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 |
---|---|
17730 | Turning to other branches of art, what traces do we find of the transfer to them of textile features? |
17730 | We do not need to look a second time to discover a striking likeness to the textile system, and we ask, Is it also derived from a textile source? |
21534 | ( a) How are cotton and flax bleached? |
21534 | ( a) What are the requisites for good dressmaking? |
21534 | ( a) What is the chief constituent of the vegetable fibers? |
21534 | ( b) Has the subject any educational value? |
21534 | ( b) How does dressmaking differ from white sewing in make, finish, and ornamentation? |
21534 | ( b) How does their affinity for dyestuffs compare with wool and silk? |
21534 | ( b) What can you say in regard to children''s clothing? |
21534 | ( b) What experience have you had in cleaning( a) cotton,( b) wool,( c) linen,( d) silk,( e) velvet? |
21534 | ( b) What is a mordant? |
21534 | ( b) What is your idea of ornament applied to garments? |
21534 | ( c) How do the alkalies affect wool? |
21534 | ( c) How should material be prepared for dyeing? |
21534 | 5. Who invented the cotton gin and how did this invention affect the cotton industry? |
21534 | Can you add any suggestions that would be helpful to others in this work? |
21534 | Can you make the running stitch properly? |
21534 | Can you suggest better methods than those given in the text? |
21534 | Do you consider it economy to repair garments? |
21534 | For what purpose may the cat stitch be used? |
21534 | From your point of view what do you consider a successful garment? |
21534 | Have you found the ready made garments satisfactory in underwear and dresses? |
21534 | How are gathers made, and how sewed into a band? |
21534 | How are print goods made? |
21534 | How do the textile fibers compare in the raw state in condition and price? |
21534 | How does wool differ from hair? |
21534 | How is it done? |
21534 | How may pressing be done to give the best results? |
21534 | Name some other bast fibers and their products? |
21534 | Of what value is the study of textiles? |
21534 | What are the common basting stitches, and for what are they used? |
21534 | What can you say of fastenings? |
21534 | What colors do you find satisfactory for your own wear, and why? |
21534 | What factors determine the use of fabrics? |
21534 | What garments require little or no pressing, and why? |
21534 | What have you gained by the study of this lesson? |
21534 | What instruction have you ever had in sewing? |
21534 | What is noil; shoddy; felt; flocks? |
21534 | What is the name of the manufactured product of flax? |
21534 | What is your opinion of the care of clothing? |
21534 | What kinds are there? |
21534 | What materials are best suited for infants''garments? |
21534 | What methods, new to you, have you tried in connection with this lesson? |
21534 | What questions have you to ask? |
21534 | What stitches or methods described in this lesson are new to you? |
21534 | Where should ornament be placed, and why? |
21534 | Wherein have the lessons been of practical value to you? |
21534 | With what dress goods have you had experience, and with what results? |
21534 | With what sewing machine are you most familiar, and what are its peculiarities? |
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? |
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?" |
15416 | ''Besides''what? |
15416 | ''Cast her out''? 15416 ''Sorry''?" |
15416 | A funny little pink and black devil, is n''t it? |
15416 | Ai n''t Nature under God''s direction? |
15416 | All well, I hope? |
15416 | Altogether? |
15416 | And I say that, though a publican and the wife of a publican; and so do you, do n''t you, Job? |
15416 | And d''you think I care what they say about me? |
15416 | And do n''t Nature tickle us to our own undoing morning, noon, and night? 15416 And how are the gee- gees?" |
15416 | And how d''you think about it? 15416 And how''s Mister Roberts, Sarah?" |
15416 | And if I think of anything may I tell you? |
15416 | And if he does? 15416 And if they are, what does it matter as long as they are all straightforward? |
15416 | And my credit can go to the devil, I suppose? |
15416 | And see the baby? |
15416 | And the Red Hand has been here, has it? 15416 And what about her? |
15416 | And what are your wishes alongside of your acts? 15416 And what did he call justice?" |
15416 | And what did you do, Dick? 15416 And what does he say, Nelly?" |
15416 | And what if I decline to take ten shillings a week, after fifty years of work in his beastly Mill? |
15416 | And what is the best? |
15416 | And what other point of view, in keeping with honour and religion, exists? |
15416 | And what''s the result? 15416 And what, if I say''no''?" |
15416 | And when d''you weigh in? |
15416 | And why should Bridetown be denied the privilege of numbering a beautiful girl amongst its population? |
15416 | And why should I be asked to pull tons less of solid weight? 15416 Apart from the necessity and justice,"she said,"and taking it for granted that the thing must happen, what is your opinion of the future? |
15416 | Are you a villain? 15416 Are you sure it''s all for his sake? |
15416 | Are you sure-- can you be sure, Ray? 15416 Are you? |
15416 | At least you''ll do nothing to come between us? |
15416 | Because you get a few tea- parties and old women at nine- pence a head on your little bit of grass? |
15416 | Better than Sabina Dinnett? |
15416 | But Sabina? |
15416 | But if I want to make him mine? 15416 But surely''The Tiger''s''your house, sir?" |
15416 | But that being so, ca n''t you see you ought to support me in everything? |
15416 | But what about you? 15416 But what know they? |
15416 | Can I help you? |
15416 | Can anything be fair to her short of marriage? |
15416 | Can even a man I thought large- minded and broad- minded and all the rest of it, go on twaddling about this as if he was an old washer- woman? 15416 Can that worry you?" |
15416 | Can you give me a few minutes, Uncle Ernest? 15416 Can you think I''m sorry? |
15416 | Could your child be anything but clever with his hands, Sabina? |
15416 | D''you know the lime- kiln on North Hill? |
15416 | D''you know what you''re doing? |
15416 | D''you mean he''s stopping the allowance? |
15416 | D''you mean his brother, or the Mill? |
15416 | D''you mean''The Magnolias''? |
15416 | D''you think Ray has grown bad- tempered, father? |
15416 | D''you think you could speak to Richard for me, and put out the truth concerning''The Seven Stars''? |
15416 | Dead? |
15416 | Did Sabina agree easily? |
15416 | Did he say anything about his plans? |
15416 | Did n''t it make you ill? |
15416 | Did we quarrel? 15416 Do the people like the new master?" |
15416 | Do you honestly mean that you could look the world in the face if you ruin this woman? |
15416 | Do you know any particular place that he liked? |
15416 | Do you see anything of Raymond? |
15416 | Do you? 15416 Do you?" |
15416 | Does he want to? |
15416 | Engaged to be married, of course? |
15416 | Everything''s all right, I suppose? |
15416 | Good God-- is there no peace, even here? |
15416 | Granted, but he do n''t ask many questions of Alice Chick or Nancy Buckler, do he? 15416 Have n''t you ever guessed what I felt?" |
15416 | Have you any friends you particularly wish to be there? 15416 Have you noticed how a natural instinct makes the young long to escape from the presence of age? |
15416 | Have you seen Bert, the newspaper boy? 15416 Have you written to Daniel?" |
15416 | He was n''t quite a rogue, was he? |
15416 | Holidays round again, young man? 15416 Hope the will was all right?" |
15416 | How can I say it''s an open question after this? 15416 How can I tell? |
15416 | How can he? |
15416 | How can we? 15416 How could she think so?" |
15416 | How could you love and cuddle a ghost? |
15416 | How d''you know that, Aunt Jenny? |
15416 | How did you happen to be a spinner? |
15416 | How did you play? 15416 How long are you going to take?" |
15416 | How should I talk? 15416 How would it be if you sold the hunter and got a nice everyday sort of horse that you could ride, or that Sabina could drive?" |
15416 | How''s the works? |
15416 | How''s your rheumatism? |
15416 | How''s your uncle, Job? |
15416 | However do you get through it all? |
15416 | I hope your brother was sporting? |
15416 | I know, but I hope you''ll have a big night off before the deed is done and you take leave of freedom-- what? |
15416 | I lay you dressed him down then? |
15416 | I suppose Daniel will come up to the scratch all right? |
15416 | I suppose you thought I should go to my father''s funeral? 15416 I wonder-- I wonder, Ray?" |
15416 | If I showed you my den in the store, would you swear to God never to tell? |
15416 | If I''m his boy, why ai n''t my mother his wife, like all the other chaps''fathers have got wives? |
15416 | If it is n''t? |
15416 | In other words you''ve changed your mind? |
15416 | Is Mister Raymond here? |
15416 | Is his mother going? |
15416 | Is it true Sabina is going to have a baby? 15416 Is n''t it a darling little church?" |
15416 | Is n''t nature all powerful and blood thicker than water? 15416 Is she going to see me, or is n''t she?" |
15416 | Is she going to the mill to- morrow? |
15416 | Is that true, or is n''t it? |
15416 | Is the wedding day fixed? |
15416 | Is the wedding put off then? |
15416 | Is there nothing in paternity? |
15416 | It''s war then? |
15416 | It''s you, is it? |
15416 | Just to show you''re a bit out of the common, perhaps? |
15416 | Know more of him than I do? |
15416 | May I say a few words to you? |
15416 | May I speak to you a moment before you start with Miss Waldron? |
15416 | Meaning what? |
15416 | Might we? 15416 Miss Waldron, of course?" |
15416 | Most true, I''m sure; but you did n''t come to tell me that? |
15416 | Mr. Ironsyde wants everything just so, and why not? |
15416 | Mrs. Northover''s compliments and might we have the big fish kettle till to- morrow? 15416 No doubt your first would turn in his grave if you did,"he admitted;"but what about it? |
15416 | No newspaper on Saturday-- how was that? |
15416 | Not walking too fast for you? |
15416 | Now how did you divine that? 15416 Or mine be anything but fond of machinery?" |
15416 | Perhaps you''d rather not? 15416 Perhaps you''ll tell me how the world could get on without string?" |
15416 | Ray been here? |
15416 | Say it''s an open question-- then what? |
15416 | Shall I come in and dine this evening? |
15416 | Shall you play any cricket this summer? |
15416 | She told you then-- against my wishes? |
15416 | Since when did rain frighten you? |
15416 | Since when? |
15416 | So what do you say? 15416 Stories about what?" |
15416 | Surely everything has shrunk? |
15416 | Surely-- surely after yesterday? |
15416 | Talking of good things, d''you remember our walk to Chilcombe in the year one? 15416 Teetotal, is n''t he?" |
15416 | That old lady with the yellow wig? |
15416 | The enemy sowed tares by night, and what can be more devilish than sowing the tares of evil on virgin soil? 15416 Then the whole estate belongs to Raymond, now?" |
15416 | Then why fling away your chances and be impossible and useless and an enemy to society, when society only wants to be your friend? 15416 Then you''d say--?" |
15416 | Then you''ll leave, no doubt, and what will Missis Northover do then? |
15416 | Vexed with you, Sally? 15416 We look to see ourselves reflected in our offspring, yet how often do we?" |
15416 | Well then, what follows? 15416 Well, what''s that to me? |
15416 | What about Sabina? |
15416 | What about a nice little handy''jingle''for her to trundle about in? |
15416 | What about all that talk of changes for the better before Mister Ironsyde died then? |
15416 | What about her life? |
15416 | What about you, then? |
15416 | What allowance did dear Henry make him? |
15416 | What am I to do if I ca n''t trust her? |
15416 | What are you going to do, then? |
15416 | What are you to do? 15416 What can I do about it? |
15416 | What can I say to that? 15416 What common ground is there? |
15416 | What could be more unjust and cruel and wicked than that? |
15416 | What d''you call making a mistake? 15416 What d''you think of her?" |
15416 | What do the Drawing Frames do to it? |
15416 | What do you know about things to talk to me like that? 15416 What do you mean when you say he''s a''cure,''Sarah?" |
15416 | What do you say to that, Job? |
15416 | What do you think of Estelle? |
15416 | What do you think? |
15416 | What do you want to hide for, pretty? |
15416 | What does John Best say? |
15416 | What does that mean? |
15416 | What does that mean? |
15416 | What have you seen then? |
15416 | What in God''s name has come over you? 15416 What is it, then?" |
15416 | What luck? |
15416 | What perfectly beautiful thing can I get for Ray and Sabina for a wedding present? |
15416 | What shall I do without you? 15416 What shall I say about the girls?" |
15416 | What shall you do about it? |
15416 | What should that be, I wonder? |
15416 | What the deuce is the matter? |
15416 | What the devil business is that of yours? |
15416 | What the dickens is it? |
15416 | What then? 15416 What was I saying? |
15416 | What was it? |
15416 | What would you do? 15416 What would you think if I told you I was going to marry her, Waldron?" |
15416 | What''s he done now? |
15416 | What''s he done then? 15416 What''s the matter? |
15416 | What''s the matter? |
15416 | What''s the matter? |
15416 | What? |
15416 | Whatever will you say next? |
15416 | Where shall you live? |
15416 | Where will you get them? |
15416 | Where''s Raymond? |
15416 | Where''s home going to be-- that''s the question? |
15416 | Where''s the fun? |
15416 | Where? |
15416 | Who ever would have thought the man jealous? |
15416 | Who is going into Parliament? |
15416 | Who the devil cares about himself? 15416 Who the devil''s that?" |
15416 | Who would wish you to? |
15416 | Who''d deny them, Sabina? 15416 Why ai n''t your mother his wife? |
15416 | Why did you come? 15416 Why do you think that?" |
15416 | Why not, Missis Dinnett? |
15416 | Why not? 15416 Why not? |
15416 | Why not? |
15416 | Why not? |
15416 | Why should n''t I go on sitting between you? |
15416 | Why should n''t I if I want to? |
15416 | Why should n''t he come, John? |
15416 | Why use words like that? 15416 Why? |
15416 | Why? 15416 Will you let me tell mother, to- day? |
