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
42958Did it rain ony wi''ye?
42958Look,he said to me;"can there be any music in these hands?"
42958Now, in all that long coastline what to write about?
37187Are you near me?
37187Why are you gazing at my companion?
37187[ 14] I must now conclude this account of my visit to Maghera, but may I mention that farther north there are other interesting antiquities? 37187 At Tobermore those who bring in the rushes ask at the door,May St. Bridget come in?"
37187Can we identify any of these with the prehistoric races of the British Isles and of Europe?
37187Did the thorn- bush hide the entrance to the subterranean dwelling?
37187Do these represent a people who dyed themselves with red ochre, or who simply went naked?
37187Do you believe in drames?
37187Does not this point to the Irish Danes being a kindred race to the Picts?
37187Goll looked at the child, and thought, if that is the size of Finn''s infant, what must Finn himself be?
37187He replied by the question,"Do you adore and love the Son of God?"
37187How long did these primitive people continue to exist in Ireland and in Switzerland?
37187How long did these rude tribes survive?
37187How many centuries did he take to learn the lesson?
37187In his papers,"Who built the British Stone Circles?
37187In the fairies who dress in green may we not have a tradition of people who stained themselves with woad or some other plant?
37187Would I go to look for it?
13157And what are you learning there?
1315731 Killing and maiming cattle 83 It may be asked, why did not the Ulster members call the attention of Parliament to this state of things?
13157And even granting for the sake of argument that this is wrong, is it fair to call it bribery?
13157And if they do-- what then?
13157And would a Roman Catholic Parliament and nation care to remain subject to a King of England whose title depended on his being a Protestant?
13157But the question is, was Wolfe Tone right when he said that these were the only two possibilities; or is there a third one, and if so, what?
13157But what was the result?
13157Can Irish Protestants be accused of bigotry when they contend that these writers mean what they say?
13157Can it be wondered that Elizabeth conceived the idea of imitating her sister''s policy and forming a"plantation"in the North?
13157If other countries acted in a similar manner, how could the grievances of bygone centuries ever be forgotten?
13157If that is so, what right has one man to a large farm when there are hundreds of others in a neighbouring town who have no land at all?
13157In fact, how can a law be a law unless it is enforced?
13157It may be asked, why did the Irish Parliament do nothing to stay this national ruin?
13157Might not the mass of the people, whose native customs had been well nigh crushed out by civil wars, be persuaded to_ adopt_ the law of England?
13157Now, if compensation is bribery, who was bribed?
13157Proofreaders IS ULSTER RIGHT?
13157The simple answer is, How could they do so?
13157What influence for good could such a church have had upon the mass of the people?
13157What is the use of having new land laws?
13157What those means were, was explained by Gladstone himself:--"What is meant by boycotting?
13157What would be said in England if a Tory landlord evicted a cottager for working for a Radical farmer?
15277Did you ever,asked Lord Salisbury on a remembered occasion,"have a boil on your neck?"
15277Is he the sort of man that would be likely to be breaking windows?
15277Is he the sort of man that you would expect to find at the head of a mob shouting,''To Hell with the Pope''?
15277Well, but,said the Judge,"what is the nature of your objection?
15277What sort of man,asked the counsel,"would you say Jamie Williamson is?"
15277)_ Now, as my Solicitor, how do you advise me to deal with this difficulty?
15277And if"Ulster"does fight after all?
15277And the outcome?
15277Are we to be denied the hope that fir, and spruce, and Austrian pine may conceivably be lifted out of the plane of Party politics?
15277As First Lord of the Treasury, Lord Chamberlain, Attorney- General, Chancellor of the Exchequer, Privy Purse, or Private Secretary?
15277Ask your neighbour offhand at a dinner in Dublin:"What is so- and- so, by the way?"
15277But how are we to do it?
15277But is not the Kingdom of Heaven taken by violence?
15277But is"sentiment"to be ignored in the fixing of constitutions?
15277But was it a failure of the English intellect or a lapse of the English will?
15277But where, asks the triumphant critic not quite ingenuously, is the line to be drawn between local and Imperial affairs?
15277But whom does it aggrieve?
15277But why recall all this"dead history"?
15277But will they be solved by a grapple between the Orange Lodges and the Ancient Order of Hibernians?
15277Can Irish- grown wool be improved up to the fineness of the Australian article?
15277Did she obtain free trade in coal?
15277Do you object to the panel or to the array?"
15277Does Protestantism demand that the constitutions of the Dominion and the Province respectively shall be withdrawn?
15277Does anybody think that this attitude will be at all modified by recent occurrences at Westminster?
15277Henley used to say)?
15277How are these wants to be supplied but by blending more closely with Ireland the industry and capital of Great Britain?"
15277How do you clean a slate except by liquidating the debts of which it keeps the record?
15277How is this to be done?
15277How, one may well ask, are we to itemise the retail iniquities of a system of government which is itself a wholesale iniquity?
15277If we were the higher race why did we not put them out?
15277In which of my capacities?
15277Is it necessary to ask who won?
15277Is it necessary to trace step by step the complete surrender of the last ditchers of those days?
15277Is the decline in the area under flax to be applauded or deplored?
15277Is there no way out of a situation so troublesome and humiliating?
15277Is this state of things immutable?
15277Is this to be found in the Westminster Assembly, sometimes loosely styled the"Imperial Parliament"?
15277Now, then, as First Lord of the Treasury?
15277That I am a person I know; but what is a person?
15277That Ireland is a nation I know; but what is a nation?
15277That is your advice?
15277The_ post hoc_ may be taken as established; was it a_ propter hoc_?
15277Very well, people say, what are you going to do with Home Rule when you get it?
15277Was the Union the cause as well as the antecedent of this decay?
15277What are the English going to do with Home Rule when they get it?
15277What does it all come to?
15277What does it matter whether my ancestors murdered yours or not?
15277What does it matter whether yours were the saints and men of letters and mine the savages, or whether the boot was on the other leg?
15277What is it after all but"sentiment,"he inquires, that prevents a man from killing his grandmother in time of hunger?
15277What is it that she now claims, and on what grounds?
15277What of it?
15277What other interpretation is possible?
15277What sort of a mind, then, is the English mind?
15277What then are the conditions of success?
15277What will German or Japanese or American politics be like in 1920?
15277What will Irish politics be like in, say, 1920?
15277When we attempt improvement of both will"Ulster"fight?
15277Who forgets the memorable scene between him and Ko- Ko, the Lord High Executioner, on an occasion of supreme importance?
15277Why on earth do n''t you get up, and skip about like me?"
15277Why should the augury fail?
15277Why should we be concerned?
15277Why then are they not Home Rulers?
15277Why?
15277Will Great Britain decide wisely in the choice to which she is now put?
15277Will the shipbuilders, the spinners, and the weavers close down their works in order to patronise Sir Edward Carson''s performance on a pop- gun?
15277Will"Ulster"fight against an effort to check the mischief?
15277Will"Ulster"fight against such an attempt to increase its prosperity?
15277You are certainly in love; suppose you were suddenly asked"to state the case"for love?
15277You are probably civilised; suppose you were suddenly asked"to state the case for civilisation"?
14326Are all these people landlords?
14326Is Sir Edward on board?
14326WHAT ANSWER FROM THE NORTH?
14326What matter if they would,was the reply,"would n''t we let on that we wo n''t have it?
14326Where on the Earth was the like of it done In the gaze of the sun? 14326 And let it be known and blazoned wide That this is the wage the faithful earn: Did she uphold us when others defied? 14326 Are Englishmen and Scotchmen prepared to fasten it upon them by military force? 14326 Are you willing to back me to the finish in this undertaking? 14326 But has there ever been arebellion"the object of which was to maintain the_ status quo_?
14326But he continued, without budging from the gangway,"Och aye, we''re getting in plenty; but my God, did n''t Mrs. Blank o''Dungannon bate all?
14326But if success is not the test, what is?
14326But was eloquent persuasion really required at such a moment to still the voice of faction in the British House of Commons?
14326But what majority?
14326But, had not that necessity now arisen?
14326CHAPTER VII"WHAT ANSWER FROM THE NORTH?"
14326CHAPTER XII WAS RESISTANCE JUSTIFIABLE?
14326Could they have been snatched from their homes and haled to London, what fate would have befallen them?
14326Did ye hear about her?"
14326Had she been captured by a destroyer from Pembroke, or overhauled, pirate as she was without papers, by Customs officials from Rosslare?
14326Had the Government any policy in regard to Ulster?
14326Had the War Office made up its mind what to do with General Gough and the other cavalry officers when they arrived in London?
14326Had the time come when they ought to put forward in Parliament an alternative policy to the absolute rejection of the Bill?
14326Had they considered how they could deal with the threatened resistance?
14326How are you going to overcome that resistance?
14326Is it the aim of the men who resist?
14326Is the Treaty to be construed as Britain pleases, and always to the prejudice of the weaker side?
14326No?
14326Smith, Walter Long, and Bonar Law?
14326Surely this can not be the meaning of America''s message to mankind glowing from the pen of her illustrious President?
14326The hour was too late: could they not wait till daylight?
14326WAS RESISTANCE JUSTIFIABLE?
14326Was it likely, he asked, to do more than was now offered by the Government?
14326Was the day at last approaching when Lord Randolph Churchill''s exhortation must be obeyed?
14326Well, then, what was their authority?
14326What answer from the North?
14326What is a recompense fair and meet?
14326What is their reward?
14326What was the reason?
14326Where is your car?
14326Where there was no law establishing military service for Ireland, what"alteration or regulation"respecting such a law can legally bind?
14326Where, then, lies the basis of the claim that they can be forced to take them up for the defence of others?
14326Why did you not say so at once?
14326exclaimed Crawford,"is Sir Edward there?
14326had made the same supreme sacrifice?
14326where her justification for armed revolt?''"
14326ye never heard o''Mrs. Blank o''Dungannon?
31044And can you account for them?
31044And does Robbie never play it?
31044And we feel for him, do n''t we Grand- da?
31044And what might that be?
31044And what would that be?
31044And who took her?
31044And you?
31044Are n''t you a very poor farmer?
31044Are ye coortin''any this weather Mr. Taylor?
31044Are you there Robbie?
31044Are you there ma''am?
31044Aye?
31044Aye?
31044Ballykelly?
31044Beggarman, did ye say?
31044But she''s in a good way o''doin''I suppose?
31044Can ye get us a drop o''tay?
31044Could you oblige me with a receipt ma''am?
31044D''ye hear yon?
31044D''ye see what I mane?
31044D''ye tell me?
31044D''ye think I''m a Rockyfellow?
31044D''you hear me Robbie?
31044D''you think my house is a home for all the dirt and scum of the country side?
31044Did ye nivir hear tell of Smith, Hunter, and Fargison?
31044Did you ivir hear tell of a man who was drunk wi''out drinkin''?
31044Do ye Robbie?
31044Do ye think my son bes only an ould ba cryin''for a toy?
31044Do you say so, Mrs. Granahan?
31044Forget you, Jane?
31044God bless me, d''you say so mister?
31044Ha''e ye anyone in your eye yet?
31044Ha''e you that stamp Mr. Taylor?
31044Have you finished granda?
31044He left it here then?
31044How did we like the speech you gave on temperance, d''ye say?
31044How did ye take to it yourself, Mr. Granahan?
31044How dy''e do, Mr. Graeme?
31044How much dy''e want?
31044How''s the crame market?
31044I suppose now there were some nice young weemin there-- eh Mr. Taylor?
31044I suppose ye heerd all about him givin''up the fiddle playin''?
