Questions

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

identifier question
36069( P.?)
36069At 1( 11?)
36069At 4(?)
36069Lewis had just reached a spot of safety when, says the narrative,"He heard a voice behind him cry out,''Good God, Captain, what shall I do?''
36069Should I be the happy mortal destined to turn the scale of war, will you not rejoice, oh my father?
36069Was it or was it not the Nile of Livingstone''s prediction?
36069What could it mean, and what would be the outcome?
36069Where?
13403Are there many instances of people having been bit by mad animals?
13403How much is paid per day for ploughing with two oxen? 13403 Is the state of a bachelor aggravated and rendered less desirable?
13403What is the value of whales of different sizes?
13403Which food has been experienced to be most portable and most nourishing for keeping a distressed ship''s crew from starving?
13403[ 82] Sidney foresees the difficulty his brother may have:How shall I get excellent men to take paines to speake with me?
13403( 1876?)
134031595(?).
134031605(?).
134031690?]
13403A few random examples of this list are:"Which are the favourite herbs of the sheep of this country?"
13403A. Paris( n.d.)( 1552?).
13403After what manner the subjects in both countries shewe their obedience to their prince, or oppose themselves against him?
13403Alas, good Sir, what can a man learne in thirty yeeres?"
13403By what means?"
13403Devereux, Robert, Earl of Essex( or Bacon?).
13403Footnote 202:_ Quo Vadis?_ A Just Censure of Travel as it is undertaken by the Gentlemen of our Nation, London, 1617.
13403Hall mutters to his servants,"Jesus can you not knocke the boyes head and the wall together, sith he runnes a- bragging thus?"
13403Imprinted at London for Edward A(?
13403What Englishman could not know a Frenchman by this ridiculous picture?...
13403What is the greatest vice in both nacions?
13403What should this good man doe?
13403With two horses?"
13403[ London?
13403_ Quo Vadis?
18809Are they going to rebuild the tower, sir? 18809 But perhaps you are going somewhere?"
18809Good gracious, sir, who could have invented such lies? 18809 How far is it to Hindon?"
18809In what opera?
18809Is it not amazingly like Lord Byron?
18809Is it possible, sir, and which then is your air?
18809Is it possible? 18809 Is this the right road?"
18809Not believe? 18809 Of Carthage?"
18809Sir, did you ever see his sketch of Death on the Pale Horse? 18809 Then you do n''t value that picture much?"
18809Then you have visited Granada?
18809What do you think of the Alhambra?
18809But how shall I attempt to describe to you the St. Catherine?
18809But what can Papworth have done there?
18809Can we see the remains at this distance?
18809Did you never read''Memories of the Duke of Grammont?''
18809Have you time to go through the rooms with me?"
18809He accompanied us as far as the dining room door, when he inquired if I had seen the Tower?
18809He is a man of considerable talent; but who was that person he brought with him?
18809He went to Vienna, where he obtained vast celebrity, and wrote to me, saying,"Do you remember that march you composed which I kept so long?
18809How do you like it?"
18809I said,"How did you get him to paint it so soft?
18809It surely can not be Fonthill was the instant suggestion?
18809Lord Byron tried many times to get a sight of the Eps[?
18809My companion here observed,"Had Mr. Beckford heard of the recent discoveries made of the ruins of Carthage?"
18809Pray, Sir, do you know that picture?"
18809That was pretty well, eh?"
18809What in the world will they find out next?
18809What think you of it?"
18809When you are attacked by snarling, waspish curs is it at all wonderful if you find them an echo of the proprietor?
18809Who but a man of extraordinary genius would have thought of rearing in the desert such a structure as this, or creating such an oasis?
18809didst thou not inspire Raphael?
18809what?
16202Have not,_ said I_, the_ Cacklogallinians_ Souls, think you, since they''re endued with Reason?
16202Why, Sir,_ said I_, to our_ English_ Interpreter, do you sup by Day- light? 16202 You say,_ replied I_, that none but the virtuous Soul reaches these blissfull Seats; what then becomes of the Vicious?
16202But by what Art have you taught Fowls articulate Sounds?
16202Do they sollicite the People to chuse them, or are they their free Choice?
16202Have they always the Good of the Nation at Heart so far, as to prefer it to that of their Families?
16202He ask''d me, Whether I came from the World?
16202I ask''d if his Name was not_ Cuffey_, Mr._ Tenant_''s Negro?
16202I asked him, in Case we succeeded in our Journey, and found the Riches we coveted, how we should bring away any Quantity?
16202I heard him say very distinctly,"Sir, do you think I am made of Money, or can you imagine the Treasure of a Nation will supply your Extravagance?
16202I went some Paces from it, and looking up again, I heard a Voice, which utered these Words hastily,_ Quaw shoomaw?
16202My Master coming to me, said,_ Ednu sinvi_?
16202One of the Negro Men ask''d_ Cuffey_, why he did not bring my Head, instead of bringing me alive?
16202Religion,_ answer''d my Lord_, is absolutely necessary in a well- govern''d State; but do your great Men make any Profession of Religion?
16202What then,_ said I_, do those of the other Hemisphere for Light?
16202When I had return''d them, I ask''d, in what he thought I could serve him?
16202Why,_ said he_, is it possible you can swim so long?
16202_ Have you Physicians among you?_ We have, said I, Men of extensive Charity, great Humility, profound Learning, without the least Tincture of Vanity.
16202_ Have you any Commerce with the Nations on the Continent?_ We are, said I, the greatest Dealers in_ Europe_.
16202_ Have you any Lawyers in your part of the World?_ Lawyers, said I, we have, but not more than necessary.
16202and how comes it, that the Soul, when loosed by Sleep, I suppose without Distinction, retires hither?"
16202and where could you possibly find them of that Size?"
16202if of the latter, what is your Policy, what are your Manners and Customs, and what Accident brought you hither?
16202if so, how I durst undertake so perilous a Journey?
16202or, to ask a more proper Question, do they do more than profess it?
16202starts_; which is, having afterwards learned the Language,_ Who art thou?
21338Ah quoth_ Heraclide_( with a hart renting sigh) art thou ordaind to be a worse plague to me than ye plague it selfe?
21338Alas( quoth she deep sighing) why did I enter into anie mention of my owne misusage?
21338Answere me, quoth he, my wise young_ Wilton_, is it true that I am thus vnderhand dead and buried by these bad tongues?
21338Bring you me a princockes beardlesse boy( I knowe not whence hee is, nor whether he would) to call my name in suspense?
21338Can a lambe take delight to be suckled at the brests of a she- wolfe?
21338Fie vppon it, a mans breath to bee let out a backe- doore, what a villanie it is?
21338For his companions, do they trouble you?
21338From_ Spaine_ what bringeth our Traueller?
21338Haue I escapt the hands of God to fal into the hands of man?
21338Haue I liu''d to make my husbands bodie the beere to carry me to hell, had filthie pleasure no other pillowe to leane vpon but his spreaded limmes?
21338His backe turnd, shee askt_ Diamante_ what countrey woman she was, what frends she had, and how shee fell into the hands of that Jew?
21338I haue a leg with an issue, shall I cut it off, and from his fount of corruption extract a venome worse than anie serpents?
21338Leiden_ dide, is y it?
21338Marrie this quoth I is my arrant Thy name is_ Esdras of Granado_, is it not?
21338My selfe doo but behold my selfe, and yet I blush: then God beholding me, shall not I bee ten times more ashamed?
21338Tell mee who is most trauelled in histories, what good Poet is or euer was there, who hath not had a little spice of wantonnes in dayes?
21338What is the glorie of the Sunne, but that the moone and so many millions of starres borrow their light from him?
21338What is there more as touching this tragedie that you would be resolued of?
21338What stratagemicall actes and monuments do you thinke an ingenious infant of my age might enact?
21338What will you conceit to bee in anie Saintes house that was there to seeke?
21338What will you in your indifferent opinions allow me for my trauell, no more seigniorie ouer the Pages than I had before?
21338What, hast thou the heart to go thorough with it or no?
21338Why iest I in such a necessary perswasiue discourse?
21338Why should I vse anie idle delayes?
21338_ Italy_ the paradice of the earth, and the Epicures heauen, how doth it forme our yong master?
21338_ Quid non auri sacra fames_?
21338what hath he done?
21338what plague canst thou name worse than I haue had?
21338where had you him?
21338who shall hide us from the winter''s face?
36657''Oo? 36657 Are you a Trinity pilot?"
36657Did_ you_ do that?
36657Do n''t you know you can be punished for stowing away?
36657Fhwat the divil d''yez mane?
36657Goin''ter give him anythin'', Bill?
36657Got''ny money?
36657How much?
36657Mornin'', pilot, same t''you,curtly answered the old man; and, in almost the same breath,"Dy''e think there''s water''nough on the bar frus?
36657Of course not,I answered;"neither do you, I should imagine?"
36657Please, sir,I humbly replied,"may I go an''have a look round?"
36657We''ve taken the libbaty, sir, ov comin''aft t''ask ye ef it''s yeur intenshun ter sail''thout shippin''enny more hands?
36657Well, what is it, men?
36657What?
36657Why did n''t you come and ask me for a passage?
36657Why, where ha''you been stowed away all this time, you young rascal?
36657You give it up, then, I suppose?
36657''Ow wos hi ter know as you''d wanter sleep all day?"
36657A ruddy- faced little girl about my own age opened it, and said, hesitatingly,"What d''you want?"
36657And even if so, do you think, reader, you would feel contented with fat pork and pea- soup for dinner three times a week for four months on end?
36657And now I_ was_ home what was I going to do?
36657And what can be done with half a pound of flour?
36657Anybody seen that shipwrecked boy?"
36657Are we going to dock at once, or will she tie up in the basin?
36657As he stepped over the rail with a ludicrous assumption of importance, he said, patronizingly,"Good mawnin'', cap''n, hope you''se berry well, sah?"
36657As soon as he caught my eye, he said,"What flat are you on?"
36657As soon as my bewilderment had passed a little, I said,"Was it you that spoke just now?"
36657At first this benevolent(?)
36657At last he said,"I''m Captain Bunker, m''lad; whadjer want of me?"