15416 | Wo n''t you see Sabina before you go, Raymond? 15416 Worse than seducing her and leaving her alone in the world with a bastard child, I suppose?" |
15416 | Would it come right,he ventured to ask,"if you gave up spinning?" |
15416 | Would n''t you? |
15416 | Would thicky cat sclow me? |
15416 | Would you say that he bore Sabina a grudge? |
15416 | Yes-- that''s not very wonderful, is it? 15416 You advise against, then?" |
15416 | You ask what I think about Estelle? |
15416 | You ca n''t accuse me of wanting to stick my nose into other people''s business, can you, Ray? 15416 You can say that? |
15416 | You did n''t tell them? |
15416 | You do n''t grudge any of these things, Ray? |
15416 | You do n''t mean he is in love, or anything like that? |
15416 | You might hope it; but why do you think it? 15416 You oppose your will to mine, then, Sabina?" |
15416 | You see, Estelle-- how can I explain? 15416 You surely do n''t want to quarrel with all his friends as well as him? |
15416 | You thought that, Nelly? 15416 You wo n''t chuck football, anyway? |
15416 | You''ll show him the baby, wo n''t you, Sabina? |
15416 | You''re going? |
15416 | You''re not prepared to help me, then, or make any suggestion-- for the child''s sake? |
15416 | You''re sure? 15416 You''ve heard, of course, about the goings on? |
15416 | You''ve made a start, Ray? |
15416 | Yours? 15416 ''The Seven Stars''more to it than''The Tiger''? |
15416 | A break must mean Sabina''s social ruin; but would union mean ruin to Raymond? |
15416 | A man''s idea of being''sporting''does not mean telling stories to a trusting and loving girl, does it? |
15416 | A very serious thing has happened and if we older heads--""Who told you about it?" |
15416 | Above all, what sort of line would his Aunt Jenny take? |
15416 | After all, why not? |
15416 | Ai n''t she always at it-- always tempting us to go too far along the road of our particular weakness? |
15416 | And Sally Groves, and one or two of my best friends at the Mill? |
15416 | And ai n''t laziness the particular weakness of all women and most men? |
15416 | And did n''t she wait all the morning to see if you''d come to her-- and me? |
15416 | And how does such a man expect anybody to care about him? |
15416 | And if the problem was reduced to that, what became of her theories? |
15416 | And if you once grant there are more view points than one, where are you?" |
15416 | And more important still, was it true? |
15416 | And now he''ll find I''ve been to her, and that may-- oh, my God, why did n''t I keep quiet a little longer, and trust him?" |
15416 | And what do I lose? |
15416 | And what will the result be? |
15416 | And who shall blame her?" |
15416 | And who''ll blame him? |
15416 | And whose spirit does n''t meet in their thoughts, or works, the dead who are still living?" |
15416 | And why not?" |
15416 | And why should you care for one little, unwanted boy? |
15416 | And you-- how are you? |
15416 | Anyway, it showed you''d got plenty of good friends, surely?" |
15416 | Are there no means of winning him?" |
15416 | Are you coming to the''smoker''at''The Tiger''next month?" |
15416 | Are you game for a paying guest? |
15416 | Are you ready for another bottle of gingerbeer? |
15416 | Are you the father of it, or are n''t you?" |
15416 | As things are it seems to me you might like to be quietly and privately married away from Bridetown?" |
15416 | But I suppose you mean I''d better not?" |
15416 | But Sabina?" |
15416 | But is n''t that a thing to avoid? |
15416 | But what''s the sense of losing your temper in other people''s quarrels? |
15416 | But where were the words capable of lending any conviction to such a sentiment? |
15416 | But why should she cut off her nose to spite her face and refuse my friendship and help because I wo n''t marry her?" |
15416 | By the way, may I call you Sabina?" |
15416 | Ca n''t you see that it''s your place, Sabina, to use your influence on my side?" |
15416 | Ca n''t you see that you''ll always suffer it if you take no steps to right it? |
15416 | Ca n''t you see what this means to her? |
15416 | Can I get his trust, or ca n''t I?" |
15416 | Can he ever make you anything but a bastard and an outcast? |
15416 | Can not you imagine men big enough to work for humanity without reward? |
15416 | Can you do such wonders as Miss Dinnett?" |
15416 | Chick?" |
15416 | Churchouse?" |
15416 | Could I bring my horse?" |
15416 | Could power modify character? |
15416 | Could she have listened to so grave a determination on Daniel''s part and taken no step to prevent it? |
15416 | Could she still be so stern after the years that had swept over their quarrel? |
15416 | Could such an unworldly and inexperienced woman be right? |
15416 | D''you know what I would do if I had my way? |
15416 | D''you know what it is? |
15416 | D''you think I''m going to chuck away an hour of this day for a thousand mothers?" |
15416 | Did n''t you ever wonder how you got off so well after trying to burn down the works? |
15416 | Did n''t you hear me tell you I was with child by you? |
15416 | Did n''t you tell me years and years ago I''d fight your battles some day? |
15416 | Did she know that Daniel had dismissed him? |
15416 | Did you ever pull with me, or anybody, if you could help it? |
15416 | Did you get any ideas out of the man?" |
15416 | Did you play any cricket at school?" |
15416 | Did you really think that?" |
15416 | Do n''t education and all that count? |
15416 | Do n''t you feel like that?" |
15416 | Do the colours of babies''eyes change, like kittens''eyes, Ray?" |
15416 | Do you believe in the resurrection of the body, Estelle? |
15416 | Do you know who ought to own these works when your father dies?" |
15416 | Do you like poetry, Mercy?" |
15416 | Do you like your office?" |
15416 | Do you yourself think''The Tiger''is a finer house and more famous than my place?" |
15416 | Does anybody know of your engagement except my nephew and myself?" |
15416 | Does it seem to you to be interesting?" |
15416 | Does she know how good- looking she is?" |
15416 | For were not all three Fates to be seen at their eternal business here? |
15416 | For what sort of a home could he establish? |
15416 | For why? |
15416 | Go round to the kitchen, will''e?" |
15416 | Granted that she made a mistake, is her mistake to wreck her whole life? |
15416 | Granted wrong things happened, how are you helping to right the wrong? |
15416 | Had Ironsyde arrived at his determination from honest conviction, or thanks to the force of changed circumstances? |
15416 | Had not Mary Dinnett just reminded him that this was a Christian country? |
15416 | Have there not been plenty of such men-- before Christ, as well as since?" |
15416 | Have you any good reason for thinking it?" |
15416 | Have you got a room?" |
15416 | Have you noticed that garden chair in the porch?" |
15416 | He ignored me as his son, and so I ignore him as my father; and who would n''t?" |
15416 | He was masterful and possessed self- assurance; but what man can lead and control without these qualities? |
15416 | How could he endure to hear that people had been rude to her, and uttered coarse jests in her hearing aimed only at her ear? |
15416 | How do you read the fact that my father directs Raymond''s allowance to cease, Uncle Ernest?" |
15416 | How do you stand with her?" |
15416 | How had God got the heart to let him live for this? |
15416 | How often have you been there since we went?" |
15416 | How the devil do people find out about one? |
15416 | How was I to know such an idea was in your mind? |
15416 | How was he to know you would n''t try to burn the works again-- and succeed next time?" |
15416 | How worse? |
15416 | How would it be if you took him into the office at Bridport, where he would be more under your eye?" |
15416 | I hope he is well? |
15416 | I shall never want to work again, or think of work, or anything else on earth till-- till-- What does he matter anyway-- or his ideas? |
15416 | I should have liked to see you married; yet, after all, why not? |
15416 | I suppose you''ll grant that much?" |
15416 | I suppose you''re not properly his father if you do n''t marry her?" |
15416 | I suppose you''ve been told often enough who your father is?" |
15416 | I wonder if you would begin with Roberts at the lathes, or Cogle at the engines?" |
15416 | I''m not frightened to chance my luck, am I, Sabina?" |
15416 | I''ve a right to know that, I suppose?" |
15416 | If I want to assume paternity-- claim it, adopt him as my son-- to succeed me some day?" |
15416 | If I want to lift him up and assure his future? |
15416 | If the hunt that''s going on does n''t find him, how shall you do it? |
15416 | Is it out of any care for me he''d lift me up? |
15416 | Is n''t a good father a good father?" |
15416 | Is not the English word''canvas''only''cannabis''over again? |
15416 | Is she doubtful too?" |
15416 | Is that conducive to a religious trust in God, or a rational trust in man for these outlawed thousands?" |
15416 | Is the allowance to be continued?" |
15416 | Is the deed done, or is n''t it? |
15416 | Is there any more? |
15416 | Is there anybody here who can take your place for a month or six weeks?" |
15416 | Is there to be no finality in your resentment? |
15416 | It has got rights of some sort, surely? |
15416 | It''s selfish--? |
15416 | Life''s so difficult even for the luckiest of us; but it is n''t the luckiest who are the pluckiest generally-- is it? |
15416 | Me leave''The Seven Stars''after thirty- four years?" |
15416 | Me? |
15416 | Miss Waldron says it''s up to me to try and get the boy off; but the question is shall I be serving him best that way?" |
15416 | Mister Ironsyde do n''t like you, and why should he? |
15416 | Mr. Churchouse here is the best gentleman on God''s earth; but he do n''t understand a mother''s heart-- how should he? |
15416 | Need I say more?" |
15416 | No doubt you''ve seen me in the company of Sabina Dinnett?" |
15416 | No two people feel the same about it, surely? |
15416 | Not the finest pleasure gardens in Bridport, I suppose?" |
15416 | Now what constitutes life? |
15416 | Perhaps you''ve never seen a bumble- bee either?" |
15416 | Raymond?" |
15416 | Shall I have a look round for you?" |
15416 | Shall I quarrel with a gracious flower because a wandering bee has set a seed? |
15416 | Shall an elderly and faulty fellow creature rise in judgment at the weakness of youth? |
15416 | Shall it be, or sha n''t it, Richard?" |
15416 | Shall you be back to tea?" |
15416 | She herself had not suggested it; for what advantage could be gained by such a step? |
15416 | So what''s the good of wasting time talking as though you could? |
15416 | So you''re up against the laws and out for the liberties? |
15416 | Suppose you went so far as to let him befriend you, could he ever make up for not marrying your mother? |
15416 | Supposing this marriage does n''t really make for the happiness of either of them?" |
15416 | Surely he wo n''t chain an open- air man like you to a wretched desk all your time?" |
15416 | Surely his own work does n''t throw him into the company of the girls?" |
15416 | Surely nothing can make it impossible to clear my good name, Raymond?" |
15416 | Surely that was a pretty good sign he means to be friendly?" |
15416 | Surely the child must come round sooner or later?" |
15416 | Surely we can meet on the common ground of his welfare and leave the rest?" |
15416 | That was what we may expect from men of honour and right bringing up?" |
15416 | The turbine has a poetic side, do n''t you think?" |
15416 | Then where shall I be?" |
15416 | Then why waste nervous energy and strength on all this silly hate?" |
15416 | To do this was surely not required of her, for whereunto would it lead? |
15416 | Upon which a sailor- man, who listened to him, shouted out,''Oh death, where is thy sting?'' |
15416 | Was it"sporting"? |
15416 | Was n''t that an adventure-- to give a better tea than anybody in Bridport?" |
15416 | Was n''t there all the morning? |
15416 | We were n''t conventional last year, so why the dickens should we be this? |
15416 | Were you deaf yesterday? |
15416 | What about my point of view?" |
15416 | What are the years to me? |
15416 | What are you but a machine?" |
15416 | What can be worse than a man that lies to women and seduces an innocent girl under promise of marriage? |
15416 | What chance would she have of ever winning Daniel to acknowledge and respect her if the facts came to his ears? |
15416 | What choice of action have you got if you''re a gentleman? |
15416 | What did you do? |
15416 | What do you gain? |
15416 | What do you mean, Legg? |
15416 | What does it matter where the capital is as long as the nation has got it safe? |
15416 | What good comes into the world with hate? |
15416 | What good does it do you to hate?" |
15416 | What has he done for me that I should ease him and do as he pleases? |
15416 | What has the community done for us, that we should become slaves for it? |
15416 | What have I done but love you with all my heart and soul? |
15416 | What have I done in the past to lead you to any such conclusion? |
15416 | What have I ever done to make you put other people''s points of view before mine?" |
15416 | What is beauty? |
15416 | What is it that over- rides the natural relationship and poisons him against me? |
15416 | What is the good? |
15416 | What is the sense of all this hate? |
15416 | What motiveless malignity actuated Levi Baggs meanwhile, who can say? |
15416 | What must be the result of any such meeting? |
15416 | What on earth happens to us if Daniel fires me out of the Mill?" |
15416 | What sense is there to it?" |
15416 | What should I write to Daniel, but to tell him he''s the biggest cur and hound on earth?" |
15416 | What the deuce do you want to escape from your flesh for, if it''s healthy and tough and fine?" |
15416 | What thinking man, or boy, has not for that matter? |
15416 | What wonder she lost her head? |
15416 | What would become of England if every man was made in the pattern of his father? |
15416 | What would he do when he knew it? |
15416 | What''s he got out of all his hate and unkindness to the world?" |
15416 | What''s the fuss about now?" |
15416 | What''s the good of working for yourself?" |
15416 | What''s the matter with this?" |
15416 | What''s the matter with you?" |
15416 | What''s the trouble?" |