31044I suppose ye know I come o''good family, Mr. Granahan?
31044I suppose you are all doing well here Mrs. Granahan?
31044I suppose you''ve heard about Robbie?
31044I wonner what he wanted?
31044I wonner when father will be goin''to see anyone about me?
31044I wunner what his mother would say to that?
31044If you took to that fiddle and went away, would you forget me soon?
31044Is that the fiddle he was telling me about, I wonder?
31044Is that the tramp''s fiddle, Mrs. Granahan?
31044Is that the whole of them now Ellen?
31044Is your daughter wi''you Mr. Graeme?
31044Is your mother out Ellen?
31044It was fine of Robbie was n''t it?
31044John Smith of Ballykelly?
31044Keepin''it in wi''one hand were you?
31044Look Robbie if I said it was whispering you the truth, what would you say?
31044McKillop?
31044Ne''st ce pas, Monsieur?
31044Nothin''new with you I suppose?
31044Oh indeed now?
31044Ould weemin''?
31044Perhaps he could have given him a lift, eh Mr. Taylor?
31044Samuel James do ye remember the time that ould tramp was playin''on this fiddle, as he went out that day, down the loney?
31044So Mr. Graeme is comin''over here to settle matters with father to- day do you say?
31044So you''re at it again, are you?
31044The more public houses the less drinkin''did he say?
31044Was it in a public house ye met him?
31044We did, I think, did n''t we?
31044Well how''s the corn doin''?
31044Well was n''t Robbie John at home?
31044Well, how did the fair go off?
31044Well, son; what about the cattle?
31044Well?
31044Well?
31044Well?
31044Were you there yisterday forenoon?
31044What ailed him he could n''t help ye?
31044What ailed you, you did n''t call?
31044What did ye disagree wi''in the discoorse?
31044What does it say to you?
31044What good will it ever do ye?
31044What harm does it do you or me?
31044What is it all about?
31044What is it?
31044What makes them hang it there to temp''me?
31044What makes you think that?
31044What would you do?
31044What''s happened?
31044What''s put all that into your wee head?
31044When he might ha''been lookin after the cattle or the pigs or somethin else, where is he?
31044Where are you going?
31044Where are you going?
31044Where else?
31044Where now?
31044Where''s that fiddle of yours Robbie John?
31044Where''s the old man?
31044Who did you say?
31044Who else did you see?
31044Who flattered him and led him on?
31044Who kep''the fiddle hangin''there and would let no one take it down, a continuin''temptation till him?
31044Who left her home?
31044Who was it left ye home from John Graeme''s temperance lecture?
31044Who was with her?
31044Who''s that father has got with him Samuel James?
31044Who''s that fiddlin''?
31044Who''s the manager of the creamery up beyont?
31044Who?
31044Why d''ye ask?
31044Why do n''t you give up playin''that fiddle of yours and turn your hand to honest work?
31044Why?
31044Why?
31044Why?
31044William John Granahan d''ye think this is a horse fair?
31044Woman dear would you ha''e me go and come to market wi''out a ha''penny in my pocket?
31044Would three shillin''no''do?
31044Would two hunnert no''do?
31044Ye bought it out o''coorse?
31044Yon cratur?
31044You do n''t seem as gay hearted as I would expect, does he Mr. Taylor?
31044You followed me then?
31044You ha''e nobody but your daughter I suppose?
31044You want to rob me of me one poun''do ye?
31044You were at the lecture last Monday?
31044You what?
31044You would n''t get your arm round her so easy then; would he Grand- da?
31044You''ll not forget me Da?
31044[ He pauses and fumbles for his pipe,& c.] Is''nt that a fiddle I''m hearing?
31044or half a crown?
31044or two shillin''?
31044will you?
14391What mountain is it yonder?
14391''"All the most vigorous and finest(?)
14391''"In what direction?"
14391''"Is it they who say,"said Cuchulainn,"that there are not more of the Ulstermen alive than they have slain of them?"
14391''"Is my friend Conchobar in this battlefield?"
14391''"Tell me,"said Conchobar to him,"why you do not sleep?"
14391''"What advantage to you to deceive me, wild boy?"
14391''"What ails you at them now?"
14391''"What are those cattle yonder so active?"
14391''"What is your name?"
14391''"What plain is that over there?"
14391''"What, is it not you advised it?"
14391''"Which would the Ulstermen think best,"said Cuchulainn,"to bring them dead or alive?"
14391''"Which would the Ulstermen think best,"said Cuchulainn,"to have them dead or alive?"
14391''"Who is it who is there?"
14391''"Why have you come into the battlefield,"said Conchobar,"that you may swoon there?"
14391''"Why have you thrown the stone, O boy?"
14391''"Why were the boys not bound to protect you?"
14391''A chariot like a huge royal fort, with its yolcs strong golden, with its great panel(?)
14391''A man in a battle- girdle(?
14391''A pity for thee to fall on the field of battle, thick[ with slain?
14391''And I think it better that weariness or cowardice be found with you, because of friendship beyond my own men(?).
14391''And if I am then?''
14391''And now?''
14391''And you?''
14391''Another company has come there to the hill to Slemon Midi,''said Mac Roth,''which is not fewer than a warlike cantred(?).
14391''Are the heads yonder from our people?''
14391''Are you Cuchulainn?''
14391''Are you not able to protect me from him?''
14391''Do you hear your new son- in- law greeting you?''
14391''Fedelm the prophetess, how seest thou our host?''
14391''Fedelm the prophetess, how seest thou our host?''
14391''Fedelm the prophetess, how seest thou our host?''
14391''Has a bright cloud come over the sun yet?''
14391''Have you an idea?''
14391''Have you his head, O Fergus?''
14391''Have you news?''
14391''Have you the inspiration(?)
14391''He has a yellow head of hair, and a linen emblem round it; a club of fury(?)
14391''He is half of a combat truly,''said he,''who so comes there; he is a fence(?)
14391''He is the fierce glow of wrath, he is a shaft(?)
14391''He is veteran of his land(?
14391''He was---- of valour and of prowess, in sooth,''said Fergus;''he was of---- pride(?)
14391''He will be whole who has brought it(?
14391''Help me,[ Note: Spoken by Fergus?]
14391''How am I now with the host?''
14391''How do the lads of Ulster fight the battle?''
14391''How do you see Cuchulainn?''
14391''How is it to be done then?''
14391''How long have I been in this sleep now, O warrior?''
14391''I have promised it''''Take back(?)
14391''I see a fair man who will make play With a number of wounds(?)
14391''I see,''said he,''the chariot broad above, fine, of white crystal, with a yoke of gold with----(?
14391''I think it long,''said Mac Roth,''to be recounting all that I have seen, but I have come meanwhile(?)
14391''In what manner does it please you to go to meet Medb to- morrow, O Cuchulainn?''
14391''Is it he who is hardest to deal with among the Ulstermen?''
14391''Is not the king''s host at the will of him, Unless it breaks fair play?
14391''Is that what he is doing?''
14391''Is there anything else then?''
14391''Is there no clearer description?''
14391''It is ploughland(?)
14391''Let us put a hero to hunt(?)
14391''Look, my lad,''said Fer Diad;''is Cuchulainn on the ford?''
14391''Nevertheless we have profited by(?)
14391''Not he,''said Fergus;''he would not have come over the border of the country without thirty chariots two- pointed(?)
14391''Not so(?)
14391''O friend Lugaid, do the hosts fear me?''
14391''One who fears you not(?)
14391''Say will you pay for this man on the morrow?''
14391''Sleep a little, O Cuchulainn,''said the warrior;''your heavy swoon(?)
14391''Smite the hills across them and the champions(?)
14391''So?''
14391''The dark churl should not have made fight,''said Fergus,''against the great Hound whom he could not contend with(?).''
14391''The hill is named Fithi(?)
14391''The man of expeditions will come Who will defend(?)
14391''The men have almost worn me out By reason of the number of single combats; I can not work the slaughter(?)
14391''Then Cathbad came to them, and said:"Has the boy taken arms?"
14391''This gift is overpowering(?
14391''This time,''said Cuchulainn,''will you yield and accept your life?''
14391''Though it were that that he should boast, the feat that I have done before him, it was no more shame to me,''(?)
14391''Was it Celtchar Mac Uithidir?''
14391''Was it Eogan Mac Durtacht?''
14391''What are you doing here?''
14391''What are you looking at?''
14391''What are you waiting for here?''
14391''What deed is that?''
14391''What indeed?''
14391''What is it yonder, O Fergus?''
14391''What is the matter with you?''
14391''What is the matter?''
14391''What is to be done to them?''
14391''What is your name?''
14391''What kind of chariot then?''
14391''What kind of man is there?''
14391''What kind of man,''said Ailill,''is this Hound of whom we have heard among the Ulstermen?
14391''What kind of man?''
14391''What man have you for the ford to- morrow?''
14391''What man is it yonder, O Fergus?''
14391''What shall I do, O warriors?''
14391''What word is this, O Medb?''
14391''What would you say to him?''
14391''What, O lad, are you not fit to keep watch and ward for me?''
14391''When they had all come to the feast, Culann said to Conchobar:"Do you expect any one to follow you?"
14391''Whence are you?''
14391''Whence do you come?''
14391''Whence have you brought the cattle?''
14391''Where are their cow- herds?''
14391''Where is Cuchulainn?''
14391''Where is the Bull?''
14391''Where is the madman''s head?''
14391''Where is your master?''
14391''Where then is Cuchulainn?''
14391''Which of the men of Ireland speaks thus to me?''
14391''Which of the warriors of the king is that?''
14391''Whither will you send,''said Ailill,''to seek that man to meet Cuchulainn?''
14391''Who are those, O Fergus?''
14391''Who are you at all?''
14391''Who are you?''
14391''Who carries them off?
14391''Who has boasted that?''
14391''Who has come upon them?''
14391''Who has sung that?''
14391''Who has sung this?''
14391''Who is it yonder, O Fergus?''
14391''Who is that, O Fergus?''
14391''Who is that, O Fergus?''
14391''Who is that, O Fergus?''
14391''Who is that, O Fergus?''
14391''Who is that, O Fergus?''
14391''Who is that, O Fergus?''
14391''Who is that, O Fergus?''
14391''Who of the Ulstermen holds the shield?''
14391''Who shall go for that?''
14391''Who strikes the three strong blows, great and distant?''
14391''Who takes them, who steals them, who carries them off?''
14391''Whom shall I smite?''
14391''Whose man are you?''
14391''Why do you blame the men?''
14391''Why else have you come to me?''
14391''Why should we not go against Cuchulainn?''
14391''Will it cause injury to the host, If they go a journey from it?
14391''will you acknowledge your saving?'']
14391(?)
14391), about him; a brooch of white silver therein; a black shield with a boss of bronze on it; a spear, covered with eyes, with----(?
14391), dry- framed(?
14391), dry- framed(?
14391), feat- high, scythed, sword- fair(?
14391), feat- high, straight- shouldered(?
14391), feat- high, sword- fair(?
14391), horses will be pressed(?
14391), in his hand; a shirt, braided(?
14391), of a champion, on two horses, swift, stout(?
14391), of a champion, on which there would be room for seven arms fit for a lord(?).
14391), well- yoked(?
14391), with great panels of copper, with shafts of bronze, with tyres of white metal, with its body thin- framed(?)
14391), with its nails of sharpness that were on shafts and thongs and cross- pieces and ropes(?)
14391),----(?).
14391); the tunic falling(?)
14391---- as a bee would move to and fro on a day of beauty(?).''
14391... One of the two horses is supple(?
14391...''Does Ailill sleep now?''