36657At last the middle- aged Mussulman who ran the show began to look suspicious, and said,"You got plenty rupee, Johnny?"
36657But then the difficulty arose: who was to write the important document?
36657Come, wot''ll yer gimme?"
36657D''ye think I do n''t know my duty?
36657Did n''t you hear,''Man the windlass''?"
36657Did they not alter your opinions as to the wisdom of your ancestors?"
36657Did ye think I was goin''ter let yer drown the kid?
36657Fhwy''nt yez let me go,---- yer dhirty sowls t''hell?"
36657Goin''ter turn Me''ommedun?"
36657Goin''to sleep-- er what?"
36657Having admitted this, the question perforce follows,"Who, then, are you, that presumes to compete with these master magicians?"
36657He advised me to return to London, where I was better known(?
36657He dared not go out for fear of being arrested; would I take pity on him, and see him on board?
36657He said at once,"Very well, sir, why not go into Ascension?"
36657He turned a liquorish eye upon me, and murmured, between the puffs of smoke,"What might ye be wantin''of him?"
36657He turned sharply upon me, saying,"Vell,''n vat_ jou_ vant?"
36657How could I have dreamed that it was also to be my chamber?
36657How could I know that it was only starch?
36657How could we?
36657I cried,"where''s that duff?"
36657I said, in terror,"you''ll bust the duff- bag, wo n''t you?"
36657Indignation overcame prudence, and I shouted at the pitch of my voice,"Mr. Bailey, do you allow this to go on in your house?"
36657Joe approached the kid, knife and plate in hand, but on seeing the contents, drew back with a start and an exclamation of"What the---- is_ that_?"
36657Me?
36657None of them lost any time in getting away to seek some accommodating(?)
36657Now do you see?"
36657Occasionally I heard, through the mighty void that separated me from the outer world, a ringing shout of,"Where''s that shipwrecked boy?
36657Sounds horrible, does n''t it?
36657Still, he came alongside and hailed us with,"''R ye takin''steam up, cap''n?"
36657Suddenly out of the gloom came a hoarse hail,"D''ye want a pilot, sir?"
36657The men were like schoolboys at breaking- up time, half crazy with delight at the thought of the joys(?)
36657Then Bill said,"Now, then, Johnny, how much for the lot?"
36657They terminated their conversation by mutual shoulder- shruggings, as who should say,"But what would you, my friend?
36657Wasser name?
36657What jer mean by darin''ter come in''ere like thet?"
36657What of that?
36657What scope is there here for any variety or skill in cookery?
36657When they ceased speaking, he said,"Is that all, my men?"
36657Where th''---- er ye goin''with the ship?
36657With the slightest possible shrug of his shoulders, he said,"Why not?
36657Without a moment''s hesitation the old man replied,"Yes, where are you?"
36657Wot djer tek me for?
36657[ Illustration:"I suppose you do n''t believe in this, do you?"]
36657de_ Ark_ doan''it?
36657exclaimed Nat;"ef thishyers a heasy- workin''ship, what mout ye reckon a_ hard_-workin''one''ud be like?
36657he cried,"this is how sick you are, is it?
36657he said with a sneer,"what you doin''ere, hay?
14415And how many years before wheat again?
14415And what did I pay for it?
14415And who was John Knox?
14415But what good came of it at last?
14415Do you know that?
14415Has your saint any power like that?
14415Have you ever seen that fine monument by Chantrey there?
14415How far is it?
14415What do you consider the principal event in your long life?
14415What''s the matter?
14415Where shall we walk this year?
14415Will that satisfy you,inquired Sir William;"or shall I go a little deeper and draw blood?"
14415Wo n''t you stay for breakfast?
14415_ Question_.--What is thy duty towards God? 14415 _ Question_.--What is thy duty towards thy Neighbour?
14415***** O whoar is thy sweetheart, reed Robin?
14415A decided hint of salt in your tea?
14415A man called out,"I am a priest; where is the king?"
14415After walking for some distance they were passing a stone, when the gentleman asked,"Is this the popping stone?"
14415And a fishy taste in the very eggs?
14415And can I ever cease to be Affectionate and kind to thee, Who wast so very kind to me?
14415And hush''d me in her arms to rest, And on my cheeks sweet kisses prest?
14415And tears of sweet affection shed?
14415And walk in Wisdom''s pleasant way?
14415As a finale, one of our passengers shouted to his friend who had come to see him off:"Do you want to buy a cow?"
14415As in other similar places we had visited, the first question that suggested itself to us was,"How do the people live?"
14415Bright visited it?
14415But no sooner was this known, than a mob rushed towards the edifice, exclaiming:"Shall the idol be again erected in the land?"
14415But was it a road?
14415But what were we to do?
14415Could this be the inn?
14415DRAKE''S DRUM Drake he''s in his hammock, an''a thousand mile away,( Capten, art tha''sleepin''there below?
14415Drake he was a Devon man, an''ruled the Devon seas,( Capten, art tha''sleepin''there below?
14415Drake he''s in his hammock till the great Armadas come,( Capten, art tha''sleepin''there below?
14415Forty- five years have passed away since then, but the memory still remains; and the sweet sleep that followed-- the rest of the weary-- what of that?
14415Garrick overheard the remark, and exclaimed:"Eh, what do you say?
14415He expressed a wish that Lockhart, his son- in- law, should read to him, and when asked from what book, he answered,"Need you ask?
14415He was a clergyman who not only read the prayers, but prayed them at the same time: I often say my prayers, But do I ever pray?
14415His friend Bannatyne, seeing that he was just about to depart, and was becoming speechless, drew near to him saying,"Hast thou hope?"
14415How came this vast number of fish to be congregated here?
14415I asked my brother, as we walked along, why he put his question in that particular form:"Which is the Cobbler and which is his Wife?"
14415I say, Jim, what''s that?"
14415If the saving of time is the object, why not reduce the length of the sermon, which might often be done to advantage?
14415In reply to our question,"Can we get a bed for the night?"
14415Is not this part of the"Lyonesse"of the poets-- the country of romance-- the land of the fairies?
14415Is that so?"
14415It was a solemn moment, for had we not started with the rising sun on a Monday morning and finished with the setting sun on a Saturday night?
14415It would never do to leave it there, but what could they do to get it out?
14415Knows he the titillating joy Which my nose knows?
14415Like brightest diamond chased in purest gold?
14415O where is your equal on earth to be found?
14415Parson?"
14415Possibly he considered he was working for the cause of religion, and hoped for his further reward in a future life; or was it a silver penny?
14415Say, where shall the toiler find rest from his labours, And seek sweet repose from the overstrung will?
14415Showman, which is the lion and which is the dogs?"
14415Slack remarked in his Derbyshire dialect, which he always remembered,"Oh, he was pleased, were he?
14415So daring in love, and so dauntless in war, Have ye e''er heard of gallant like young Lochinvar?
14415The Queen asked him again,"What have ye to do with my marriage, or what are ye in this commonwealth?"
14415The clergyman was evidently well known to the people at the house, and an introduction to the master and mistress, and( shall we record?)
14415The landlord asked him,"Will you have a pint?"
14415The porter hurried to the gate--"Who knocks so loud, and knocks so late?"
14415The story"Why is the sea salt?"
14415Their looks were sullen, their steps were slow, Convicted felons they seemed to be,--"Are you going to prison, dear friend?"
14415Was ever scene so sad and fair?
14415Was it the College or the Sailor''s Hornpipe?
14415We quoted the following lines: Knows he, that never took a pinch, Nosey, the pleasure thence that flows?
14415We returned to our hotel at the time arranged for breakfast, which was quite ready, the table being laid for three; but where was our friend?
14415What dainty darling this-- what peerless peer?
14415What spot more honoured than this beautiful place?
14415What though in solemn silence all Move round the dark terrestrial ball; What though no real voice nor sound Amidst their radiant orbs be found?
14415When he asked"What''s the matter?"
14415When the time came for him to die he asked for I Corinthians xv., and after that had been read he remarked:"Is not that a comfortable chapter?"
14415Whence is derived the verb to flee, Where have you been by it most annoyed?
14415Who could have invented those spades of wood?
14415Who has not heard the howling of Tregeagle?
14415Who knows?
14415Who knows?
14415Who ran to help me when I fell, And would some pretty story tell, Or kiss the place to make it well?
14415Who was it that cut them out of the tree?
14415Whoever could it be?
14415Why not follow the water, which would be sure to be running towards the sea?
14415Will you tell me, sir, that I do n''t know the origin of Presbyterianism?
14415Would you like coffee with sand for dregs?
14415Yet soft,--nay stay-- what vision have we here?
14415and did the men supplant the deer and grouse then?
14415and what was the force that overwhelmed them?
14415broder Teague, dost hear de decree?
14415but there is only the mocking echo to answer, as if from a far- distant land,"Where are they?"
14415but why does he stay behind?
14415if you see any of the enemy, tell them we are two or three miles away, will you?"
14415may we see the peep- shows?
14415murmured the gentleman; and then he said,"How do you spell it?"
14415my brother ejaculated;"but surely there is n''t a coal- pit in a pretty place like this?"
14415of butter; is she not a daughter of Abraham?
14415or, failing that, why not adopt the system which prevailed in the Scottish Churches?
14415said Little John,"That you blow so heartily?"
14415seek to see What heaven and hell alike would hide?
14415the men pretended to be drunk, and one of them said in a tipsy tone of voice,"Ca n''t you see, guv''nor?
14415the wintry blast comes on, And quickly falls the snow; And where are all the beauties gone That bloom''d a while ago?
14415they said, in astonishment;"where is he?"
14415to which John promptly replied"Golgotha,"and"Who founded University College?"
14415where are they?"
14415with twopence- halfpenny in your pocket?"
21556And Meyer,I interrupted,"what of him?"
21556And the horses?
21556Any milk?
21556Are not the Crows, the Bannaxas, the Flat Heads, and the Umbiquas, starving during the winter? 21556 Are you quite sure that the revelation was from the Lord?"
21556Aye, boil, bubble, evaporate,exclaimed I;"what do I care for water or tea now?"
21556Can you give my horse a pail of water?
