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 |
---|---|
40492 | And I? |
40492 | And in Paris? |
40492 | And we said thee and thou to each other? 40492 And who has told you of Walter Scott?" |
40492 | And you come so late? |
40492 | And you the wisest? |
40492 | And you? |
40492 | Big Curly- head? 40492 Do you not know how to hook a dress?" |
40492 | Do you remember Adrienne? |
40492 | Do you remember when we were children and you the tallest? |
40492 | Do you remember your foster- brother who pulled you out of the water one day? |
40492 | I came to see Sylvie; is she still here? |
40492 | I, Father Dodu? |
40492 | I? 40492 Is it better than Auguste Lafontaine?" |
40492 | Is it possible that you have become a musician? |
40492 | Is it pretty? |
40492 | Like one of Walter Scott''s landscapes, is it not? |
40492 | Lost in thought? |
40492 | Shall you make lace to- day? |
40492 | Sylvie,cried I,"let us stop here, will you?" |
40492 | That you, little Parisian? |
40492 | Then you are a glove- maker, Sylvie? |
40492 | What has become of the nun? |
40492 | What is it to me? |
40492 | What is that? |
40492 | What is your work then? |
40492 | What,thought I,"would that young man say, if I were to take his place by the woman whom he has left alone?" |
40492 | Where is it? |
40492 | Where is the pastry- cook? |
40492 | Whom, pray? |
40492 | Why should you complain? |
40492 | A good woman who came back to dessert after serving us, whispered in my ear:"Do you not recognize your foster- brother?" |
40492 | And of him who gave us this exquisite creation of heart and brain what words remain to say? |
40492 | Are we not mistaken? |
40492 | As for the laurels, have they been cut down, according to the old song of the maidens who no longer care to roam the forest? |
40492 | But what can I tell you that you do not know already and have not devised together to ruin me? |
40492 | Can I avoid repeating in my own history, that of many others? |
40492 | Did I really see Adrienne as surely as I marked these details? |
40492 | Didst thou not love me for an instant, cold star, when I fought and wept and suffered for thee? |
40492 | Do women really feel that certain words come from the lips rather than the heart? |
40492 | Do ye still insult me, ye, who owe your lives to pity, rather than any fear on my part? |
40492 | Do you remember how you taught me to catch crawfish under the bridges over the Nonette and the Thève?" |
40492 | Do you remember that courtier who recalled distinctly that he was once a sofa? |
40492 | Do you remember the day we put on the wedding clothes, at my aunt''s house? |
40492 | Do you remember, Sylvie, how afraid you were when the keeper told us the story of the Red Monks?" |
40492 | For which one do you go?" |
40492 | He rose and stood behind me, saying,"Have you forgotten me, Parisian?" |
40492 | How can he prove that he is the legitimate son of the Khan of the Crimea, according to the crafty recital of La Rancune? |
40492 | How dispose now of this hero deserted by his mistress and his companions? |
40492 | How shall I venture, yet living, to deck my forehead with these shining crowns? |
40492 | How, from the depths of misery where he is plunged, can he rise to the highest destiny? |
40492 | I had to talk of my life in Paris, my travels...."How can anyone go so far?" |
40492 | In recalling these details, I come to the point of asking myself,"Are they real or have I dreamed them?" |
40492 | Is he, in truth, only a strolling player, rightly punished for insulting the public, for indulging in his mad jealousy and alleging ridiculous claims? |
40492 | Is it an obsession, the way these memories haunt me? |
40492 | Is she really as young, as dazzling, and as pure as she seems?" |
40492 | Is this what history and the conceptions of our poets have left of him? |
40492 | My comrade and my sister, wilt thou never regret those hours of triumph and rapture? |
40492 | My ideal was within my grasp, or was it only one more disappointment, a mocking misprint? |
40492 | Sylvie, too, whom I loved so dearly, why had I forgotten her for three long years? |
40492 | The audience questioned nightly:"Who, pray, is this actress, so far beyond all that we have ever applauded? |
40492 | The unnatural enthusiasm which had possessed me for so long, my dreams, my tears, my despair and my tenderness,--could they mean aught but love? |
40492 | Was I not noble and puissant in the gilded helmet with streaming locks of purple blackness, the glittering armor and azure cloak? |
40492 | Was this young Nero, the idol of Rome, the handsome athlete, the dancer, the poet whose only wish was to please the populace? |
40492 | What are thy groves and lakes and thy desert to me now? |
40492 | What is Aurélie( that was the name of the actress) playing to- night? |
