | did you hear?" |
56528 | do n''t you think so?" |
56528 | do they want a hand here for any kind of work?" |
56528 | exclaimed Maheu, furious at being dragged out of his dejection,"what is all this clatter again? |
56528 | exclaimed Étienne in a stifled voice;"where the devil is he going to?" |
56528 | from what side could they attack the rocks? |
56528 | gone away?" |
56528 | growled Étienne,"are they going to flatten us? |
56528 | had anything really changed in his house? |
56528 | had something happened? |
56528 | has the wind prevented you from sleeping, poor darling?" |
56528 | have n''t we got to the end yet?" |
56528 | he asked,"is n''t she up yet then?" |
56528 | how could they go down? |
56528 | how many are there in there?" |
56528 | is it forbidden to work, then?" |
56528 | is it possible? |
56528 | is it you?" |
56528 | is it you?" |
56528 | is it you?" |
56528 | is there any need to say where one goes? |
56528 | is this the rendezvous you called us to?" |
56528 | murmured the innkeeper;"what''s the good of it? |
56528 | or would it be better to wait patiently, and not to act until he had received the directors''orders? |
56528 | repeated M. Hennebeau;"am I happy?" |
56528 | said a miner grinning;"did that little fellow have you? |
56528 | said the young man;"why do you need a good God and his paradise to make you happy? |
56528 | she cried merrily;"was n''t it lucky that I leant my head?" |
56528 | so the strong man was thrown? |
56528 | that''s nice, is n''t it? |
56528 | the water was rising; what could he do? |
56528 | they come a little late, do n''t they, my worthy fellow?" |
56528 | they have money, why should they care?" |
56528 | to- morrow morning at Jean- Bart, is it agreed?" |
56528 | was it another accident? |
56528 | was it humbug, a pretence of going to sleep? |
56528 | was it possible that they were reduced to such misery? |
56528 | we are reaching the bottom: do you hear?" |
56528 | were the men also in the party? |
56528 | what has my little girl there done to Him, to be shaking with fever? |
56528 | what is it, then?" |
56528 | what is it?" |
56528 | what pleasant odour did he find in him? |
56528 | what the devil does it matter to me?" |
56528 | what will you do with all that? |
56528 | what''s happening, then?" |
56528 | what''s he done there? |
56528 | when your heads are smashed, is it you who will have to bear the consequences? |
56528 | where am I to get it from? |
56528 | where are you hurt?" |
56528 | where are you off to so quick?" |
56528 | where was it to be found, what was to be done? |
56528 | why are others rich? |
56528 | why are the former beneath the heel of the latter without hope of ever taking their place? |
56528 | why are the others such fools?" |
56528 | why did you take this trouble?" |
56528 | why do n''t you reply? |
56528 | why do you not take us? |
56528 | why have you done this?" |
56528 | why, in the devil''s name, do n''t you watch them?" |
56528 | why? |
56528 | will you climb up in front of me?" |
56528 | will you take that? |
56528 | would you like me to make it if you come back late?" |
56528 | you do n''t know?" |
56528 | you knew that, and said nothing? |
56528 | you''re going away?" |
56528 | Étienne narrated his vain wanderings of the past week: must one, then, die of hunger? |
56528 | Étienne recognized Rasseneur and was turning away, when the latter added:"You do n''t want to see me, eh? |
56528 | Étienne said again:"And if it breaks?" |
56528 | Étienne, for example, who was looking out for quarters? |
56528 | Étienne, losing his self- possession and trembling with anger, turned his eyes on his mate''s and stammered:"You''ve done that, you''ve done that?" |
38832 | Appropriate it in what manner? |
38832 | Can you help me to a safe investment for him? |
38832 | Have you got the jelly yet, mother? 38832 Is n''t Austin come?" |
38832 | Is n''t he yet come? |
38832 | ''A stab?'' |
38832 | ''A stepping- stone to become what?'' |
38832 | ''A wrong? |
38832 | ''Across whom?'' |
38832 | ''Ah, what indeed?'' |
38832 | ''Ai n''t nine hours a- day enough for the men to be at work? |
38832 | ''Am I interested?'' |
38832 | ''Am I like the healthy unsuspicious woman whom you saw some years before that?'' |
38832 | ''Am I stopping of my own accord? |
38832 | ''And Cox wo n''t take it in?'' |
38832 | ''And him you can not swear to? |
38832 | ''And how old are you?'' |
38832 | ''And if there is?'' |
38832 | ''And now, young sir,''turning to Austin,''how shall I reward you?'' |
38832 | ''And other firms as well?'' |
38832 | ''And suppose my sister, his lawful wife, had been led to believe this fine tale?'' |
38832 | ''And that I am a liar?'' |
38832 | ''And the wife and the children?'' |
38832 | ''And what did he say to you?'' |
38832 | ''And what do you think? |
38832 | ''And what have you been doing?'' |
38832 | ''And what have you had this morning to fortify you against the weakness?'' |
38832 | ''And what was amiss?'' |
38832 | ''And who are you, did you say?'' |
38832 | ''And whose is the fault?'' |
38832 | ''And you did not know her?'' |
38832 | ''And you think that Clay has suspected this? |
38832 | ''And----you have a mother?'' |
38832 | ''Any good?'' |
38832 | ''Anybody in the offices, Mr. Clay, except you?'' |
38832 | ''Are the men not learning the error of their course yet?'' |
38832 | ''Are they alike in person?'' |
38832 | ''Are they going off to the Forest at this hour, that lot?'' |
38832 | ''Are we quite alone?'' |
38832 | ''Are you a fool, Baxendale? |
38832 | ''Are you a man, or a demon? |
38832 | ''Are you glad to see me, Florence?'' |
38832 | ''Are you in any profession? |
38832 | ''Are you joking?'' |
38832 | ''Are you mad?'' |
38832 | ''Are you out of your mind, Bevary? |
38832 | ''Are you particularly engaged, Clay?'' |
38832 | ''Are you rascal enough to go in for the masters?'' |
38832 | ''Are you sure it would n''t do you good, Jim Dunn?'' |
38832 | ''Are you sure that_ you_ know nothing about her?'' |
38832 | ''Are you tired, sir?'' |
38832 | ''Articled?'' |
38832 | ''Austin, is it kind of you to try to put me off so? |
38832 | ''Austin,''breathed Mrs. Hunter,''was it a happy death- bed? |
38832 | ''Ay,''returned Mrs. Quale;''was ever such nonsense known? |