21556Could you restore him, if his head had been cut off?
21556Does she? 21556 Does your power to raise this man to life again depend upon the particular nature of his disease?
21556Fear has turned the Crows into stones,resumed the Prince,"what has become of their light feet?
21556Flower of the magnolia,said he, taking her by the hand,"wilt thou love me less as a brother than as a husband?
21556How do you know that you can?
21556How far to Little Rock?
21556How far,said I,"to Caledonia city?"
21556How much?
21556Is there no farm on the way?
21556It is a shameful imposition,he cried;"how much do you want after all?"
21556Now, why should not the Shoshones put themselves at once above the reach of such chances? 21556 Oh, Pat, be a good man; ca n''t you go and pick some berries?
21556Slick was thunderstruck,` and the pocket- book?'' 21556 Take them away, then; are they tied?"
21556The bodies of the young women have been atrociously and cowardly abused-- seest thou? 21556 The what?"
21556Well, if this man had been killed, and one of his arms cut off, could you bring him to life, and also restore to him his arm?
21556Well, stranger, what will you give me to ferry you over?
21556What is the matter, Blackey?
21556What the devil can you have babbled about during the whole blessed night? 21556 What,"I exclaimed,"after he was dead?"
21556Where do you come from, eh?
21556Why not settle the matter with them all at once? 21556 Why, you are both of you mere children; she ca n''t get a house, and how could you support her?"
21556Would they not be too happy to exchange their furs against the corn, the tobacco, and good dried fish of the Shoshones? 21556 ` And so you lost the wager?''
21556` Faith, have you?'' 21556 ` Where are they?''
21556` Why, you fool, you did not give them your money, did you?'' 21556 After a silence of a few minutes, he asked the Comanche chief what he could answer to that? 21556 And next? 21556 Are they not, although rebels and unnatural children, still the children the Shoshones? 21556 At last the judge condescended to cease his whittling, and come to make his own bargain, which he did openly:Any good saddles, Fielding?
21556At last, an old chief rose and addressed Opishka:"Great chief,"said he,"why askest thou?
21556But what could be expected from a Frenchman?
21556But what, indeed, could be expected from a people who murdered their guests, invited by them, and under the sanction of a white flag?
21556Can a Comanche and warrior think in any way but one?
21556Come, old chap, let us have your bill, and mind, make it out as for old customers, for we intend to return often; do n''t we?''
21556Could he not easily procure plates and inscribe thereon a set of characters, no matter what, and exhibit them to the intended witnesses as genuine?
21556Did I not say so?
21556Didst thou ever dream of another voice than mine, a younger one, breathing of love and despair?"
21556Didst thou ever dream of one?
21556Do my warriors know such a people?
21556Do n''t you hear anything?"
21556Do they intend to conquer Missouri, Illinois, Mexico?
21556Does the snake offer peace to the squirrel when he kills him with the poison of his dreaded glance?
21556Dost thou know the love of a brother?
21556Eh, Boone, my boy, how fares it with ye?"
21556Had they not the unlimited range of the prairies?
21556Hast thou a wish?
21556He was going, but the chief grasped him firmly by the arm:--"Where dost thou wish to go?
21556How long it lasted none is living to say; and who could?
21556I only said,` How dare you, Sir?''
21556Is not the poison a deadly one?
21556Is the buffalo less a buffalo when he grows old, or the eagle less an eagle when a hundred winters have whitened his wings?
21556Is there a place in the mountains or the prairies where the name of Mosh Kohta has not been pronounced and praised?
21556It is only the white Manitou that speaks to him, and how could the white Manitou know the nature of the Indians?
21556Now I was in uncommon bad temper that morning, and I answered his question with a"What do you mean, you old fool?"
21556Now, is an impure Cayuga a fit tomb for the body of a Comanche warrior?
21556Perceive you not how fast the blood runs into their veins?
21556Reduction of duty on foreign goods?
21556See you not into their hearts?
21556Shall we chastise them and give their carcasses to the crows and wolves?
21556Shall we return, or encamp here?"
21556The Prince spoke:--"Do you not want to become the most powerful nation of the West?
21556The chief looked at him and replied, with the most ineffable contempt:"What should I answer?"
21556The farmer then asked--"You are quite certain that you can bring this man to life again?"
21556The merchant, however, would not:"Why did you take it?"
21556The question was, what was the length of the rope required; i.e., what was the width of the river?
21556The text was:--"Ye are the salt of the earth, but if the salt has lost its savour, wherewith shall it be salted?
21556The young wanderer was amazed; he had now ten thousand dollars, but what could he do with so much money?
21556There stood the bleeding moon;''twas neither light nor obscurity; how could man divide the time and the seasons?
21556Was it good-- was it bad?
21556Was it good?
21556What could he do?
21556What could we do?
21556What does this mean?
21556What evidence, then, have we of the_ existence_ of these plates?
21556What have they to eat?
21556What hunting and what fishing have you had this last year?
21556What must it then be on those who have resided with the Indians for years?
21556What next?
21556What say my warriors: let them speak?
21556What then shall we do?
21556What were the Crows before the coming of the white men, on the shores of the Buona Ventura?
21556What will you bet-- five, ten, fifty, hundred?
21556What would be easier than thus to impose on their credulity and weakness?
21556Where was the boasted superiority of the Texians over the Indian race?
21556Who ever heard of the Arrapahoes entering the war- path in night?
21556Who knows?
21556Who then could resist the Shoshones?
21556Who will say that the Mormon prophet is not among the great spirits of the age?
21556Why ask?
21556Why comest thou, false- hearted, to pour thy deceitful words into the ears of my young men?
21556Why did they act like wolves, biting their benefactors instead of showing to them their gratitude?"
21556Why this exact discipline of the Mormon corps?
21556Why; can two suns light the same prairie, or two male eagles cover the same nest?
21556` I know better,''he will say,` do n''t I?
21556` They; who do you mean?''
21556does an Indian say to the beaver, he comes to offer peace when he sets his traps for him?
21556gentlemen,''exclaimed Slick,` why did you not say so?
21556or could you now bring any dead man to life?"
21556said I,"are they shooting in the bar?"
21556said Number 1, smacking his lips;` now have you the real genuine stuff?
21556suppose they are a vanguard of General Rusk''s army, and one of them should escape?
21556what can we expect from them and their assistance but exorbitant claims and undue interference?
21556why should they not get rich?
13405''And so you lost the wager?'' 13405 ''Eh, old Slick,''said one of the sparks,''capital dinner, by Jove; good wine, fine cigars; plenty of customers, eh?''
13405''Faith, have you?'' 13405 ''They?-who do you mean?''
13405''Where are they?'' 13405 ''Why, you fool, you did not give them your money, did you?''
13405And Meyer,I interrupted,"what of him?"
13405And the horses?
13405Any milk?
13405Are not the Crows, the Bannaxas, the Flat Heads, and the Umbiquas, starving during the winter? 13405 Are you quite sure that the revelation was from the Lord?"
13405Aye, boil, bubble, evaporate,exclaimed I;"what do I care for water or tea now?"
13405Can you give my horse a pail of water?
13405Could you restore him, if his head had been cut off?
13405Does she? 13405 Does the just Nanawa wish the Shoshones to be despised by the Crows or the horsemen of the south?
13405Does your power to raise this man to life again depend upon the particular nature of his disease? 13405 Fear has turned the Crows into stones,"resumed the Prince,"what has become of their light feet?
13405Flower of the magnolia,said he, taking her by the hand,"wilt thou love me less as a brother than as a husband?
13405How do you know that you can?
13405How far to Little Rock?
13405How far,said I,"to Caledonia city?"
13405How much?
13405Is there no farm on the way?
13405It is a shameful imposition,he cried;"how much do you want after all?"
13405Now, why should not the Shoshones put themselves at once above the reach of such chances? 13405 Oh, Pat, be a good man; ca n''t you go and pick some berries?
13405Take them away, then; are they tied?
13405The bodies of the young women have been atrociously and cowardly abused-- seest thou? 13405 The what?"
13405We shall soon reach the chiefs,said he;"I to revenge a brother''s death, thou to quit for ever thy tribe and thy children, Hast thou a wish?
13405Well, if this man had been killed, and one of his arms cut off, could you bring him to life, and also restore to him his arm?
13405Well, stranger, what will you give me to ferry you over?
13405What is the matter, Blackey?
13405What the devil can you have babbled about during the whole blessed night? 13405 What,"I exclaimed,"after he was dead?"
13405Where do you come from, eh?
13405Why not settle the matter with them all at once? 13405 Why, you are both of you mere children; she ca n''t get a house, and how could you support her?"
13405Would they not be too happy to exchange their furs against the corn, the tobacco, and good dried fish of the Shoshones? 13405 ''And the pocket- book?'' 13405 ''I know better,''he will say,''do n''t I? 13405 1, smacking his lips;''now have you the real genuine stuff? 13405 Accordingly, after putting one sheet in type? 13405 After a silence of a few minutes, he asked the Comanche chief what he could answer to that? 13405 And next? 13405 And to all the invectives and reproaches of Mrs. Slick he answered only with,''Here she goes? 13405 Are they not although rebels and unnatural children, still the children, of the Shoshones? 13405 At last the judge condescended to cease his whittling, and come to make his own bargain, which he did openly:Any good saddles, Fielding?
13405At last, an old chief rose and addressed Opishka:--"Great chief,"said he,"why askest thou?
13405But what could be expected from a Frenchman?
13405Can a Comanche and warrior think in any way but one?
13405Come, old chap, let us have your bill, and mind, make it out as for old customers, for we intend to return often; do n''t we?''
13405Could he not easily procure plates and inscribe thereon a set of characters, no matter what, and exhibit them to the intended witnesses as genuine?
13405Did I not- say so?
13405Didst thou ever dream of another voice than mine, a younger one, breathing of love and despair?"
13405Didst thou ever dream of one?
13405Do my warrior?
13405Do n''t you hear anything?"
13405Do they intend to conquer Missouri, Illinois, Mexico?
13405Does the snake offer peace to the squirrel when he kills him with the poison of his dreaded glance?
13405Dost thou know the love of a brother?
13405Down we darted?