40492 | What is she doing now? |
40492 | What then is love? |
40492 | What time is it? |
40492 | Where are the roses that girdled the hillside? |
40492 | Where did I read the fatal biography of this adventurer? |
40492 | Where shall we find to- day those wild adventures, that gay, Bohemian life that united us, poets and actresses, as comrades and equals? |
40492 | Who can tell me that this woman may be bought? |
40492 | Who could sully by an evil thought the purity of first love in this shrine of hallowed memories? |
40492 | Who could wish to see her slain? |
40492 | Who does not favour her lover? |
40492 | Who would we d her, so poor? |
40492 | Why did I go there? |
40492 | With what_ adieux_ shall we now take leave of our little pearl of a story? |
40492 | You said,''the_ creature is drowned_ does not go tick- tack; what will Uncle say?''" |
40492 | have I been__ Or Lusignan or Biron? |
40492 | said Father Dodu;"have you come to carry off our pretty girls?" |
40492 | said I,"he or another?" |
40492 | why did you not come back then? |
40492 | why, that is delightful!--Tell me, were you embroidered?" |
40492 | you seek for love... but what of me? |
2527 | And even if not,he answered with impatience,"what can you mean? |
2527 | And what do they mean by saying Albert is your husband? 2527 And what do you call behaving well? |
2527 | And why so? |
2527 | And you were happy once? |
2527 | But why should any one,said I,"in speaking of an action, venture to pronounce it mad or wise, or good or bad? |
2527 | Cousin,said I to Charlotte, as I handed her down,"do you think I deserve the happiness of being related to you?" |
2527 | Do you not see that you are deceiving yourself, that you are seeking your own destruction? 2527 Do you remember the flowers you sent me, when, at that crowded assembly, you could neither speak nor extend your hand to me? |
2527 | Have you brought nothing to read? |
2527 | Is he your son? |
2527 | Shall I help you, pretty lass? |
2527 | What do you mean? |
2527 | What have you done, unfortunate man? |
2527 | What is the use of my continually repeating that he is a good and estimable man? 2527 Who is Albert,"said I to Charlotte,"if it is not impertinent to ask?" |
2527 | Who lie on the heath beside me? 2527 Who on his staff is this? |
2527 | Why do I not write to you? |
2527 | Why dost thou waken me, O spring? 2527 Why need I conceal it from you?" |
2527 | Why? |
2527 | Adieu!--Is Albert with you? |
2527 | Alpin, thou son of song, why alone on the silent hill? |
2527 | Am I not sufficiently employed? |
2527 | And have we, then, none ourselves? |
2527 | And if that same cup proved bitter to the God of heaven, under a human form, why should I affect a foolish pride, and call it sweet? |
2527 | And is it not in reality the same, whether I shell peas or count lentils? |
2527 | And shall I avow it? |
2527 | And should I feel ashamed to utter the same expression? |
2527 | And what is man-- that boasted demigod? |
2527 | And whether he soar in joy, or sink in sorrow, is not his career in both inevitably arrested? |
2527 | And why all these doubts and delays? |
2527 | And why not? |
2527 | And wouldst thou, heavenly Father, banish such a child from thy presence? |
2527 | And yet am I wholly blameless? |
2527 | Are they my love and my brother? |
2527 | But must I despair of my talents and faculties, whilst others of far inferior abilities parade before me with the utmost self- satisfaction? |
2527 | But who could keep such a resolution? |
2527 | But why should I talk of poetry and scenes and idyls? |
2527 | But why should I trouble you? |
2527 | But would you require a wretched being, whose life is slowly wasting under a lingering disease, to despatch himself at once by the stroke of a dagger? |
2527 | But, dear Wilhelm, he loves her with his whole soul; and what does not such a love deserve? |
2527 | But, my dear friend, what is the use of prudence? |
2527 | Call it folly or infatuation, what signifies a name? |
2527 | Can he value her as she deserves? |
2527 | Can that be a delusion which makes us happy? |
2527 | Can we never take pleasure in nature without having recourse to art? |
2527 | Did I not encourage her emotions? |
2527 | Did I not feel charmed at those truly genuine expressions of nature, which, though but little mirthful in reality, so often amused us? |
2527 | Did not Albert furnish you with this reflection? |
2527 | Do not children touch everything they see? |
2527 | Do not his powers fail when he most requires their use? |
2527 | Do you not surround me on all sides? |
2527 | Do you remember my writing to you about a peasant boy shortly after my arrival here? |
2527 | Do you understand-- can you explain the causes which occasion them, and make them inevitable? |
2527 | Does he know how to prize his happiness? |