14391A beard curly, forked, on him, so that it reached over the soft lower part of his soft shirt, so that it would shelter(?)
14391A black shield with a hard boss of white metal; a five pointed spear in his hand; a forked(?)
14391A spear with wings(?
14391After that,''Why have you come, O my friend, O Fergus?''
14391Ailill and Medb perceived it; it was then Medb said:''O Fergus, this is strange, What kind of way do we go?
14391Ailill asked:''Is it Conchobar who has done this?''
14391And he put it in the hands of the druids; and Fergus sang this song:''Here is a withe, what does the withe declare to us?
14391And this is the agreement,''said Fergus:''that the ford on which takes place(?)
14391As regards the charioteer and Cuchulainn:''What shall you do to- night?''
14391But for your protection, it would have been your entrails drawn(?)
14391But their herd took their Bull from them, and they drove him across into a narrow gap with their spear- shafts on their shields(?).
14391Conchobar said,"Who has instructed you?"
14391Cuchulainn guards himself so that his skin or his----(?)
14391Cur was plying his weapons against him in a fence(?)
14391Docha Mac Magach went with Mane Andoe: Dubthach Doeltenga of Ulster came with Fiacha Fialdana from Imraith(?).
14391Fergus replied:''O Medb, what troubles you?
14391Few or many?
14391Fiacha Fialdana from Imraith(?)
14391For they were cast from him just as if it was stone or rock or horn that they struck(?).
14391God save you, friend Fergus,"said he,"where is Conchobar?"
14391Hair black and curly on him, and he purple, blue- faced; eyes grey, shining, in his head; a cloak grey, lordly(?
14391Hair black, curly, on him; round eyes, grey(?
14391Hair white- yellow has he, and it curly, neat, bushy(?
14391He asked his charioteer:''Is it I who have caused it?''
14391He put on his black(?)
14391He put on his dark apron of dark leather, well tanned, of the choice of four ox- hides of a heifer, with his battle- girdle of cows''skins(?)
14391He said"Would he bring his deeds to completion, provided the age of manhood came to them?"
14391He smites them, over left chariot wheel(?
14391He threw two stones from Cuince, so that he slew her in her plain(?).
14391He took the goads(?)
14391He who will not----(?)
14391His hair curled round his head like the red branches of a thorn in the gap of Atalta(?).
14391His heart was heard light- striking(?)
14391I will take you,''said he,''between my toes, till your ribs are broken, and you will be in this condition till a doom of blessing comes(?)
14391I would make their necks whizz(?)
14391It is not long afterwards that they met in the middle of the ford, and Fer Diad said to Cuchulainn:''Whence come you, O Cua?''
14391It is there he said to the leader:''What is your name?''
14391It is there that Ailill said:''Go, O Mac Roth,''said Ailill,''and look for us whether the men are all(?)
14391It was thus the chariot was, with its body thin- framed(?
14391Mane said to him in the same way thrice,''whose man was he?''
14391Not more heavily does he traverse(?)
14391O Fer Diad, do you know why you have been summoned into this tent?''
14391Ravens will drink milk of----[ Note: Some kenning for blood?]
14391Scathach''s----(?
14391Seven toes on each of his feet, and seven fingers on each of his hands, and the shining of a very great fire round his eye,----(?)
14391So that formerly Cuchulainn''s throng(?)
14391Take thought for the honour of Ulster: what has not been lost shall not be lost, if it be not lost through you to- day(?).
14391The cattle do not come from the fields That the din of the host may not terrify them(?).
14391The charioteer in front of him; the back of the charioteer''s head towards the horses, the reins grasped by his toes(?)
14391The charioteer took first then his helm, ridged, like a board(?
14391The first troop had many- coloured cloaks folded round them; hair like a mantle(?
14391The thunder and the din and the noise(?)
14391Then Cuchulainn attacked him with the edge of his sword, and took his hair off as if it was shaved with a razor; he did not put even a scratch(?)
14391Then Cuchulainn killed Fota in his field; Bomailce on his ford; Salach in his village(?
14391Then Cuchulainn said:''What you have done I deem help at the nick of time(?).''
14391Then Medb took the arms of Fergus(?)
14391Then he sang a song:''I am all alone before flocks; I get them not, I let them not go; I am alone at cold hours(?)
14391Then the charioteer said to him:''The man goes over thee as the tail over a cat; he washes thee as foam is washed in water, he squeezes(?)
14391Then the maiden looked for it; and Medb said:''O Fedelm the prophetess, how seest thou the host?''
14391There is a man with fair curly hair, broad cut(?
14391Therewith he drew his foot to him so that his leg(?)
14391Therewith they awoke through their sleep(?).
14391They fell by one another so that no one escaped alive of the abundance(?)
14391They will rush on you on the plains(?
14391They will strive for their women, they will chase their flocks in fight on the morning, heroes will be smitten, dogs will be checked(?
14391This was well- measured(?)
14391What age is this youth who is famous?''
14391What is its mystery?
14391What is there less fitting for me to be there than for any other good warrior?''
14391What number threw it?
14391When Cuchulainn saw the kings from the east taking their crowns on their heads and marshalling(?)
14391When Medb came, she asked,''Why are you waiting here?''
14391When they had reached the mountain, Cuchulainn asked:"What is the white cairn yonder on the top of the mountain?"
14391Which would you think easier to bear, O friend Fergus?''
14391While the hosts were going over Mag Breg, he struck(?)
14391Why do ye not win my blessing?''
14391You would think my club[ Note: Or''track''?]
14391[ Note: Or Nera?]
14391]; and everything that has been destroyed of his household(?)
14391_ The Death of Lethan_ Lethan came on to his ford on the Nith(?)
14391_ The Death of Lochu_ Cuchulainn killed no one from the Saile ind Orthi(?)
14391_ The Death of Nadcrantail_''What man have you to meet Cuchulainn tomorrow?''
14391and cattle shall be made good, and he shall have full compensation(?
14391and is its equipment here?
14391dry- framed(?
14391indeed,''said he,''right is the honour(?)
14391of a hero, with their pricking goads(?
14391of copper, with its shafts of bronze, with its body thin- framed(?
14391of his horses, and his whip(?)
14391of the chariot under my side and my skin- cover under my head, so that I might sleep now?''
14391said Ailill;''will you have them neither stay nor go?''
14391said Cuchulainn;''can you yoke it?
14391the apple- feat, the edge- feat, the supine- feat, the javelin- feat, the ropefeat, the---- feat, the cat- feat, the hero''s salmon[-leap?
14391to the knee, and long(?)
14391which illumines?''
14391who drives them away?
14391who kills them?''
14391who makes that boast?''
29533Actually walk the whole way?
29533After all, what would it be worth to me? 29533 Ah,"said Bland,"and the ordinary inhabitants of the city--?"
29533An ambassador,I said,"Plenipotentiary?"
29533And how are you going to get there? 29533 Are you a surgeon as well as a lord?"
29533Are you in command here?
29533At the Review?
29533Badly?
29533Because,I said,"if she is injured in any way-- But perhaps she was insured?"
29533Broken?
29533But did that satisfy any one?
29533But do you think,I said,"that your workmen will go out and be shot in order to save you from paying an extra penny in the pound income tax?
29533But if it is n''t Babberly, who is it?
29533But is he?
29533But is there?
29533But now?
29533But supposing he does n''t want to go?
29533But the Chancellor of the Exchequer is the man who''s responsible for the revenue, is n''t he?
29533But what can you do?
29533But where did you get the coal?
29533But who fired them?
29533But why London? 29533 But why did you coal in the middle of the night?"
29533But why light blue?
29533But why should you? 29533 But you?"
29533But,I said,"do you actually mean to go out and do battle?"
29533But,I said,"who are you going to shoot at?
29533Can I help in any way?
29533Can they be landing anything from the yacht?
29533Captain or Colonel or Knight at Arms?
29533Did he go?
29533Did it kill many people?
29533Did they hold the meeting?
29533Did you ever see the Green Loaney Scutching Mill?
29533Did you hear tell what she did with that shell she fired into the town?
29533Did you say,I asked,"that they''re going to march to Belfast?"
29533Did you watch them coming out again?
29533Do n''t you see?
29533Do n''t you think,I said,"that it would be better for you to go back to bed?
29533Do you know what this means?
29533Do you mean to say,I said,"that you think the Admiral was not in earnest in that bombardment?"
29533Do you mean to say,I said,"that you''ve bought that weapon?"
29533Do you mean,said Clithering,"that you want us--?"
29533Do you really think,I said,"that he--?"
29533Do you think I''m a fool To put up with Home Rule? 29533 Do you think our people really meant it to- day?"
29533Do you think that''s wise?
29533Do you think they really mean it?
29533Do you?
29533Does n''t it look just as if the town had been captured by an enemy,she said,"after a long siege?"
29533Doing what?
29533Eh?
29533Excellency?
29533Father,she said,"do you think that Mr. Power could really have been smuggling things in that yacht?"
29533Gentlemen,said Babberly,"are you going to ask Ulstermen to fire on the King''s troops?"
29533Gentlemen,said Moyne,"are we to attempt to hold our meeting to- morrow?
29533Get a map, will you?
29533Good morning, Excellency,he said,"glorious day, is n''t it?"
29533Have spent the morning,I said,"in finding out that you want to marry each other?"
29533Have they gone?
29533Have you any reason to suppose that the Fleet--?
29533How can I? 29533 How can I?"
29533How did you get coal in a place like this?
29533How did you get here?
29533How did you manage it?
29533How''s it managed?
29533How?
29533How?
29533I say, Excellency, you will ask me up to dinner every night he''s here, wo n''t you?
29533I say,said Bland from the window,"did the soldiers get orders to fire over the people''s heads?"
29533I suppose you''ll have the Moynes over to dinner?
29533I suppose,I said,"that it''s no use my telling you that he was not smuggling?"
29533I suppose,I said,"they wo n''t actually hang him?"
29533I''m not sure--"Did n''t your Prime Minister say he''d be glad to get rid of us? 29533 If by fighting them,"said Babberly,"you mean asking the unarmed citizens of Belfast to stand up against rifles--""Unarmed?"
29533If it is n''t that, what is it that you''ve come to tell me?
29533If you''ve time to waste on that sort of thing,he said,"why not devote it to living bishops instead of one who has been dead over a thousand years?"
29533In the name of goodness, why?
29533Is Lord Moyne going to take the chair to- morrow?
29533Is Miss D''Aubigny at home?
29533Is she sunken?
29533Is that all?
29533Is that all?
29533Is that any improvement on Review?
29533Is that to be an Imperial charge, or are you--?
29533Is there any one thing left in this rotten old world,said Conroy,"that''s worth doing?"
29533It is in rather a hole, is n''t it?
29533It''s hardly necessary to undress him, is it?
29533Just lift that up, will you, Excellency?
29533Look here, Excellency, you remember the time that yacht of Conroy''s, the_ Finola_, was in here?
29533Look here, Kilmore,he said,"do you know anything about a rumour that''s flying about?"
29533Lord Moyne, I presume?
29533Malcolmson has agreed all right,said Babberly,"and if only that wretched little paper-- did you say Conroy was in it?"
29533Marry her? 29533 May I ask you one question?"
29533Meant what? 29533 Not Babberly, is it?"
29533Not a paying proposition?
29533Now is there anything objectionable in that letter? 29533 Oh, are you?"
29533Oh, did you?
29533Oh,he said,"you have a theory too, have you?"
29533Ought n''t we to be doing something?
29533Our side wants to hold a meeting--"You are on a side then, are you?
29533Politics?