13405Eh, Boone, my boy, how fares it with ye?"
13405Had they not the unlimited range of the prairies?
13405He was going, but the chief grasped him firmly by the arm,--"Where dost thou wish to go?
13405How can I escape?
13405How long it lasted none is living to say; and who could?
13405I hear?"
13405I only said,''How dare you, Sir?''
13405Is not the poison a deadly one?"
13405Is the buffalo less a buffalo when he grows old, or the eagle less an eagle when a hundred winters have whitened his wings?
13405Is there a place in the mountains or the prairies where the name of Mosh Kohta has not been pronounced and praised?
13405It is only the white Manitou that speaks to him, and how could the white Manitou know the nature of the Indians?
13405Now I was in uncommon bad temper that morning, and I answered his question with a"What do you mean, you old fool?"
13405Now, is an impure Cayuga a fit tomb for the body of a Comanche warrior?
13405Perceive you not how fast the blood runs into their veins?
13405See you not into their hearts?
13405Shall we chastise them and give their carcases to the crows and wolves?
13405Shall we return, or encamp here?"
13405The Prince spoke:--"Do you not want to become the most powerful nation of the West?
13405The chief looked at him and replied, with the most ineffable contempt:"What should I answer?"
13405The farmer then asked,--"You are quite certain that you can bring this man to life again?"
13405The merchant, however, would not:"Why did you take it?"
13405The question was, what was the length of the rope required;_ i.e._, what was the width of the river?
13405The text was--"Ye are the salt of the earth, but if the salt has lost its savour, wherewith shall it be salted?
13405The young wanderer was amazed; he had now ten thousand dollars, but what could he do with so much money?
13405There stood the bleeding moon;''twas neither light nor obscurity; how could man divide the time and the seasons?
13405Was it good-- was it bad?
13405Was it good?
13405What Comanche ever scalped women and children?
13405What could he do?
13405What could we do?
13405What does this mean?
13405What evidence, then, have we of the_ existence_ of these plates?
13405What have they to eat?
13405What hunting and what fishing have you had this last year?
13405What must it then be on those who have resided with the Indians for years?
13405What next?
13405What say my warriors; let them speak?
13405What then shall we do?
13405What were the Crows before the coming of the white men, on the shores of the Buona Ventura?
13405What will you bet-- five, ten, fifty, hundred?
13405What would be easier than thus to impose on their credulity and weakness?
13405Where was the boasted superiority of the Texans over the Indian race?
13405Who ever heard of the Arrapahoes entering the war- path in night?
13405Who knows?
13405Who then could resist the Shoshones?
13405Who will say that the Mormon prophet is not among the great spirits of the age?
13405Why ask?
13405Why comest thou, false- hearted, to pour thy deceitful words into the ears of my young men?
13405Why did they act like wolves, biting their benefactors, instead of showing to them their gratitude?"
13405Why this exact discipline of the Mormon corps?
13405Why; can two suns light the same prairie, or two male eagles cover the same nest?
13405a pale- faced Oposh- ton- ehoc?
13405does an Indian say to the beaver, he comes to offer peace when he sets his traps for him?
13405gentlemen,''exclaimed Slick,''why did you not say so?
13405know such a people?
13405or could you now bring any dead man to life?"
13405said I,"are they shooting in the bar?"
13405speak?
13405suppose they are a vanguard of General Rusk''s army, and one of them should escape?
13405what can we expect from them and their assistance but exorbitant claims and undue interference?
13405why should they not get rich?
33432''Who comes here to disturb the royal peace?'' 33432 ''Who is I?''
33432A broken neck?
33432A thousand what, Uncle Munch?
33432About how tall?
33432All those? 33432 And I suppose, then,"said Diavolo,"if you belong to us you''ve got to do pretty much what we tell you to?"
33432And I won a hole, did n''t I?
33432And did n''t the Emperor treat you well, Uncle Munch?
33432And did n''t you ever see him again, Baron?
33432And did the robbers ever get down?
33432And may I ask your name?
33432And still you got him on deck?
33432And were n''t you ever punished?
33432And what did you do with the moose''s antlers?
33432Are you interested in giraffes?
33432Bub,said she, in a whisper,"do you think that was a true story?"
33432But were n''t you sea- sick?
33432But what became of the ivory?
33432But what became of the plough, Uncle Munch?
33432But what do they feed upon?
33432But, you know, do n''t you?
33432Could he talk?
33432Could n''t the fireman stop the engine?
33432Did n''t he see through it when he saw you put the army in your pocket?
33432Did n''t you and she make your last hole on a single stroke?
33432Did you see him do it, Uncle Munch?
33432Do I wish I had? 33432 Do n''t you wish_ you_ had two youngsters like us, Uncle Munch?"
33432Do they hunt men in India??
33432Do they hunt men in India??
33432Do they really relish them?
33432Do you suppose that''s true, Diavolo?
33432Does all heroes get killed?
33432Function-- duty-- what does the duty of a bear- shooer consist in?
33432Hello there, who wants 91162 Nepperhan?
33432How about the royalties on this book?
33432How did you lose Jang, Baron?
33432How the deuce do you make that out? 33432 How was that?"
33432I do n''t think we ever heard of that, did we?
33432I know it was mean, but what could I do?
33432I mean for horse- back riding, which would you rather have?
33432I should n''t think he''d live long if he does n''t eat?
33432I wonder where he can be?
33432In Hades?
33432Is he a blacksmith who shoes bears instead of horses?
33432Is that you?
33432Kept me? 33432 No post- office?
33432Oh, did n''t you?
33432Pebbles?
33432Pretty good catch for an afternoon, eh?
33432Pretty hot for literary work, is n''t it?
33432Saved your life, eh?
33432Seven?
33432Stenographer ready?
33432That is rather curious, is n''t it?
33432That you, Baron?
33432That''s what I thought; and when you ca n''t work ruin stares you in the face, eh? 33432 Then how the deuce am I to get hold of your stuff?"
33432Theology?
33432Those are real candy names, are n''t they?
33432True? 33432 True?"
33432Two? 33432 Uncle Munch,"said the Twins one day, as they climbed up into the visitor''s lap and disarranged his necktie,"was you ever up in a balloon?"
33432Was you in it for long?
33432Well, how about the missionaries?
33432Well,returned the Baron, thoughtfully, as if calculating,"did you ever see the Eiffel Tower?"
33432Well,said Mr. Munchausen,"you''re here again, are you?"
33432Well?
33432Were you killed by a shark?
33432Were you up in the air for three whole months?
33432What became of the June- bug?
33432What country would it have been, Mr. Munchausen,asked Sapphira innocently,"Germany or Siam?"
33432What did Bonaparte say?
33432What did they live on?
33432What did you do for hazards?
33432What did you do?
33432What do you say to that, Sapphira?
33432What does your venerable Dad say about it?
33432What good are they?
33432What is a Gillyhooly bird, anyhow?
33432What kept you, Uncle Munch?
33432What kept you?
33432What kind of a snake did you say he was?
33432What useful what?
33432What was it, Uncle Munch?
33432What was the nature of the letters?
33432What was the other boa doing while you were saving Wriggletto?
33432What what?
33432What''s cannon- ballism?
33432What''s snakes good for except to kill? 33432 What''s the nature of your story?"
33432What''s what, Uncle Munch?
33432What, do they lay Roc''s eggs?
33432What? 33432 What?"
33432What?
33432Where is Wriggletto now?
33432Where the dickens did they come from?
33432Where?
33432Which would you rather do, Angelica,Mr. Munchausen resumed,"go to sea in a balloon or attend a dumb- crambo party in a chicken- coop?"
33432Who was Jang?
33432Who was Wriggletto?
33432Who was he?
33432Why ca n''t we have both stories?
33432Why did n''t you come down?
33432Would you like to lie down and take a rest?
33432You do n''t mean to say that I have never told you about Wriggletto, my pet boa- constrictor, do you?
33432You gave up a hole, did n''t you?
33432You told pretty near the truth, too, Uncle Munch, because you are hot stuff yourself, ai n''t you?
33432''A regular lu- lu, eh?''
33432''But how?''
33432''Ca n''t you get closer to him?''
33432''Captain,''said I,''ca n''t you tie an anchor onto a hawser, and bait the flukes with a boa constrictor and make sure of him?''
33432''Have you got a sample of yourself along for me to taste?''
33432''How can we do it?''
33432''Shall we take it over?''
33432''What do you think it is?''
33432''What for?''
33432''What kind?''
33432''What shall we do?''
33432''Who am I?
33432''Who am I?''
33432Beelzy bowed in response to the compliment and observed to the Baron:"You ai n''t here yourself this season, be ye?"
33432Can you not see that it is raining cats and dogs without?"
33432Does the number include being struck by lightning?"
33432Have you got any plumbing in the camp?
33432How did the engine come to run away?"
33432How has this wrong upon the worthy realist of the eighteenth century been perpetrated?
33432How''s that for an offer?"
33432I cried,"Who in thunder do you suppose wants to play golf on a day like this?"
33432I do n''t know whether I ever told you about my first experience with the cannibals-- did I?"
33432I never told you of the bovine lie I got once while playing a match with Bonaparte, did I?"
33432I''m glad they were disappointed, are n''t you?"
33432If you were fast asleep while all this was happening how did you know that Jang did those things?"
33432Is it a Henry James dandy, or does it bear the mark of Caine?
33432Is it an intentional or an unwitting wrong?
33432Is it realism or fiction?"
33432May I inquire what useful function in the ménage of a hotel a bear- shooer performs?"
33432Munchausen?"
33432Munchausen?"
33432Munchausen?"
33432Rather neat idea, eh?
33432Really?"
33432So I answered,''Who is I, O Mtulu, Bravest of the Taafe Chiefs?
33432Suppose the giraffe should be awakened by the roaring of the lion before I got there and should rush off himself to escape the fate that awaited me?
33432The Baron?"
33432The Twins were silent for a few moments and then they asked:"Well, Uncle Munch, what kind of fire- works are safe anyhow?"
33432The question arises,_ why_ is this?
33432Then one of them asked:"But what did you live on all that time, Uncle Munch?"