2527 | Does he not view my attachment to Charlotte as an infringement upon his rights, and consider my attention to her as a silent rebuke to himself? |
2527 | Does not every frivolous engagement attract him more than his charming and lovely wife? |
2527 | Does not the Son of God himself say that they are his whom the Father has given to him? |
2527 | Does not the very disorder which consumes his strength deprive him of the courage to effect his deliverance? |
2527 | Finding that all the parish, particularly the old people, were displeased, I asked"why they allowed it?" |
2527 | For is not this anxiety for change the consequence of that restless spirit which would pursue me equally in every situation of life? |
2527 | Great God, must we thus part with everything we hold dear in this world? |
2527 | Has my soul ever been sullied by a single sensual desire? |
2527 | Has our dear bower been destroyed by this unpitying storm? |
2527 | Have I been given to him? |
2527 | Have men before me ever been so wretched? |
2527 | Have not other attachments been specially appointed by fate to torment a head like mine? |
2527 | Have you carefully studied the secret motives of our actions? |
2527 | He heard of Morar''s renown, why did he not hear of his wound? |
2527 | How can I, how can you, be annihilated? |
2527 | How could she approach her husband, and confess a scene which she had no reason to conceal, and which she yet felt, nevertheless, unwilling to avow? |
2527 | How could you shut your heart against me in that hour which makes you mine for ever? |
2527 | How many kings are governed by their ministers-- how many ministers by their secretaries? |
2527 | I am alone the cause of my own woe, am I not? |
2527 | I am unable to do anything for myself: how, then, should I be competent to assist others? |
2527 | I answered;"need you bid me do so? |
2527 | I feel that it can impart strength to the feeble and comfort to the afflicted, but does it affect all men equally? |
2527 | I looked after her: suddenly I saw Charlotte''s bonnet leaning out of the window, and she turned to look back, was it at me? |
2527 | I said to myself,"can she, too, be like the rest?" |
2527 | In her presence could I not display, to its full extent, that mysterious feeling with which my heart embraces nature? |
2527 | In what cave of the hill shall I find the departed? |
2527 | Is he only happy before he has acquired his reason, or after he has lost it? |
2527 | Is his friendship toward me unimpaired? |
2527 | Is it because we are older and more experienced? |
2527 | Is it not enough that we want the power to make one another happy, must we deprive each other of the pleasure which we can all make for ourselves? |
2527 | Is not my love for her of the purest, most holy, and most brotherly nature? |
2527 | Is there a cause to mourn? |
2527 | Is this presumption, or is it a consciousness of the truth? |
2527 | Must it ever be thus,--that the source of our happiness must also be the fountain of our misery? |
2527 | My good friend, if resistance be strength, how can the highest degree of resistance be a weakness?" |
2527 | Of what importance is it that I have learned, with every schoolboy, that the world is round? |
2527 | See here, Albert, the history of thousands; and tell me, is not this a case of physical infirmity? |
2527 | She wished that he could see her in her true light, and judge her without prejudice; but was she anxious that he should read her inmost soul? |
2527 | Should I not shudder at a prospect which had its fears, even for him who folds up the heavens like a garment? |
2527 | Sovereign, did I say? |
2527 | The world is everywhere the same,--a scene of labour and pain, of pleasure and reward; but what does it all avail? |
2527 | They had preserved so long a silence toward each other and should she be the first to break it by so unexpected a discovery? |
2527 | To my sight, perhaps, she would not appear as she now stands before me; and why should I destroy so sweet a picture? |
2527 | Was he, however, to blame for wishing to avert from her every appearance of suspicion? |
2527 | Was it anger at his daring? |
2527 | Was it the ardour of Werther''s passionate embraces that she felt within her bosom? |
2527 | Was it the sad comparison of her present condition with former days of innocence, tranquillity, and self- confidence? |
2527 | What could her father do? |
2527 | What do I behold but satiety and indifference? |
2527 | What dost thou behold in the plain? |
2527 | What dost thou behold, fair light? |
2527 | What if the Father will retain me for himself, as my heart sometimes suggests? |
2527 | What is a magic- lantern without light? |
2527 | What is annihilation? |
2527 | What is the destiny of man, but to fill up the measure of his sufferings, and to drink his allotted cup of bitterness? |