29533Pretty tidy looking lot, are n''t they? 29533 Protestant or Papist?"
29533Quite so,said Babberly;"but how?
29533Say,said Conroy,"are you dead sure you whipped them?"
29533Surely,I said,"the Dean ca n''t be having a Harvest Thanksgiving Service yet?
29533Taxation?
29533That millionaire fellow?
29533The Government is threatening you, I suppose?
29533The fact is,he went on,"that the people we have with us at present--""Babberly?"
29533The people in the gate lodge have burst the new boiler I put in for them, I suppose?
29533The scutching mill?
29533Then what did she come for?
29533Was it copies of_ The Loyalist_,I asked,"which were in the packing- cases which you and Power landed that night from the_ Finola_?"
29533Was one of them particularly freckly?
29533Was there much other looting last night?
29533Well,I said,"have you captured your millionaire?"
29533Well,I said,"were they drunk?"
29533Well,I said,"why did you come?"
29533Were you in time for the scrimmage?
29533What about Moyne?
29533What about the police?
29533What am I to do, Kilmore?
29533What are they going to do?
29533What are they?
29533What are you going to do yourself?
29533What ass?
29533What can be the result of such a conflict as you suggest? 29533 What did he do?"
29533What did he say?
29533What did the Prime Minister say?
29533What do you mean?
29533What do you suppose is in those cases?
29533What do you want me to do?
29533What does your Government think I should want the darned thing for?
29533What for?
29533What guns have they on the Cave Hill?
29533What happened at the meeting?
29533What happened?
29533What is your religion?
29533What on earth am I to do?
29533What on earth do you expect to gain by that?
29533What other fellows?
29533What would you say?
29533What''s Crossan been doing to you?
29533What''s happening?
29533What''s queer?
29533What,said Conroy,"does your Government expect me to do in return for making me attractive to Tottie Pringle?"
29533When did you come?
29533Who have you got who understands them? 29533 Who is the man you know?"
29533Who is to march past what?
29533Who on earth are those?
29533Why are n''t you at each other''s throats?
29533Why did n''t you stay at home? 29533 Why do n''t you go to London, then?"
29533Why does n''t he rattle them again with the gun?
29533Why does n''t the Government act upon it then?
29533Why not try Ireland?
29533Will you be able to get him?
29533Will you excuse me?
29533Would you like me to speak to the Dean about it?
29533Would you like to take a look at her?
29533You approve of the paper, then?
29533You do n''t mean to say that you think that a handful of north of Ireland farmers and mechanics can stand up against the British Empire?
29533You do n''t mean to say,said Clithering,"that you really wanted us-- to-- to shoot in earnest?"
29533You read his letter in_ The Times_, I suppose?
29533You''ll no be a Papist?
29533You''ll rather hate that, wo n''t you, Kilmore?
29533Your bank account?
29533Any chance of a scrap?
29533Anything that one gentleman would not write to another?"
29533Are there many killed?"
29533But how did you know?
29533But what about governing the country afterwards?"
29533But who gives you your orders?
29533But-- but what will happen here to- morrow?
29533By the way, Marion, what are you going to wear?
29533By the way, did we do much damage to your ship?
29533By the way, have you been out?"
29533Conroy-- you know Conroy, do n''t you?"
29533Could you--?"
29533Did n''t you know?
29533Do n''t they usually kill each other in battles?"
29533Do n''t you realize?
29533Do n''t you see that whatever way things go you''re in for it?
29533Do you happen to know if I''m a member of it?"
29533God Save the King?
29533Got that, Godfrey?"
29533Have you finished, Godfrey?
29533Have you heard him singing his hymn?"
29533He''s something in some university, is n''t he?"
29533How did you get a bicycle in the middle of a battlefield?"
29533I ask you, are you prepared to undertake one?"
29533I do n''t quite know where he''ll find himself afterwards, but--""What does it matter about afterwards?"
29533I got hold of a bicycle--""How?"
29533I must run away now; but you will do your best with Mr. Conroy, wo n''t you?
29533I said,"I mean to say the March Past?
29533I suppose you have said that Nationalism ceased to exist about the year 1900?"
29533I wonder if you would mind sounding him, Excellency?"
29533If he had fought fair I should n''t have minded, but--""What were you doing,"I said,"to make him attack you?
29533If you''d kept them in their proper places--""What on earth brought you to Belfast?"
29533In fact, I was just going for the police--""I suppose you sent for the police this morning?"
29533In the end I said:"Really?"
29533Is it a club?"
29533Is there any connection whatever between the fruit and the lily?
29533Is there one?"
29533It was you, was n''t it, who--?"
29533It''s not much, is it?"
29533May I call up the Prime Minister on the telephone?"
29533May I say that you have refused to preside at the meeting to- morrow?"
29533McNeice?"
29533Now do you think it would be worth my while to marry into a family like that for forty thou.?
29533Now, what do you think we ought to do?"
29533Now, what do you think, Lord Kilmore?"
29533Or was it yesterday?
29533Real fighting, you know?
29533Shall I demand Mr. Redmond''s head on a charger?
29533She''s here, is n''t she?
29533Tell him--""What is the exact amount of the over- draft?"
29533That''s going as far as any one very well could, is n''t it?"
29533That''s so, is n''t it?"
29533The one Malcolmson hit with his cannon ball?"
29533The question is, will the soldiers attack them here?
29533We''re kind of out for that, are n''t we?"
29533Were we bluffing or were we in earnest?
29533What about the Lord Lieutenant?"
29533What arguments did they use?"
29533What happened at this time of year, Godfrey?
29533What hymn?
29533What interest can you expect him to take in your fights?
29533What interested me was, not the conversation which beat fiercely on my ears, but the personal question, Why had Lady Moyne invited me to this party?
29533What on earth were you doing at that time of night?"
29533What was she doing on the night she was here?"
29533What would become of a bride if she were decked with the fruit?
29533What would happen if any one came to a meeting crowned with the blossoms?
29533What would you think now of Ulster as an infant Hercules strangling a snake representing Home Rule?
29533What''s the row all about?
29533What''s the use of your arguing on about every little point?"
29533What''s to stop it?"
29533Which of the two was right about us?
29533Who are those?"
29533Who is Commander- in- Chief?"
29533Who told you what--?"
29533Why did you come?"
29533Why did you do it?"
29533Why do you ask?"
29533Why should I?
29533Why the Chancellor of the Exchequer?
29533Why would n''t they?
29533Will that satisfy you?"
29533You catch the idea now?"
29533You remember Henderson, Lord Kilmore?
29533You said you were going to hang him, did n''t you, Crossan?"
29533You''ll take them, wo n''t you?
29533said Clithering,"what''s that?
29533what''s that?"
20176How''s the uncle?
20176( DANIEL''S_ face expresses his dismay, which he hurriedly tries to hide._) What place was it you were in, Mr. Mackenzie?
20176( DANIEL_ goes back into the workshop._) I wonder what tie would be the better one?
20176( JOHN_ remains silent._) Would n''t you rather lose a thousand pounds and keep me, father?
20176( KATE_ comes in from inner rooms._) Where''s that book you were reading last night, Kate?
20176( KATE_ looks at_ MARY,_ and with a shrug of her shoulders, obeys the orders._) Where''s the tea till I show you how to measure?
20176( MARY_ comes out of the workshop smiling gaily._) Well?
20176( MARY_ enters._) Well, did you see him off comfortably?
20176(_ Calling._) Are you there, Sarah?
20176(_ Comes into kitchen._) Is my tie right, Kate?
20176(_ He comes and opens the door, dressed in his best suit of clothes._) What''s the matter?
20176(_ He draws_ JOHN_ aside._) Do you think Mackenzie invented that patent reciprocating piston that he''s so proud of?
20176(_ He goes towards the workshop._) Where did you say the_ Whig_ was, Mary?
20176(_ He looks across at_ ANDY_ and_ SARAH,_ who have seated themselves at the back._) How do you do, Andy and Sarah?
20176(_ He looks at her, and then begins in a bashful manner._) You were n''t at Ballyannis School fête, Sarah?
20176(_ He looks at the letter._) Yesterday was the 14th, was n''t it?
20176(_ He notes it down._) No ring?
20176(_ He peeps into the door of the workshop._) He''s not in his wee workshop?
20176(_ He spits out the bread._) Heaven save us, what kind of bread''s that?
20176(_ He stops short, and then in a horrified voice._) Surely to God he has n''t a notion of that woman?
20176(_ Kate picks up the bucket and goes out by the yard door._) Where''s your father?
20176(_ Looking round._) Where''s Daniel?
20176(_ Seeing that this statement is received coldly._) Now, why does it blow out?
20176(_ She gets close beside her uncle and nestles beside him._) Is he dark or fair?
20176(_ She goes over close beside him._) Was n''t it good of Alick?
20176(_ She picks it up and looks at it._) Is that your Sunday one?
20176(_ She takes off her hat and flings it carelessly on a chair._) Where''s Uncle Dan?
20176(_ Suddenly._) I wonder is there a book on machinery in the house?
20176(_ Suddenly._) What do you do all the time you stay in Belfast, uncle?
20176(_ Very much interested._) What?
20176A fan bellows?
20176ALICK.. Did you not see how he rushed off to tidy himself up when he heard Sarah McMinn was coming over?
20176An action?
20176And did n''t I leave word there was no more to be got without my orders?
20176And did you get it sold, uncle?
20176And did you visit and court much at the home?
20176And he lost all his money?
20176And he''s been a long time this way?
20176And my clothes-- is there any dirt on the back of them?
20176And so the people are talking of me already?
20176And tall?
20176And uncle, is he good- looking?
20176And what are you looking now?
20176And you did it all yourself, uncle?
20176Andy McMinn?
20176Any for me, Sam?
20176Any more, Mr. Murray?
20176Any word from Mr. Dan about the boy he was to bring you?
20176Are all the inventions you write about good things?
20176Are n''t you going to explain that fan bellows thing you''ve been working at to them when they come in?
20176Are they?
20176Are you engaged to that McMinn woman, John?
20176Are you going to pay the money?
20176Are you not coming, father?
20176Are you sure?
20176Are you there, Daniel?
20176Are you there, Kate?
20176Are you there, Miss Mary?
20176Are you there, dear?
20176Are you up, uncle?
20176As soon as_ DANIEL_ hears her voice he hurriedly retreats across to the workshop._) Where do you keep the knives and forks?
20176As who do you say, woman?
20176Away out and help him then, ca n''t you?
20176Aye?
20176Ballyannis?
20176But had n''t he always some message on business to transact with you?
20176But have you got something struck out?
20176But if you liked the inventor you could do him a good turn all the same?
20176But you''re more likely to meet people there who''d take it up, are n''t you, uncle?
20176Ca n''t you?
20176Cigar?
20176Could I be much plainer, Mr. Mackenzie?
20176Could n''t I uncle?
20176Could n''t you, uncle?
20176Could you not make it plainer nor that?
20176Could you not slip over and ask Andy to come across?
20176Could you not tell a body was her face clean?
20176D''ye want to wake the dead?
20176DANIEL(_ crossing over to the left and taking a seat near the door of the workshop._) How do you do?
20176DANIEL(_ taken aback, but recovering his self possession._) Ballyannis?
20176Daniel back?
20176Daniel?
20176Dark?
20176Did I miss much of it?
20176Did I?
20176Did he sell the plans of the bellows, Miss?
20176Did he-- the somebody-- did he never ask you?
20176Did n''t you, sir?
20176Did n''t you?
20176Did the_ Whig_ come yet?
20176Did you do anything, Daniel about the bellows?
20176Did you get a post card?