33432They like to play stunts-- I think it is called stunts, is n''t it, when one boy does something, and all his companions try to do the same thing?"
33432Torpeters are n''t any harm, are they, Uncle Munch?"
33432V THE STORY OF JANG"Did you ever own a dog, Baron Munchausen?"
33432We went to see whence it came, and what do you suppose we saw?
33432What can I do for you?"
33432What do you say?"
33432What is its precise charm in your eyes,--the health- giving qualities of the game or its capacity for bad lies?"
33432What''s your number?
33432Where in Hades are you?"
33432Why do you know what happened to me when I was a boy?"
33432Why, am I late?"
33432Would you believe it, I found that my last bullet was the one with which I had saved the balloon from the Prussian shot?"
33432You''ve given up theology I presume?"
33432_ Chapter III._]"But the chickens?"
33432_ Chapter XIII._] There was a pause for a few moments, when Diavolo said,"Uncle Munch, is that a true story you''ve been giving us?"
33432asked the Twins,"was n''t the elevator running?"
35574Ca n''t you find anything suitable in that code- book? 35574 Good to be out in the air, eh?
35574Great Scott, is n''t it big, and_ is n''t_ it damp? 35574 I beg your pardon, sir, but is your name Porter?
35574Is that a Swiss-- that splendid circus- chariot driver? 35574 Is this the place?
35574Is_ that_ what I-- what we--[ Illustration: Beauvais]Where''s the front of it?
35574Now, my dear, the question is, what''s to be done? 35574 So this is the tomb of the husband of Diana of Poitiers?
35574There, what do you think of that? 35574 Well, Peters, and so we are off for Mont- Saint- Michel, bless her old heart-- or is Michel a him?
35574Well, ai n''t you going to get the code- book? 35574 Well, ai n''t you ready?
35574Well, where can we get a Swiss? 35574 Well, where can we go now?
35574Well, where is the church? 35574 Well, why do n''t we start?
35574Well, why do n''t you holler, Lee? 35574 What comes next?
35574What time is it? 35574 What''s he saying?
35574What''s our Goddess of Liberty doing up there? 35574 What''s that ant- hill out at sea?
35574What''s that chopped- off creation before us? 35574 Where''s our man gone?
35574''Clear vertical fall''eh?
355742:41--tomb of the Duc d''Aumale; good face, handsome decorations on his bosom, stained- glass windows-- all made at Sévres, eh?
3557433"''So that''s the clock?''"
35574A bank, eh?
35574Ahead there?
35574Ahead, eh?
35574An hour after we leave, eh?
35574And so that is Mont- Saint- Michel?
35574Another?
35574Are those the famous bas- reliefs?
35574Are you all right, child?
35574Are you sure?
35574Ask him if he has ever known anyone to miss their footing?
35574Ask if it''s his bona fide heart or only a death- mask of it?
35574Baggage- counters, eh?
35574Belle- Isle, eh?
35574Betty glanced around and said,"Oh, Madame, où est Fakir?"
35574Bob, do you remember me?
35574But how could they have arranged it?
35574But what are the beads?
35574By Pontorson, eh?
35574Ca n''t we go to Mont- Saint- Michel some other way?
35574Could you give a description of the man?
35574Curious about the Brewers not turning up; suppose he''s under the automobile yet?
35574Curious little creature, the cross- eyed one, is n''t she?
35574Curious place, Havre, do n''t you think?
35574Did it roll?
35574Did you ever hear of anything more cruel?
35574Did you ever see anything like that young man''s gall?
35574Did you ever see so many canals-- or smell so many?--and the little cottages out of another century?
35574Did you ever see such a collection as those girls?
35574Did you know he was in Rouen?
35574Did you know that?
35574Did you notice how she used to push the ash- receiver toward me?
35574Did you see him while he was there?
35574Dike, eh?
35574Do n''t you know I''m responsible for you two girls?
35574Do n''t you want to go with them, Edgar?
35574Do we get down here?
35574Do we get up there?
35574Do we go upstairs?
35574Do you mean that we have got to climb that little ladder?
35574Do you remember-- but how do you come to be in Europe, anyhow; and what liner did you line up on?
35574Do you suppose we ought to speak to a policeman?
35574Down here?
35574Dumas''Belle- Isle?
35574Eat up there, eh?
35574Edgar, will you do me the courtesy not to be pointing to the left with that cane of yours when I turn suddenly to the right again?
35574Edgar, will you oblige me by carrying that cane so that child does n''t come within an ace of catching her mouth on it every other second?
35574Edna, is this soap yours?
35574Faster than a horse can gallop, eh?
35574Fishing- rods and oars all about; when does the tide come in?
35574Girl who captured flag from Charles the Bold, eh?
35574Good job of scaffolding, is n''t it?
35574Got her?
35574Great Scott, what are you staying so long for?
35574Great place, eh?
35574Has she got her year under her?
35574Have we got to hunt''em up?
35574He is n''t going to Rouen?
35574He says he is sure M. Sibilet is in love with Mrs. Clary now, or why under the sun should he offer him his tooth- powder?
35574Heart buried underneath?
35574Henry II of England, eh?
35574How do we get from Dol to the mont?
35574How do you know?
35574How does he come to be in Rouen?
35574How much of a tip is that much gold lace going to look forward to getting?
35574I do n''t catch what you say?
35574I do n''t see anything very remarkable in a Norman being buried in Normandy, do you, Bob?
35574I said:''Have it_ rough_, eh?
35574I sent her ahead, did I?
35574I tell you, Bob, when I was--"Is that the fountain?
35574I think we ought to be speaking to a policeman, do n''t you?
35574I''ll take the tickets; we''re all full- fare, are n''t we?
35574II UNCLE JOHN IN ROUEN 9 A.M."Well, girls, are you ready to get up and out and set about improving your minds?
35574If they did n''t arrange it, why did they look upset?
35574Is it a joke, or ca n''t they trust a Frenchman with their old relics?
35574Is n''t he the one we peeked around in Rouen?
35574Is n''t it awful?
35574Is n''t that awful?
35574Is that the diligence?
35574Is that the tomb he finally got into?
35574Is that why they called him''the Bold''?
35574It is n''t the sea, though, is it?
35574It''s big, is n''t it?
35574Jeanne Hachette?
35574Joan of Arc?
35574Just hold my hat, will you?
35574Just tell him we do n''t want any of those oyster- shell pincushions first, will you?
35574Look at that woman, with her bouquet of live chickens-- novel effect in chickens, eh, Bob?
35574Looked disappointed, did n''t he?
35574Looks Roman to me; what do you think?
35574Looks easy, do n''t it, Peters?
35574Lumbering old concern-- eh, Peters?
35574Malo._ Dearest Mama: Why did n''t you write me that Mrs. Whalen was coming abroad?
35574Mine?
35574Mr. Chopstone said very roundly:"You''d better fight shy of her, I think,"and Edna said dryly:"Of him, too, do n''t you think?"
35574Nice joke, eh?
35574No?
35574Now do n''t you see why no woman could be happy with a man like that?
35574Now, Edgar, I have one favor to ask of you-- will you kindly allow me to manage my own affairs while you manage yours?
35574Now, where_ is_ the porter?
35574Of course it was easier, though, going down- hill, and I said, when we were near enough not to be anxious any more,"It was worth seeing, was n''t it?"
35574Oh, yes, of course the aunt was interesting, too; but-- what did you say?
35574Or-- how old is the little cross- eyed one?
35574Peters, I-- where''s the next step?
35574Peters, have you observed how many stairs there are in Europe?
35574Peters, you-- where''s the bottom?
35574Poulard herself, is n''t it?
35574Pretty bit of sarcasm, eh, Bob?
35574Pretty idea, to put up a fountain where they burnt her-- keep her memory damp at all events, eh?
35574Pretty place, do n''t you think?
35574Rather a medieval staircase, eh?
35574Rather a rough joke, its being so much the biggest, is n''t it?
35574Richard- Coeur- de- Lion-- petrified, eh?
35574Robert Porter-- Bobby Porter that went to the Washington School?
35574Rollo the Norman?
35574Round back of this crazy mob?
35574Said to ask the Swiss, did he?
35574Say, was there any one else with you?
35574See any one you knew there?
35574She put him down and began to look displeased again, and Betty just glanced about and said calmly,"Oh, Madame, où es Fakir?"
35574Sort of like turning around and hitting your cane, eh, Edgar?
35574Speaking to_ me_?
35574Strikes me as a pretty big statue to put up to a heart, do n''t you think, Bob?
35574That''s Edna and this is Yvonne, and-- you do n''t say he''s your son?
35574The Bois was just lovely-- all automobiles and babies; and who do you think we met?
35574The red- haired man said,"Why do n''t you buy a chain for him?"
35574There, do you see that old staircase?
35574They did n''t invite the elderly French lady, and she protested about"comme il faut"--but Betty said,"Où est Fakir?"
35574This is the kind of thing I''ve come several thousand miles to look at, is it?
35574Those gargoyles and saints around the top stick their heads out pretty interested- like, do n''t they?
35574To keep the rain from damaging them, eh?
35574Uncle thought the word meant"nervous,"and we heard him say to Mr. Porter,"Well, who would n''t have been, under the circumstances?"
35574Used to be on land, eh, and then got to be on sea?
35574Was n''t some English Henry shut up on Mont- Saint- Michel and fed by ravens there, or something like that?
35574Wave and holler?
35574We had a beastly trip,--only came from Havre last night,--and, by the way, how in thunder can we get hold of the man who opens these iron gates?
35574We have n''t got to overhaul them again here, have we?
35574We might make a little excursion out there, calling ourselves the Three Mousquetaires, eh?
35574We-- who did you say?
35574Well, Bob, the Reformation was a great thing, after all, was n''t it?
35574Well, Edgar, are you coming, too, or do you choose to stay outside with your stick?
35574Well, I vow, who has she got-- if it isn''t-- Yvonne, is n''t that that young man-- how d''ye do, Edgar?
35574Well, ask him?
35574Well, do n''t you hear?
35574Well, that''s a pretty tall flight of steps, is n''t it, Peters?
35574Well, what did he say?
35574Well, what did he say?
35574Well, what did he say?