38832 | ''Be you a going to this meeting, Quale?'' |
38832 | ''Be you better, dear? |
38832 | ''Because you have never had no crosses, is it any reason that you never shall? |
38832 | ''Better this evening?'' |
38832 | ''Bevary, what are you driving at?'' |
38832 | ''But how could we keep on the top rooms when we were unable to get together the rent, to pay for them? |
38832 | ''But if she likes him?'' |
38832 | ''But may not the money have come from the same helping source? |
38832 | ''But perhaps you will tell me in your turn, Sam Shuck, whether it''s likely to answer for masters?'' |
38832 | ''But what are our wives and children to do while the strike is on?'' |
38832 | ''But what else could they have done? |
38832 | ''But what is it that you have got?'' |
38832 | ''But where am I to get work to do now?'' |
38832 | ''But why does he not come oftener?'' |
38832 | ''But why not have told me this? |
38832 | ''But why not impart to me the facts?'' |
38832 | ''But, my dear, what else is to be done?'' |
38832 | ''But-- when the children were ill-- was it a time to give up rooms?'' |
38832 | ''By the way, though-- what is the lady''s name?'' |
38832 | ''Ca n''t I be articled, sir?'' |
38832 | ''Can I get anything for you? |
38832 | ''Can I go and see him?'' |
38832 | ''Can nothing be done to prevent it? |
38832 | ''Can one clam?'' |
38832 | ''Can we drop into our coffins with famine? |
38832 | ''Can we starve?'' |
38832 | ''Can you not put it off for an hour? |
38832 | ''Can you swear to that first man?'' |
38832 | ''Can you swear to the others?'' |
38832 | ''Can you tell me how Mrs. Thornimett is?'' |
38832 | ''Can you tell me of any sacrifice that will keep it up?'' |
38832 | ''Can you tell me where a gentleman of the name of Lewis lives?'' |
38832 | ''Can you tell what their motive was for doing this?'' |
38832 | ''Can you walk with assistance as far as Mr. Rice''s shop?'' |
38832 | ''Can you wonder that I look worse? |
38832 | ''Clay,''cried Mr. Hunter, returning to the room and resuming his seat,''did any one in particular call and want me to- day?'' |
38832 | ''Clay? |
38832 | ''Come to his senses at last, has he?'' |
38832 | ''Come, Bevary, what have you got in your head? |
38832 | ''Could a woman, could any one be so positive as she is, unless thoroughly sure? |
38832 | ''Could he have fallen into Lawyer Gwinn''s"clutches"to_ that_ extent?'' |
38832 | ''Could n''t you have brought in a sausage or two for yourself, Mary, or a red herring?'' |
38832 | ''Could you not wait upon him, child, and describe my symptoms?'' |
38832 | ''Crowing?'' |
38832 | ''D''ye remember Baxendale? |
38832 | ''D''ye suppose it would be about anything else?'' |
38832 | ''Darby,''said Austin, when the man appeared before him,''will you pass your word to me to remain? |
38832 | ''Dear Mrs. Hunter, will you allow me to say a word to you on the subject of Florence?'' |
38832 | ''Did Arkwright come?'' |
38832 | ''Did I accuse you of it? |
38832 | ''Did Mrs. Hunter inquire who it was that was with me?'' |
38832 | ''Did it ever strike you that Austin Clay knew your secret, James?'' |
38832 | ''Did it never occur to you to think, or to expect, that he might leave you something?'' |
38832 | ''Did she begin upon her family affairs-- as she is rather fond of doing?'' |
38832 | ''Did they threaten you?'' |
38832 | ''Did you believe it?'' |
38832 | ''Did you ever hear of a lock- out, Shuck?'' |
38832 | ''Did you ever hear of that, Slippery Sam?'' |
38832 | ''Did you have an egg at eleven o''clock?'' |
38832 | ''Did you indeed pay it? |
38832 | ''Did you never know that you were a considerable legatee?'' |
38832 | ''Did you not know him previously, sir?'' |
38832 | ''Did you recognise the man?'' |
38832 | ''Did you say your name was Clay, sir?'' |
38832 | ''Did you see the strange manner in which that woman attacked me?'' |
38832 | ''Did you take the lantern with you purposely?'' |
38832 | ''Do n''t you mean to tell Louisa?'' |
38832 | ''Do they help her?'' |
38832 | ''Do you dislike the escort, Florence?'' |
38832 | ''Do you feel no better?'' |
38832 | ''Do you know what I heard? |
38832 | ''Do you know what she wanted?'' |
38832 | ''Do you know where Mr. Hunter is?'' |
38832 | ''Do you know, Austin Clay, that I have a long, long account to settle with you?'' |
38832 | ''Do you not see that it is death?'' |
38832 | ''Do you quarrel with it, young sir?'' |
38832 | ''Do you see him? |
38832 | ''Do you see where the fault lay in that case?--the blame?--the whole gist of the evil?'' |
38832 | ''Do you speak of Miss Gwinn?'' |
38832 | ''Do you think I could spare Florence? |
38832 | ''Does Mr. Hunter appear to you to be ill?'' |
38832 | ''Does he crave for it?'' |
38832 | ''Does she wear widow''s weeds?'' |
38832 | ''Father,''whispered the child, hopefully,''have you got the work?'' |
38832 | ''Florence, how_ can_ you be so tiresome? |
38832 | ''Go and do what?'' |
38832 | ''Going to take a moonlight ramble?'' |
38832 | ''Gwinn? |
38832 | ''Gwinn?--and from Wales?'' |
38832 | ''Has he signed the declaration?'' |
38832 | ''Have masters a right to oppress us, sir?--to grind us down?--to work us into our coffins?'' |
38832 | ''Have you all come into a fortune?'' |
38832 | ''Have you any little girls of your own?'' |
38832 | ''Have you come up for anything particular, Darby?'' |
38832 | ''Have you done a day''s work for weeks and months? |
38832 | ''Have you ever been to see that poor patient in Kerr''s asylum?'' |
38832 | ''Have you got any money, I ask? |
38832 | ''Have you made any acquaintance with Mr. Lewis, Agatha?'' |
38832 | ''Have you much appetite?'' |
38832 | ''Have you no idea what it is?'' |
38832 | ''Have you noticed before that he does not seem well?'' |
38832 | ''Have you yet to learn that a bad man can assume the semblance of goodness?'' |
38832 | ''Have you, since you came to London, seen aught of my enemy?--that man whom you saved from his death in the gravel pits? |
38832 | ''How am I to avoid offence?'' |
38832 | ''How am I to repay you?'' |
38832 | ''How are the children?'' |
38832 | ''How are you, Clay? |
38832 | ''How came she to leave me so much as that?'' |
38832 | ''How can I wonder at anything she does? |
38832 | ''How can there be, while the masters and the Unions are at loggerheads?'' |