2527 | What is the matter with me, dear Wilhelm? |
2527 | What is the meaning of all this? |
2527 | What is to come of all this wild, aimless, endless passion? |
2527 | What mean those looks of kindness with which she often-- often? |
2527 | What should I do, what can I do, my dear Charlotte?" |
2527 | What sin? |
2527 | What was to be done? |
2527 | When a nation, which has long groaned under the intolerable yoke of a tyrant, rises at last and throws off its chains, do you call that weakness? |
2527 | When shall it be morn in the grave, to bid the slumberer awake? |
2527 | When shalt thou wake with thy songs? |
2527 | Whence comes our exclusive right? |
2527 | Whither am I going? |
2527 | Whither are ye gone to rest? |
2527 | Who is this whose head is white with age, whose eyes are red with tears, who quakes at every step? |
2527 | Who shall throw the first stone at a husband, who, in the heat of just resentment, sacrifices his faithless wife and her perfidious seducer? |
2527 | Who, in such cases, is really the chief? |
2527 | Why art thou sad, O Armin, chief of sea- surrounded Gorma? |
2527 | Why burst the sigh of Armin? |
2527 | Why delayest thou thy coming? |
2527 | Why delays my Salgar; why the chief of the hill his promise? |
2527 | Why did I not dare to take her in my arms, and answer her by a thousand kisses? |
2527 | Why do I thus deceive myself? |
2527 | Why must you love me, me only, who belong to another? |
2527 | Why should I continue to give you occasion to pity and blame me? |
2527 | Why should I not reserve all my sorrow for myself? |
2527 | Why should I not, Wilhelm? |
2527 | Why should I remain? |
2527 | Why should I stay behind? |
2527 | Why should it not? |
2527 | Why was I afraid to throw myself at her feet? |
2527 | Why, Wilhelm, should she put this question to me, just at the moment when the fear of our cruel separation filled my heart? |
2527 | Wilhelm, what is the world to our hearts without love? |
2527 | Will you dare call this enthusiasm, ye crowd of pompous declaimers? |
2527 | Yes, Charlotte, why should I not avow it? |
2527 | and even still-- But what object is there, Charlotte, which fails to summon up your image before me? |
2527 | and have I not, like a child, treasured up every trifle which you have consecrated by your touch? |
2527 | and is it not strange, my friend, that we should suffer the little that does really ripen, to rot, decay, and perish unenjoyed? |
2527 | and is this the destiny of man? |
2527 | and then might not rapture perchance be the portion of this liberated soul? |
2527 | and what is he to you? |
2527 | did then a single power of my soul remain unexercised? |
2527 | do they know when we are well and happy? |
2527 | do they know when we recall their memories with the fondest love? |
2527 | do those departed ones know how we are employed here? |
2527 | how can cold and passionless words convey the heavenly expressions of the spirit? |
2527 | is it sinful to revel again in such happiness, to recall once more those rapturous moments with intense delight? |
2527 | my heart is not so corrupt, it is weak, weak enough but is not that a degree of corruption? |
2527 | or at the young maiden, who, in her weak hour of rapture, forgets herself in the impetuous joys of love? |
2527 | or for his unwillingness to share his rich prize with another, even for a moment, and in the most innocent manner? |
2527 | she continued, with a firm but feeling voice;"but shall we know one another again what do you think? |
2527 | she said, in a tone of emotion,"you, who know my heart, how could you so ill interpret my distress? |
2527 | they replied,"when the steward orders, what can we poor peasants do?" |
2527 | what do you say?" |
2527 | what is death? |
2527 | what is man, that he dares so to accuse himself? |
2527 | what shall I say in your praise? |
2527 | where are you? |
2527 | whither is my Salgar gone? |
2527 | who can do justice to her language? |
2527 | who can express my sensations? |
2527 | why complainest thou, as a blast in the wood as a wave on the lonely shore? |
2527 | why did he not wait till his strength was restored, till his blood became calm? |
2527 | why didst thou not see thy apotheosis in those eyes? |
2527 | why hast thou forsaken me?" |
2527 | why is it that the torrent of genius so seldom bursts forth, so seldom rolls in full- flowing stream, overwhelming your astounded soul? |
2527 | why tormentest thou me with fear? |
2527 | why were they so fortunate? |
2527 | why were you born with that excessive, that ungovernable passion for everything that is dear to you?" |
2527 | with all thy voice of music? |
27537 | A little curaçao, eh? |
27537 | All your dolls, who had the names of queens and marchionesses-- what has become of them? |
27537 | Alone? |
27537 | And are you sure of this? |