20176Did you hear the news?
20176Did you know Andy McMinn''s for coming over to see you this day, Mr. Murray?
20176Did you now?
20176Did you now?
20176Did you see it, Kate?
20176Did you see the fluster that your father got into, Mary, when he heard that Sarah McMinn was coming over?
20176Did you send her for more flour?
20176Did you write her letters?
20176Did you?
20176Do you ever examine new inventions?
20176Do you ever get the Scottish Engineers''Monthly Handbook, price sixpence monthly?
20176Do you follow me?
20176Do you know it''s_ my_ hat?
20176Do you know what has happened?
20176Do you know what it is, Mr. Murray?
20176Do you mean to deny he did n''t?
20176Do you not like him, Sarah?
20176Do you not mind?
20176Do you not think that a trifle high?
20176Do you really like me, Mr. Mackenzie?
20176Do you say so?
20176Do you see any sign of them McMinns yet?
20176Do you see that, Kate?
20176Do you think I''ve got eyes in the back of my head?
20176Do you think it is to see old Andy?
20176Do you think old Andy McMinn''s servant man gets leave to drive them about of an afternoon like the clergy''s?
20176Do you think that now?
20176Do you think there will be any sale for it at all?
20176Do you think you''d get more than one thousand pounds for it?
20176Do you think you''ll make money off it, uncle?
20176Do you, John?
20176Eh, Andy?
20176Eh, uncle?
20176Eh?
20176Eh?
20176Eh?
20176Eh?
20176Eh?
20176Eh?
20176Eh?
20176Eh?
20176Eh?
20176Eh?
20176Eh?
20176Eh?
20176Eh?
20176Eh?
20176Eh?
20176Eh?
20176Everyone here?
20176Father, has she a good case against you?
20176Father, what are you going to do?
20176Flour?
20176God bless me, Daniel, would you break me?
20176Gregg?
20176Gregg?
20176Had he his luggage with him?
20176Had n''t we better have a name?
20176Had n''t you?
20176Has anything happened?
20176Has he no other plans and drawings except what''s there?
20176Has that woman been sneering about me again?
20176Have you anyone to go to in particular?
20176Have you got the tea things ready, Kate?
20176Have you never got it yet?
20176Have you now?
20176Have you the kettle on?
20176He never courted her?
20176He told the McMinns that?
20176He works then?
20176He would n''t deny it himself?
20176He''s up out of bed then?
20176How are you, Mr. Dan?
20176How are you, Mr. Murray?
20176How are you, Mr. Murray?
20176How is she driven, Mr. Murray?
20176How is she what?
20176How is she worked-- steam, horse, or water power, which?
20176How would you like a boy who was dark and tall, and well set up and well to do?
20176I do n''t think Sarah was in love with John, was she?
20176I got this----(_He fumbles and produces a ring._) Let me put that on your wee finger, wo n''t you?
20176I suppose I better go, John?
20176I suppose you spent every ha''penny of the money, too, that I gave you?
20176I suppose you''ve no money, Alick?
20176I wonder did he get the bellows sold?
20176I wonder did they believe McAleenan?
20176I wonder is Uncle Dan about?
20176I wonder would twenty pounds be any use at all?
20176I wonder, Daniel, would you mind so much after all if I married her?
20176I''m not dirty looking-- am I, Miss Mary?
20176If I what, bonnie Mary?
20176In fact, looking over the whole thing carefully, do you really believe you''d make even a ten pound note out of us?
20176Is Dan settling the case?
20176Is Daniel never ready yet?
20176Is he making much headway with it, John?
20176Is he-- do you think, uncle-- is he much nicer than Alick?
20176Is he?
20176Is he?
20176Is it any wonder?
20176Is it from the McMinns?
20176Is it their servant man?
20176Is it true, Daniel, you were offered two thousand for it?
20176Is n''t Mr. Dan expected home to- day from Belfast?
20176Is n''t it?
20176Is that so?
20176It''s not McCready, Miss, is it?
20176It''s you again, is it?
20176Kate and father?
20176Last night?
20176Last time?
20176Leaving, is he?
20176Let me stay with you-- won''t you?
20176Loan of a plough or a horse, or something like that?
20176Look, if you went up to Belfast again soon, wo n''t you see that boy?
20176Machinery?
20176Mackenzie said that?
20176Maybe its in the parlour?
20176Maybe this scientifican business is uninteresting to you, Sarah, is it?
20176McMinn?
20176Me?
20176Miss Mary?
20176Mr. Daniel, may I look at the bellows?
20176Mr. Mackenzie, what did you say to Andy about it?
20176Nicer?
20176No love, no letters, no courting, no photographs exchanged?
20176No photographs exchanged?
20176Now what do you think of it?
20176Now, Danny, I would like to oblige you, but what do you think it would cost me?
20176Now, what is a fan bellows yourself, Mr. Murray?
20176Perhaps you''ve read them?
20176Sarah McMinn?
20176Sarah McMinn?
20176Sarah, will you marry me?
20176Sixpence, Mary?
20176Sixpence?
20176So you are back again?
20176Somebody killed?
20176Sure she would n''t get a thousand off you, father?
20176Sure you wo n''t?
20176Sure you wo n''t?
20176Sure you wouldn''t-- you could n''t think of marrying her after all that row that happened?
20176Surely you are n''t going to marry that woman?
20176Tell me(_ rather bashfully_), was Sarah to come with him?
20176That will mean how many pounds, Daniel, did you say?
20176That''s awful, father, is n''t it?
20176That''s grand; and uncle, is he well to do?
20176That''s splendid, uncle, is n''t it?
20176The bellows?
20176The bellows?
20176The one I got taken at Lurgan?
20176The one with the big talk between the old fellow and the son about everything in the world you could think of?
20176The spanner?
20176Then could you do a good turn for Uncle Dan?
20176Then why not go to London?
20176They never exchanged letters?
20176This day?
20176Uncle Dan, could you give me sixpence?
20176Uncle?
20176Was he going to London?
20176Was he nice, uncle?
20176Was that the way of it?
20176Was there anybody there when you asked her?
20176We can all work nice and comfortably together, ca n''t we?
20176Well, John?
20176Well, Mary?
20176Well, could n''t we do the same this time?
20176Well, yourself?
20176Well?
20176Well?
20176Well?
20176Well?
20176Well?
20176Well?
20176Were you at McArn''s publichouse last night?
20176What about it?
20176What about the bellows?
20176What ails you now?
20176What ails_ you_ anyway?
20176What are you doing, Daniel?
20176What are you talking about?
20176What did I say?
20176What do you say, Mr. Mackenzie?
20176What do you think of that?
20176What does he know about----(_she stops short, remembering that_ SARAH_ is present._) Mr. Mackenzie?
20176What does that mean?
20176What is it?
20176What kept you?
20176What name will I put on that telegram?
20176What name will we put to that telegram?
20176What notion have you got now?
20176What sort of case had Jennie Black against John McArdle, of Slaney Cross?
20176What sort of case had Maggie McAndless against old William Boyd?
20176What technical papers do you get?
20176What the divil made you mention the bellows?
20176What will we do, Uncle Dan?
20176What with?
20176What''s all this?
20176What''s in the parcel?
20176What''s it worth?
20176What''s the arrangements and internal works of the bellows now, Daniel?
20176What''s the favour?
20176What''s the matter, father?
20176What''s the matter?
20176What''s the matter?
20176What''s the matter?
20176What''s the matter?
20176What''s the news with you?
20176What''s the news?
20176What?
20176What?
20176What?
20176What?
20176What?
20176What?
20176What?
20176What?
20176What?
20176What?
20176What?
20176What?
20176When will you see him again, uncle?
20176When?
20176When?
20176Where could that screw driver be I wonder?
20176Where has Mr. John been going to these wheen of nights?
20176Where is she?
20176Where were you?
20176Where''s Mary?
20176Where''s the flour?
20176Where''s the pen and ink, I wonder?
20176Where?
20176Which photograph?
20176Which photograph?
20176Who be to be the third party I wonder?
20176Who could that be?
20176Who did you say was coming?
20176Who gave her the right to go searching that way, I wonder?
20176Who give you the money?
20176Who is Gregg?
20176Who said so?
20176Who said that?
20176Who told you?
20176Who was that?
20176Who with?
20176Who wull you go to see in London?
20176Who''re they for?
20176Who''s that?
20176Who''s your mistress here?
20176Who?
20176Who?
20176Who?
20176Why did n''t you show him the one I got taken at Newcastle?
20176Why is n''t she here?
20176Why now is it called a fan bellows?
20176Why now?
20176Why?
20176Why?
20176Why?
20176Will I get it for you, Uncle Dan?
20176Will I leave your bag here, Mr. Dan?
20176Will I make you a drop of tea?
20176Will that do?
20176Will you defend the case?
20176Will you get out of this and quit tormenting people?
20176Will you tell them when they come in?
20176Will you?
20176Wo n''t it, Mr. Mackenzie?
20176Wo n''t we, John?
20176Wo n''t you?
20176Wo n''t you?
20176Working?
20176Would Belfast not do you?
20176Would it not be better to settle before going into the court?
20176Would it, uncle?
20176Would it?
20176Would you?
20176Yon dirty old thing?
20176You did n''t know we wanted that much, did you not?
20176You do n''t understand French?
20176You haven''t----you''re not going to----you have n''t a notion of that woman?
20176You know I can just wheedle father round my wee finger, ca n''t I?
20176You mean to be telling me that Mr. John has a notion of that old thing?
20176You remember one I wrote on the new compressed air drills last July?
20176You remember?
20176You wo n''t forget, uncle?
20176You would n''t have that, Sarah, would you?
20176You would n''t put him out, Sarah?
20176You''re back again, are you?
20176You''re no angry, are you?
20176You''ve been an awful long time inventing, uncle, have n''t you?
9461''Aven''t you never''eard of no one livin''together without bein''married?
9461''Ow you mean... queer things?
9461A boy or a girl?
9461A what?
9461A what?
9461Accounts for what?
9461Afeard, Uncle Matthew?
9461After everything?
9461Ah, what''s kind about? 9461 All plays are about sin of some sort, are n''t they?
9461Am I a fool for loving you?
9461Amn''t I always thinking of you?
9461Amn''t I the fool,he said to himself,"not to have come here before?"
9461And do you think the_ Whig_ and the_ Telegraph_ are?
9461And even if he had n''t, it''s not much of an achievement, is it? 9461 And have you no friends here-- relations, I mean?"
9461And how do you propose to keep her?
9461And how much will you get out of it?
9461And if you think you can do better in London... or America nor you can in Ballyards... well, you''re right to... to go, are n''t you?
9461And leave Uncle William alone?
9461And no comic songs?...
9461And what about the bookshop?
9461And what do you think of it? 9461 And what if it is?"
9461And what sort of a place is Belfast on a Saturday afternoon with a lot of drunk footballers flying about? 9461 And where in the earthly world do you want to go to?"
9461And why should n''t a story be written about any other thing nor a lot of love?
9461And why should n''t he write books if he has a mind to it?
9461And you in love with her?
9461And you''ve no work fornent you?
9461And you, do you like it, Uncle Matthew?
9461And you? 9461 Angry with you, son?"
9461Anything wrong?
9461Are all babies like that?
9461Are n''t we, Eleanor?
9461Are there any more cakes or buns?
9461Are there really people like that?
9461Are these the others?
9461Are they?
9461Are you a Catholic?
9461Are you an author?
9461Are you angry with me, Uncle William?
9461Are you codding me?
9461Are you codding me?
9461Are you goin''to the Tahr, then?
9461Are you going to do it?