38832 | ''How can they do that without capital?'' |
38832 | ''How can we get it, unless we try for it?'' |
38832 | ''How comes it about?'' |
38832 | ''How could I, Sarah?'' |
38832 | ''How could you know that she remained ignorant?'' |
38832 | ''How dare the masters think of taking on forringers? |
38832 | ''How dare you say you believe it?'' |
38832 | ''How dare you take part against me?'' |
38832 | ''How did it end?'' |
38832 | ''How do I know?'' |
38832 | ''How do you do, Mary?'' |
38832 | ''How do you feel to- day, Mary?'' |
38832 | ''How do you know that?'' |
38832 | ''How do you know you will not lose it?'' |
38832 | ''How do you make out that White, and them, be oppressionists?'' |
38832 | ''How do you think you shall like your quarters?'' |
38832 | ''How is Baxendale?'' |
38832 | ''How is it you are not at work to- day, Shuck?'' |
38832 | ''How is she, sir, by this time?'' |
38832 | ''How is she, sir?'' |
38832 | ''How long is it since Dr. Bevary was here?'' |
38832 | ''How long is this strike going to last?'' |
38832 | ''How much more"fair"would that have been towards us, than this locking- out is towards you? |
38832 | ''How on earth could you think of giving it away? |
38832 | ''How should I know about him?'' |
38832 | ''How should it?'' |
38832 | ''How was it you never spoke of this, Henry?'' |
38832 | ''However have you contrived it?'' |
38832 | ''Hunter and Hunter?'' |
38832 | ''I can rise above that in time, I suppose,''remarked Austin,''if I give satisfaction?'' |
38832 | ''I hope you are not hurt?'' |
38832 | ''I say,''continued Mrs. Stevens,''George says, will you and your master come in for an hour or two this evening, and eat a bit of supper with us? |
38832 | ''I should say-- But, is it true?'' |
38832 | ''I think it should be, what did you say? |
38832 | ''I wonder whether what Mr. Hunter said to- day will do any of''em any service?'' |
38832 | ''I wonder who he is?'' |
38832 | ''I wonder,''mused Austin,''what brings her to town?'' |
38832 | ''I''d like to know what you call that, but meeting in secret?'' |
38832 | ''I?'' |
38832 | ''If I understand you aright, you have come to town now to insist upon what you call your rights?'' |
38832 | ''If you knew it, why did you not speak openly to me?'' |
38832 | ''If_ you_ are not happy in the prospect of the future, who can be?'' |
38832 | ''Ill to be in danger of her life? |
38832 | ''In tears, Florence? |
38832 | ''In what manner, sir?'' |
38832 | ''Injury upon_ you_?'' |
38832 | ''Insolent, has she been?'' |
38832 | ''Is Cheek one that can not get any?'' |
38832 | ''Is Mrs. Hunter gone?'' |
38832 | ''Is he dead?'' |
38832 | ''Is he to_ die_ of hunger?'' |
38832 | ''Is it Baxendale?'' |
38832 | ''Is it a fitting time and place?'' |
38832 | ''Is it assumed to hide what he dare not betray?'' |
38832 | ''Is it right that a free- born Englishman should give in to such a system of intimidation? |
38832 | ''Is it right to keep a man grinding and sweating his life out for ten hours a- day?'' |
38832 | ''Is it well-- is it in accordance with the fitness of things, that a master should be under the control of his men? |
38832 | ''Is it you, Austin? |
38832 | ''Is it you, White?'' |
38832 | ''Is it you?'' |
38832 | ''Is not that man Gwinn, of Ketterford?'' |
38832 | ''Is she better?'' |
38832 | ''Is she hurt? |
38832 | ''Is she much worse?'' |
38832 | ''Is that Slippery Sam?'' |
38832 | ''Is that you, Susan?'' |
38832 | ''Is the silk paid for?'' |
38832 | ''Is there any more chance of its coming to an end, sir?'' |
38832 | ''Is there no chance of the present state of affairs coming to an end?'' |
38832 | ''Is this Peter Quale''s?'' |
38832 | ''Is who much worse, doctor?'' |
38832 | ''It was not!----What do you say?'' |
38832 | ''It''s easy to talk of education, and self- improvement; but how many is there that would use the accorded hour that way?'' |
38832 | ''James, do you want doctoring?'' |
38832 | ''James,''resumed the doctor,''why did you not confide the secret to me? |
38832 | ''Just tell us, old White, before you go on, whether coercion answers for British workmen?'' |
38832 | ''Keen- looking customer?'' |
38832 | ''Know her?'' |
38832 | ''Let''s see?'' |
38832 | ''Lewis, ma''am? |
38832 | ''May I not spend my time as I like upon a holiday?'' |
38832 | ''My dear lady, what will become of you if you give way to these fits of violence? |
38832 | ''Nor any sisters?'' |
38832 | ''Not back at work yet, Baxendale?'' |
38832 | ''Not go in for it? |
38832 | ''Not in secret-- do they?'' |
38832 | ''Not knowing him, sir?'' |
38832 | ''Now, Sam Shuck, do n''t you see who is a standing in your presence?'' |
38832 | ''Of what nature was the wrong?'' |
38832 | ''Oh, if you please, sir, can I speak a word to my master?'' |
38832 | ''Oh, is it you, Austin Clay? |
38832 | ''Oh, is it you, Louisa?'' |
38832 | ''Oh, sir, what is it? |
38832 | ''Oh, sir,''uttered the invalid, straining his eyes on him from the sick- bed, before Austin had well entered,''is the news true?'' |
38832 | ''Oh, they are, are they?'' |
38832 | ''Oh, you did notice that, did you? |
38832 | ''One of the principals, I suppose?'' |
38832 | ''Papa,''said Florence,''have you heard that Robert Darby''s children are ill?--likely to die? |
38832 | ''Perhaps the law might?'' |
38832 | ''Perhaps there are other claims for"youth''s follies"to come behind it?'' |
38832 | ''Perhaps you can understand the reason of her attacking me?'' |
38832 | ''Perhaps you mean my papa? |
38832 | ''Poor thing? |
38832 | ''Richard,''said Mr. Hunter, as the servant closed the hall- door.--''Sir?'' |
38832 | ''Samuel Shuck, did you ever know strikes do any good, either to the men or the masters? |
38832 | ''Shall you ever be visiting London?'' |
38832 | ''Shall you?'' |
38832 | ''She do n''t look over flourishing, do she, sir?--do she Miss Florence? |
38832 | ''Since when have you been oppressed, and ground down into your coffins?'' |
38832 | ''Sir, is there any way in which I can serve you?--_any_ way? |
38832 | ''So it is you, is it, Austin Clay?'' |
38832 | ''So you did not intend to call upon me during your stay in Ketterford, Austin Clay?'' |
38832 | ''Starved out yet?'' |
38832 | ''Stevens, do you want to better yourself, or not?'' |
38832 | ''Still getting better?'' |