27537 | And her husband? |
27537 | And the young lady,said the tutor,"is charming, I''m sure?" |
27537 | And the_ Don Quixote_ of which we coloured the engravings together? |
27537 | And then, perhaps, they''ll give you a good place? |
27537 | And what about your chum Sénécal? |
27537 | And why not? 27537 And yet, suppose I happen to be killed? |
27537 | And your children? |
27537 | And your pug Moricaud? |
27537 | Andalusians, I suppose? 27537 Are you not going to come in?" |
27537 | Are you perfectly certain? |
27537 | Are you perfectly sure? 27537 As far as I could understand, he was sued by one Mignot, an intimate friend of Regimbart-- a long- headed fellow that, eh? |
27537 | As we happened to have been talking just now about coal- mines,the advocate went on,"what has become of his big company? |
27537 | Aye, who''ll pay the amount? |
27537 | Beloved by whom? |
27537 | Besides, could you find anything more charming than these little toads? 27537 But is there anyone in the room?" |
27537 | But perhaps there is something you want? |
27537 | But what is it that''s not prohibited? |
27537 | But why is it that you do n''t want to make them pay up? 27537 But why not?" |
27537 | Can it be that this is the lady of the races? |
27537 | Can it be that you are-- perhaps----? |
27537 | Can you swear to having seen him at the Panthéon? |
27537 | Christianity is the keystone and the foundation of the new edifice----"You are making game of us? |
27537 | Could you believe it possible that I no longer loved you? |
27537 | Did you notice his face when a question was asked about the portrait? 27537 Did you really?" |
27537 | Do I associate with the Jesuits? |
27537 | Do n''t you remember? |
27537 | Do you know anything, Mademoiselle? |
27537 | Do you know her? |
27537 | Do you know him? |
27537 | Do you know how to make passes? |
27537 | Do you know,Sénécal went on,"what they have discovered at the Duchesse de Praslin''s house----?" |
27537 | Do you think so? |
27537 | Do you wish me to interest myself on your behalf? |
27537 | Eh? 27537 Eh? |
27537 | Eh? 27537 For what purpose?" |
27537 | For what, pray? |
27537 | For, in fact, what is it they want? 27537 Have I any reason to be afraid?" |
27537 | Have I any to give you? |
27537 | Have you done all that''s necessary in the matter? |
27537 | How could such a thing ever come to pass? |
27537 | How do you know that? |
27537 | How have I insulted them? |
27537 | How is it that he has come back again? 27537 How is that? |
27537 | How is that? 27537 How is that?" |
27537 | How is that? |
27537 | How now? 27537 How?" |
27537 | How? |
27537 | I have arrived too late? 27537 I thought he was your friend, monsieur?" |
27537 | I? 27537 I? |
27537 | I? |
27537 | In any case,Sénécal went on,"do you know a patriot who will answer to us for your principles?" |
27537 | In that case, why did she take on with me? |
27537 | In what way can I be of service to you now? |
27537 | Is Arnoux there? |
27537 | Is he still living? |
27537 | Is it credible, I ask you? 27537 Is it not-- eh?" |
27537 | Is it to buy a carriage? |
27537 | Is she still interested in a fellow named Arnoux? |
27537 | Is that my fault? 27537 Is that so?" |
27537 | Is that true? |
27537 | Is this really all you owe her? |
27537 | Is this young man trustworthy and intelligent? |
27537 | It seems to me I knew that woman? |
27537 | It was worth the trouble, was n''t it? 27537 Let me know his name? |
27537 | Look here-- why? |
27537 | Mine? 27537 My God, who can it be that has changed him?" |
27537 | Nevertheless, was not the will the main element in every enterprise? 27537 Now that I think of it, are we speaking of Dussardier?" |
27537 | Of whom, pray, are you talking? |
27537 | Perhaps it is somewhere else? |
27537 | Perhaps you are going to defend them? |
27537 | Pray, where are you dining? |
27537 | Probably not by yourself? |
27537 | Really? |
27537 | Really? |
27537 | Rosanette was with you? |
27537 | She is better-- isn''t that so? |
27537 | So you do n''t want to have me? |
27537 | Still-- even now? |
27537 | Suppose we go upstairs? |
27537 | Suppose we try the taste of it? 27537 Suppose you happen to be killed?" |
27537 | Then there''s no danger? |
27537 | These caricatures of Cham are very funny, are they not? |
27537 | Though, indeed, such things must be, after all? 27537 To what do I owe the honour-- of a visit-- so unexpected?" |
27537 | To what? |
27537 | Tuesday? |
27537 | Was n''t it you that I once saw with both of them at the Palais- Royal? |
27537 | Well, and Arnoux? |
27537 | Well, and this marriage? |
27537 | Well, and what about Compain? |
27537 | Well, and what about yourself? |
27537 | Well, what then? |
27537 | Well, what? |
27537 | Well,said he to his man- servant, while the latter was undressing him,"are you satisfied?" |