9461Are you going to do what I ask or are you not?
9461Are you going to marry me?
9461Are you looking for anything?
9461Are you making fun of me?
9461Are you not, son?
9461Are you quite sure,said he,"that you know what the truth is?"
9461Are you ready?
9461Are you settled in your mind that you''re going back to London?
9461Are you still waiting for inspiration, John?
9461Are you sure of yourself?...
9461Are you very disappointed?
9461Are you willing to let him suffer for your books, too? 9461 Are you worrying yourself about Eleanor''s confinement, son?
9461Are you?
9461Are you?
9461Aye, but what am I to do, John? 9461 Aye, you have your pride, but I''m wondering would you rather have that than Eleanor?"
9461Aye?
9461Bassanio?
9461Because I wo n''t start making love to you, I suppose?
9461Broom?
9461But does it matter what he says?
9461But have n''t you been to the house?
9461But supposing I do n''t like her?
9461But that was right, was n''t it?
9461But what about me?
9461But what about me?
9461But what would be the good of that?
9461By your lone?
9461Ca n''t you get all the adventure and romance you need in this place, and not go tramping among strangers and foreigners for it?
9461Can I go up and see him, sir?
9461Can I go up to him now, doctor?
9461Can I not see you before? 9461 Can you tell me which of these offices that lady works in?"
9461Could n''t you come, too?
9461Crawford?
9461D''you know why I never had any adventures, John?
9461D''you like it, Uncle William?
9461D''you mean to tell me,he said,"that man did n''t know his wife when he saw her in the Coort?"
9461Did I hear you saying she''s getting married the day?
9461Did a letter for her come this morning?
9461Did he, indeed?
9461Did he?
9461Did n''t I?
9461Did n''t you know she''s being married the day on a policeman?...
9461Did you ever see this piece before?
9461Did you ever see_ The Merchant of Venice_?
9461Did you never fall in love with no one, Uncle Matthew?
9461Did you not get any sleep at all, ma?
9461Did you think I would n''t?
9461Did''e?
9461Different? 9461 Do all Irishmen behave like this?"
9461Do n''t you like being married, then?
9461Do people pay good money to listen to that sort of stuff?
9461Do you always read post- cards, Lizzie?
9461Do you hear me, William?
9461Do you know a wee girl called Jennie Roak?
9461Do you know why? 9461 Do you like her better nor that Belfast girl that married the peeler?..."
9461Do you like it?
9461Do you like living in London?
9461Do you like me better now, Eleanor, than you did when we were married?
9461Do you mean Southwark?...
9461Do you mean to say you do n''t know where she is?
9461Do you mean to say?...
9461Do you never think of anything? 9461 Do you not believe me?..."
9461Do you not know either? 9461 Do you not love me then?"
9461Do you remember that night on the Embankment when we were both so scared of getting married?
9461Do you remember that piece:_ and her sunny locks hang on her temples like a golden fleece? 9461 Do you think I''ll get any money out of it?"
9461Do you think a wee fellow like you could be a burden to a man with muscles like them, as hard as iron?
9461Do you think he would have liked me to be a minister?
9461Do you think it''ll matter?
9461Do you think you''re a good writer, John?
9461Do you want me to come home too, then?
9461Do you want one?
9461Do you, son? 9461 Do you... do you like me?"
9461Do you?
9461Does she keep herself?
9461Eh, John?
9461Eh?
9461Eh?
9461Eih? 9461 Eih?"
9461Eih?
9461Ever done any newspaper work before?
9461Florence cakes?
9461For good?
9461Give me her address, will you?
9461God love you, son, what put that notion into your head?
9461Good heavens, your little dog swallowed a tape- measure?
9461Grey?
9461Have another?
9461Have one?
9461Have you been here long?
9461Have you been putting notions into her head?
9461Have you come to do this ceremony, too?
9461Have you had your tea yet?
9461Have you no nature or pride? 9461 Have you tasted it already, then?"
9461Have you writ any yet?
9461He''ll have to go by his lone some day, wo n''t he? 9461 He''s very good,"John began...."And she''s rotten?"
9461Hilloa,he said sleepily,"how did the concert go?"
9461Hilloa,he said,"not gone to bed yet?"
9461Hilloa,he said,"you''re home early, are n''t you?"
9461Hilloa,said Hinde,"done that job all right?"
9461Hilloa,said the stranger in a whisper,"are you a critic?"
9461How can I come home when I have my work to do? 9461 How can I get adventure and romance in a place where I know everybody?"
9461How can I tell? 9461 How did you know, Uncle Matthew?"
9461How did you know?
9461How do you get to Brixton from here?
9461How do you think it''s going?
9461How is she?
9461How long are you going to stay?
9461How long will it be before you will marry me, then?
9461How long?
9461How many people does this place hold?
9461How much did you get for it?
9461How much do you think you''ll make out of it, John?
9461How much have you earned since you came here?
9461How much is it?
9461How much is it?
9461How much will you pay me for it?
9461How much?
9461How will I, Uncle Matthew?
9461How''s the book getting on?
9461How''s the shop doing?
9461I do n''t look suspicious, do I?
9461I hear you''re a writer, too?
9461I love you, do n''t I?
9461I s''pose you''ll do syme as Mr.''Inde... leave it to me to get the things for you, an''charge it up?
9461I suppose Jannissary is going to do it, too?
9461I suppose you often go?
9461I suppose you''ve never tried your hand at a play, have you?
9461I suppose you''ve seen a good many queer things from that seat?
9461I suppose,John said sarcastically to the commissionaire,"you do n''t want me to swear an affidavit about it?"
9461I suppose,said John,"it was n''t much fun being her man?"
9461I think you got everythink?
9461I told you it would be all right, did n''t I? 9461 I wonder how long you''ll feel like that, Mac?"
9461I wonder if my mother would come and stay with us?
9461I wonder if that trifle has got anything intoxicating in it?
9461I wonder now, are you right?
9461I wonder what she''s up to?
9461I wonder,she replied,"whether you''d mind tasting it first, just to see whether it has anything intoxicating in it?"
9461If we were to stay here,Eleanor said,"that offer would be very useful, would n''t it?"
9461If you were good at that work, you would not need encouragement, would you?
9461In the first act? 9461 In the meantime, what are you going to do?
9461In the name of God,his mother exclaimed,"who do you think buys books in this place?"
9461Is anything wrong?
9461Is he very bad?
9461Is it a fellow?
9461Is it all right?
9461Is it any good?
9461Is it with another fellow?
9461Is it?
9461Is my Uncle Matthew unconscious?
9461Is n''t it good? 9461 Is n''t it lovely?
9461Is n''t it?
9461Is she a fair girl or a dark girl?
9461Is she an Irish girl?
9461Is that all you have?
9461Is that so now?
9461Is that the scenery?
9461Is that the whole of it?
9461Is that what my mother told you to say?
9461Is that what you call Christians?
9461Is that what you call it?
9461Is that whiskey?
9461Is that you, John?
9461Is that you, John?
9461Is that your trouble? 9461 Is there a book there?"
9461Is there anything up?
9461Is there anything up?
9461Is there anything wrong, ma?
9461Is this it?
9461Is this the first time you''ve been here?
9461Is... is Maggie in?
9461It does n''t make any difference whether I approve or not, does it?...
9461It looks awful in the daylight, does n''t it? 9461 It sounds queer and foolish, does n''t it?"
9461It wo n''t be necessary for me to give his love to you, will it?
9461It''ll take me a good piece of the way, and if I ca n''t earn enough to take me the rest of it, sure, what good am I?
9461It''s Benson''s Company, is n''t it?
9461It''s a bit of a mixture, is n''t it?
9461It''s not much of a place, is it?
9461It''s queer, is n''t it?
9461It''s rather nice?
9461It''s there, ai n''t it? 9461 It''s true, is n''t it?"
9461John Turley''s child?
9461Like the two downstairs?
9461Losin''your temper, eih?
9461Mac what, sir?
9461Make? 9461 Miss Squibb... that''s the name of the landlady... comic name, is n''t it?
9461No? 9461 Och, sure, what does he know about love?"
9461Och, what does it matter where it''s born,John impatiently demanded,"so long as it is born?"
9461Oh, ca n''t I?
9461Oh, do n''t you see? 9461 Oh, is n''t it grand?"
9461Oh, is that it?
9461Oh, is that what you call the Tuppeny Tube?
9461Oh, well, if it comes to that, you never told her anything about yourself, did you?
9461Oh, whatever kept you, boy?
9461Oh, yes, we know all about that, but are you sure you''re sure? 9461 Oh,_ do_ you?"
9461Oh?
9461On what compulsion must I?
9461Only what?
9461Other women do it, do n''t they?
9461Play?
9461Portia?
9461Satirical?
9461Say what again?
9461Settling down comfortably?
9461Slaves?
9461So you''ve learned to call it the river, have you? 9461 Supposing we were engaged without anybody knowing about it?"
9461Sure, what''s to hinder you?
9461Sure, why?...
9461Tea or coffee?
9461That fellow what- you- may- call- him? 9461 That''s it, is it?"
9461The lady you''ve just taken up, Miss Moore?
9461The next year''ll be your last one at the monitoring, wo n''t it?
9461The poet chap?
9461The point is, do you believe in me?
9461The position is n''t very satisfactory, is it? 9461 The what?"
9461Then it_ was_ you who had been asking for me? 9461 Then the ladies in the box now are not friends of hers?"
9461Then what qualifications have you for the work?...
9461Then why ca n''t we get married, my dear? 9461 Then why do you stay?"
9461Then why do you write for papers like the_ Daily Sensation_?
9461Then will you stay a wee while longer now?
9461Then you do love me?...
9461Then you have kissed someone else?
9461Then you''ll get engaged to me?
9461Then you''ve lost your work?
9461There''s no hurry for a day or two, is there?
9461They are n''t putting much enthusiasm into it, are they?
9461They''ve what?
9461Two?
9461Up?
9461Was it good?
9461Was n''t he always the wee lad for scribbling bits of stories in penny exercise books?...
9461Well, and are n''t you as fond of adventure as anybody in the wide world?
9461Well, if you wo n''t meet me to- morrow night, will you meet me the next night?
9461Well, is n''t it sensible to want to be sensible as soon as possible? 9461 Well, my boy,"he said,"what do you think of her?
9461Well, we have n''t regretted it yet, have we?
9461Well, we make little of the English, do n''t we?
9461Well, what is it?
9461Well, what would you call it?
9461Well, what''s the good of it then?
9461Well, when will I see you again?
9461Well, where were you brought up then?
9461Well, where''s your Ulster now?
9461Well, why do n''t you go?
9461Well, why not? 9461 Well, will you meet me to- morrow somewhere?
9461Well, wot if''e did?
9461Well, wot''ll you''ave for your breakfis?
9461Well, you know he was a slave before he was a saint?
9461Well,''e did n''t know everythink did''e?
9461Well?
9461Well?
9461Well?
9461Well?
9461Well?
9461Well?
9461Were they happy and contented men?
9461Were they rich?
9461Were you?
9461What about Cream? 9461 What about the others?
9461What about us, then?
9461What about?
9461What age are you?
9461What are you doing here?
9461What are you leading up to?
9461What are you looking for?
9461What are you staring at, John?
9461What are you thinking of, Uncle Matthew?
9461What are you waiting for, John?
9461What brought you over?
9461What cathedral is it?
9461What did you think of him?
9461What did you think of the Creams?
9461What do you mean? 9461 What do you mean?"
9461What do you think about it?
9461What do you think of it?
9461What do you think of that?
9461What do you think of that?