38832 | ''Surely there was no repetition of the violence? |
38832 | ''Tell me one thing: could I be of any service, in any way?'' |
38832 | ''That you can not, or that you will not? |
38832 | ''The Shucks, and that lot, be actually going off now?'' |
38832 | ''The bone of contention is the letting us work nine hours a day instead of ten: well, why should they not accord it? |
38832 | ''The gist of the whole question is this,''he said:''Will agitation do us good, or will it do us harm? |
38832 | ''The rooms are in readiness to be shown, are n''t they?'' |
38832 | ''The woman, Bevary-- are you sure she''s gone quite away? |
38832 | ''Then Mr. Lewis Hunter is a married man?'' |
38832 | ''Then where lies the doubt-- the objection?'' |
38832 | ''Then why did you not tell her? |
38832 | ''Then why shilly- shally about the question of a strike?'' |
38832 | ''There is nothing the matter? |
38832 | ''To- morrow?'' |
38832 | ''Upon what point?'' |
38832 | ''Want me, do you?'' |
38832 | ''Was he a man, that he should bring''em to this state of starvation, and then turn round upon''em with threats? |
38832 | ''Was it not so?'' |
38832 | ''Was it the prisoner, Shuck?'' |
38832 | ''Watch for Gwinn, and give him the note?'' |
38832 | ''Weeds?'' |
38832 | ''Well, Baxendale?'' |
38832 | ''Well,''said he,''and what have you been doing at Ketterford?'' |
38832 | ''Well?'' |
38832 | ''Well?'' |
38832 | ''Well?'' |
38832 | ''Well?'' |
38832 | ''Were wages bad at that time?'' |
38832 | ''Were you disappointed when you heard the poor master''s will read?'' |
38832 | ''What English master''ud employ them half- starved frogs?'' |
38832 | ''What ailed you, deary?'' |
38832 | ''What am I to do, sir?'' |
38832 | ''What am I to do?'' |
38832 | ''What am I to say?'' |
38832 | ''What are those men about to rush into, Quale?'' |
38832 | ''What are you going there for? |
38832 | ''What can James be thinking of? |
38832 | ''What can Susan want?'' |
38832 | ''What can be her motive for wanting to find him?'' |
38832 | ''What could have possessed you?'' |
38832 | ''What d''ye think?'' |
38832 | ''What did he want?'' |
38832 | ''What did you do?'' |
38832 | ''What did you say the name was?'' |
38832 | ''What did you say, sir?'' |
38832 | ''What did you say?'' |
38832 | ''What did_ she_ say?'' |
38832 | ''What do any of us have? |
38832 | ''What do you ask?'' |
38832 | ''What do you mean by asking it?'' |
38832 | ''What do you mean?'' |
38832 | ''What do you object to in me?'' |
38832 | ''What do you part for?'' |
38832 | ''What do you think about?'' |
38832 | ''What do you think, sir?'' |
38832 | ''What do you want me for? |
38832 | ''What do you want upon them?'' |
38832 | ''What do you want?'' |
38832 | ''What does he think of doing there?'' |
38832 | ''What else did you tell him?'' |
38832 | ''What else has he had to feed him?'' |
38832 | ''What has Dr. Bevary told you of me and of my affairs?'' |
38832 | ''What has happened? |
38832 | ''What has happened?'' |
38832 | ''What has the lady to do with it?'' |
38832 | ''What has the strike brought you?'' |
38832 | ''What have you come for?'' |
38832 | ''What have you got them all in this room for?'' |
38832 | ''What have you got to say again it, Mrs. Quale? |
38832 | ''What if they did? |
38832 | ''What is her Christian name?'' |
38832 | ''What is her business here? |
38832 | ''What is it we want to strike for? |
38832 | ''What is it, Mary?'' |
38832 | ''What is it?'' |
38832 | ''What is it?'' |
38832 | ''What is that, Clay?'' |
38832 | ''What is that, sir?'' |
38832 | ''What is the matter, that you are whispering? |
38832 | ''What is the mercy-- the brightness?'' |
38832 | ''What is the page?'' |
38832 | ''What is the relationship between you?'' |
38832 | ''What is the use of bringing these old things?'' |
38832 | ''What is this?'' |
38832 | ''What is this?'' |
38832 | ''What is to be done?'' |
38832 | ''What is to be done?'' |
38832 | ''What is your grief, Florence?'' |
38832 | ''What is your opinion?'' |
38832 | ''What shall I do with her?'' |
38832 | ''What should I, a lone woman, do with an extensive business? |
38832 | ''What should we do if_ all_ the ills came to us, mamma?'' |
38832 | ''What sort of one?'' |
38832 | ''What took place here this morning with Miss Gwinn?'' |
38832 | ''What was all that, Clay? |
38832 | ''What was the name of-- of the enemy she talks of?'' |
38832 | ''What was the trade in other places about, that it did n''t help you?'' |
38832 | ''What was the warfare about?'' |
38832 | ''What were the threats they used last night?'' |
38832 | ''What''s other folks to us? |
38832 | ''What''s that as you''re talking about, miss?'' |
38832 | ''What''s that you ask me? |
38832 | ''What''s that, Jacky?'' |
38832 | ''What''s that?'' |
38832 | ''What''s the good of a afternoon Saturday holiday? |
38832 | ''What''s the good of listening to him?'' |
38832 | ''What''s the good of six shillings for a Saturday night, when everything''s wanted, from the rent down to a potater? |
38832 | ''What''s this-- silk?'' |
38832 | ''What, is it_ you_, Miss Baxendale?'' |
38832 | ''What?'' |
38832 | ''What?'' |
38832 | ''What_ are_ our grievances?'' |
38832 | ''What_ is_ this tale-- this mystery-- that my brother and the doctor seem to be picking up?'' |
38832 | ''Whatever has been going on here this last half hour?'' |
38832 | ''Whatever news is it that he has had?'' |
38832 | ''When did you first notice him to be ill?'' |
38832 | ''When did_ you_ become acquainted with it?'' |
38832 | ''When do I make acquaintance with the people who take my apartments?'' |
38832 | ''When do you begin, Robert?'' |
38832 | ''When shall I come, sir?'' |
38832 | ''Where can he have been summoned to?'' |
38832 | ''Where did I get it from?'' |
38832 | ''Where did he strike you?'' |
38832 | ''Where did you bear that fine tale?'' |
38832 | ''Where did you get it from?'' |
38832 | ''Where did you get that fine new toggery, Shuck?'' |
38832 | ''Where did you meet with her? |
38832 | ''Where do you expect to go to when you die?'' |
38832 | ''Where''s Mary this evening?'' |
38832 | ''Where''s the use of talking nonsense?'' |
38832 | ''Where_ have_ you stayed?'' |
38832 | ''White, and them? |
38832 | ''Who are they?'' |
38832 | ''Who are you, that you should seek to pry into my secrets?'' |