35574Well, what did they say?
35574Well, what is it?
35574Well, what shall we do?
35574Well, when did she live?
35574What are we paying him for, anyway?
35574What boat did you come over on?
35574What did he say?
35574What did she say?
35574What did you say, Yvonne?
35574What did you say?
35574What did you say?
35574What do they have the thing so high for, anyhow?
35574What do you say, Peters?
35574What do you suppose the people here do to amuse themselves, anyhow?
35574What do you think of Sibbilly now, Edna?
35574What do you think, Peters?
35574What does he mean by that?
35574What is it, Yvonne?
35574What is it, now?
35574What is our Swiss friend hissing about?
35574What is this road we''re on, anyway?
35574What makes you handle it as you do, anyway?
35574What other?
35574What shall I do with the girls?''
35574What''s he saying?
35574What''s that Indian beadwork around her feet for?
35574What''s that island off at sea?
35574What''s that?
35574What''s that?
35574What''s the moral of her train turning into a dolphin?
35574What''s the tin overhead for?
35574What''s this system of wildly speculating wheat- pits?
35574What, Rollo that was''At Work''and''At Play''and at everything else when we were kids?
35574What?
35574What_ did_ happen to it?
35574When did he die?
35574When did you come over?
35574Where did he spend the time while he was waiting to be buried?
35574Where in thunder did you get that fellow from?
35574Where is he going?
35574Where''s Yvonne?
35574Where''s the door?
35574Where?
35574Where?
35574Where_ is_ that porter?
35574Which Henry was he, anyhow-- the one with six wives or the one who never shed a smile?
35574Who is n''t here?
35574Who was Jeanne Hachette?
35574Who''s buried here?
35574Who''s speaking to me?
35574Who?
35574Whose grave?
35574Whose heart?--Richard''s?
35574Whose statue is that in the middle?
35574Whose umbrella is that getting left by the door?
35574Why do n''t they put in the guide- book,''Street commands a fine view of the roof?''
35574Will you look up in that roof?
35574Will you think of the difference he is making in our comfort these days?
35574Will you?"
35574Wonder how high they are, anyhow?
35574Would n''t that be terrible?
35574XII UNCLE JOHN AND MONT- SAINT- MICHEL"Well, this is a great change from the automobile-- eh, Peters?
35574Yes?
35574You do n''t mean to tell me that''s Joan of Arc?
35574Yvonne, did n''t that young reprobate write you he was going to Russia?
35574Yvonne, did you notice the way they handled those trunks when we landed-- as if they were eggs?
35574Yvonne, do you know where that fellow went to?
35574[ Illustration:"''Richard Coeur- de- Lion-- petrified, eh?''"]
35574[ Illustration:"''Tell her we want dinner for four, and prompt''"]"Do we go up here?
35574[ Illustration:"''What''s that chopped- off creation before us?''"]
35574_ Not_ the cathedral?
35574_ You?_ Well, what do you want to say to me?
35574_ You?_ Well, what do you want to say to me?
35574do they keep Charlemagne wreathed, too, or is five hundred years the bead- wreath limit?
35574how can we?
21378A good plan,said the professor;"but would it not be better for two to face them, and two to go forward-- I mean, to retreat?"
21378A treasure chamber?
21378About his dog, Mrs Dunn?
21378About passports or what is necessary?
21378About, sir? 21378 Accident, eh?
21378Ah, Mrs Dunn,cried the lawyer;"what have you been about?
21378Ah, you thought those people would be a nuisance?
21378Am I to give them this food, effendi?
21378And I''ve a right to make myself jolly if I like, have n''t I, sir?
21378And disappoint the lad?
21378And do the landlords?
21378And draw blood?
21378And he knows something of the country?
21378And how are we to set there?
21378And how is Lawrence this morning?
21378And hunt up treasures of all kinds, eh?
21378And if the money be not paid, Yussuf, what then?
21378And in the winter, Yussuf?
21378And our goods-- our property?
21378And outside the town?
21378And the ropes?
21378And this man and his little crew will reap the benefit?
21378And what will he require?
21378And what would you and his friends say if I did not prescribe for him?
21378And what''s the good of his money, sir, if he is n''t going to live?
21378And when are you going?
21378And when?
21378And where is this pearl among men to be found?
21378And where the light shines in?
21378And where would you get your builders and your tenants?
21378And would you use a sword, sir?
21378And you advise it, Yussuf?
21378And you approve of it, sir?
21378And you are sure, Yussuf?
21378And you would follow them, Yussuf?
21378And you, Yussuf?
21378Approve of it, ma''am? 21378 Are we going to have a storm, Yussuf?"
21378Are you all ready?
21378Are you coming too, effendi?
21378Are you going to have a look at those old stones, Preston?
21378Are you hurt, my boy?
21378Are you much hurt?
21378Are you people staying at Morris''s?
21378Are you sure?
21378Are-- are you sure?
21378Armed, sir!--armed?
21378Armed?
21378Awake? 21378 Because it will make us believe that you have been shamming all this time, and that you''re really quite well, thank you, sir!--eh?"
21378Better, sir? 21378 Brought the money, ma''am?
21378Burying the hatchet? 21378 But I say, Preston,"said the old lawyer then,"do you really mean to say that I made enough noise to frighten the horses?
21378But Yussuf? 21378 But are the ruins there?"
21378But are you really quite well?
21378But are you wounded-- injured?
21378But do you really mean, Mr Burne, that, supposing the doctor gives his consent, you would accompany us abroad?
21378But had we not better ride boldly forward? 21378 But his excellency, Mr Burne?"
21378But his father''s executor, Professor Preston?
21378But is it a fact, sir,said Mr Burne,"that you have real brigands in the country?"
21378But is it far?
21378But is not that a heavy price for the accommodation we shall receive?
21378But is there no other way-- a mile or two round?
21378But it is warm in the winter?
21378But it will not last, man?
21378But not wounded?
21378But suppose another storm should come?
21378But suppose the Turkish soldier prefers running away to fighting?
21378But suppose, when the thing goes off, the shots should come out at this end instead of the other?
21378But the old path-- is it very dangerous?
21378But these Greek sailors?
21378But was it a poisonous snake?
21378But what are we going to do?
21378But what is to be done now, Yussuf?
21378But where are we going?
21378But where does it lead?
21378But where is the road up?
21378But why do they put the hives in yonder?
21378But wo n''t they shoot at us?
21378But you can, effendi?
21378But you feel as if you could eat?
21378But you will come with us to the gunsmith''s?
21378But you will tell Mr Preston?
21378Buy or hire?
21378Ca n''t you see?
21378Ca n''t you, a university man, understand metaphors-- shepherd boy calling wolf when there was nothing the matter? 21378 Can your excellency fight?"
21378Carving knives?
21378Changed, sir?
21378Come, Yussuf, do n''t you think we might stop and ascend here?
21378Could I hear you? 21378 Could you hear me using my handkerchief, Mrs Dunn?"
21378Cured? 21378 Did you never see an Englishman take snuff before?"
21378Did you? 21378 Do I look like a man, sir, who would wear a fez with a towel round it?
21378Do as the Romans do, eh?
21378Do n''t you see that it was you who startled the animals off?
21378Do you know such a one?
21378Do you mean to say that those scoundrels have taken advantage of our being asleep to get on board the boat and escape?
21378Do you not know me?
21378Do you really feel yourself equal to the journey, my dear boy?
21378Do you see, effendi Lawrence?
21378Do you think so?
21378Do you think so?
21378Do you think so?
21378Do you think there is danger, then?
21378Do you think they are enemies, Yussuf?
21378Do you, sir?
21378Doctor? 21378 Doctor?"
21378Does n''t it?
21378Does n''t this curious stuffy feeling of heat make you feel drowsy, Mr Preston?
21378Dreaming? 21378 Effendi?"
21378Eh, what, not so well?
21378Eh, what? 21378 Eh, what?
21378Eh, what?
21378Eh? 21378 Eh?
21378Escape?
21378Even if we have no pistols, eh?
21378Feared?
21378Fever?
21378Fight, eh?
21378Freedom?
21378Get ready?
21378Give up? 21378 Go on, then,"said the professor;"but is there any risk to yourself?"
21378Going to find anything there?
21378Grapes are too, when the fox can not reach them-- eh, Lawrence?
21378Had n''t we better try and shoot a bird or an animal, and make a fire under those trees, and see if we can find some walnuts? 21378 Had we not better get on faster?"
21378Hallo, what have you found?
21378Hard- mouthed? 21378 Have you noticed what beautiful white stone this is, Mr Preston?"
21378Have you offered to pay for everything we have, and pay well, Yussuf?
21378He will not carry his religious feelings to the pitch of pushing us over some precipice in the mountains, eh? 21378 He''ll say that if the money is not paid he''ll--""Will you be quiet, Charley?"
21378He''s not ill. Are you, my lad?
21378Here, you, Yussuf, what''s to be done?
21378Highwaymen and footpads about, I suppose?
21378Hot?
21378How am I to explain our position if you will keep on chattering so?
21378How am I to explain? 21378 How are you getting on with this stuff, Lawrence?"
21378How can you talk like that?
21378How did you know that my friend, here, and I carried belts containing gold?
21378How do you feel, my lad?
21378How do you feel?
21378How do you know it to be poisonous?
21378How far is it to that cluster of hovels?
21378How have you slept?
21378How is it that such a grand city as this should have been so completely destroyed, Mr Preston?
21378How long? 21378 How long?"
21378How many? 21378 How much farther have we to go?"
21378How much farther is it to the village where we shall stop for the night?
21378How should I know?
21378How soon shall we go to see the horses?
21378How, Mr Preston?
21378How-- am-- I-- to-- get-- down?
21378How?
21378Humph, and do you feel alarmed?
21378Hurt, sir-- hurt? 21378 Hurt?"
21378I had read of earthquakes out here,said the professor, who was gaining confidence now;"but you do not often have such shocks as these?"
21378I only say, Are you a real Turk or a sham?
21378I say, Lawrence, old man, is it real?
21378I say, Mr Burne,cried Lawrence laughing;"is your back beginning to ache already?"