15416 | What''s your father done to you? |
15416 | Whatever are you talking about?" |
15416 | When that John Best drops out, as he ought to do, for he''s long past his work, will he get ten shillings a week? |
15416 | Where is the sense of this blind enmity against me? |
15416 | Who am I to cast anybody out, Missis Dinnett? |
15416 | Who are you to take his side and cringe to him? |
15416 | Who does n''t know dead people personally, and go to tea with them, and hear their bones rattle? |
15416 | Who ever was vexed with you?" |
15416 | Who had lost more than he by his unreason? |
15416 | Who''ll blame me for being bad and indifferent-- wicked if you like? |
15416 | Who''s F.H.?" |
15416 | Who''s he that he should be lifted up to represent honest, God- fearing men?" |
15416 | Why did Raymond demand continued silence even in the face of offences put upon her by her neighbours? |
15416 | Why did not my nephew come, if he started to come?" |
15416 | Why did you advise me to look out what I was doing last night?" |
15416 | Why do n''t the yarn teach us a lesson? |
15416 | Why do you shrink from doing now what you wanted to do at first?" |
15416 | Why must I think your friendship and your money are the best possible things for him? |
15416 | Why should I advise him to take what I refused for myself twelve years and more ago? |
15416 | Why should he? |
15416 | Why should they? |
15416 | Why were n''t you out?" |
15416 | Why? |
15416 | Why? |
15416 | Why? |
15416 | Will it make him less miserable to go on and commit a greater? |
15416 | Will you be so happy and comfortable along with me, at''The Seven Stars,''as you are at''The Tiger''? |
15416 | Will you let my lawyer see you?" |
15416 | Will you take my aunt''s arm and follow next after me, please?" |
15416 | Would a man who loved her, as she deserved to be loved, suffer this? |
15416 | Would you like a chicken, sir?" |
15416 | Would you like me to see my child?" |
15416 | Would you like one? |
15416 | Would you ruin the pair of us?" |
15416 | Yes, why? |
15416 | You are satisfied that he will tell me the truth?" |
15416 | You do n''t apprehend anything of that sort, I hope?" |
15416 | You do n''t mind if I smoke?" |
15416 | You do n''t remember the time when he used to steal chickens, do you?" |
15416 | You know what a handicap is in a race? |
15416 | You must have some reason for hating him?" |
15416 | You see that? |
15416 | You to set a trap?" |
15416 | You want to marry me yourself?" |
15416 | You wo n''t be vexed with me if I say something, will you?" |
15416 | You''ll forgive me, wo n''t you?" |
15416 | You''re behaving very wickedly, Mr. Ironsyde, and driving my daughter frantic; and if she ca n''t tell her mother her sorrows, who should know?" |
15416 | she asked,"and when are you going to do it? |
2153 | ''And why are we to be molested?'' 2153 A sub- poena-- what is that?" |
2153 | A what? |
2153 | Ahem!--What''s your name? 2153 All''s right now, young woman?" |
2153 | All? 2153 And I''m to tell him that, am I, next time I see him?" |
2153 | And Mary? 2153 And can you see pretty well with th''other?" |
2153 | And did that kill him? |
2153 | And did they never see her again? |
2153 | And did you wait all that time in the street? |
2153 | And do n''t you think he did it? |
2153 | And do you know aught about them, too? |
2153 | And do you think one sunk so low as I am has a home? 2153 And have I heard you aright?" |
2153 | And he''ll prove that thing for my poor lad, will he? 2153 And he''s sailed?" |
2153 | And how did he take it? |
2153 | And in course thou plucked the pillow away? 2153 And is it thee that dares set foot in this house, after what has come to pass? |
2153 | And is this the end of all my hopes and fears? 2153 And now, dear Mrs. Wilson, can you remember where he said he was going on Thursday night? |
2153 | And pray, may I ask, which was the favoured lover? 2153 And that''s your last word?" |
2153 | And what about the gun? 2153 And what did you put on?" |
2153 | And what do you find so amusing, Sally? |
2153 | And what does the doctor say? |
2153 | And what good have they ever done me that I should like them? |
2153 | And what was the substance of your conversation? 2153 And what''s Mary Barton to thee, that thou shouldst be running after her in that- a- way?" |
2153 | And what''s made this change, Mary? |
2153 | And where did you say you lived? |
2153 | And why ca n''t you cherish her, even though she is happy? |
2153 | And why shouldst thou know? |
2153 | And yet, dear, if it would not put you out o''your way,--I would work hard to make it up to you;--but would not your grandfather be vexed? |
2153 | And yet, how could it be managed otherwise? 2153 And you never spoke to him again?" |
2153 | And you want Will Wilson to prove an_ alibi_--is that it? |
2153 | And you''ve no clue to the one as is really guilty, if t''other is not? |
2153 | Are not you well? |
2153 | Are you aunt Hetty? |
2153 | Ask, or not ask, what care I? 2153 At the same rate of wages as now?" |
2153 | Ay, ay, and is it so? |
2153 | Ay; donno ye know what wishing means? 2153 But how was your daughter when you got there?" |
2153 | But what can be done? 2153 But what must I do?" |
2153 | But what was the name of their boat? |
2153 | But why did they turn you off, when the jury had said you were innocent? |
2153 | But you do n''t think her fit to go to Liverpool? |
2153 | But you have seen young Mr. Carson since your rejection of the prisoner? |
2153 | But you,--what could they get but good from you? 2153 But--"said Mr. Duncombe, smiling,"you would like to be a married man before you go, I suppose; eh, Wilson?" |
2153 | Ca n''t; and he is well, you say? 2153 Can you come to see her to- morrow? |
2153 | Could not you and Will take mother home? 2153 D---- you, I ask you again where you''re bound to? |
2153 | Davenport-- Davenport; who is the fellow? 2153 Dear Mary, is that you?" |
2153 | Dear nurse, what is the matter? |
2153 | Dearest Mary,--"What, Jem? |
2153 | Did yo hear where the wife lived at last? |
2153 | Did you ever hear tell,said he to Mary,"that I were in London once?" |
2153 | Did you know Mr. Carson as now lies dead? |
2153 | Did you know the chap? |
2153 | Did you never see her again, Alice? 2153 Didst thou mark how poorly Jane Wilson looked?" |
2153 | Do n''t you know them brats never goes to sleep till long past ten? 2153 Do n''t you think she''s happy, Margaret?" |
2153 | Do you remember Esther, the sister of John Barton''s wife? 2153 Do you think Harry means any thing by his attention to her?" |
2153 | Don ye think He''s th''masters''Father, too? 2153 Father, do you know George Wilson''s dead?" |
2153 | Going-- art thou going to work this time o''day? |
2153 | Han they ever seen a child o''their''n die for want o''food? |
2153 | Han yo known this chap long? |
2153 | Han[ 16] ye had no money fra th''town? |
2153 | Has he left her much to go upon? |
2153 | Has it been a dream then? |
2153 | Have I done any thing to offend you? |
2153 | Have I had no inward suffering to blanch these hairs? 2153 Have n''t I? |
2153 | Have ye been to see his mother of late? |
2153 | Have you heard any more of this horrid affair, Miss Barton? |
2153 | Have you not heard that young Mr. Carson was murdered last night? |
2153 | He would not listen to me; what can I do? 2153 Here we are, wife; didst thou think thou''d lost us?" |
2153 | How can I best find her? 2153 How can I tell?" |
2153 | How can he find it out when he''s at Halifax? |
2153 | How can you know, wench? 2153 How did he die? |
2153 | How did he die? |
2153 | How do you think her? |
2153 | How far does the pilot go with the ship? |
2153 | How gone? 2153 How is he?" |
2153 | How is she? 2153 How many hands had she?" |
2153 | How shall you like being cross- examined, Mary? |
2153 | How should I know? |
2153 | How soon would he come back? |
2153 | How? |
2153 | Hurt? 2153 I wonder if one little lie would be a sin as things stand? |
2153 | Is he not come back from the Isle of Man? |
2153 | Is it a dream? |
2153 | Is mamma ill? |
2153 | Is no one gone for a ladder? |
2153 | Is she so very bad? |
2153 | Is that you, Mary Barton? |
2153 | Is your father at home, Mary? |
2153 | Is your grandfather a fortune- teller? |
2153 | It is his hand- writing-- isn''t it? |
2153 | It would n''t be better for thee to be scarce a bit, would it, and leave me to go and find out what''s up? 2153 It''s very sudden, is n''t it?" |
2153 | Let me in, will you? |
2153 | Margaret,said Mary, who had been closely observing her friend,"thou''rt very blind to- night, arn''t thou? |
2153 | Mary, is Jem your brother, or your sweetheart, that you''re so set upon saving him? |
2153 | Mary, they say silence gives consent; is it so? |
2153 | Mary, what''s come o''er thee and Jem Wilson? 2153 Mary,"--beginning to speak again,--"did you ever hear what a poor creature I were when he married me? |
2153 | May I make bold to ask if this gun belongs to your son? |
2153 | No, wait a minute; it''s the teagle hoisting above your head I''m afraid of;--and who is it that''s to be tried? |
2153 | No; where? |
2153 | Now, how in the world can we help it? 2153 O Mary, canst thou wreck his peace, Wha for thy sake wad gladly die? |
2153 | Oh Margaret, have ye heard this sad news about George Wilson? |
2153 | Oh, father, what can I do for you? 2153 Oh, how much do you want? |
2153 | Oh, tell us what you see? |
2153 | Oh, why did n''t you come in for my pretty pink gingham? |
2153 | Perhaps he''s your cousin, then? 2153 Please, sir, Davenport''s ill of the fever, and I''m come to know if you''ve got an Infirmary order for him?" |
2153 | Pray what do you want, young woman? |
2153 | Shall I take him to the lock- ups for assault, sir? |
2153 | So the old governor is back again, eh? 2153 So thou''rt off to Glasgow, art thou?" |
2153 | So, John, yo''re bound for London, are yo? |
2153 | Tea is ready, is it? |
2153 | Tell me, Margaret,said Mary, taking her apron down from her eyes, and looking at Margaret with eager anxiety,"what can I do to bring him back to me? |
2153 | The mother of the prisoner at the bar? |
2153 | The rich man dines, while the poor man pines, And eats his heart away;''They teach us lies,''he sternly cries,''Would_ brothers_ do as they?'' |
2153 | Then he''s come fra Halifax, is he? |
2153 | Then what did you say when you had this final conversation with Mr. Carson? 2153 Then you are going?" |
2153 | Then you give it up, do you? 2153 Then you mean to give her up, sir? |
2153 | Then you think him guilty, sir? |
2153 | Then you''ve heard nothing of Esther, poor lass? |
2153 | There are no little boats about, and I thought I was to go in a little boat; those ships are never meant for short distances, are they? |
2153 | There''s a change comed over him sin''yo left, is there not? |
2153 | There''s no one else who can prove what you want at the trial to- morrow, is there? |
2153 | Thou''st never left Mrs. Wilson alone wi''poor Alice? |
2153 | Uncle who? |
2153 | Was it a pretty place? |
2153 | Was it afore Will had set off? |
2153 | Was she any ways different in her manner? |
2153 | Was she very bad? |
2153 | Well, Jem, he''s gone at last, is he? |
2153 | Well, John, how goes it with you? |
2153 | Well, Wilson, and what do you want to- day, man? |
2153 | Well, but what did your grandfather say? |
2153 | Well, father, but did you see th''Queen? |
2153 | Well, my fine fellow, and what have I to do with that? 2153 Well, neighbour,"said Wilson,"all that may be very true, but what I want to know now is about Esther-- when did you last hear of her?" |
2153 | Were you aware that he knew of Mr. Henry Carson''s regard for you? 2153 What accident, father?" |
2153 | What am I saying? 2153 What are you copying it for?" |
2153 | What brought him to life at first? |
2153 | What could we do, darling? |
2153 | What did he say he wanted it for? |
2153 | What did he say, sir, if I may be so bold as to ask? |
2153 | What did you do? |
2153 | What do they say? |
2153 | What do you call a handsome reward? |
2153 | What do you mean? |
2153 | What do you want me to do, nurse? 2153 What do you want?" |
2153 | What does he say? |
2153 | What does he say? |
2153 | What don ye want? |
2153 | What is it about? |
2153 | What is it? 2153 What is it?" |
2153 | What is it? |
2153 | What is the pilot- boat? |
2153 | What is this? 2153 What made her think there were a letter?" |
2153 | What mun I answer? 2153 What o''clock is that?" |
2153 | What pier did she start from? |
2153 | What things are these? |
2153 | What was it like? |
2153 | What was it? |
2153 | What was she like? |
2153 | What will mother say? 2153 What you say is very true, no doubt,"replied Mr. Carson;"but how would you bring it to bear upon the masters''conduct,--on my particular case?" |
2153 | What''s the matter, my wench? |
2153 | What''s the old fellow after? |
2153 | Whatten''s all I can do, to what he''s done for me and mine? 2153 When are you going to sail?" |
2153 | When are you going, father? 2153 When art starting?" |
2153 | When did he-- when did they bring him home? |
2153 | When does thy father start, Mary? |
2153 | When may I go home? 2153 When?" |
2153 | Where am I to go to? |
2153 | Where are the engines? |
2153 | Where are you bound to? 2153 Where had he been till that time o''night?" |
2153 | Where have I been? 2153 Where have you hidden yourself? |
2153 | Where is he? 2153 Where is he?" |
2153 | Where is she? |
2153 | Where is the young woman now? |
2153 | Where was Jem? 2153 Where''s yo''r father?" |
2153 | Who is she, Ben? |
2153 | Who''s it all for, for if you told me I''ve forgotten? |
2153 | Who''s there? |
2153 | Why are we here? |
2153 | Why did you let Jem Wilson go twice? |
2153 | Why have you never been in all these many years? |
2153 | Why need you go? |
2153 | Why not? |
2153 | Why, Sally, had you any idea she was going to fly out in this style? |
2153 | Why, how old is he? |
2153 | Why, if I''d come up by thee, who''d ha''caught the creature, I should like to know? |
2153 | Why, what can you wear? 2153 Will and Margaret are married?" |
2153 | Will she come back by hersel? |
2153 | Will you come and see her, Job? 2153 Will you tell me?" |
2153 | Wishing him? |
2153 | With thee? |
2153 | Wo n''t you? |
2153 | Yes-- oh, yes-- can we not cross now? |
2153 | You little thought when you were so ill you should live to have such a fine strapping son as I am, did you now? |
2153 | You say no one crosses the threshold but has something sad to say; you do n''t mean that Margaret Jennings has any trouble? |