38832 | ''Who are you?'' |
38832 | ''Who brought home all this misery but you?'' |
38832 | ''Who dares to call it a strike? |
38832 | ''Who edged me on to join the Unionists? |
38832 | ''Who gave_ you_ authority to interfere, Austin Clay?'' |
38832 | ''Who has been at the office to- day?'' |
38832 | ''Who has been spreading it up and down the place that_ we_ are in trouble about the rent?'' |
38832 | ''Who has been the worse, pray, for the pitching into Baxendale? |
38832 | ''Who has let it go abroad that I could n''t?'' |
38832 | ''Who has most cause to demand it, you or I?'' |
38832 | ''Who is it?'' |
38832 | ''Who is that person?'' |
38832 | ''Who is that, Nancy?'' |
38832 | ''Who knows? |
38832 | ''Who paid it in?'' |
38832 | ''Who said I wanted my wife to be attended out of charity?'' |
38832 | ''Who was it?'' |
38832 | ''Who were the ringleaders?'' |
38832 | ''Who''d do that, but a traitor?'' |
38832 | ''Who''s to be there?'' |
38832 | ''Who? |
38832 | ''Who?'' |
38832 | ''Why did she attack you?'' |
38832 | ''Why did you do it, Mary? |
38832 | ''Why did you not give it him, I ask?'' |
38832 | ''Why did you not remit the money, according to promise, and so obviate the necessity of my coming?'' |
38832 | ''Why did you not send my uncle word, Mary?'' |
38832 | ''Why do n''t you join the Union?'' |
38832 | ''Why do you hesitate?'' |
38832 | ''Why do you not speak?'' |
38832 | ''Why do you seek me here?'' |
38832 | ''Why should I? |
38832 | ''Why so?'' |
38832 | ''Why was I not sent for before?'' |
38832 | ''Why, Sarah, is it you?'' |
38832 | ''Why, what do you know of her?'' |
38832 | ''Why----who are you?'' |
38832 | ''Why? |
38832 | ''Why?'' |
38832 | ''Why?'' |
38832 | ''Will Mary Baxendale soon get well, do you think, uncle?'' |
38832 | ''Will he ever be fit for work again?'' |
38832 | ''Will you be apprenticed to me, Austin?'' |
38832 | ''Will you disclose to Dr. Bevary the name of that man, if you will not to me?'' |
38832 | ''Will you forgive me, Florence? |
38832 | ''Will you grant me a favour, Henry?'' |
38832 | ''Will you have me?'' |
38832 | ''Will you lend me two pounds, then?'' |
38832 | ''Will you link your name to mine?'' |
38832 | ''Will you listen to me then?'' |
38832 | ''Will you not help me to find him, Dr. Bevary? |
38832 | ''Will you not tell her yourself?'' |
38832 | ''Will you remain with me?'' |
38832 | ''Will you see her, or not?'' |
38832 | ''Will you see her, sir? |
38832 | ''Will you shut the door?'' |
38832 | ''Will you tell me what I_ am_ to do? |
38832 | ''Will you tell me your name? |
38832 | ''With an hour''s work less a day, and the afternoon holiday on the Saturday, we shall----''''What''s the good of a afternoon Saturday holiday? |
38832 | ''You approve of me for Florence? |
38832 | ''You are from the country, sir, maybe?'' |
38832 | ''You are not Mr. Lewis Hunter''s daughter?'' |
38832 | ''You are not one of the malcontents, then?'' |
38832 | ''You are thirsty, Willy?'' |
38832 | ''You ca n''t have forgot old Mr. Austin, the great- uncle, sir? |
38832 | ''You have come into a fortune, do you say?'' |
38832 | ''You like him, do you, Miss Florence?'' |
38832 | ''You never mean to say you be a- going off, like simpletons, at this time o''day?'' |
38832 | ''You shut up, will you?'' |
38832 | ''You take care to give him the allowance weekly?'' |
38832 | ''You''d hold out to the last against the men?'' |
38832 | ''Young Clay, where is your master to- day?'' |
38832 | ''_ How_ can I find him? |
38832 | ''_ Now_ will you render justice, Lewis Hunter?'' |
38832 | ''_ You_ knew?'' |
38832 | --for she was speeding back again--''can I get any other help for you? |
38832 | A policeman? |
38832 | A sudden revulsion of feeling came over Baxendale-- he seemed to have passed from despair to hope.--''Child,''he gently said,''did an angel send it?'' |
38832 | Ah, ma''am, what matters it, after all? |
38832 | Ai n''t she a soft?'' |
38832 | Ai n''t you ashamed, not to work as other men do?'' |
38832 | Am I like the hearty, open man whom you came up to town and discovered a few years ago?'' |
38832 | And it was over: so, what signified talking of it?'' |
38832 | And now, what do you mean by this?'' |
38832 | And that-- suspecting it, he has wished for Florence?'' |
38832 | And there was certainly reason in their argument-- if the men wished to feed their children, why did they not work for them? |
38832 | And where was her uncle? |
38832 | And where''s to be the ending?'' |
38832 | And you would talk of staving off the difficulty?'' |
38832 | And you, James: why should simple debt, if it is that, have worked so terrible a fear upon you?'' |
38832 | And you, James?'' |
38832 | Any ill?'' |
38832 | Are n''t some folks idiots, Peter?'' |
38832 | Are n''t they my boots? |
38832 | Are we likely to get our grievances redressed by the masters, unless we force it? |
38832 | Are we not kept to work like beasts of burden, ten hours a day? |
38832 | Are you acquainted with her history?'' |
38832 | Are you feeling worse?'' |
38832 | Are you going back to them?'' |
38832 | As she stood in her impotence, looking on the dead, I asked her which, in her opinion, had inflicted the most wrong, she or you?'' |
38832 | Austin''--laying his hand upon the young man''s shoulder--''what am I to say? |
38832 | Austin, will you not give notice to the police, and tell them to be on the alert?'' |
38832 | Austin, will you say farewell, and send my husband to me? |
38832 | Ay; she had thought of that with longing; but how would his poor aching head do without it? |
38832 | Baxendale?" |
38832 | Besides, was not he drawing money from you to keep silence? |
38832 | Bevary?'' |
38832 | Bevary?'' |
38832 | Bevary?'' |
38832 | Borrow of them that have been provident, and so are better off, in this distress, than me? |
38832 | But how can I do that? |
38832 | But how can I in reason ask for help now, when I do n''t help myself? |
38832 | But what could be the matter? |
38832 | But why did they not send for you in time?'' |
38832 | But why should they help you more than any other firm would?'' |
38832 | But, Dr. Bevary, if her enemy be Mr. Henry Hunter, how is it she does not know him by name?'' |
38832 | But, looking back now, do you consider that it was for the best? |