21378I say, Mr Preston-- you are my guardian, you know-- is there any need for him to come? 21378 I say, Yussuf,"said Lawrence one night as he sat talking to the guide,"they wo n''t cut off our heads, will they?"
21378I say, is it safe to let him go on like that?
21378I say, look here, Yussuf,said Mr Burne,"are you real or only sham?"
21378I say,he said aloud,"what''s become of that baggage?"
21378I startle them? 21378 I suppose they will not alarm you, Yussuf?"
21378I was going abroad to travel and study the places about which I am writing, but--"When do you go?
21378I was going within a few days, but--"Whereto?
21378I was going within a few days, my boy,said the professor kindly;"but--""Is it warm and sunshiny there, sir?"
21378I? 21378 I?
21378If we make a stout resistance, shall we beat them off?
21378In London?
21378In amongst the ruins?
21378In spite of the djins and evil spirits?
21378In the caves? 21378 In winter?"
21378Is he much hurt, Preston?
21378Is he much hurt?
21378Is it a beautiful country, Mr Preston?
21378Is it a fever coming on?
21378Is it an earthquake?
21378Is it not given to man to be calm and confident, and to walk bravely on, in such places as this? 21378 Is it so bad as this?"
21378Is not the dust settling down?
21378Is that all?
21378Is that curious feeling one has appetite?
21378Is that you, Yussuf?
21378Is there any danger?
21378It did not bite you?
21378Known? 21378 Laugh at you, my dear sir?"
21378Laughing at me, eh? 21378 Lawrence effendi,"he said quickly,"has it bitten you?"
21378Let''s hope not,said the professor;"but you will make some advances to him, will you not?"
21378Loaded? 21378 Look here, Yussuf, if we fight, what will be the consequences?"
21378Look here, Yussuf,said the professor at last;"what is to be done?"
21378Look here,said the professor;"shall I wear the fez, and you can take my hat?"
21378Means what, Yussuf?
21378More good than physic, sir?
21378Mr Burne?
21378Must we go back and search for it?
21378My dear Burne, are you serious?
21378My dear sir, can you not see? 21378 My dear sir,"said the doctor smiling,"you know the old saying about one man''s meat being another man''s poison?
21378News? 21378 No,"said Mr Burne, who overheard the remark;"but suppose my snuff does not hold out, what then?"
21378Noise? 21378 Not to save his life, Mrs Dunn?"
21378Now, do you see what that proves?
21378Now, then, what next? 21378 Now, then, what''s to be done?"
21378Now, what''s to be done?
21378Oh, Mr Preston, are you much hurt?
21378Oh, are they?
21378Oh, the Romans had a colony here, had they?
21378Oh, you are, eh, madam?
21378Oh, you don''t-- don''t you?
21378Other way?
21378Playing at soldiers, Mr Burne?
21378Quite time, eh?
21378Ready, Yussuf?
21378Risks? 21378 Ropes?
21378See what?
21378Seems queer to begin by being inspected, and then shaking hands with the servant we engage, eh, professor?
21378Send-- this gun, sir?
21378Serious, sir? 21378 Shall we dismount and climb up?"
21378Shall we go back?
21378Shall we risk it?
21378Shut in?
21378Sir, do I look like a man who would wear a fez with a jack- towel twisted round it?
21378State? 21378 Stay here?
21378Sure, excellency? 21378 Take the lady?"
21378Telegram?
21378Tell me,cried Yussuf,"have you tight hold of it by the head?"
21378That''s an eagle, is it not, Mr Preston?
21378The country is very fine, of course?
21378The flash of light, effendi?
21378The young effendi?
21378Theatre? 21378 Then he is to be the master, not we?"
21378Then we must be going,said Mr Burne,"eh?"
21378Then what do you mean, sir, if it is true, by bringing us into such a place as this?
21378Then what do you propose to do?
21378Then what have you seen?
21378Then what would you do now?
21378Then why do n''t you trust him, sir?
21378Then you call this a slight earthquake?
21378Then you really wish us to go on with our purchases?
21378Then you think there is danger?
21378Then you will do nothing?
21378Then, had we not better tell the Chumleys?
21378Then, why did n''t you say so, man? 21378 There will be bread, and fruit, and a boat, excellency,"said Yussuf quietly;"and these are what you want, are they not?"
21378They did not disturb you, then?
21378They would not without, then?
21378Think that would do for me? 21378 Think?
21378This man is not a Christian, then?
21378Tired? 21378 To Devonshire, then-- to Torquay?"
21378To Turkey?
21378To death, Burne?
21378To see these?
21378Try and escape, effendi?
21378Use them, sir? 21378 Was it the night breeze or some bird?"
21378We, sir?
21378Well, Lawrence,said the professor anxiously,"how do you feel?"
21378Well, Yussuf,said Mr Preston anxiously;"what does he say?
21378Well, Yussuf,said the professor,"what is to be done?"
21378Well, what do they say now?
21378Well, what is it?
21378Well, what is it?
21378Well, when one is in Cyprus, one must act like a Cypriote, eh, Lawrence, my lad? 21378 Well, where is it?
21378Well, who minds a bit of fog, so long as he is well?
21378Well, whoever said you did, man?
21378Well, why did n''t you?
21378Well,said the professor,"what next-- a good breakfast, and then start?"
21378Well?
21378Well?
21378Well?
21378What about?
21378What are these people, then?
21378What are you doing?
21378What are you going to do, Yussuf?
21378What are you going to do, Yussuf?
21378What are you going to show us to- day, Yussuf?
21378What are you thinking, Yussuf?
21378What can I do, excellency, but try to keep you out of danger?
21378What could it be?
21378What do you ask us to do, then?
21378What do you mean, my good fellow?
21378What do you mean?
21378What do you mean?
21378What do you mean?
21378What do you mean?
21378What do you propose doing, then?
21378What do you say now? 21378 What do you say, Lawrence, my boy?
21378What do you say, Lawrence?
21378What do you say, Lawrence?
21378What do you say, professor?
21378What do you think, sir?
21378What does he say, Yussuf?
21378What does he say, Yussuf?
21378What for?
21378What have you found?
21378What is absurd?
21378What is he doing?
21378What is he whispering to you, Master Lawrence?
21378What is it then-- a cistern? 21378 What is it-- more poison?"
21378What is it? 21378 What is it?"
21378What is it?
21378What is it?
21378What is it?
21378What is to be done now?
21378What is to be done, Yussuf?
21378What is to be done, Yussuf?
21378What is to be done, Yussuf?
21378What shall we do, Yussuf?
21378What shall we do, then?
21378What then, ma''am?--what then?
21378What will you do?
21378What''s that?
21378What''s the good of telling a man to take care when he is down?
21378What, Mr Burne?
21378What, and kill us, Yussuf?
21378What, and ruin ourselves?
21378What, in those caves?
21378What, is there to be a fight?
21378What, the guide?
21378What, then?
21378What-- the presence of those trees?
21378What? 21378 What?"
21378What?
21378What_ is_ the matter, Mr Burne?
21378When are you going to try, then?
21378When do we go, then?
21378When?
21378Where are we going?
21378Where can we get arms?
21378Where is it?
21378Where would you get your police, Burne? 21378 Where?"
21378Which I did n''t mean any harm, sir; but would n''t it be better to let the poor boy die in peace, instead of worrying him to keep on taking physic?
21378Which stones do you want to look at?
21378Why do n''t you speak? 21378 Why not call the man back and offer him two- thirds of his price?"
21378Why not push a nice large brass cannon before us in a wheel- barrow?
21378Why not, sir?
21378Why should you, effendi?
21378Why, Lawrence, my boy, I did not know you were so ill."Ill? 21378 Why, it ca n''t be a bear, is it?"
21378Why, my dear boy,cried Mr Preston,"can you not see that you keep on overtasking yourself?
21378Why, not?
21378Why, where are they?
21378Why, you''re not tired of the journey already, Mr Burne?
21378Why? 21378 Why?"
21378Why?
21378Wild idea, ma''am?
21378Will not the effendi lie down and take his rest now?
21378Will you allow us to assist you into my private room, sir?
21378Will you be quiet, Charley?
21378Will your excellency explain?
21378Winter? 21378 Winter?"
21378With mountains and valleys and flowers?
21378Would he go with us?
21378Would you like a doctor fetched?
21378Yes, but how?
21378Yonder, just to the left of that patch of bushes where the stone looks grey?
21378You are not going to buy one of these, are you, Mr Burne?
21378You are satisfied, then?
21378You do n''t suppose that I am going to stand still and not make any effort to help the boy, do you, Preston? 21378 You do not feel nervous about that, do you, Burne?"
21378You do not feel so well?
21378You feel better now?
21378You have a pistol?
21378You have quite cleared the passage, then?
21378You have, Yussuf? 21378 You like it then?"
21378You must what?
21378You remember what you said at Ansina?
21378You think we shall get into trouble, then?
21378You think, then, that they will come back?
21378You will lie down for an hour, Lawrence, eh?
21378You will take me with you?
21378You will wait here, will you not, Burne?
21378You, madam?
21378You? 21378 Your excellency will condescend to wear my fez?"
21378Your excellency''s back?
21378Your ransom, madam?
21378Yussuf? 21378 A cave, of course?
21378And had Yussuf gone and left him?"
21378And how are you, Mr Grange?
21378And is Turkey still like this?
21378And what fine horns?"
21378Anyone shot?"
21378Anything else?"
21378Are they going to starve us?"
21378Are we dogs that they should do this thing?"
21378Are you Professor Preston?"
21378Are you awake now?"
21378Are you going to climb up?"
21378Are you going to send for the money?"
21378Are you ill?"
21378Are you suspicious of these people?"
21378Asia Minor, did n''t you say, Mr Preston?"
21378Boy seems to be all right, do n''t he?"
21378But I say, is n''t it turning very cold?"
21378But come, what is to be done?"
21378But how did you come?"
21378But is there nothing to see to- day?"
21378But must I mount that animal again?
21378But now, doctor, what do you really think about the poor dear?
21378But what will you?--is it always summer and sunshine everywhere?
21378But you know the difference between a snake and a lizard?"
21378Ca n''t you see that I am an Englishman, sir, one who is never beaten, and never gives up?