2153 | You were in the room the whole time while Barton was speaking to me, I think? |
2153 | You''re going to see mother? |
2153 | You''ve never said where you come from? |
2153 | You''ve not got a bit o''money by you, Barton? |
2153 | Your father''s out I suppose? |
2153 | ''Is it hers?'' |
2153 | ''Whatten business have yo to do that?'' |
2153 | 8, Back Garden Court, where there''s friends waiting for her? |
2153 | A frozen lump of snow, lingering late in one of the gnarled tufts of the hedge? |
2153 | A nasty, smoky hole, bean''t it? |
2153 | Abhorring what they considered oppression in the masters, why did they oppress others? |
2153 | After a minute or two, he asked,"Mary, art thou much bound to Manchester? |
2153 | After you had given up going with him, I mean? |
2153 | And now, where was Mary? |
2153 | And she must do it; for was not she the sole depository of the terrible secret? |
2153 | And the Valentine I sent you last February ten years?" |
2153 | And what am I to do with Alice? |
2153 | And who so quick as blind Margaret in noticing tones, and sighs, and even silence? |
2153 | And who was he, the questioner, that he should dare so lightly to ask of her heart''s secrets? |
2153 | And will you give me a certificate of her being unable to go, if the lawyer says we must have one? |
2153 | And yet, why dread? |
2153 | And( strange, stinging thought) could he be beloved by her, and so have caused her obstinate rejection of himself? |
2153 | Any thing more, missis?" |
2153 | Ar''n''t them lawyers impudent things? |
2153 | Are all safe, Margaret?" |
2153 | Are not you worn out, Helen?" |
2153 | Are there boat- stands?" |
2153 | Are we worshippers of Christ? |
2153 | Are you bound to live there?" |
2153 | Art thou going to faint?" |
2153 | At last Sally Leadbitter asked Mary if she had heard the news? |
2153 | At last she ventured to whisper,"Is there any chance for the other one, think you?" |
2153 | At length he replied,"Where did you see Esther lately? |
2153 | Because I''ve heard fine things of Canada; and our overlooker has a cousin in the foundry line there.--Thou knowest where Canada is, Mary?" |
2153 | Besides you go when your father''s at home, without letting on[ 26] to him, and what harm would there be in going now?" |
2153 | Besides, how could I hear o''a place there? |
2153 | Besides, was it not enough to know that he was guilty of this terrible offence? |
2153 | Bless me, Will, that''s sudden, is n''t it?" |
2153 | But are we near the boats? |
2153 | But by what train?" |
2153 | But could no doctor be had? |
2153 | But don ye know Ben Davenport as worked at Carsons''? |
2153 | But have you taught them the science of consequences? |
2153 | But how could I do that, Mary? |
2153 | But if I should find her, how can I make her come with me? |
2153 | But if you did think of marrying her, why( if I may be so bold as to ask) did you go and tell her you had no thought of doing otherwise by her? |
2153 | But it was only the weakness of an instant; for were not the very minutes precious, for deliberation if not for action? |
2153 | But the gentleman; why did he, with his range of choice among the ladies of the land, why did he stoop down to carry off the poor man''s darling? |
2153 | But to- morrow,--would she not come in to- morrow? |
2153 | But unable to wait another instant she called out herself,"Can you see the_ John Cropper_? |
2153 | But what availed his sympathy? |
2153 | But what would be Mr. Carson''s course? |
2153 | But what''s up with you, Mary? |
2153 | But where? |
2153 | But who was he, that he should utter sympathy or consolation? |
2153 | But will he thank me for it? |
2153 | But yo are not Esther, are you?" |
2153 | But you want to be told it again and again, do you?" |
2153 | But you''ll ha''heard all this, Mary?" |
2153 | But, how comed you by it? |
2153 | But, who knows"( falling back into the old desponding tone)"if he really went? |
2153 | Ca n''t you stop at home quiet with me?" |
2153 | Can my prayers be heard? |
2153 | Can you bear to hear it? |
2153 | Can you help me, Margaret?" |
2153 | Can you not guess? |
2153 | Can you say there''s nought wrong in this?" |
2153 | Could he have overheard her conversation with Sally Leadbitter? |
2153 | Could his mother mar it? |
2153 | Could it be--? |
2153 | Could she break into it with her Martha- like cares? |
2153 | Could this man be a lover of Mary''s? |
2153 | Could you have thought it? |
2153 | D''ye believe there''s such a thing as the Mermaidicus, master?" |
2153 | D''ye think folk could be led astray by one who was every way bad? |
2153 | Dearest Mrs. Wilson, may n''t I stay?" |
2153 | Did I ever tell yo what th''Infirmary chap let me into, many a year agone?" |
2153 | Did I ever tell you, Mary, what she said one day when she found me taking on about something?" |
2153 | Did Jem really care for Molly Gibson? |
2153 | Did he die easy?" |
2153 | Did he go on horseback to town? |
2153 | Did he make a fine end?" |
2153 | Did not you hear where he''d been? |
2153 | Did you ever tell the prisoner at the bar of Mr. Henry Carson''s attentions to you? |
2153 | Did you ever try to excite his jealousy by boasting of a lover so far above you in station?" |
2153 | Did you know he were in Halifax, Mary?" |
2153 | Did you never go home while she was alive?" |
2153 | Did you not see the_ John Cropper_ sail down the river this morning? |
2153 | Did you see my clerk as you came up- stairs? |
2153 | Did you tell him you found you preferred his rival?" |
2153 | Did your father set him to look after you while he was away? |
2153 | Do n''t you know they will stain, and make it shabby for ever? |
2153 | Do n''t you understand me now? |
2153 | Do you guess, Mary?" |
2153 | Do you hear me, Jem?" |
2153 | Do you know"The Oldham Weaver?" |
2153 | Do you not believe that as long as hope remained I would be up and doing? |
2153 | Do you see how you''ve hurt the little girl? |
2153 | Do you think if I could help it, I would sit still with folded hands, content to mourn? |
2153 | Do you?" |
2153 | Does he not remind you of some of the busts of Jupiter?" |
2153 | Does it haunt the minds of the rich as it does those of the poor? |
2153 | Dost thou know where Jem is, all through thee?" |
2153 | Dost thou know where he is, thou bad hussy, with thy great blue eyes and yellow hair, to lead men on to ruin? |
2153 | Errands of mercy-- errands of sin-- did you ever think where all the thousands of people you daily meet are bound? |
2153 | Flesh and blood gets wearied wi''so much work; why should factory hands work so much longer nor other trades? |
2153 | For sure, there''s no more mischief up, is there?" |
2153 | For, brothers, is not them the things we ask for when we ask for more wage? |
2153 | Had he given her up? |
2153 | Had he not promised with such earnest purpose of soul, as makes words more solemn than oaths, to save Mary from becoming such as Esther? |
2153 | Had they not loved her?--and who loved her now? |
2153 | Han they done as they''d be done by for us?" |
2153 | Han ye heard o''his good luck?" |
2153 | Han ye heard where I was last night?" |
2153 | Harry Carson''s mother had been a factory girl; so, after all, what was the great reason for doubting his intentions towards Mary? |
2153 | Harry?" |
2153 | Hast thought of that?" |
2153 | Have not I toiled and struggled even to these years with hopes in my heart that all centered in my boy? |
2153 | Have you got it down, Mary?" |
2153 | Have you had a long walk? |
2153 | Have you much to do?" |
2153 | Have you sent for a doctor? |
2153 | Have you sent for a doctor?" |
2153 | He had evidently got possession of some gun( was it really Jem''s; was he an accomplice? |
2153 | He interrupted his earnest gaze into her face, with the exclamation--"And who can yo be to know Mary Barton, or to know that she''s ought to me?" |
2153 | He kissed her again and again, but looking round as if searching for some one he could not find, the first words he uttered were still,"Where is she?" |
2153 | He loved me above a bit; and am I to leave him now to dree all the cruel slander they''ll put upon him? |
2153 | He saw the short- sightedness of falsehood; but what could he do now? |
2153 | He was out when Alice was taken ill; and he did not come home till early in the morning, or, to speak true, in the night: did he?" |
2153 | He''ll bear witness that Jem were with him? |
2153 | His raven hair( his mother''s pride, and so often fondly caressed by her fingers), was that too to have its influence against him? |
2153 | How can I tell what is right? |
2153 | How comes it they''re rich, and we''re poor? |
2153 | How could I hold up if thou wert gone, Jem? |
2153 | How could I sleep till I knowed if Will were found?" |
2153 | How could I?" |
2153 | How could she, the abandoned and polluted outcast, ever have dared to hope for a blessing, even on her efforts to do good? |
2153 | How did you hear, mother?" |
2153 | How did you like standing witness? |
2153 | How do you know the wild romances of their lives; the trials, the temptations they are even now enduring, resisting, sinking under? |
2153 | How is Miss Simmonds? |
2153 | How long is it ago?" |
2153 | How shall I clear him to strangers, when those who know him, and ought to love him, are so set against his being innocent?" |
2153 | How shall I save her? |
2153 | How shall I save her? |
2153 | How? |
2153 | However, I''ve just been going over the principal points again to him; may be you saw us? |
2153 | I asked him, and he has got the Rose,_ sans reproche_; but do you know, little Miss Extravagance, a very small one is half- a- guinea?" |
2153 | I could live it down if I stayed in England; but then what would not Mary have to bear? |
2153 | I did not speak of them, but were they not there? |
2153 | I forget what your name is?" |
2153 | I know all your clothes as well as I do my own, and what is there you can wear? |
2153 | I mun know where to find you-- where do you live?" |
2153 | I must see him,--it''s a matter of life and death: he can save the innocent from being hanged,--he can not be gone,--how gone?" |
2153 | I named your name with the view of unlocking his confidence, but--""What did he say?" |
2153 | I seemed hard and cold; and so I might be to others, but not to him!--who shall ever imagine the love I bore to him? |
2153 | I''m speaking as if she cared for me, and would marry me; d''ye think she does care at all for me, Mary?" |
2153 | I''ve caught you, have I?" |
2153 | If he presented himself before her while this idea of his character was uppermost, who might tell the consequence? |
2153 | If it please God she recovers, will you take her to you as you would a daughter?" |
2153 | If it was n''t Jem, who was it?" |
2153 | If you come home to- morrow night, and Will''s there, perhaps I need not step up?" |
2153 | In the wilderness of a large town, where to meet with an individual of so little value or note to any? |
2153 | Is Harry come in? |
2153 | Is Jem proved innocent? |
2153 | Is Margaret very well?" |
2153 | Is Miss Alice Wilson alive, then; will that please you? |
2153 | Is he bound for th''shooting gallery? |
2153 | Is he ill? |
2153 | Is he thrown? |
2153 | Is he_ dead_, did you say? |
2153 | Is it not enough to have robbed me of my boy with thy arts and thy profligacy, but thou must come here to crow over me-- me-- his mother? |
2153 | Is it wi''crying? |
2153 | Is n''t it called an_ alibi_, the getting folk to swear to where he really was at the time?" |
2153 | Is she here? |
2153 | Is she there yet?" |
2153 | Is th''canting old maid as was his sister alive yet?" |
2153 | It is true they who thus purchase it pay dearly for their oblivion; but can you expect the uneducated to count the cost of their whistle? |
2153 | It keeps him silent, to be sure; but so long as I see him earnest, and pleased, and eager, what does that matter? |
2153 | It was but too clear, some way or another, he had learnt all; and what would he think of her? |
2153 | It''s Jem, is it? |
2153 | It''s very sad, is n''t it, father?" |
2153 | Jacob Butterworth had said a good word for me, and they asked me would I sing? |
2153 | Jem?" |
2153 | Job, and wo n''t you ever believe me when I tell you he''s innocent? |
2153 | Jones''s?" |
2153 | Just ask''em that, Barton, will ye?" |
2153 | Look, who is this letter from?" |
2153 | Lord, what is it to Life? |
2153 | Margaret did not know he was at home: had he stolen like a thief by dead of night into his own dwelling? |
2153 | Margaret had the great charm of possessing good strong common sense, and do you not perceive how involuntarily this is valued? |
2153 | Margaret, do you think he can be saved; do you think they can find him guilty if Will comes forward as a witness? |
2153 | Margaret, you can tell me; you were there when he came back that night; were you not? |
2153 | Mary, ar''n''t you ready?" |
2153 | Must he be told of Mary''s state? |
2153 | My dears, poor Mr. Harry is brought home--""Brought home--_brought_ home-- how?" |
2153 | My hairs are gray with suffering, and yours with years--""And have I had no suffering?" |
2153 | Not doomed by us to this appointed pain-- God made us rich and poor-- of what do these complain?" |
2153 | Not your old plaid shawl, I do hope? |
2153 | Now did n''t you, Mary? |
2153 | Now suppose I know-- I knew he was innocent,--it''s only supposing, Job,--what must I do to prove it? |
2153 | Now what''s he after next? |
2153 | Now, would you not, dear mother?" |
2153 | O awful is it in the hushed mid night, While gazing on the pallid, moveless form, To start and ask,''Is it now sleep-- or death?''" |
2153 | Oh, Jem, is it true? |
2153 | Oh, sir, may not I go down?" |
2153 | Oh, what shall I do to save Mary''s child? |
2153 | Oh, why did she ever listen to the tempter? |
2153 | Once before she refused, and said she could not break off her drinking ways, come what might?" |
2153 | Or canst thou break that heart of his, Whase only faut is loving thee?" |
2153 | Or why did not Job go? |
2153 | Papa will give it me, wo n''t you, dear father? |
2153 | Poor soul, she''s gone dateless, I think, with care, and watching, and over- much trouble; and who can wonder? |
2153 | Sailed?" |
2153 | Says I,''Good woman, may we rest us a bit?'' |
2153 | Shall toil and famine, hopeless, still be borne? |
2153 | Shall you, or I, receive such blessing? |
2153 | She added, hesitatingly,"Is any one else at Job''s?" |