38832 | But, of course----''''Of course, what?'' |
38832 | By what do you so judge?'' |
38832 | Can I see him?'' |
38832 | Can he, or anybody else, point a finger and say,"It was you did it?" |
38832 | Can you honestly affirm to me that you are in robust health?'' |
38832 | Can you suppose that I should otherwise speak of it to you?'' |
38832 | Clay?'' |
38832 | Clay?'' |
38832 | Clay?'' |
38832 | Clay?'' |
38832 | Clay?'' |
38832 | Clay?'' |
38832 | Clay?'' |
38832 | Clay?'' |
38832 | Could I say one thing and mean another? |
38832 | Could n''t he have seen better? |
38832 | D''ye think I stole it?'' |
38832 | Did Florence_ know_ the knock, that her voice should falter, and the soft pink in her cheeks should deepen to a glowing crimson? |
38832 | Did I not know enough of his avarice, his needs, to have made sure that he would turn it to his own account? |
38832 | Did Lawyer Gwinn feel baffled? |
38832 | Did he overlook the obvious fact, that he was one who possessed attractions, both of mind and person, and that Florence was now a woman grown? |
38832 | Did n''t I buy''em with my own money?'' |
38832 | Did she deem the day- dreams might refer to her, that her eye- lids should droop, and her cheeks turn scarlet? |
38832 | Did you ever see such good looks? |
38832 | Did you happen to meet the Gwinns?'' |
38832 | Did you hear how Darby got out his tools?'' |
38832 | Did you note him?'' |
38832 | Did you say you have come for leave of absence? |
38832 | Did you see her?'' |
38832 | Do n''t it go again the grain?'' |
38832 | Do n''t you see that I can not control him?'' |
38832 | Do n''t you see that I have put off my winter clothing?'' |
38832 | Do n''t you think the master has seemed very poorly of late?'' |
38832 | Do you feel sure it was the man you speak of? |
38832 | Do you happen to know anything of the London firm, Hunter and Hunter?'' |
38832 | Do you hear?'' |
38832 | Do you know how much?'' |
38832 | Do you know it, doctor?'' |
38832 | Do you know what our trade gets in Australia? |
38832 | Do you not wonder that Miss Gwinn should have gone back to Ketterford without molesting you again?'' |
38832 | Do you not, sir?'' |
38832 | Do you note my words, meddling boy? |
38832 | Do you recollect a fellow of the name of Moody?'' |
38832 | Do you remember the proverb of the bundle of sticks?'' |
38832 | Do you say her brother is a lawyer?'' |
38832 | Do you see him?'' |
38832 | Do you suppose that you alone are to meet and pass your laws, saying you will coerce the masters, and that the masters will not pass laws in return? |
38832 | Does any one want you?'' |
38832 | Does the master take on much?'' |
38832 | Eh, John?'' |
38832 | Forgive the seeming incivility of the avowal, but I consider that I ought not to comply with your request-- that I should be doing wrong?'' |
38832 | Gwinn?'' |
38832 | Had Daffodil''s Delight miscalculated the time, believing it to be day, instead of night? |
38832 | Had I refused to pay it----''''Well?'' |
38832 | Had Mrs. Hunter and Florence entered into a compact to annoy him? |
38832 | Had it found the company of sister spirits? |
38832 | Had they repented their bargain? |
38832 | Had you forgotten them?'' |
38832 | Has he been here to consult you?'' |
38832 | Have I ever oppressed you, ever put upon you?'' |
38832 | Have I shown myself solicitous for your interests, for your welfare? |
38832 | Have a bit of supper, Baxendale?'' |
38832 | Have a bit?'' |
38832 | Have n''t you waited for it, and starved for it, and hoped for it?'' |
38832 | Have you any idea in what that objection lies?'' |
38832 | Have you been thinking over what was said last night?'' |
38832 | Have you come after me to say you have thought better of it?'' |
38832 | Have you got any money?'' |
38832 | Have you heard what has happened to the master?'' |
38832 | Have you quite resolved upon giving it up?'' |
38832 | Have you rooms to let?'' |
38832 | He could be of no use in that; but how could they discriminate? |
38832 | He is ever ready, you know, to----What do you say, Shuck? |
38832 | Henry Hunter? |
38832 | How are they all to find work again? |
38832 | How are you?'' |
38832 | How can I find him?'' |
38832 | How closely has the account been drawn at the bank?'' |
38832 | How dare you interfere with my things? |
38832 | How do the poor manage to pull through illness? |
38832 | How do you do, Uncle Henry?'' |
38832 | How does he seem? |
38832 | How had he disappeared? |
38832 | How have you parted with them? |
38832 | How is it possible? |
38832 | How is it you are going now?'' |
38832 | How is_ she_?'' |
38832 | How many orphans, and widows, and men in prisons are there, who have cause to rue this strike that has only now just passed? |
38832 | How will it go on?'' |
38832 | Hunter,''exclaimed Austin, greatly agitated, and speaking in the moment''s impulse,''why will you not give me the hope of winning her? |
38832 | Hunter?'' |
38832 | Hunter?'' |
38832 | Hunter?'' |
38832 | Hunter?'' |
38832 | Hunter?--Lewis Hunter?'' |
38832 | I am your wife''s brother; could you have a truer friend?'' |
38832 | I appeal to you all''--raising his hands over the room--''whether the masters can do without us?'' |
38832 | I say, master, what''ll you weigh in these fag ends of mutton and beef at-- the two together?'' |
38832 | I suppose he did not impose upon me,''added he, with a poor attempt at a forced smile:''it_ was_ Gwinn, of Ketterford, was it not?'' |
38832 | I suppose you were deep in your books?'' |
38832 | I went home to Ketterford, deliberating----''''Well?'' |
38832 | I wonder what illness can have stricken her? |
38832 | If God was pleased to answer us in words, would not the answer be,"There is work, and to spare; you have only got to do it?"'' |
38832 | If every one of us was free to go back to work to- morrow, and sought to do so, where would we get it? |
38832 | If the masters fill their yards with other operatives, what is to become of us?'' |
38832 | If the strike was to bring''em all this misery, what the plague business had he to join it? |
38832 | If we all went to work again quietly, where would they be? |
38832 | If we are to give into them now, where has been the use of this struggle? |