27537 | Well? 27537 What Monsieur?" |
27537 | What am I to do? 27537 What appointments?" |
27537 | What are you doing, Monsieur? |
27537 | What bet? |
27537 | What calf''s head? |
27537 | What did the doctor say? |
27537 | What do I care about business? |
27537 | What do I care about the Maréchale? |
27537 | What do you mean? |
27537 | What does it signify to you? 27537 What does it signify, when it is to one who sympathises with you that you offer it? |
27537 | What does that signify to me? |
27537 | What does''us''mean? |
27537 | What for? |
27537 | What has become of that interesting gentleman? |
27537 | What has happened, might I ask? |
27537 | What idea have you got into your head about me? |
27537 | What is the matter? 27537 What is there for me to do in the world? |
27537 | What marriage? |
27537 | What news, Citizen? |
27537 | What number? |
27537 | What other? |
27537 | What woman? |
27537 | What''s the matter with you now, my own darling? |
27537 | What''s the matter with you? 27537 What''s the matter?" |
27537 | What, then, are you doing? |
27537 | What? 27537 What?" |
27537 | What? |
27537 | When the country could provide men like Delacroix or Hugo with incomes of a hundred thousand francs, where would be the harm? |
27537 | Where are we going? |
27537 | Where are you going now? |
27537 | Where is her name? |
27537 | Where, might I ask? |
27537 | Where, then, would you like me to put them? |
27537 | Who has given me such a priest''s cap? |
27537 | Who knows? 27537 Who knows?" |
27537 | Who told you that? |
27537 | Who? 27537 Who?" |
27537 | Whom do you mean? |
27537 | Why did she not come to see her father? |
27537 | Why did you do that? |
27537 | Why do you ask? |
27537 | Why do you call it mine? |
27537 | Why is this? 27537 Why not? |
27537 | Why not? |
27537 | Why should I think of you? |
27537 | Why so? |
27537 | Why? |
27537 | Why? |
27537 | Why? |
27537 | Will you come with me yourself there, then? |
27537 | With good reason, too-- is that not so? |
27537 | Would you believe it? 27537 Would you believe that this brute has no interest in the thing any longer?" |
27537 | You are not going, I''m sure, to leave me by myself? |
27537 | You do n''t say so? |
27537 | You have not been to Nogent, then? |
27537 | You love nobody but me alone? |
27537 | You mean to tell me that? |
27537 | You see him often, then? |
27537 | You seem to me very dispassionate about politics? |
27537 | You will not acknowledge it? |
27537 | You''d like to follow it-- wouldn''t you? |
27537 | You''ll accompany me-- won''t you? |
27537 | You''re going out shopping? |
27537 | Your bed? 27537 Your hour?" |
27537 | ( See page 107)_ Frontispiece_"CAN I LIVE WITHOUT YOU?" |
27537 | A letter from his mother was awaiting him when he reached his abode:"Why such a long absence? |
27537 | After a long interval of silence, Frederick went on to ask:"So, then, he has changed his address?" |
27537 | After a minute''s silence he added:"We ought to''thee''and''thou''each other, as we used to do long ago-- shall we do so?" |
27537 | And M. Dambreuse, addressing Frederick, said to him in a low whisper:"You have not called about that business of ours?" |
27537 | And Madame Dambreuse:"You''ll call again soon, will you not?" |
27537 | And a horrible doubt seized hold of his mind:"Suppose she was not coming at all, and merely gave me a promise in order to get rid of me? |
27537 | And after that-- to what would she be compelled to turn? |
27537 | And as he took a seat:"How is the worthy Arnoux going on?" |
27537 | And as the other was gazing at him in astonishment:"Is n''t your mistress''s furniture to be sold in three days''time?" |
27537 | And from time to time he uttered a groan; then:"But is a man bound to fight a duel?" |
27537 | And then, what concern is he of yours any longer? |
27537 | And turning towards Frederick:"So here you are-- you?" |
27537 | And yet, where would be the harm in two wretched beings mingling their griefs? |
27537 | And yourself-- what about the woman you were so passionately attached to, Madame Arnoux?" |
27537 | And, as they were passing in front of a large cart- shed containing some faggots:"Suppose we sat down there,_ under shelter_?" |
27537 | And, as they were swallowing the first spoonful:"Well, my dear old friend Aulnays, have you been to the Palais- Royal to see_ Père et Portier_?" |
27537 | And, exhuming their youth with every sentence, they said to each other:"Do you remember?" |
27537 | Are you going to deny this?" |
27537 | Are you there?" |
27537 | As for Lamartine, how can you expect a poet to understand politics? |
27537 | As for M. Dambreuse''s office, a disagreeable spot, what use could he make of it? |
27537 | As for their intelligence, what was the use of that precious trades''union of theirs which they established under the Restoration? |