2153 | She must speak; to that she was soul- compelled; but to whom? |
2153 | She to judge him? |
2153 | She wo n''t hearken to warning, or heed it more than I did; and who loves her well enough to watch over her as she should be watched? |
2153 | Should I write to him?" |
2153 | Should he shrink from the duties of life, into the cowardliness of death? |
2153 | So I went out into the street, one January night-- Do you think God will punish me for that?" |
2153 | So giving Jennings a sharp nudge( for he''d fallen asleep), I says,''Missis, what''s to pay?'' |
2153 | So he''s ill, eh?" |
2153 | So says I,''And, missis, what should we gie you for the babby''s bread and milk?'' |
2153 | So she wisely paused in their delivery, and said in a more sympathetic tone than she had heretofore used,"Do tell me, Mary, what''s fretting you so? |
2153 | So why ca n''t he make a law again poor folks''wives working in factories?" |
2153 | So, will you give it to her, Mary, when I''m gone? |
2153 | Some of the masters were rather affronted at such a ragged detachment coming between the wind and their nobility; but what cared they? |
2153 | Speak out, man, ca n''t ye? |
2153 | Speak, child, ca n''t you?" |
2153 | Stay, Mary, has your mother got any nettles for spring drink? |
2153 | Still, where to find her again? |
2153 | Th''Union is paying for your father, I suppose?" |
2153 | The clerk was gabbling over the indictment, and in a minute or two there was the accustomed question,"How say you, Guilty, or Not Guilty?" |
2153 | The cloud- shadows which give beauty to Chat- Moss, the picturesque old houses of Newton, what were they to Mary, whose heart was full of many things? |
2153 | The first question sobbed out by his choking voice, oppressed with emotion, was,"Where is she?" |
2153 | The gentleman she had just beheld would see and question Jem in a few hours, and what would be the result? |
2153 | The morning of the day on which it was to take place he had lain late in bed, for what was the use of getting up? |
2153 | The_ John Cropper_? |
2153 | Then a shrill cry was heard, asking"Is the oud man alive, and likely to do?" |
2153 | Then may I trouble you to ask him to step up immediately?" |
2153 | Then what in the name of goodness made him shoot Mr. Harry? |
2153 | Then you wo n''t help me, Job, to prove him innocent? |
2153 | Then, should she apply to Jem himself? |
2153 | There stood-- could it be? |
2153 | They get interest on their capital somehow a''this time, while ourn is lying idle, else how could they all live as they do? |
2153 | Thou''lt may be like to see her?" |
2153 | Thou''rt taking it in, Mary; thou''rt to call on him in Liverpool at two, Monday afternoon?" |
2153 | Thou''st found her at Mrs. Jones''s, Job?" |
2153 | To Glasgow, did you say? |
2153 | To his surprise the dark, sturdy- looking artisan stopped him by saying respectfully,"May I speak a word wi''you, sir?" |
2153 | To whom could she speak and ask for aid? |
2153 | To whom shall the outcast prostitute tell her tale? |
2153 | True, his vengeance was sanctioned by law, but was it the less revenge? |
2153 | Ungracious enough on the whole, was it not, Mr. Legh? |
2153 | Was he afraid you''d be on again?" |
2153 | Was it not she who had led him to the pit into which he had fallen? |
2153 | Was it then so; that Mary was a flirt, the giddy creature of whom he spoke? |
2153 | Was it you, then, that killed my boy? |
2153 | Was na it a good thing they did na keep me from Liverpool? |
2153 | Was she not lonely enough to welcome the spirits of the dead, who had loved her while here? |
2153 | Was she to blame him? |
2153 | We said,''Where are they?'' |
2153 | We spoke up again[ 33] it; but every body said it were the rule, so what could two poor oud chaps like us do again it? |
2153 | Well, the regiment was ordered to Chester( did I tell you he was an officer? |
2153 | Were a few hasty words, spoken in a moment of irritation, to stamp her lot through life? |
2153 | Were the delegates empowered to accept such offer? |
2153 | Were there any means by which he might be persuaded to spare John Barton''s memory? |
2153 | What are you copying, Amy?" |
2153 | What are you looking at me so strangely for, Sophy?" |
2153 | What are you stopping for?" |
2153 | What better sentence can an emperor wish to have said over his bier? |
2153 | What boots thy pity now? |
2153 | What can he want, Jem?" |
2153 | What could a fellow who had never been many miles from home know about the wonders of the deep, that he should put him down in that way? |
2153 | What could he do for him? |
2153 | What could her father be doing up- stairs? |
2153 | What could she answer? |
2153 | What d''ye mean by trouble? |
2153 | What did she want there? |
2153 | What did ye say about that?" |
2153 | What do they say?" |
2153 | What do you say, mother?" |
2153 | What do you think, Helen?" |
2153 | What gown are you going in, Mary?" |
2153 | What had she done to deserve such cruel treatment from him? |
2153 | What has Jem done? |
2153 | What have I been doing? |
2153 | What have I done, Mary? |
2153 | What if Mary should implicate her father? |
2153 | What is it?" |
2153 | What must I say?" |
2153 | What news?" |
2153 | What rustled under her hand in the pocket? |
2153 | What shall I do? |
2153 | What should he do to tempt her? |
2153 | What should he say? |
2153 | What use could it be of to a landsman? |
2153 | What was it? |
2153 | What was she to think? |
2153 | What were these hollow vanities to her, now she had discovered the passionate secret of her soul? |
2153 | What were you fretting about, first place?" |
2153 | What would Mary say?" |
2153 | What would you have me do?" |
2153 | What''s he going to do in Glasgow?--Seek for work? |
2153 | What''s the matter? |
2153 | What''s the use of watching? |
2153 | What''s up that he ca n''t come home and help me nurse? |
2153 | Whatten you want it for?" |
2153 | When do you go?" |
2153 | When it''s a matter of life and death to Jem?" |
2153 | When they had ended, he said,"Where was he shot?" |
2153 | When? |
2153 | Where are you bound to?" |
2153 | Where are you going to?" |
2153 | Where did they find him? |
2153 | Where did you see her? |
2153 | Where han ye been this many a year? |
2153 | Where han ye been wandering that we none of us could find you out?" |
2153 | Where have you been to, first place?" |
2153 | Where is Jem?" |
2153 | Where is she, Charley? |
2153 | Where is the wisdom that shall bridge this gulf, And bind them once again in trust and love?" |
2153 | Where was it? |
2153 | Where''s Jem Wilson?" |
2153 | Where''s your father going? |
2153 | Where''s your father? |
2153 | Where? |
2153 | Which business is of most consequence i''the sight o''God, think yo, our''n or them gran ladies and gentlemen as yo think so much on?'' |
2153 | Which did you prefer?" |
2153 | Which was the favoured lover? |
2153 | Who cared for her? |
2153 | Who could resist her voice, her tones of misery, of humility? |
2153 | Who could tell how maddened he might have been by jealousy; how one moment''s uncontrollable passion might have led him to become a murderer? |
2153 | Who did she go with, lad?" |
2153 | Who is to believe me,--who is to think him innocent, if you, who know''d him so well, stick to it he''s guilty?" |
2153 | Who so likely as Margaret to treasure every little particular respecting Will, now Alice was dead to all the stirring purposes of life? |
2153 | Who will give her help in her day of need? |
2153 | Who would refuse the kindness for which she begged so penitently? |
2153 | Who would then guard Mary, with her love and her innocence? |
2153 | Whose doing is it? |
2153 | Why did he not come down? |
2153 | Why did n''t he go for the doctor?" |
2153 | Why did she ever give ear to her own suggestions, and cravings after wealth and grandeur? |
2153 | Why do you torment me with questions like these? |
2153 | Why does she not come to bed? |
2153 | Why had she singled him out? |
2153 | Why had she thought it a fine thing to have a rich lover? |
2153 | Why have we made them what they are; a powerful monster, yet without the inner means for peace and happiness? |
2153 | Why should he alone suffer from bad times? |
2153 | Why should not we?" |
2153 | Why should you think I''ve only room for one love in my heart? |
2153 | Why were the masters offering such low wages under these circumstances? |
2153 | Why, this very night she roused me up, and''Job,''says she,''I ask your pardon for wakening you, but tell me, am I awake or dreaming? |
2153 | Will would have proved an_ alibi_,--but he''s gone,--and what am I to do?" |
2153 | Will you be clemmed, or will you be worried?'' |
2153 | Will you have the kindness to inform the gentlemen of the jury what has been your charge for repeating this very plausible story? |
2153 | Will you tell him this, Sally? |
2153 | Will you tell me?" |
2153 | With a husky voice that trembled as he spoke, he said,"I think, sir, yo''re keeping company wi''a young woman called Mary Barton?" |
2153 | With all the glories of the garden at his hand, why did he prefer to cull the wild- rose,--Jem''s own fragrant wild- rose? |
2153 | Wo n''t that be a good_ alibi_?" |
2153 | Would Mary care? |
2153 | Would Mary like to see her? |
2153 | Would Mrs. Davenport and the little child go home with Mary? |
2153 | Would it grieve thee sore to quit the old smoke- jack?" |
2153 | Would n''t that be nice? |
2153 | Would she care in the very least? |
2153 | Would somebody with a wig on please to ask him how much he can say for me?" |
2153 | Would you not be glad to forget life, and its burdens? |
2153 | Yo''ve seen th''hearses wi''white plumes, Job?" |
2153 | You know Mary Barton, do n''t you?" |
2153 | You know them two letters, Margaret?" |
2153 | You recollect aunt Esther, do n''t you, Mary?" |
2153 | You remember the reward Mr. Carson offered for the apprehension of the murderer of his son? |
2153 | You remember, do n''t you, love? |
2153 | You say he''s sailed; what can be done?" |
2153 | You wo n''t even say you''ll try and like me; will you, Mary?" |
2153 | You would not fancy this I have on, more nor the scarf, would you?" |
2153 | You''d like me to have some one to make me as happy as you made father? |
2153 | You''ll have heard of old Jacob Butterworth, the singing weaver? |
2153 | You''ll not tell her, Mary?" |
2153 | You''ll often speak of me to her, Mary? |
2153 | You''re one of th''Union, Job?" |
2153 | You''re sure, girls, you''re under no mistake about Will?" |
2153 | You''ve never been quarrelling wi''Jem, surely?" |
2153 | [ 41] But I knew blind folks must not be nesh about using their tongues, so says I,''Jem Wilson, is that you?'' |
2153 | _ He did not know what he was doing_, did you, little boy? |
2153 | and did not Margaret tell yo what he''d done wi''it? |
2153 | and do n''t you see what a sacrifice I was making to humour her? |
2153 | and everybody?" |
2153 | and have n''t you a shawl, under which you can tuck one lad''s head, as safe as a bird''s under its wing? |
2153 | and what brings you here?" |
2153 | and why on earth are you walking? |
2153 | and yet what can I do? |
2153 | and, in a lower voice, he added,"Any news of Esther, yet?" |
2153 | are you sure he is dead?" |
2153 | art thou there?" |
2153 | asked Barton, the latent fire lighting up his eye: and bursting forth, he continued,"If I am sick, do they come and nurse me? |
2153 | asked I,''going decently about our business, which is life and death to us, and many a little one clemming at home in Lancashire? |
2153 | but how did she know? |
2153 | but what has that to do with remembering Alice?" |
2153 | ca n''t we get past?" |
2153 | child, what''s the matter? |
2153 | did n''t you know it? |
2153 | did you say? |
2153 | do n''t go on talking a- that- ns; how can I think on dress at such a time? |
2153 | do n''t tell me it''s not the Queen as makes laws; and is n''t she bound to obey Prince Albert? |
2153 | do you know I sometimes think I''m growing a little blind, and then what would become of grandfather and me? |
2153 | do you mean fair by Mary or not? |
2153 | do you think we may ring for tea? |
2153 | do you think you could just coax poor Will to walk a bit home with you, that I might speak to mother by myself?" |
2153 | donna ye see the fire- light? |
2153 | else where''s the use? |
2153 | have I heard you aright? |
2153 | have you gotten a spare night- cap?'' |
2153 | how should I know? |
2153 | how should he bear it? |
2153 | is Will Wilson here?" |
2153 | is n''t an_ alibi_ a proving where he really was at th''time of the murder; and how must I set about an_ alibi_?" |
2153 | is that you? |
2153 | muttered he,"who''d ha''thought of my turning out such an arrant liar in my old days?" |
2153 | muttered she,"what have you done?--What must I do? |
2153 | my only son?" |
2153 | of your acquaintance, in short? |
2153 | one would think you were the first girl that ever had a lover; have you never heard what other girls do and think no shame of?" |
2153 | or of Alecto? |
2153 | or what brings the old chap here? |
2153 | or when?" |
2153 | perhaps he might have given it away; but then must it not have been to Jem? |
2153 | said he feebly,"is it thee? |
2153 | said he, almost angrily,"why did you not state the case fully at first? |
2153 | said the boy, impatiently,"why, have not I told you? |
2153 | see him at his trial? |
2153 | speak out, ca n''t ye, and ha''done with it?" |
2153 | tell me, is he ill?" |
2153 | the aunt to Mary? |
2153 | then, was that man whose figure loomed out against the ever increasing dull hot light behind, whenever the smoke was clear,--was that George Wilson? |
2153 | wailed forth his wife,"have you no thought for me? |
2153 | was there no other little thought of joy lurking within, to gladden the very air without? |
2153 | what am I saying?" |
2153 | what could be the matter with him? |
2153 | what could we_ not_ do, if we could but find her? |
2153 | what mun I say?" |
2153 | what terrible thought flashed into her mind; or was it only fancy? |
2153 | what think yo of a lawyer? |
2153 | what was birth to a Manchester manufacturer, many of whom glory, and justly too, in being the architects of their own fortunes? |
2153 | what''s the matter with you? |
2153 | when would it come? |
2153 | where was he, Margaret?" |
2153 | who might have made them different?) |
2153 | who would comfort her? |
2153 | who''s she? |
2153 | whose word hast thou for that?" |