38832 | If you possessed a grain of the independence of free men, you''d have hoisted your colours before now; what would have been the result? |
38832 | In the midst of Mrs. Dunn''s reproaches, how was it she did not cast a recollection to the past? |
38832 | Into the ground? |
38832 | Is he really dead?'' |
38832 | Is it likely_ I_ should lend myself to such a thing? |
38832 | Is it my fault? |
38832 | Is it only to- day as you have knowed me, Tom Cox? |
38832 | Is it so, Florence?'' |
38832 | Is n''t it just a mockery for me to pray for help to provide for me and mine? |
38832 | Is n''t it time for the medicine?'' |
38832 | Is n''t there every reason why they should? |
38832 | Is n''t there men, outsiders, willing to work a full day''s work, but ca n''t get it? |
38832 | Is not this house large enough for us? |
38832 | Is she in her senses, papa?'' |
38832 | Is she mistaken, or is Henry Hunter false?'' |
38832 | Is that justice? |
38832 | Is there a chance of its coming to an end?'' |
38832 | Is there any other witness who can swear to him?'' |
38832 | Is there danger?'' |
38832 | Is there most power in one man, or in a few dozens of men?'' |
38832 | It asked, as plainly as a gaze could ask,''_ Do_ you believe so? |
38832 | It is not so much consumption as----''''Who told you it was consumption?'' |
38832 | It looks odd, do n''t it, to come after lodgings one minute, and enter upon''em the next?'' |
38832 | It''ll be glorious times, girls, wo n''t it? |
38832 | James is not ill?'' |
38832 | Jemimer, whatever are you at? |
38832 | Let me ask you another question: Were you well treated under me, or were you not? |
38832 | Ma''am, if He did not remove us to a better and a happier home, would the living be directed to give thanks for our departure from this?'' |
38832 | Mrs. Quale had from the first recommended the two sisters to try for situations: but when was advice well taken? |
38832 | Myself, or you?'' |
38832 | Not another word, I say.--Is it to- day or to- morrow that Grafton''s bill falls due?'' |
38832 | Now, my men,''he continued in a stern tone, as he faced the excited throng,''who are you? |
38832 | Oh, Dr. Bevary, will you believe me now? |
38832 | Oh, you do, some of you? |
38832 | Or a knave?'' |
38832 | Or be you come home again with a empty pocket?'' |
38832 | Perhaps when spring comes on----''''How am I to exist till spring, sir?'' |
38832 | Pollocks?'' |
38832 | Pretty well, that, was n''t it?'' |
38832 | Quale, I''ll go to the meeting, if you will?'' |
38832 | Shall I put myself into the Gazette, do you suppose? |
38832 | Shame and blame?'' |
38832 | Should I, or not?'' |
38832 | Sir,''she hastily inquired,''do you come from the neighbourhood of Ketterford?'' |
38832 | Suppose it had been Mary? |
38832 | Suppose you all do strike-- which is what they are hankering after-- what good''ll it bring?'' |
38832 | Tell me, if you can, whether any vexation has arisen in business matters?'' |
38832 | That something must be wrong at home, she felt sure: else why was she kept away from it so long? |
38832 | That town beyond, in the distance, is Ketterford, is it not?'' |
38832 | The nine hours''concession is all you want? |
38832 | The pillow on which his head leaned? |
38832 | The thought, that it must be so, crossed Austin Clay; or why that warning''hush''twice repeated? |
38832 | The two things come to the same, do n''t they? |
38832 | The young''uns have got their bare feet upon the boards, as may be said, for their shoes be without toes and heels; and who is to get''em others? |
38832 | There was the masters''yards open, and why did n''t he go to work? |
38832 | They have horse- boxes, I presume, at the station?'' |
38832 | They----''''Against Baxendale?'' |
38832 | Thornimett?'' |
38832 | Though, what could she be writing about to him? |
38832 | To give evidence?'' |
38832 | To her own eagerness, public and private, for the strike? |
38832 | Too ill to get up? |
38832 | Tuesday, was n''t it, Mary? |
38832 | WAS THE LADY MAD? |
38832 | WAS THE LADY MAD? |
38832 | Was Mr. Henry Hunter the stranger to her he asserted himself to be, or was he not? |
38832 | Was Mr. Hunter suspecting that his brother had more cognisance of the affair than he seemed willing to avow? |
38832 | Was he a going to see''em took off to the workhouse? |
38832 | Was it Gwinn of Ketterford?'' |
38832 | Was it not three, mamma?'' |
38832 | Was it quite prudent of Mr. Hunter to sanction, nay, to court the frequent presence at his house of Austin Clay? |
38832 | Was it, or was it not, the man whom I met at Ketterford?'' |
38832 | Was n''t she his wife? |
38832 | Was she ready to go?'' |
38832 | Was that infliction in store-- a bitter winter-- to be added to the already fearful distress existing in this dense metropolis? |
38832 | We both agree that you are in his confidence; if so, perhaps you will satisfy me?'' |
38832 | Were you born into the world to be slaves-- blackymoors; to be ground into the dust with toil? |
38832 | Were you mad?'' |
38832 | What ails you this evening?'' |
38832 | What are his symptoms?'' |
38832 | What are we to do?'' |
38832 | What could any lady mean by keeping him so long, in his own house? |
38832 | What could be the result? |
38832 | What could it be? |
38832 | What did she hope to gain by it? |
38832 | What did you care for Mrs. Thornimett, that her death should make you"melancholy?"'' |
38832 | What do you mean by"wrong?"'' |
38832 | What do you mean?'' |
38832 | What do you say?'' |
38832 | What does my going round cost me? |
38832 | What does the doctor say?'' |
38832 | What good has ever come of the boast? |
38832 | What good has the struggle done you?'' |
38832 | What has kept him, Florence?'' |
38832 | What is her name? |
38832 | What is it that is overshadowing papa?'' |
38832 | What is it? |
38832 | What is it?'' |
38832 | What is to become of those men that the masters ca n''t find employment for? |
38832 | What is to become of us then?'' |
38832 | What is to become of us? |
38832 | What possessed Mr. Hunter? |
38832 | What reason or principle of justice can there be in your saying,"He shall not do this; he shall receive no more than I do, or than Ryan, there, does? |
38832 | What revenge would Miss Gwinn have reaped from this? |
38832 | What revenge? |
38832 | What was your motive for concealing it?'' |