9461What do you think the letter_ h_ was put in the alphabet for? 9461 What do you think, Uncle William?"
9461What do you want to see?
9461What does it feel like to have written a book?
9461What does it matter whether you''re happy and contented or not, so long as things are happening to you?
9461What does it say?
9461What does that matter? 9461 What does''cowp''mean?"
9461What for?
9461What have you got with you?
9461What have you?
9461What in the earthly world put that notion into your head?
9461What is it?
9461What man?
9461What other reason would a man have for thinking of a woman?
9461What paper will I send it to, do you think?
9461What part of Ulster do you come from?
9461What piece was it you saw?
9461What place is this?
9461What put it into your head to turn scribbler?
9461What question?
9461What shall I do then?
9461What sort of a job?
9461What sort of a meeting?
9461What sort of a surprise?
9461What sort of books?
9461What sort of talk is this? 9461 What style of play_ do_ you want to do?"
9461What the hell are you laughing at?
9461What things, John?
9461What time do you shut?
9461What was that, son?
9461What were you reciting?
9461What were you talking about?
9461What''ll you do?
9461What''ll you have... bread or soda- farl?
9461What''s abrupt about it?
9461What''s an oul''harbour when there''s no boat in it?
9461What''s cold about me? 9461 What''s down there?"
9461What''s happened?
9461What''s happening?
9461What''s he got to do with it?
9461What''s her name?
9461What''s terrible about it?
9461What''s that got to do with it? 9461 What''s that got to do with it?
9461What''s that got to do with it?
9461What''s that got to do with it?
9461What''s that place?
9461What''s that you say, John, boy?
9461What''s that?
9461What''s that?
9461What''s the job you want me to do?
9461What''s the matter?
9461What''s the sense of that?
9461What''s the use?
9461What''s wrong with my accent?
9461What''s wrong with the shop? 9461 What''s wrong with you?"
9461What''s your name? 9461 What?"
9461What?
9461When do you think you''ll be able to let us have the manuscript of the play, Mac?
9461When''ll I see you again?
9461When''s Eleanor coming back?
9461When?
9461Where are you going, William?
9461Where do you come from?
9461Where''ll we go to- night?
9461Where''s that?
9461Where''s that?
9461Where?
9461Who are you?
9461Who is she? 9461 Who told you I came from Cookstown?"
9461Why are old men so beastly?
9461Why are you persecuting me?
9461Why ca n''t you settle down here in the shop with your Uncle William?
9461Why did n''t you ask for advice before you signed this thing?
9461Why do n''t you get married, Lizzie?
9461Why do n''t you like it?
9461Why do you call her his wife?
9461Why not? 9461 Why not?
9461Why not?
9461Why not?
9461Why not?
9461Why should n''t I get a job again? 9461 Why, Uncle Matthew?"
9461Why, ma?
9461Why, son, what''s there to cry about? 9461 Why, what''s the matter?"
9461Why? 9461 Why?"
9461Why?
9461Why?
9461Why?
9461Why?
9461Why?
9461Will I fetch my ma?
9461Will I get you something to eat?
9461Will I read it to you?
9461Will it, mother?
9461Will she have you?
9461Will we go?
9461Will you be ready, do you think, Eleanor?
9461Will you come to the theatre with me next Saturday?
9461Will you come with me or come later by yourself?
9461Will you come?
9461Will you come?
9461Will you get engaged to me then?
9461Will you let me leave the school, Uncle?
9461Will you or will you not?
9461Will you?
9461With me?
9461With my tail between my legs?
9461Wo n''t it be fun reading the reviews?
9461Wo n''t we, Eleanor? 9461 Wo n''t you?"
9461Wot is?
9461Wot is?
9461Wot you sy?
9461Wot you want to know for?
9461Wot''s a toob for?
9461Wot''s wrong with it?
9461Would n''t an Ulsterman know another Ulsterman the minute he clapped his eyes on him? 9461 Would that do?"
9461Would you let strangers walk into your house and use your furniture?
9461Would you like some soda- bread or wheaten farls?
9461Would you like to go back to your club, Eleanor?
9461Would you mind telling me what those things are for?
9461Would you rather live in the country, then?
9461Would you?
9461Yes, Uncle Matthew?
9461Yes, Uncle?
9461Yes, and how did they get it? 9461 Yes, ma, but why?"
9461Yes, would you like some?
9461Yes, your little dog died last week?...
9461You do n''t expect me to believe a yarn like that?
9461You do n''t like that life on newspapers, do you, John?
9461You do n''t think a girl as nice- looking as me has reached my age without having kissed a fellow, do you?
9461You do n''t want me to tell you that I''m in love with you... like that... when I''m not?
9461You got that length, did you?
9461You never had no notion of her, John?
9461You remember that, do you?
9461You walk down them steps there, an''get into a lift, an''wot''ll''appen to you? 9461 You were frightened, too?"
9461You what?
9461You what?
9461You would n''t do behind his back what you''d be afraid to do fornenst his face, would you?
9461You would n''t have him give information about me to any man who chooses to ask for it?
9461You would, would you? 9461 You''ll be very kind to her, wo n''t you, son?"
9461You''ll marry some time, wo n''t you? 9461 You''ll meet me again to- morrow?..."
9461You''ll not leave me, John?
9461You''re Irish, are n''t you?
9461You''re alone then?
9461You''re going soon, are n''t you?
9461You''re my sweetheart now, are n''t you, Eleanor?
9461You''re not thinking of giving me a drop, are you?
9461You''re really alone then... like me?
9461You''re what?
9461You''ve not answered my question yet?
9461Your mother? 9461 _ Have_ to go, John?"
9461_ Love''s Tribute!_ My dear old Mac, what the hell''s the good of a title like that? 9461 ''Inde?
9461''Inde?"
9461''Inde?"
9461''Is it far?''
9461''Where to, ma''am?''
9461A parcel?"
9461A sardine tin?''
9461A young fellow like you is n''t going to let a wee thing like that upset you?"
9461ANDREW MARVELL THE FIRST CHAPTER I If you were to say to an Ulster man,"Who are the proudest people in Ireland?"
9461After all, we... we have to... to do the best we can for ourselves... have n''t we?"
9461After all, what was the purpose of teeth?
9461An''w''ere is your''ome?"
9461And do you know what''ud happen to you?
9461And if you were to say to a Ballyards man,"Who are the proudest people in Ulster?"
9461And suppose I never fell in love with you?"
9461And what''s he got to glare at?
9461And what''s the use of books, anyway?
9461And why would n''t you?
9461And you?
9461Answer me that, now?"
9461Any girl who_ is_ a girl would want to help, would n''t she?"
9461Any more for the Ayngel?..."
9461Anything else?"
9461Are n''t we?"
9461Are n''t you an Ulsterman?
9461Are n''t you well?"
9461Are you all fell out with each other?"
9461Are you all right, Matt?"
9461Are you coming or are you not?"
9461Are you going to send them out, too?"
9461Are you in earnest?"
9461At this hour?"
9461Because I try hard to get what I want?"
9461Being pestered by you is somehow different from being pestered by other men....""Have any other men bothered you?"
9461Bothwell?"
9461But did you never think of it for your own sake?
9461But why?"
9461Ca n''t I?"
9461Ca n''t you stay on a while longer, John?
9461Can you get off for the day, do you think, and we''ll go out and celebrate it?..."
9461Could anything be more dull than the life of an actor in a repertory theatre?
9461Cream?"
9461D''you hear me?"
9461D''you think she did live at Belmont?
9461D''you understand me?"
9461Did anyone ever hear the like of that?
9461Did he never speak to you about that?"
9461Did you like the plays, John?"
9461Did you never feel you''d like to come into the shop?"
9461Did you notice how she held the audience, Mac?
9461Do n''t you, Dolly?"
9461Do women feel love as strongly as men do?
9461Do you believe in that?"
9461Do you believe me when I tell you I love you?
9461Do you hear me?"
9461Do you know it?"
9461Do you know it?"
9461Do you know them?"
9461Do you know what happened last night?"
9461Do you like me?"
9461Do you mean you did n''t go to it?"
9461Do you not understand me?
9461Do you remember asking me why I did n''t sell happorths of tea and sugar?"
9461Do you remember that joke about the dog that swallowed the tape- measure and died?"
9461Do you remember?"
9461Do you think I am?"
9461Do you think I should go up now?"
9461Do you think I''m going to let my child go without things to feed your pride?..."
9461Do you think I''m going to throw up everything now when I''ve made a start?
9461Do you think a great city endures?
9461Do you think that woman, what''s her name again?..."
9461Do you think they will be?"
9461Do you think you''ll be able to come home with me at the end of the week?"
9461Do you understand me?"
9461Does he mind, d''you think?"
9461Does n''t everyone know that the Devil''s roaming up and down the streets of London day and night, luring young men to their ruin?
9461Eh, William?"
9461Eh?"
9461Ever read any of him?"
9461Ever seen Cinquevalli balancing a billiard ball on top of another one?
9461Ever''eard of the Ayngel at Islington?"
9461Ever''eard thet?"
9461Feel them muscles, will you?"
9461Finished that new book of yours yet?"
9461Five years?
9461For you to leave it out?"
9461Funny, is n''t it?"
9461Get it done quickly, will you?"
9461Get your stuff in before eleven, will you?
9461Good heavens, man, do n''t you realise what you''ve done?
9461Great place, eh?"
9461Great, is n''t she?
9461Had he not once offered to quit from his monitorial work to help in the shop and had not his offer been firmly refused?...
9461Has n''t every man had to struggle and fight for his position, and amn''t I fighting and struggling for mine?
9461Have n''t you any sense of proportion at all?"
9461Have you been trying to persuade her to stay here?"
9461Have you seen it?"
9461Have you told your ma yet?"
9461He began to read"The Song of the Broad Axe,"at first to himself, and then aloud:_ What do you think endures?
9461He hurried up to the sitting- room and as he climbed the flight of stairs that led directly to it, Hinde called out to him,"Is that you, Mac?"
9461He lay back against the cushions of the cab and considered Eleanor would certainly be well cared for at home, but..."what about me?"
9461He leant across the table and, pointing to the paper, said,"Are you using that?"
9461He poured out some of the tea for her,"I suppose you take milk and sugar?"
9461He saw the title of it..._ Don Quixote_... and he said to her,"What are you doing, ma?"
9461He thought the play was a very ordinary one, but this proves that it is n''t, does n''t it, Eleanor?"
9461Heard any more about your book?"
9461Hinde?"
9461His work has kept them, has n''t it?
9461How can I annoy you when I''m in love with you?
9461How can I be anything else when I shall be your husband this time to- morrow?"
9461How can he go up to Belfast when I ca n''t go with him?"
9461How can he manage all right?
9461How could a bean- feaster, he demanded, feel passion in his blood?
9461How could a man feel about a woman, the way I feel about her, and not be in earnest?"
9461How did you know me?"
9461How in the earthly world do they manage to get about their business?"
9461How is it you did n''t know about it, and you and her such chums together?"
9461How many people in this town can say they''ve always lived in the one house like the MacDermotts?"
9461How many times do you see Jannissary''s list in the advertisements?"
9461How much is twelve and nine?"
9461How was he to know that he would feel any more for Eleanor in six months''time than he now felt for Maggie... for whom he had once felt everything?
9461How was she to know that he was speaking the truth?
9461How were Uncle William and Mr. Cairnduff and the minister and Willie Logan?...
9461How would I know I did n''t like it if I had n''t tasted it?
9461How''s Eleanor?"
9461How''s Jennie keeping?"