2153 | why do you hold me so tight? |
2153 | why do you shake your head? |
2153 | why had Esther chosen him for this office? |
2153 | will you bless me on my errand? |
2153 | will you tell me?" |
2153 | wo n''t that much do?" |
2153 | you and Margaret will often go and see her, wo n''t you? |
2153 | you''re tired already, are you? |
2153 | you_ will_ save her?" |
34419 | A hole? |
34419 | A native-- no? 34419 A quake of fear?" |
34419 | A talk? 34419 A visit?" |
34419 | About Geoffrey Heath? |
34419 | Above all, what in heaven have I to do with Milly Trend? |
34419 | Afraid? |
34419 | Against you, Alice? 34419 Ah, that''s rather a pity, is n''t it?" |
34419 | Ah, then there''s business? |
34419 | Alice, can you kiss me when you know you have broken your promise? |
34419 | Alice, my child, my darling, are you not really mine? |
34419 | Alice, what does it mean? |
34419 | Alice,he said, alarmed by the swift alteration,"are you tired of the house? |
34419 | All the same I''m glad you can honestly stick to Jasper,said Ordway,"he counts on you now, does n''t he?" |
34419 | Am I to understand seriously that she means to marry Brown? |
34419 | An accident on the road, was n''t it? |
34419 | An engagement? |
34419 | And Aunt Mirandy? |
34419 | And Geoffrey Heath? |
34419 | And are you different also? |
34419 | And at the end of that time, I presume, you were wearied of widowhood and married Buzzy? |
34419 | And did he fight? |
34419 | And did you fail? |
34419 | And do the people like it? |
34419 | And do you think she cares for him-- that she even imagines that she does? |
34419 | And for nothing? 34419 And he did n''t strike a single blow?" |
34419 | And how much,demanded Wherry insolently,"does that happen to be?" |
34419 | And if I will not what are you going to do about it? |
34419 | And if he does n''t? 34419 And if he refuses?" |
34419 | And if he says he''ll give it who will believe him? |
34419 | And it is about me? |
34419 | And it is different now? |
34419 | And leave Milly here? 34419 And leave you the open?" |
34419 | And now you will have something to think of, Alice, you will be bored no longer? |
34419 | And so I am to interview this interesting example of degeneration? |
34419 | And so you expect me to take you without knowing a darn thing about you? |
34419 | And suppose he asks you-- as he probably will-- how in the devil it came to be any business of yours? |
34419 | And the children? 34419 And there was none?" |
34419 | And this is the result? |
34419 | And what will you do in the new place? |
34419 | And why is that? |
34419 | And you are happy at last? |
34419 | And you are making a new foundation now? |
34419 | And you care nothing for Kit Berry? |
34419 | And you cared nothing for me?--nothing for my anxiety, my distress? |
34419 | And you go in an hour? |
34419 | And you promise me that you will give it up? |
34419 | And you remembered me chiefly because of the park and the circus? |
34419 | And you will do just what I wish, wo n''t you? |
34419 | And you will give me raspberry preserves out of the blue china jar? |
34419 | And you would have gone without seeing me? |
34419 | And you, Banks? 34419 And you?" |
34419 | Any letters, daughter? |
34419 | Anything going on there? 34419 Are simple things always ugly?" |
34419 | Are we going there now-- to see Crowley, I mean? |
34419 | Are you alone, Alice? 34419 Are you obliged to go back to that hateful office this afternoon?" |
34419 | Are you positive that you said nothing to bring about her decision? 34419 Are you quite sure that you''re well, Daniel?" |
34419 | Are you ready to walk back now? |
34419 | Are you sure this will be a lesson to you? |
34419 | Are you sure, then, that she was not with Geoffrey Heath? |
34419 | As a bookkeeper? |
34419 | Ask yourself, then, what possible reason I could have in coming to you-- except to save you? |
34419 | At least you''ll let me go with you to the station? |
34419 | At the cotton mills? 34419 Banks? |
34419 | Before I leave you, will you promise me to give him up?--to forget him if it be possible? |
34419 | Beverly? 34419 But Alice? |
34419 | But I thought you were determined to stay in Botetourt for the future? |
34419 | But I''ll see you sometimes, sha n''t I? |
34419 | But ca n''t I mourn for papa and mamma just as well in my beads as I can without them? |
34419 | But how could these things possibly affect us? |
34419 | But how did I know, Smith, that you wan''t livin''up to the man at your door? |
34419 | But how did she raise the money? |
34419 | But how do you know all this, my dear fellow? 34419 But how does she show it?" |
34419 | But if it were true how could you know it? |
34419 | But if you pay it all to Wilson,Emily would ask, as a kind of elementary lesson in arithmetic,"how is the money going to buy all the other things?" |
34419 | But is he unkind to you, Alice? 34419 But is n''t our chief end just to make them easier for others?" |
34419 | But perhaps the custom of the place was different? |
34419 | But she is safe now? |
34419 | But the place belongs to Mr. Beverly, I presume? |
34419 | But this strange dizziness, my dear? 34419 But were you obliged to leave home in this way? |
34419 | But what can I do? 34419 But what has this bald- headed man to do with Alice or with me?" |
34419 | But what is knowledge,she demanded,"if it is n''t just feeling, after all?" |
34419 | But when did she change? 34419 But where is Micah?" |
34419 | But where will you go? |
34419 | But where? |
34419 | But will it last? |
34419 | But wo n''t you stay on in Tappahannock? 34419 But you could n''t make a living at it?" |
34419 | But you were sad once-- that day in the cemetery? 34419 But you wo n''t stay one long?" |
34419 | Can you give me shelter for the night? |
34419 | Can you tell me,inquired Ordway, when they had started again upon the advance,"the name of the old house I passed a mile or so along the road?" |
34419 | Cedar Hill, is it? 34419 Closed? |
34419 | Come back here a minute, will you, out of hearing? 34419 Contented? |
34419 | Cousin Paulina? |
34419 | Crowley? |
34419 | Daniel,he asked,"what is the use?" |
34419 | Did I? |
34419 | Did he come about the tobacco, Beverly? |
34419 | Did he keep it? |
34419 | Did n''t it? |
34419 | Did she care for him? |
34419 | Did she meet him for the first time last summer? |
34419 | Did she sleep? |
34419 | Did she wait for that to marry me? |
34419 | Did you ever find out his name? |
34419 | Did you hear any news, my dear? |
34419 | Did you meet Banks as you came in? 34419 Did you serve a term in prison before you came here?" |
34419 | Did you sit up with him last night? |
34419 | Did you sit up with him last night? |
34419 | Did you tell me he got here yesterday? |
34419 | Different? 34419 Do n''t you think I know that I have ruined your life?" |
34419 | Do n''t you think six lemonades in one day too many? |
34419 | Do you dare to tell me that you''ve been to Botetourt? |
34419 | Do you expect to go shortly? |
34419 | Do you feel the need of a cup of coffee, Daniel? |
34419 | Do you give him any medicine? |
34419 | Do you know anything of Geoffrey Heath? 34419 Do you know it is three months since we had a letter from Alice,"he said,"and six since she went away?" |
34419 | Do you know, sir, that you have not entered my house once in the last three years? |
34419 | Do you know,she asked presently,"any hands that I can get to work the garden this week?" |
34419 | Do you mean to tell me that she''s willing to put up with Heath for the sake of a little extra luxury? |
34419 | Do you mean to tell me you''ve forgotten our conversation in that beastly road? |
34419 | Do you mean you''ve separated? |
34419 | Do you mean, Emily,asked Beverly, in his plaintive voice,"that you have been actually digging in the ground?" |
34419 | Do you mind telling me,she asked, after an instant''s hesitation,"why you came to Tappahannock? |
34419 | Do you remember the night I slept in your barn? |
34419 | Do you remember the night in the bar- room? |
34419 | Do you remember, papa, how Alice used to bite and scratch as a baby? 34419 Do you s''pose it would like a little molasses for its supper?" |
34419 | Do you suppose Alice''s marriage could have sobered him? 34419 Do you think I''d better see a doctor? |
34419 | Do you think I''d turn sneak? |
34419 | Do you think if I had succeeded, I''d be splitting wood in Bullfinch''s Hollow? |
34419 | Do you think so? |
34419 | Do you tire of it? |
34419 | Do you understand me? |
34419 | Do you want me to start in at the books to- day? |
34419 | Do you want to sweep out the warehouse or to keep the books? |
34419 | Does she expect me to sit quietly by and see it go on forever? 34419 Easier to bear?--no, but I do n''t think the chief end of things is to be easy, do you?" |
34419 | Every man has a right to give up some time, has n''t he? |
34419 | Extravagant? 34419 Geoffrey Heath?" |
34419 | Give her up? 34419 Good Lord, is that so?" |
34419 | Had a son, did n''t he? |
34419 | Had n''t she left him last night for good and all? |
34419 | Happy? |
34419 | Has anything gone wrong? |
34419 | Has he had a quiet night? |
34419 | Has it ever occurred to you,he asked,"how little-- how very little you know of me? |
34419 | Have you even forgotten that I am the father of your children? |
34419 | Have you ever practised law in Virginia? |
34419 | Have you lost all love for me, Lydia? |
34419 | Have you seen Smith? 34419 He has been very kind about it, has n''t he?" |
34419 | He makes a handsome little pile out of''em too, I guess? |
34419 | Horatio Brown? |
34419 | How about to- morrow? 34419 How can I help it? |
34419 | How dare you come to me with a tale like this? 34419 How did you hear it? |
34419 | How do I know if I''m to get the money? |
34419 | How does it concern them? 34419 How is she?" |
34419 | Howdy, Smith, is that you? |
34419 | I almost hope she is n''t pretty, and yet it''s horrid of me and I wonder why I hope so? 34419 I am at peace and is that not happiness?" |
34419 | I am taking you to see Adam Crowley,she explained,"do you remember him?" |
34419 | I beg your pardon, sir, but are you the man that helped William Cotton? |
34419 | I have, but not that way-- where''s Trenton whom we''ve been talking of all summer? |
34419 | I know the name, but the tobacco market is about closed now, is n''t it? 34419 I reckon this coat''s all right, Smith, ai n''t it? |
34419 | I shall go, I think, on the four o''clock train,he continued,"is that what you would advise?" |
34419 | I should n''t like to cross you,she said, laughing,"but then why should I? |
34419 | I suppose I may as well make them plain? |
34419 | I suppose I may have a talk with Heath anyway? |
34419 | I suppose it is,said Lydia, though she added immediately,"but are n''t the poor often very immoral?" |
34419 | I suppose you would n''t like to tell me what you said to her? |
34419 | I suppose your philosophy would insist that after plucking it I should demand the eating of it also? |
34419 | I wonder how it is that you keep so happy in spite of everything? |
34419 | I wonder if he really hates me? |
34419 | I wonder if he''s the chap Hudge was telling me about at breakfast? |
34419 | I wonder what she is like and if she is pretty or plain? |
34419 | I wonder why under heaven you took me in? |
34419 | I wonder why you do these things? |
34419 | I wonder why? |
34419 | I''d like to know what right you have to talk about brutality? |
34419 | I''m a minute late,he said,"but it does n''t matter, does it? |
34419 | I''ve been to college-- do you mean that? |
34419 | I? 34419 I? |
34419 | I? |
34419 | If I am,he asked jokingly,"will you promise to stand off and not spoil the game?" |
34419 | If I could have helped you then, why can not I help you now? |
34419 | If she is not, where is she? |
34419 | If that was true, is not your life in Tappahannock true also? |
34419 | If those are old books, wo n''t you remember to take them up to your room, Daniel? |
34419 | In spite of Milly? |
34419 | In that case had n''t we better serve ourselves until she has made up her mind? |
34419 | In that case you''ve no objection to leaving immediately, I suppose? |
34419 | Indeed? 34419 Is Alice dead?" |
34419 | Is Baxter here this morning? |
34419 | Is it a Sunday frolic, do you suppose? |
34419 | Is it decided then that I shall go to Jasper Trend? |
34419 | Is it in your way? 34419 Is it possible?" |
34419 | Is it to hold good if the damned thing burns befo''mornin''? |
34419 | Is n''t it better so? |
34419 | Is n''t that all the more reason she ought to have her family about her? |
34419 | Is she really a saint? |
34419 | Is that Bernardsville over there? |
34419 | Is that you, Baxter? |
34419 | Is the second green parrot dead, and do you want me to dig the grave? |
34419 | Is there to be nothing but hard work for you in the future? |
34419 | Is this just? |
34419 | Is your name Daniel Smith? |
34419 | It ai n''t her terrapin, is it, papa? |
34419 | It appears that you want to take the whole job out of my hands now, does n''t it? |
34419 | It is better for me to go away, I suppose, at once? |
34419 | It is n''t manufactured, then-- only bought and sold? |
34419 | It is taken for granted, then, that I shall live on here with my wife and children? |
34419 | It is understood, then,he asked"that I am to come back-- back to this house to live?" |
34419 | It was his desire, then, that I should return? |
34419 | It will be better than playing with dolls, wo n''t it? 34419 It would only mean-- wouldn''t it?--that people would begin to wonder all over again?" |
34419 | It''s very fine,she said,"I bought it from what''s- his- name, that famous man in Paris? |
34419 | Jasper Trend? |
34419 | Just? |
34419 | Left Geoffrey? |
34419 | Like the mother? |
34419 | Love your child? 34419 Lydia,"he asked,"is it too painful for you to have me here? |
34419 | Mamma''s health is wrecked? |
34419 | May I ask you, Mr. Smith,began the little man, suddenly,"if you can prove your right to vote or to hold office in Virginia?" |
34419 | May I get you something? |
34419 | May I see him now? |
34419 | May I wear my coral beads even if I am in mourning, Aunt Emily? |
34419 | Me? |
34419 | Meanwhile is she to be left utterly uncontrolled? |
34419 | My child, my child, what is it? |
34419 | My hand down for what? |
34419 | My help? |
34419 | New York? |
34419 | No I''m not sick, but what are you doing here? |