38832 | What will you lend?'' |
38832 | What!--which was true? |
38832 | What''ll you give me upon that silk?'' |
38832 | What''s the trouble?'' |
38832 | What''ud you do with it, do you suppose? |
38832 | What, then, must it have done by yours?'' |
38832 | What?'' |
38832 | What_ is_ the mystery, I wonder? |
38832 | When did you know her?'' |
38832 | When one is as ill as she is-- in danger of dying-- is it right that a doctor should never come a near for three or four days?'' |
38832 | Where are they to get them from?'' |
38832 | Where did you get it, child?'' |
38832 | Where have you been, sir, not to have heered on it?'' |
38832 | Where is he to be found?'' |
38832 | Where is it that you wish to go?'' |
38832 | Where would be the satisfaction to my wife and family, if, through her, I had been lying at this moment at the bottom there, dead? |
38832 | Where''s Miss Florence?'' |
38832 | Where''s papa?'' |
38832 | Where''s the use of bringing up that?'' |
38832 | Which?'' |
38832 | Whither had the spirit flown? |
38832 | Who am I, that I should think to step in before them?'' |
38832 | Who are you, and all such as you, that you should assume such power, and set yourselves up between your fellow- men and their responsibilities?'' |
38832 | Who else should it be? |
38832 | Who has done it?'' |
38832 | Who is she? |
38832 | Who is she?'' |
38832 | Who is to unlock it?'' |
38832 | Who was she, papa?'' |
38832 | Who would support them?'' |
38832 | Why did n''t you start in the morning? |
38832 | Why did she not come to me before?'' |
38832 | Why did you not?'' |
38832 | Why should I be?'' |
38832 | Why should I worry out my hours and days trying to amass more? |
38832 | Why should I?'' |
38832 | Why should he, Miss Gwinn?'' |
38832 | Why should they interfere with me?'' |
38832 | Why should you seek another?'' |
38832 | Why was she permitted to live?--to live to work me this awful wrong?'' |
38832 | Why, in my exultation, did I tell him the man was found? |
38832 | Why, then, not have gone back before? |
38832 | Why,''she continued, battling with her hands as at some invisible adversary,''was I born with this strong principle of justice within me? |
38832 | Will you come out and take a stroll?'' |
38832 | Will you find him for me?'' |
38832 | Will you give me the promise?'' |
38832 | Will you not tell me what it is?'' |
38832 | Will you not, in this my last hour, tell me its cause?'' |
38832 | Will you object to join your name to one which was so near being dishonoured?'' |
38832 | Will you please to look at these jewels?'' |
38832 | Will you promise?'' |
38832 | Will you see her?'' |
38832 | Will you watch for him, and give him the inclosed note? |
38832 | Wo n''t it be prime when the men get ten hours''pay for nine hours''work? |
38832 | Would an honest, capable man go in for it? |
38832 | Would the Society keep us?'' |
38832 | Would the masters be any the worse off?'' |
38832 | Would wisdom for the future be learnt by all this? |
38832 | Would you please step up, sir, and take a look at them?'' |
38832 | You are ill?'' |
38832 | You call Shuck a snake; do you think he is one?'' |
38832 | You did n''t set fire to your neighbour''s house, I suppose?'' |
38832 | You will not require references now?'' |
38832 | You''ll give me work, sir?'' |
38832 | _ Have_ you wives?'' |
38832 | _ They_ separate? |
38832 | _ Who_ is this person, may I ask?'' |
38832 | _ Why_ did that woman work me this crying wrong?'' |
38832 | _ have_ you spirits of your own? |
38832 | and how can I go barefoot?'' |
38832 | and something about yourself?'' |
38832 | asked Slippery Sam?'' |
38832 | continued Mr. Hunter, growing excited almost beyond control,''who inflicted that wrong? |
38832 | did a mad woman frighten and anger you?'' |
38832 | do you know any of them?'' |
38832 | do you know that I am on the brink of ruin?'' |
38832 | do you mean the Cheeks? |
38832 | do you remember that it is fifteen years ago this very day that the-- the-- crisis of the sickness came on? |
38832 | ejaculated John Baxendale,''where am I to get two pounds from? |
38832 | for the sake of a plant?'' |
38832 | had it seen, face to face, its loving Saviour? |
38832 | have you no regard for your own safety? |
38832 | he pathetically continued;''_ have_ you children? |
38832 | how are them children of your''n?'' |
38832 | how she had urged her husband on to join it, boasting of the good times it was to bring them? |
38832 | is it you, Abel White?'' |
38832 | is that an admission that other mysterious claims may really follow this one?'' |
38832 | it is not your fault; where''s the use of my----''''Why, Mary, girl, what''s the matter?'' |
38832 | oh, sir: why could not you get here sooner?'' |
38832 | or business?'' |
38832 | or down any obscure passage that might be a short cut between Daffodil''s Delight, and some other Delight? |
38832 | or into a house? |
38832 | or into that cab that was now whirling onwards at such a rate? |
38832 | or is it tyranny? |
38832 | or is the falsehood on_ his_ side?'' |
38832 | or"It was you?" |
38832 | she fondly said,''should I have been less brave? |
38832 | she uttered, in the sudden revulsion of feeling that the sight brought to her,''is it you?'' |
38832 | shrieked a female voice in interruption''who''d fight with them? |
38832 | sir,''the tears streaming from her eyes as she spoke,''would you please call Mrs. Quale, and ask her to step in? |
38832 | so flourishing a firm as that? |
38832 | to what bright unknown world? |
38832 | uttered Mr. Hunter, in deep excitement,''and that it is you who have brought me to it?'' |
38832 | was n''t they his children? |
38832 | what can_ you_ know?'' |
38832 | what did he say to you of me-- of my affairs?'' |
38832 | what does she want? |
38832 | what is your motive for seeking to get rid of me?'' |
38832 | what''ll you buy?'' |
38832 | what''s that?'' |
38832 | which of you has done this?'' |
38832 | who reproached me with being no man, but a sneak, if I went to work and knuckled down to the masters?'' |
38832 | who says it? |
38832 | whose voice is that?'' |
38832 | wrathfully repeated Mrs. Dunn;''has it been a time to pay for silk gownds when our husbands be under a lock- out? |
38832 | you do not fear she will die?'' |