27537 | As he made the latter remark, M. Roque asked:"Are you not yourself the painter of a very notable picture?" |
27537 | As they were passing a church, he said:"Suppose we go in for a little while-- to look?" |
27537 | At last he said with a smile:"Have you any doubt about it?" |
27537 | Besides, what was the cause of this good nature, so contrary to his usual conduct? |
27537 | But about Arnoux?" |
27537 | But he replied, in a lively fashion:"Would you like me to wait at the corner of the Rue Tronchet and the Rue de la Ferme?" |
27537 | But how could he get into a passion with her? |
27537 | But she went on gently, and with one of those looks which seem to appeal for a denial of the truth:"Are you perfectly certain?" |
27537 | But the other, in a tragic tone:"Ought not the Government to make an ordinance abolishing prostitution and want?" |
27537 | But what can be done with a fancy article of that sort?" |
27537 | But what road ought he to take so that they might not pass each other? |
27537 | But why was there such coldness in her manner towards her niece? |
27537 | But why? |
27537 | Can it be, furthermore, that all is over? |
27537 | Deslauriers saw what Frederick meant, and passed his two hands over his head; then, all of a sudden:"But what about yourself? |
27537 | Did I not think of it alone? |
27537 | Did he want a grant for fifty years or forever? |
27537 | Did she not, as it were, constitute the very substance of his heart, the very basis of his life? |
27537 | Do you agree?" |
27537 | Do you not feel the aspiration of my soul ascending towards yours, and that they must intermingle, and that I am dying on your account?" |
27537 | Do you not realise what it means?" |
27537 | Do you remember what a beautiful thing it was? |
27537 | Do you remember?" |
27537 | Does it mean that I love him?" |
27537 | Frederick got into a rage with him for this, and when the young man''s anger had passed off:"Well, afterwards----what?" |
27537 | Frederick, who was at the moment thinking of the Maréchale, stammered:"Where, pray?" |
27537 | Had she a lover? |
27537 | Had the Vatnaz, then, broken off with Delmar? |
27537 | Had the painter and the journalist prepared their attack on him at the same time? |
27537 | Have I killed you?" |
27537 | Have you any doubt about it, eh?" |
27537 | Have you any objection?" |
27537 | He called at her house; and in an unblushing fashion:"Have you twelve thousand francs to lend me?" |
27537 | He contented himself with saying to her in reply:"What does this signify to you?" |
27537 | He could not resist the sentiment of gallantry which was aroused in him by her fresh youthfulness, and he replied:"Why should I tell you a lie? |
27537 | He quitted the young man with these words:"You''ll come soon, will you not? |
27537 | He said in reply to her last words:"Have you considered this matter?" |
27537 | He stamped with his foot, got animated, and pretended to be encountering difficulties, while he exclaimed:"Are you there? |
27537 | He went on in a tone of mild affectation:"You have already found your affairs a little embarrassing?" |
27537 | He went on, in a mild tone, which mitigated the impertinence of his question:"Have you thought of me now and then?" |
27537 | His name? |
27537 | How is that?" |
27537 | How many journeys had he not made to various places? |
27537 | How many reports had he not heard read? |
27537 | How many rows of figures had he not piled together? |
27537 | How many speculations had he not hatched? |
27537 | How was it that Frederick did not ask for a little love from her in return? |
27537 | How was it that the capitalist had put his signature to such a lucubration? |
27537 | How was it, then, that she had resisted him so long? |
27537 | How was this? |
27537 | However, what was the use of it? |
27537 | I am afraid?" |
27537 | I an aristocrat? |
27537 | I ask, citizen, is this fair? |
27537 | I may count on this?" |
27537 | I?" |
27537 | In the expressions of which she habitually made use a candid egoism manifested itself:"What concern is that of mine? |
27537 | Is it not the fact that, since the morning when 1848 dawned, the various trade- bodies had not reappeared with their banners? |
27537 | Is it possible?" |
27537 | Is n''t it atrocious to see him keeping beggars?" |
27537 | Is n''t that so, Cisy?" |
27537 | Is nobody advancing on this bid? |
27537 | Is she as pretty as ever?" |
27537 | Is that clear? |
27537 | Is that it? |
27537 | Is that our Sénécal?" |
27537 | Is that the thing?" |
27537 | Is there any bidder at nine hundred and thirty?" |
27537 | Is there anything to prevent you from doing it? |
27537 | Is this possible?" |
27537 | It is over, messieurs, is it not? |
27537 | Let us dine together this evening, will you?" |