34419 | No,he answered with a smile which threw a humorous light upon the question,"I cannot-- can you prove yours?" |
34419 | Not knowing where it would end? |
34419 | Now I''ll go for an hour,he said abruptly,"and by the way, have you had supper or shall I bring you some groceries when I come?" |
34419 | O my dear, my dear, do n''t you think I know what I have done to you? |
34419 | Oh, Baxter, how is it possible that I''ve lived without you? |
34419 | Oh, but I say, do n''t hurry-- what''s the use? 34419 Oh, it''s that then? |
34419 | Oh, what can we expect of him? 34419 Oh, you are, are you?" |
34419 | On the train with me? 34419 On your own hook?" |
34419 | One or more? |
34419 | Perhaps you will come in to supper with us to- night? 34419 Perhaps?--that''s likely, is n''t it?" |
34419 | Preached? |
34419 | Proud of me? |
34419 | Ready? 34419 Sacrifice? |
34419 | Seven years? |
34419 | Shall I hear them now? 34419 Shall I pour the coffee?" |
34419 | Shall we have a good time, then? 34419 She will not confess it-- how could she?" |
34419 | Sign the agreement? 34419 Smith,"he asked in a hollow voice,"do you suppose it''s really any worse to die by your own hand than by disease?" |
34419 | So I''m to fight Jasper Trend, am I? |
34419 | So Miss Emily did n''t know of it? |
34419 | So he got you out of Paris? 34419 So he is still living?" |
34419 | So she has decided to stick to him for better or for worse, then? |
34419 | So you bought it in the end,laughed Ordway,"as you did last year after sending me out there on a mission?" |
34419 | So you got mixed up in a barroom row last night, I hear, Smith? |
34419 | So you''d like to save your own skin, after all, would n''t you? |
34419 | So you''re dead sure then that you ca n''t be talked over? |
34419 | So you''re going West? |
34419 | So you''re positive she means to marry him? |
34419 | So you''ve had your eye on her yourself? |
34419 | So, you''ll spend the night? |
34419 | Tappahannock? 34419 Ten Commandment Smith?" |
34419 | Than marry whom? |
34419 | Than whom? |
34419 | That ai n''t the point, Smith-- it''s going on three years since you came here-- am I right? |
34419 | That? 34419 The hot weather has come early, has n''t it?" |
34419 | The place of diamond turtle- doves and violet stockings? |
34419 | The treaty? 34419 Then I''ll break it for you,"returned Ordway, starting toward the door,"for I may presume, I suppose, that the lady is Miss Trend?" |
34419 | Then since you insist upon that awful word''business,''I suppose you mean that you''ve come formally to ratify the treaty? |
34419 | Then surely my uncle will fulfil the trust? 34419 Then the son has all the money and the house, too, has n''t he?" |
34419 | Then there''s no chance for me? |
34419 | Then there''s not much to be said for the chap, I suppose? |
34419 | Then we are to wind up the affairs of Cedar Hill, are we? 34419 Then why did you follow me? |
34419 | Then you are for the under dog, right or wrong, as I am? |
34419 | Then you began again at Baxter''s warehouse the morning afterward? |
34419 | Then you did n''t want her to go back? 34419 Then you knew Brown before?" |
34419 | Then you know him? |
34419 | Then you will be happy again-- to- morrow? |
34419 | Then you will go? |
34419 | Then you will not object to my living on in this way? 34419 Then you''ll ride it again?" |
34419 | Then you''re going away? |
34419 | Then you''ve no need of me and I may as well go home? |
34419 | Then, perhaps, I''ve been wrong in telling you this to- day? |
34419 | There''s no doubt of it? |
34419 | This is Daniel Ordway-- do you remember him? |
34419 | Till Thursday week? 34419 To knock out more of poor Geoffrey''s teeth? |
34419 | To save me? |
34419 | To the Orphan Asylum? 34419 To- morrow?" |
34419 | Was it so very wrong? 34419 Was not this will made some years ago, however, before the old man became helpless and lost his money?" |
34419 | Was there anybody else with me, Banks? 34419 Well, I can, ca n''t I, darling?" |
34419 | Well, I did that much good at least,observed Ordway with a smile,"have you finished, Kit?" |
34419 | Well, I sha n''t speak of it, of course-- but would it not be better for me to return immediately to Tappahannock? |
34419 | Well, I''ve got to thank you for it, Smith? |
34419 | Well, so I am, I suppose,she returned dismally,"there''s nothing else for me to do, is there?" |
34419 | Well, what about this particular instance? 34419 Well, you''re a nice one with your history to put on these highfaluting, righteous airs, are n''t you?" |
34419 | Went home? 34419 Were you guilty?" |
34419 | Were you tried and convicted in New York? |
34419 | What I want to know,he insisted bluntly,"is why you are here at all?" |
34419 | What about medicine and food? |
34419 | What can I do? 34419 What do you think of their wanting to make me Mayor, Banks?" |
34419 | What do you want? 34419 What had become of me?" |
34419 | What have I to do with Gus Wherry or with Daniel Ordway? |
34419 | What have other people got to do with my mourning, Aunt Emily? |
34419 | What is it about, Adam? 34419 What sort of work? |
34419 | What''other thing''do you mean? |
34419 | What''s become of him, I''d like to know? 34419 What? |
34419 | What? |
34419 | What? |
34419 | When did she come to you? |
34419 | Where did you work last? |
34419 | Where is uncle Boaz? 34419 Where is your wife?" |
34419 | Where were you married, Alice? 34419 Where?" |
34419 | Where? |
34419 | Who are you? 34419 Who is Miss Meely?" |
34419 | Who is he, by the way? |
34419 | Who is this Geoffrey Heath you speak of so incessantly? |
34419 | Who''s that fellow over there? |
34419 | Why did you select Tappahannock? 34419 Why do they always interfere with me? |
34419 | Why not? |
34419 | Why not? |
34419 | Why should I, indeed? 34419 Why should he dislike me?" |
34419 | Why should not Daniel Smith, for a good purpose, resume the rights which Daniel Ordway has forfeited? |
34419 | Why should they judge you by that and by nothing else? |
34419 | Why, Aunt Mehaley, what do you mean? |
34419 | Why, what''s the use in your asking? |
34419 | Why, yes, he was my father''s clerk for forty years, was n''t he? 34419 Will the moth fall into the flame or will it escape?" |
34419 | Will you be careful-- very careful from this time? |
34419 | Will you let me see your father? |
34419 | Will you let me speak to her alone first,he asked,"for a few minutes?" |
34419 | Will you make me a promise? |
34419 | Will you promise me to wait? |
34419 | Wo n''t run? |
34419 | Wo n''t you sit down? |
34419 | Worse? |
34419 | Would it not be better to wait until to- morrow, Alice? |
34419 | Would you mind saying that over again in a lower tone? |
34419 | Yes, I remember you told me so-- but does that make it any easier to bear? |
34419 | Yes,said Ordway, with an effort,"he''s the handsome chap who came here last June, is n''t he?" |
34419 | Yet Milly''s a good wife and you''re happy, are n''t you? |
34419 | Yet your Miss Emily still sticks to him, it seems? |
34419 | Yet your present husband is kind to you, is he not? |
34419 | You are going away? 34419 You are ready to swear to this?" |
34419 | You are the gentleman, ai n''t you, who got him to sign the pledge? |
34419 | You are visiting Tappahannock, then? |
34419 | You believe, then, that she has gone off? |
34419 | You can-- can you? |
34419 | You do n''t? |
34419 | You followed me? |
34419 | You have n''t heard then? 34419 You knew Mr. Brown, did n''t you say, suh?--before you came here?" |
34419 | You knew all the time and yet you wanted me to go back to Tappahannock? |
34419 | You liked him, did n''t you? |
34419 | You look ill,she said with her charming smile;"shall I ring for Marie to bring you whiskey?" |
34419 | You mean he actually fears violence? |
34419 | You mean that you would have been my friend through everything? |
34419 | You mean they would regret their kindness? |
34419 | You mean when I come, you quit? |
34419 | You mean you knocked him down? |
34419 | You mean you wo n''t run? |
34419 | You mean you would n''t trust me? |
34419 | You mean you''ll go away even after you''ve bought''em? |
34419 | You must have come a long way-- haven''t you? 34419 You remember me, Alice, my child? |
34419 | You shall have them shortly,she said, smiling,"but do you prefer pop- overs or plain?" |
34419 | You spent last night with him? |
34419 | You think so, do you? 34419 You think then that it is better to do a small thing well than a big thing badly?" |
34419 | You think, then,he asked,"that she meant none of her violent protestations of last night?" |
34419 | You went straight to Paris, did n''t you? |
34419 | You will buy some clothes, first of all, will you not? |
34419 | You will come back again? 34419 You''re always right,"he admitted despondently,"but do you think, then, that I''d better not see Alice to- day?" |
34419 | You''re an educated man, then? |
34419 | You''re fit for a clerk''s position? |
34419 | You, Smith? 34419 You?" |
34419 | Your oath? 34419 ''An, indeed, I''d like to know, Mr. Kelly,''said I to him,''if it''s too great a strain for the women, how the virtue of the men have stood it? 34419 ''Are you dead sure, Smith?'' 34419 ''Beverly,''she called out in a loud, high voice,''have you dared to sell the cedars?'' 34419 ''You shall have it within an hour on my word of honour,''she answered,''can you wait?'' 34419 A fresh start and then what? 34419 About what? |
34419 | After all there was a way of escape, so why should it be closed to him? |
34419 | Against you?" |
34419 | Ai n''t that so, boys?" |
34419 | Am I right in suspecting that you meant to go away with him to- night?" |
34419 | And Dick-- he is n''t sick, but he might as well be, he is so dull and plodding and over nice----""And you Alice?" |
34419 | And if he had noticed the new bronze dragon she had bought for the hall? |
34419 | And is she as captivating as ever?" |
34419 | And now it''s settled, ai n''t it, that you''re to come to my house to stay?" |
34419 | And the change came-- how do you think?" |
34419 | And was I right?" |
34419 | And was her coldness, as he had always believed, but the outward body of that spiritual grace for which he had loved her? |
34419 | And what are you after in Tappahannock?" |
34419 | And what on God''s earth are you doing here?" |
34419 | And what will you do when you get there?" |
34419 | And yet-- was it only the early morning hour? |
34419 | Are you coming, Baxter?" |
34419 | Are you looking for a job with him?" |
34419 | Are you settled here now?" |
34419 | At each gesture the guard had called out sharply:"Keep still there, wo n''t you?" |
34419 | Back in his own room again, he asked himself desperately if this existence could be possible? |
34419 | Baxter?" |
34419 | Being a stranger I thought it would be easier for you than for me-- have you ever heard anybody speak of Beverly Brooke?" |
34419 | But I ask you as man to man,"he demanded warmly,"was there another blessed thing on God''s earth for me to do?" |
34419 | But I hope you ai n''t sick Smith? |
34419 | But how are you, Banks? |
34419 | But this little girl will be real, you know, and that''s ever so much more fun, is n''t it? |
34419 | But what was Hudge telling you?" |
34419 | But what''s that in such a blood- curdlin''spell as this?" |
34419 | But where do you imagine that I am taking you?" |
34419 | Ca n''t you find out?" |
34419 | Ca n''t you hear him holler?" |
34419 | Ca n''t you sleep now?" |
34419 | Can I do anything to help you?" |
34419 | Could no place, no name even afford him a permanent shelter? |
34419 | Could so great a force as his love for her fail to avert from her young head at least a portion of her inevitable disillusionment? |
34419 | Did n''t I tell you that a woman was at the bottom of every mess I was ever in?" |
34419 | Did the knowledge he had found there count for nothing in his life-- the bitterness of shame, the agony of remorse, the companionship with misery? |
34419 | Did there ever live a woman who has n''t felt at times like railing against the milk pans and denying the eternal necessity of ham and eggs?" |
34419 | Did you deny, then, that you had signed the check? |
34419 | Did you influence her in any way?" |
34419 | Did you talk to Uncle Richard? |
34419 | Did you tell him that we''d decided that he should run?" |
34419 | Did you, by the way,"he added abruptly,"ever happen to run up against Jasper Trend?" |
34419 | Do n''t I lie awake at night making up all sorts of speeches I''m going to say to her in the morning? |
34419 | Do people dress like that where you came from? |
34419 | Do you hear that noise? |
34419 | Do you know I slept out in the fields every hot night last summer?" |
34419 | Do you mean she''s gone back to that brute?" |
34419 | Do you mean you are going away?" |
34419 | Do you recall how very unpleasant that tin roof was, Amelia? |
34419 | Do you remember the big wax doll you gave me when I was six years old, and how her voice got out of order and she used to crow instead of talking? |
34419 | Do you think if we did n''t believe in the meaning-- in the purpose of it all that you and I could stand together here like this? |
34419 | Do you think you could smuggle the money for their school bills into their Christmas stockings?" |
34419 | Do you wish it removed?" |
34419 | Does Alice go with you?" |
34419 | Emily, have you noticed how inert and lifeless Mr. Brooke has grown?" |
34419 | Even if he were spared now must he still live on here unaware how widely-- or how pitifully-- his secret was known? |
34419 | Ever heard o''Danville?" |
34419 | Ever seen his wife? |
34419 | Good God, what?" |
34419 | Had Wherry held back in mercy or had Milly Trend? |
34419 | Had he spoken of him as"my son,"or merely as"Daniel Ordway"? |
34419 | Had her very innocence shut him out from her soul forever? |
34419 | Had his sin, indeed, crushed her until she had not power to lift her head? |
34419 | Had she any objection, he asked himself now, to his presence in the household? |
34419 | Have I asked you for as much as a darned cent? |
34419 | Have n''t I played the gentleman from the first minute that I spotted you?" |
34419 | Have you heard him spoken of by decent people since you have been in Botetourt?" |
34419 | Have you seen or heard anything of her?" |
34419 | Have you spoken to Jasper?" |
34419 | He ca n''t vote in Tappahannock, can he?" |
34419 | He wondered vaguely what connection he-- Daniel Ordway-- had ever held with these things? |