21378Can I do anything more for you?"
21378Can the brutes speak English?"
21378Can the young effendi walk so far?"
21378Can we get back unseen?"
21378Can you follow Yussuf''s example?"
21378Can you lift it?"
21378Can you walk, Hamed?"
21378Did I blow my nose so loudly?"
21378Did n''t I nurse him when he was a baby, and did n''t his poor mother beg of me to always look after him?
21378Did n''t I speak plainly?
21378Did n''t the professor, my friend here, say it was a good gun?"
21378Did n''t they shoot at me?"
21378Did you hear his name?"
21378Did you never see an English gentleman meet with an accident before?
21378Did you?"
21378Do n''t you think we ought to call both in, and let them have a consultation?"
21378Do you mean to tell me that I am expected to ride a horse along a dangerous mountain road?
21378Do you suppose I do n''t understand?
21378Do you suppose I want to shoot somebody?"
21378Do you take me for a Greek or a Turk, or a heretic?
21378Do you think that at my time of life I am going to turn butcher and carve folks with a sword, or drill holes through them with bullets?"
21378Do you think you are the only man in England who wants a holiday?"
21378Do you want my coat and boots to dress up your Guy Fawkes with?
21378Eh, Lawrence, what do you say?"
21378Eh, what are you laughing at, sir?"
21378Feared what?"
21378Getting better?
21378Had n''t we better get ready at once?"
21378Hallo, young Lawrence, I''ve often thought about you; how are you?
21378Hang it, sir, do you think a man at my time of life can be bumped down upon the floor like that without being hurt?"
21378Have I got all?"
21378Have a pinch, my dear sir?"
21378Have you brought a light?"
21378Have you brought the money?"
21378He could n''t have been, could he, or he would n''t have fought for us as he did at first, and then shot that scoundrel yonder?
21378Here, I say, what am I to do?"
21378Here, Yussuf, how much farther is it?"
21378Here, Yussuf, what does this mean?"
21378Here, what are those fellows chattering about?"
21378Here, what was the use of our buying weapons of war, if we are not going to use them?"
21378How am I to get down?"
21378How do they get out of this?
21378How do you feel?
21378How do you know that is a poisonous snake, Yussuf?"
21378How do, Mr Burne?
21378How do, Preston?
21378How does it look, eh?"
21378How is the book getting on, sir?"
21378How long shall you be gone, sir?"
21378How many have you found, Preston?"
21378Humph; who''d think that Smyrna was such a dirty, shabby place, to look at it from here?"
21378I am bitten by one of those horrible vipers, am I not?"
21378I am ready to trust in your sincerity; will you not trust in mine?"
21378I do n''t see why I should n''t; do you, Lawrence?"
21378I do n''t think we need set a watch here, eh, Yussuf?"
21378I knew this country this morning, but how can I know it now?
21378I say, Preston, do you hear how this fellow is talking to me?"
21378I say, how do you like playing at soldiers?"
21378I say, what had we better do?"
21378I?
21378If you take one here, as the fellow said, where are you?
21378In town?"
21378Is it time?"
21378Is my wife ill?"
21378Is n''t it a shame?"
21378Is that all?"
21378Is the gun loaded, sir?"
21378Is this a desolate island, and are we going to be so many Robinson Crusoes for the rest of our days?"
21378It is an old cemetery, a place of tombs-- eh, Preston?"
21378Known what, man?"
21378Lawrence, boy, are you there?"
21378Lawrence, my boy, would you like to go to Brighton or Hastings, or the Isle of Wight?"
21378Loaded?"
21378Look here, young man; are you a fly, or a bird, or a black beetle?"
21378Lovely, eh, Lawrence?"
21378Mind, Lawrence, my lad; what have you there?"
21378Mr Preston, we shall stay here-- shall we not?"
21378Mrs Dunn, can I not see my old friend''s son?"
21378My dear Burne, did you not know that you made that noise?"
21378My dear sir, are you dreaming?"
21378Nor in their having a faithful experienced Mussulman guide, who fought for them and strove his very best to get them out of their troubles, eh, Burne?
21378Not execution yet from his manner?"
21378Not going to carry it away I suppose?"
21378Not letters surely?"
21378Now, Burne, are you strung up?"
21378Now, Preston, I suppose we must each have one of these long choppers?"
21378Now, Yussuf, what do you say to that, sir, eh?"
21378Now, from what gardens can he have escaped?"
21378One moment, though; these Greeks-- they will not rob us and throw us overboard-- eh?"
21378Poisonous or not poisonous?
21378Preston effendi, it is a terrible increase of the risk, but you will take the lady?"
21378Raised that echo?
21378Robbers?"
21378Safe?"
21378Shall I lead?"
21378Shall I see if I can get him to go?"
21378Shall we go any farther?"
21378Suppose he robs us and then runs away to Tadmor in the wilderness, or some other outlandish place, what can we do?
21378Suppose that we could force our way out through that snow, how are we to find the buried path with a precipice of a thousand feet below?
21378Take a pinch?
21378The Asia Minor Major Marble Quarry Company-- eh, Preston?"
21378The brute must have crawled up my leg and-- I say, Yussuf, am I a dead man?"
21378The question is, What are we to do-- fight or give up?"
21378Then what was this which approached?
21378Then, turning to Yussuf--"What is the nearest place to where we are now?"
21378There, what do you say to that?"
21378Think so?
21378This mountain air, too, gives one an appetite-- eh, Lawrence?"
21378We have plenty of time, have we not?"
21378Weak?
21378Well, Yussuf, what do they say?"
21378Well, where are we?
21378Were they to cling there for an hour-- two hours, and then slip off into the sea?
21378What about the asps?"
21378What am I to do?
21378What are we to do?
21378What are you laughing at, sir?"
21378What are you staring at?
21378What did Mr Burne say about the poor fellow going to Madeira or the south of France?"
21378What did we come for?
21378What do you feel?"
21378What do you know about guns?"
21378What do you mean?"
21378What do you say to burying the hatchet?"
21378What do you say, Lawrence?"
21378What do you say, Lawrence?"
21378What do you say?"
21378What do you think it is?"
21378What do you think, Lawrence?"
21378What for?"
21378What had we better do-- fight or give up?"
21378What have you been doing?
21378What is it, Yussuf?"
21378What is it?
21378What is it?"
21378What is to be done?"
21378What shall we do?"
21378What should he do then-- sacrifice himself?
21378What should he do-- fire at them or over them, and in the confusion make a dash for the little camp?
21378What state, sir?
21378What time is it?"
21378What was he to do?
21378What was the place-- a tomb?
21378What was to be the end of it all?
21378What wild beast was it likely to be?
21378What''s to become of me?"
21378What, when I blew my nose, or when I took snuff?"
21378What?
21378What?
21378Where are you all?"
21378Where did I hear that word?"
21378Where is Yussuf?"
21378Where were they being borne?
21378Where''s your tackle?"
21378Who won, Preston?"
21378Why do n''t you pull aside the rug?"
21378Why go down to a cabin full of sick people, when I am enjoying the fresh air, and am quite well?"
21378Why?"
21378Will they come back?"
21378Will you accept it, my boy, as a present?"
21378Will you go to them and ask what they want with us?"
21378Will you please to mount, sir?"
21378Would it not be better if the young effendi stayed below?
21378Would you go through all those wearinesses and risks again if I asked you?"
21378Yes, of course; what is it?"
21378You are decided, then, to take him?"
21378You are going to sleep, I suppose?"
21378You are not frightened?"
21378You do not wish to pass the winter here, Lawrence effendi?"
21378You great stupids, what are you staring at?
21378You know what it is, I suppose?"
21378You said Master Lawrence was to be kept quiet, sir?"
21378You''re not going to let him slip through your fingers?"
21378Yussuf paused for a few minutes and then said slowly, as if the question had just been asked:"How do we know that the village is near at hand?"
21378an eagle''s nest?"
21378and then come home thinking he has done a good work, eh, Mr Landlord?"
21378and whom would you get to serve your summons if you could procure one?"
21378anyone killed?
21378anyone killed?"
21378asked Mr Burne;"an hour or two?"
21378but are they such savages as this-- so near to the more civilised places of the East?"
21378cried Mr Burne fiercely--"hurt?
21378cried Mrs Chumley excitedly;"are we to be kept closer prisoners?"
21378cried the lawyer again, as the professor came and stood talking to Lawrence;"had you not better go down?"
21378cried the lawyer;"what did I say?"
21378cried the professor, rushing to him,"are you much hurt?"
21378do n''t you think he was in league with the murderous rascals?"
21378exclaimed Lawrence sharply,"when you have come on purpose to help me get strong again?
21378exclaimed the lady,"what then?"
21378going home, my dear lad?"
21378he cried to the dealer, who was most attentive;"what have you to say for yourself?
21378he exclaimed;"what''s the matter?"
21378in connection with postal arrangements, and steam, and telegraphs?"
21378in quantities like this?"
21378is he-- one of the idiot giaours who waste their time in seeing old stones and imitate them upon paper?"
21378is it so serious as that?"
21378is it?"
21378is this real, or is it a cock- and- bull story told in a book?"
21378ready for plenty of adventure?"
21378said Lawrence, after a few minutes''silence,"or do I feel it because I am weak with being ill so long?"
21378said Lawrence;"a tomb?"
21378said Mr Burne shortly;"what pay?"
21378said Mr Burne testily,"how could he?"
21378said Mr Burne,"we are going down from the mountain, and we shall leave it behind, shall we not?"
21378said Mr Preston, adjusting his glass;"what do you make of it now?"
21378said Yussuf decidedly; and then after a pause,"Ready?"
21378said the professor,"What of that?
21378that''s the way, is it?"
21378the lawyer, sir?
21378to look like a man on guard?"
21378were you doing it again?"
21378what are you doing?"
21378what do you know about human nature?"
21378what do you mean?"
21378what is that?"
21378what treasure?"
21378what''s that?"
21378when that village is so near at hand?"
21378where are the police?"
21378where are you?"
21378why would you insist upon coming to this wretched land?"
21378you grand Turk, what do you say about this boy?
21378you''re there, are you?"