9461I always say to myself when I come away,''Well, that''s over and my money''s spent and what satisfaction have I got for it?''
9461I call you by yours, do n''t I?"
9461I do n''t suppose you have a dress suit?"
9461I do n''t suppose you know me?"
9461I expect Lizzie told you about me and Dolly?"
9461I had to come here in one of them things that runs without horses... what do you call them?"
9461I have n''t known you very long... and you''ve rather pestered me, have n''t you?"
9461I hope you do n''t think I was rude to Lizzie just now?..."
9461I know you want to finish your book, so why should n''t I earn something to help us to keep going?"
9461I mean a financial success?"
9461I played the part of a comic footman, and I had to say to the villain,''What are you looking at, guv''nor?''
9461I say, you do n''t mind me calling you Mac, do you?..."
9461I suppose he told you you were a marvel and bleated about his ideals?"
9461I suppose that was her at the station to- night?"
9461I suppose you do n''t want it sent on to her now?"
9461I suppose you left a girl behind you in Ballyards?"
9461I suppose you''ll begin to be serious when you''re married?"
9461I suppose you''ll come with me?"
9461I suppose you''re a Christian, Mac?"
9461I suppose you''ve never done a job of this sort before?"
9461I suppose, now, you never thought of coming into the shop?"
9461I suppose,"he continued,"you would n''t like to do a job for me?"
9461I was always falling in love, but sure what was the good?
9461I''m sorry I forgot about the paper, but sure what does it matter anyway?..."
9461III"Will you be able to come with me to London at the end of the week?"
9461If I have failed so far, I can try again, ca n''t I?
9461If I love you and you get to love me, does it matter about anything else?
9461If Mr. Jannissary was to make money out of these five hundred copies why was John not to make any?
9461If he''s so sorry as all that, why the hell does n''t he print it?"
9461Is he to attend to the house and cook his meals as well as look after the shop?
9461Is it being a prig to do your work fairly?"
9461Is it printed yet?"
9461Is it, Uncle Matthew?"
9461Is n''t it a grand word, that?
9461Is n''t it better to be a good grocer than a bad novelist?"
9461Is n''t it enough luck for a man to have a wife that he loves and who loves him, and to have a child?
9461Is n''t it fearful, that?"
9461Is n''t it sickening for you to be living in that club and me to be living at Brixton, when we might be living in our own home?
9461Is n''t it, Dolly?"
9461Is n''t it?"
9461Is n''t she in?
9461Is she in love with you?"
9461Is that agreed?"
9461Is that her aunt?"
9461Is there any dancin''in this bit, do you know?"
9461Is there any particular thing you''d like to do?"
9461Is your next book a good one?"
9461It wo n''t take long to finish this book, will it?"
9461It''s a piece of luck, is n''t it?
9461It''s... it''s quite good, is n''t it?"
9461Jannissary?"
9461John''s final, overwhelming retort to her was this:"Would my da have liked me to be a minister?"
9461Just give the programme to him, will you?"
9461Like to go and write an account of it?"
9461Look''ere, young feller, are you a reporter, or wot are you?"
9461Lord alive, Mac, ca n''t you young fellows leave us a few decent lies to comfort ourselves with?..."
9461Me?
9461Mind you, each person in the audience may be as clever as you like, but as an audience... see?
9461Not bad... not a bad play, at all... but where''s the feeling heart in it?
9461Now, Eleanor, do you hear that?"
9461Now, do you think you could do anything with that idea?
9461Now, how about_ The Guilty Woman_ for your sketch, Mac?"
9461Now, you heard those back- chat- comedians at the Oxford to- night?"
9461One of these''ere noospyper chaps?"
9461Only what sort of a job?..."
9461Or a teeming manufacturing State?
9461Or hard?"
9461Or hotels of granite and iron?
9461Ought he to postpone the marriage so that Eleanor and he should have more time in which to consider things?
9461Patrick?"
9461Play that piece in front of an audience of coalminers and what''ud you get?
9461Poor son, poor son, did she not treat you well?"
9461Put this stuff in the hansom, will you?"
9461Queer bird, Lizzie, is n''t she?"
9461See?
9461See?
9461See?
9461See?
9461See?
9461See?
9461See?
9461See?"
9461See?"
9461See?"
9461See?"
9461See?"
9461She had taken him aside one day, in the middle of a game of"I spy,"and had said to him"Will you court me, Johnnie?"
9461She was a pleasant, nice- looking girl and she had an extraordinary power over him... but what did he_ know_ of her?
9461She''s not sick or anything, is she?"
9461Six months?"
9461So he was learning sense, was he?...
9461Suppose we just go up to your room again, Mac, and talk until she''s quieted down?
9461Supposing they did not care for each other?...
9461Talks about me speakin''funny, but wot about''i m?
9461That man Crawford, what do you think he''d say if you went back to him?
9461That poet fellow... what was his name?
9461That''ll help a bit, wo n''t it?"
9461That''s reasonable, is n''t it?"
9461That''s sensible, is n''t it?"
9461That''s what it matters?
9461The book I''m doing now, is n''t that good?"
9461The tall chap says to the little one,''How''s your dog, Joe?''
9461Then he said,"Have you ever kissed anyone before?"
9461Then he said,"How do you manage to keep going, Mr. Jannissary, when you publish so many books that do n''t bring you any return?"
9461Then she would start and giggle and say,"Oh, John, is that you?
9461There''s times, John, when I wonder are you a man at all?
9461V"But why did n''t you tell me you were coming?"
9461VII"Well?"
9461Was Kitchener there?"
9461Was Maggie Carmichael like that?
9461Was a man to be called a fool because his heart compelled him to perform an act of simple loyalty?...
9461Was it a girl kept you late the night?"
9461We''re going to be married, are n''t we, Eleanor?
9461We''ve been very foolish, John, have n''t we?"
9461Well, how would you improve it?"
9461Well, was the play good?"
9461Well, what if they did know?
9461Were n''t we silly?
9461Were people so poor in faith and devotion that they could not recognise the nobility of what Uncle Matthew had done?
9461Were you very late last night?"
9461What about a short series of articles for us?
9461What about trying to get a job on a paper?"
9461What about you?"
9461What are you going to do now?
9461What did he do?"
9461What did he know of her?
9461What did you see?"
9461What did you think it was?
9461What do you mean?"
9461What do you publish books for if you only want to please yourself?
9461What do you say?"
9461What else were you talking about?"
9461What happened when he took bad?"
9461What if Maggie Carmichael_ had_ treated him badly?
9461What is it makes any lad lose his train, and walk miles in the dark?
9461What is it you want me to do, Uncle William?"
9461What is it?
9461What must she think of him?
9461What notions?"
9461What right had he to expect her to pay any heed to him at all?
9461What should he do if Eleanor were married?
9461What should he do now?
9461What sort of lover would Romeo have been had he lived on a diet of lentils?
9461What sort of romance would there be in the like of that?
9461What sort of work do you want to do?
9461What time does Mr. Clotworthy want me?"
9461What time will I have to write if I take on his work?"
9461What time?"
9461What trade are you at?"
9461What was that bit again?
9461What was that water I passed on the way out?..."
9461What was the matter with your little dog?"
9461What was the piece you were reciting?"
9461What was the use of wandering about the house in this disconsolate manner?
9461What were these cheerless people going to do with the play over which he had laboured and sweated for weeks and weeks?...
9461What were we saying?
9461What were you doing in Belfast the day?"
9461What would be the good?
9461What would be wrong with it?"
9461What would become of you all, your ma and your Uncle Matthew and you, if I was to do the like of that I?
9461What would his mother say if she knew that a girl had entered his bedroom as unconcernedly as if she were entering a tramcar?
9461What would people say if I was to marry you now, after meeting you a couple of times, and you four years younger nor me?"
9461What would she do if he were to speak to her?
9461What''s Art?
9461What''s a book anyway?
9461What''s the difference?"
9461What''s the good of that?
9461What''s the good of them?
9461What''s to hinder you?
9461What''s your other name?"
9461What''ud Hamlet be without the sin in it?
9461What_ do_ you want to be, then, when you grow up?"
9461When are you coming back?"
9461When in the earthly world would you be able to keep a wife?"
9461When the young fellow, Bassanio, was telling Antonio about his girl in Belmont?"
9461When will you be going?"
9461Where do you live?"
9461Where does Eleanor live?"
9461Where else would Eleanor be so well- tended as at home?..."
9461Where else would a MacDermott be born but in his own home?"
9461Where would your Uncle Matthew get the money to buy books to dream over if it was n''t for me giving up my dreams?..."
9461Where''s the attraction, the allurement?
9461Where''s the snap in it?
9461Who was this woman he was about to marry?
9461Who wo n''t let me in?"
9461Whose windows, he demanded, were safe when, a fellow like that was let loose on the town?
9461Why are n''t you at the church?"
9461Why could she not love him?
9461Why do n''t you keep your great thoughts to yourself if you do n''t want to please anybody else?
9461Why do you ask?"
9461Why down''t you go out for a walk?
9461Why not?
9461Why not?"
9461Why should I?
9461Why should I?"
9461Why should he mind?
9461Why should n''t you do one for us?
9461Why the devil did I leave Eleanor behind?"
9461Why, your little dog ai n''t dead, is it?"
9461Why?
9461Will they help a man to make a better life for himself?"
9461Will you come with me if I go to it?"
9461Will you come with me?"
9461Will you marry me, Eleanor?"
9461Will you marry me?
9461Will you marry me?"
9461Will you meet me the morrow?"
9461Will you not believe me?"
9461Will you try to do a piece for us?"
9461Will you?"
9461Wo n''t it, William?"
9461Wo n''t we?"
9461Wo n''t you, Dolly?"
9461Wot more du want?"
9461Wot more du want?"
9461Wot time du want your breakfis?"
9461Wot you gettin''so excited abaht?"
9461Wot you goin''to call it, if it''s a boy?"
9461Wot''ll you''ave for breakfis?"
9461Would Juliet have had the power to move the sympathies of generations of men and women if she had nourished her love on haricot beans?...
9461Would he like?...
9461Would she ever believe that he had no wish to frighten her, that he wished only to be her friend, to talk to her?
9461Would she kiss this one or that one, just as the mood took her?...
9461Would we through our years, Love forego, Quit of scars and tears?
9461Would you like to stay here in the market for an hour by yourself while I go and do it?"
9461You have to have food, have n''t you?
9461You know our paper, I suppose?
9461You see, dear, you have n''t earned much since we got married, have you?"
9461You would n''t be human if you could write a great book at the first attempt, would you?"
9461You''d be surprised, mebbe, to hear that your Uncle William and me both had a notion of her before your da stepped in and took her from us?
9461You''d never advocate the like of that, Uncle Matthew?"
9461You''d rather sell two thousand copies of a book than two hundred, would n''t you?
9461You''ll come again to- morrow, wo n''t you?"
9461You''ll meet me, wo n''t you?"
9461You''ll never have the heart to refuse me, will you?
9461You''re going to leave that young girl for the sake of something that you''re uncertain of?"
9461You''re not just going with her?"
9461You''re such a darling... how could I help loving you?"
9461You''ve got Eleanor and a son... what more do you want?
9461You''ve got a shop, have n''t you?"
9461_ If love be rough with you, be rough with love!_ Who was Maggie Carmichael anyway?
9461_"Say, Joe, what''re you in mourning for?"
9461alone?"
9461different?"
9461he said, and then,"What on earth are you crying for?"
9461mean?"
9461or a prepared Constitution?
9461or any chefs d''oeuvre of engineering, forts, armaments?
9461or the best built steamships?
9461or"Give me that line, will you?"