34419 | He''s made a dirty town and you''re sweepin''it clean-- do you think it likely that it makes him love you?" |
34419 | He''s pretty apt to make his bed, is n''t he?" |
34419 | Her laughter, the delicious, irresponsible laughter of a child, rippled out:"She asked me one day if our blacks wore draperies? |
34419 | His wife had begged him to consult a lawyer-- but who, he questioned doggedly, would take an interest in him since he had no money for a fee? |
34419 | How are they going to be provided for?" |
34419 | How are they going to live through this weather?" |
34419 | How could it happen?" |
34419 | How could it make any?" |
34419 | How has she been behaving this time?" |
34419 | How is mamma?" |
34419 | How much have you paid him down?'' |
34419 | How?" |
34419 | I ai n''t got any agreement,"protested Jasper, suspecting a trap,"and how do I know that the strike ai n''t over befo''you''re making the offer?" |
34419 | I have been too hasty, for what, after all, have I to do with Milly Trend?" |
34419 | I hope at least that she has come into the old man''s money?" |
34419 | I thought-- I dreamed-- I could n''t get rid of it----""Who else could there have been?" |
34419 | I told you, did n''t I? |
34419 | I wonder if you get exactly the proper kind of food?" |
34419 | I''ve heard men were like that,"she thought,"or the freckles on my face? |
34419 | I''ve left Geoffrey, have n''t I, papa?" |
34419 | I''ve made a neat job of it, have n''t I?" |
34419 | If Geoffrey had been really horrible? |
34419 | In the first place now did n''t we promise each other that we''d play fair?" |
34419 | Is Dick away?" |
34419 | Is Kit better?" |
34419 | Is all your chopping and your digging merely for the promotion of the general good?" |
34419 | Is he cruel?" |
34419 | Is he one of these?" |
34419 | Is it just that with the instinct for luxury in your blood you should be condemned to a poverty so terrible as this?" |
34419 | Is it just, for instance, that you should slave your youth away on your brother''s farm, while he sits and plays dominoes on the porch? |
34419 | Is it nearly that?" |
34419 | Is n''t it lovely?" |
34419 | Is n''t it very pleasant as it is now?" |
34419 | Is that natural, do you s''pose?" |
34419 | Is this true?" |
34419 | It is a dreadful thing to confess,"she concluded resolutely,"but the truth is I''ve been always a little afraid of him since-- since----""Afraid?" |
34419 | It is not forever?" |
34419 | It is now in their hands----""To whom was it drawn?" |
34419 | It was n''t his fault, was it, if things never went just the way he had planned them out? |
34419 | It was only after his son began to grow up that he became socially ambitious----""And is that all you have against him?" |
34419 | It would n''t be kind to the little thing to make her look ugly, would it?" |
34419 | It''s just as well he didn''t-- he''s so dreadfully dull, is n''t he, papa?" |
34419 | It''s queer about those old families, now ai n''t it? |
34419 | It''s so frightfully gloomy in this old house, is n''t it? |
34419 | May I have till then?" |
34419 | Mehitable?" |
34419 | Micah? |
34419 | Mighty little doing in tobacco now, is n''t there?" |
34419 | Mostly on foot?" |
34419 | Now I ask you pointblank-- where''ll you get your man?" |
34419 | Now, at last, I''ll have somebody to take my side against mamma and Dick and Uncle Richard----""But why against them, Alice? |
34419 | Oh, I say, Smith, you''ve got to give in in the end-- and a week sooner or later, what''s the difference?" |
34419 | Oh, I wonder why one ever has children?" |
34419 | Oh, what can I do?" |
34419 | Oh, why, did they not tell me?" |
34419 | Only she ca n''t wear that until she''s five years old, can she?" |
34419 | Or the roughness of my hands?" |
34419 | Or was it in the peculiar contrast between his gray hair and his young blue eyes? |
34419 | Or were you too young at the time to notice it? |
34419 | Papa, do you think Geoffrey will fuss about money when he hears this?" |
34419 | Perhaps to- night-- who knows? |
34419 | Shall I catch Milly, do you think, if I start at once?" |
34419 | Shall we ride together?" |
34419 | Shall we?" |
34419 | She realised fully, I think, how much she would be obliged to sacrifice by returning home?" |
34419 | She wanted to know how it had begun? |
34419 | Since he had wished to remain undiscovered was it fair, she questioned, to thrust recognition upon his kindness? |
34419 | So he is still living?" |
34419 | So poor Mr. Beverly is dead and buried, then, is he?" |
34419 | So that is what you call it, is it? |
34419 | So you went to Europe immediately after I saw you in Washington?" |
34419 | Suppose you give her up and bear it like a man?" |
34419 | Surely they love you just as I do?" |
34419 | Surely you have n''t forgotten the prodigal? |
34419 | That this impulse concerned Alice he was vaguely aware, for when had his wife ever spoken to him upon a subject more directly personal? |
34419 | That was thirty years ago, but he wondered now if the child''s way had been God''s way, after all? |
34419 | The generous impulses of his youth were still there, but had not sorrow winnowed them from all that was base or merely selfish? |
34419 | Then he went in through the window and----""And?" |
34419 | There I had your help, had n''t I?" |
34419 | There she closed the door upon him and inquired in a guarded tone:"Has Alice been with you this afternoon? |
34419 | They''re decent enough folk in Tappahannock, are n''t they?" |
34419 | Upon the occasion of his last meeting with her was she not hastening upon some ministering errand to the city gaol? |
34419 | Was he to be always alone? |
34419 | Was it from a sentiment, or as a warning, he wondered, that she left the great cedars barring the single approach to the house? |
34419 | Was it impossible, after all, that a man should give up, as long as there remained a soul alive who believed in him? |
34419 | Was it in his spare, weather- beaten face? |
34419 | Was it only the peculiar mingling of pathos and gaiety in his look? |
34419 | Was it only the wasted strength which had returned to him in his sleep? |
34419 | Was it possible that even here he might find peace in the heart of the storm? |
34419 | Was it possible that in making her a part of his intense inner life, he had lost, in a measure, his consciousness of her actual existence? |
34419 | Was it possible, indeed, that Mrs. Brooke should have taken him in against her sister- in- law''s inclination, or even without her knowledge? |
34419 | Was it still possible to save from the ruin, if not love, at least human companionship? |
34419 | Was it very sudden?" |
34419 | Was she really in love with Geoffrey Heath? |
34419 | Was that Lydia, he wondered, kneeling there in her mourning garments with her brow hidden in her clasped hands? |
34419 | Was the lesson that he had learned in prison to be wholly lost? |
34419 | Was there any reason?" |
34419 | Was there death, after all, not life hidden for him in her plaintive beauty? |
34419 | Was there no spot in his future where he could possess himself in reality of the freedom which was his in name? |
34419 | Was there not a certain spiritual kinship in the fact that they were both failures in life? |
34419 | Was there to be no end anywhere? |
34419 | Was there, indeed, almost a hint of relief in her tone? |
34419 | We are sorry, Alice, are we not? |
34419 | Were all pure women as passionless-- as utterly detached-- as she had shown herself to him from the beginning? |
34419 | What about his own orphans now? |
34419 | What are you doing in bed?" |
34419 | What can we expect?" |
34419 | What did he do?" |
34419 | What did he want?" |
34419 | What did you say to Geoffrey when he spoke to you in the lawyer''s presence? |
34419 | What do you think?" |
34419 | What duty remained? |
34419 | What harm, he demanded, could come of any relation so healthful, so simple as this? |
34419 | What have they to do with me?" |
34419 | What is your next move then?" |
34419 | What kind of work do you want?" |
34419 | What makes them come out here?" |
34419 | What obligation? |
34419 | What of them?" |
34419 | What responsibility? |
34419 | What right has Dick or Uncle Richard to say whom I shall see or whom I shall not? |
34419 | What use was it, after all, to bandy speeches, he questioned, with a mere drunken animal? |
34419 | What was a woman like Milly Trend worth, that she should cost him, a stranger to her, so great a price? |
34419 | What was it about the chap, he questioned, that had pulled at him from the start? |
34419 | What''s happened now?" |
34419 | When did you come, Smith? |
34419 | When did you come?" |
34419 | When did you eat anything?" |
34419 | When did you get here?" |
34419 | When had the tide turned so suddenly? |
34419 | Where did you get on? |
34419 | Where is your husband?" |
34419 | Where is your room?" |
34419 | Who knows but that I shall eat this wonderful tomato to- night at supper?" |
34419 | Who was this fool of a Brooke? |
34419 | Why ca n''t he come to you?" |
34419 | Why did you do it?" |
34419 | Why did you stay away such an age? |
34419 | Why do you believe it? |
34419 | Why had she thought of him? |
34419 | Why should this country girl, he wondered, bring back to him so clearly the figure of his daughter? |
34419 | Why, in thunder, did n''t you tell me so last June?" |
34419 | Why, what in thunder do you want with''em? |
34419 | Why, what''s the matter there?" |
34419 | Will you come home? |
34419 | Will you come inside or do you prefer to sit on the porch where we can get the view?" |
34419 | Will you come?" |
34419 | Will you go?" |
34419 | Will you have a drink?" |
34419 | Will you leave to- day or will you not?" |
34419 | Will you lend me a nightgown, mamma? |
34419 | Will you not, Alice?" |
34419 | Will you promise?" |
34419 | Will you walk a little way with me down this street? |
34419 | Without that terrible atonement would he have gone on like Jasper Trend from fraud to fraud, from selfishness to damnation? |
34419 | Wo n''t you sit down?" |
34419 | Work, I mean?" |
34419 | Would he admit to- day that what he had once worshipped as purity of soul was but the frost of an unnatural coldness of nature? |
34419 | Would he be able to look fearlessly at Milly Trend again?--at Baxter? |
34419 | Would it be any better for you if I went away?" |
34419 | Would it have been kind to appear to you like an arisen ghost of Tappahannock?" |
34419 | Would it not be better for him to lose himself a second time-- to throw in his lot with a lower class, since his own had rejected him? |
34419 | Would that suit you?" |
34419 | Would this ceaseless dread of discovery prove again, as it had proved in the past, more terrible even than the discovery itself? |
34419 | You ai n''t a native of these parts, I reckon?" |
34419 | You could n''t have been more than fifteen, I suppose? |
34419 | You did n''t encourage it?" |
34419 | You have been worrying about Alice?" |
34419 | You remember how his laugh used to frighten me? |
34419 | You were always ill, were you not?" |
34419 | You will not seek to change anything? |
34419 | You''re afraid I''m going to squeeze you, now, is n''t that it?" |
34419 | You''re my friend now, ai n''t you? |
34419 | after all it ai n''t as if a woman were a bank note, is it?" |
34419 | and is he all right?" |
34419 | and leave Milly? |
34419 | and was this demonstrative embrace but a guarded confession of her gratitude for his absence? |
34419 | and what is your business?" |
34419 | and when did you discover it?" |
34419 | and who did it?" |
34419 | and you will make them leave me alone about Geoffrey Heath?" |
34419 | asked Daniel, almost in a whisper,"or was it only that she wanted to see Paris?" |
34419 | at Banks? |
34419 | at Emily? |
34419 | cried Banks,"you mean that you will stop her?" |
34419 | cried Ordway, wheeling round,"do you mean she has refused you?" |
34419 | demanded the boy in a whisper,"the time you came in through the window and took me home?" |
34419 | do you want me to haggle with a cad like that to make him marry my child?" |
34419 | exclaimed Baxter, chuckling,"you do n''t, do you? |
34419 | exclaimed Jasper,"I do n''t reckon you''re sweet on her yourself, are you?" |
34419 | gasped Milly,"do you mean a sermon?" |
34419 | he asked gently,"would it not be better for me to speak to him instead of to you?" |
34419 | he asked in a pleasant, conciliatory tone,"or will you have only a glass of seltzer?" |
34419 | he asked in alarm, or was the passion she had shown merely the outburst of an undisciplined child? |
34419 | he asked in an unnatural voice,"that she has gone off with Geoffrey Heath?" |
34419 | he asked quietly,"or is Dick?" |
34419 | he asked, laughing,"and let me feed crackers to the green parrot?" |
34419 | he asked, smiling,"particularly when I share in the results as I shall in this case? |
34419 | he demanded in perplexity,"and why is it that I can think of him now with the same interest with which I think of my own child? |
34419 | he demanded,"and the prodigal? |
34419 | he inquired uneasily,"or have I gone clean crazy?" |
34419 | he repeated blankly,"you''ve never been there?" |
34419 | he repeated, bitterly,"no, I dare say, it isn''t-- but the facts of life do n''t trouble themselves about justice, do they? |
34419 | he wondered, and what power did he possess that kept Tappahannock in a state of slavery? |
34419 | he wondered, and when had he begun to drift into the great waters where men are washed down and lost? |
34419 | or would it be as well to give them time to cool off?" |
34419 | repeated Ordway,"you''re afraid of Jasper Trend?" |
34419 | roared Baxter,"and when you''re done, we''ll shoot off some sky- rockets over the job-- so there you are, ai n''t you?" |
34419 | said Baxter softly,"you mean me, do you say?" |
34419 | said the Major,"you mean your wife would be opposed to the whole thing?" |
34419 | she added, bursting into sobs,"who''d have thought when I wore those beads that I''d ever have come to this? |
34419 | she questioned presently;"it is very foolish of him, and what have I done?" |
34419 | she questioned,"or is it only the way that she wears her hair?" |
34419 | she repeated,"you mean from marriage?" |
34419 | she whispered in his ear as she hung on his shoulder,"you will be good and kind always? |
34419 | thar, wo n''t you, darn you? |
34419 | this saddle? |
34419 | to what?" |
34419 | what then?" |
34419 | you have not forgotten me?" |