27537 | Louise came and sat beside her; then, yielding to the desire to give vent to her emotions:"Does he not talk well-- Frederick Moreau, I mean?" |
27537 | Madame Arnoux cast at her a sidelong glance, which meant:"I suppose you are not in love with him?" |
27537 | Martinon repeated several times in a very loud tone:"What? |
27537 | Monsieur has not succeeded, it would seem? |
27537 | Never went a- by- by with his wife?" |
27537 | On his return to Paris----"Why did you not call here, then, to see me?" |
27537 | One man said:"Where are we going?" |
27537 | One of your friends, eh?" |
27537 | Perhaps I am offending you? |
27537 | Perhaps Progress can be realised only through an aristocracy or through a single man? |
27537 | Perhaps it was Martinon? |
27537 | Regimbart said to Frederick, who was walking between him and Dussardier:"Well, and this scare-- what do we care about it? |
27537 | Regimbart, being Mignot''s intimate friend, could perhaps enlighten him? |
27537 | Rosanette listened to this narrative attentively, then, turning towards Frederick:"No doubt it was through jealousy? |
27537 | Rosanette, who felt herself stifling, went away; and presently Pellerin said:"Well, about Arnoux; you know what has happened?" |
27537 | She burst into sobs, and hiding her face in his breast:"Can I live without you?" |
27537 | She repeated in a louder tone:"Will you marry me?" |
27537 | She replied with a shake of her head:"And you take advantage of it to amuse yourself?" |
27537 | She said to him, in an unctuous tone, while she drew forth from her purse three square slips of paper:"You will take these from me?" |
27537 | She seized a candlestick, and pointing at her face:"Do n''t you recognise the fact there?" |
27537 | She shivered with sensuously enticing movements; but a voice exclaimed:"Where are you?" |
27537 | Since vengeance was offered to him, why should he not snatch at it? |
27537 | So, then, she was in love with the mummer? |
27537 | So, then, they were reconciled? |
27537 | Suddenly, Rosanette said in an appealing tone:"We''ll preserve the body-- shall we not?" |
27537 | Suppose we tried to rescue him, eh? |
27537 | Tell me-- what''s the matter with you?" |
27537 | That''s charming, eh?" |
27537 | The Baron went on:"What has become of her, this fine Rose? |
27537 | The entire article concluded with this phrase, pregnant perhaps with sinister meaning:"What is the cause of their affection? |
27537 | The guests stared at him, and Louise, more astonished than the rest, murmured:"What is it, pray?" |
27537 | The next moment, as her eyes fell on a door close to the pillar of the alcove:"That''s the way you let your friends out, eh?" |
27537 | The right thing to do, was n''t it?" |
27537 | The set will be ready-- will it not? |
27537 | The type of the sublime( Raphael has proved it by his Madonnas) is probably a mother with her child?" |
27537 | Their parting was an affectionate one; then, on the threshold, she murmured once more:"You love me-- do you not?" |
27537 | Then some one said from behind the door:"Is Madame there?" |
27537 | Then there were endless complaints about Providence:"Why was it not the will of Heaven? |
27537 | Then, abruptly:"You were at the races on Sunday?" |
27537 | Then, five minutes afterwards:"Who knows, after all? |
27537 | Then, who could tell but that, by some chance or other, she might be at the place of meeting before him? |
27537 | They were walking side by side and Frederick said:"You remember when I brought you into the country?" |
27537 | This is a nice joke, is n''t it?" |
27537 | This seemed strange to Frederick; and what was his friend doing down there? |
27537 | This was a piece of refinement that filled her with amazement, and, with a gush of emotion, she said to him:"Will you come with us to the sea- baths?" |
27537 | To what lover did she owe her education? |
27537 | Was he not her real husband? |
27537 | Was it a visitor? |
27537 | Was it not a piece of folly, he returned, to take everything seriously? |
27537 | Was it the diplomatist or some other? |
27537 | Was it this threat on the part of the Vatnaz that had caused so much agitation in her mind? |
27537 | Was not this one of those consoling phrases which were customary with medical men? |
27537 | Was there no one? |
27537 | Was this a conspiracy? |
27537 | What are you doing?" |
27537 | What are you to do?" |
27537 | What did he mean? |
27537 | What did it matter, however? |
27537 | What do I care about them, indeed? |
27537 | What do you want to go there for?" |
27537 | What does the fencing- school teach? |
27537 | What does this signify? |
27537 | What expiation could she offer hereafter if she were to persevere in this love- affair? |
27537 | What fine weather we are getting, are we not?" |
27537 | What had kept her in? |
27537 | What had occurred in her life down to the day when he first came to her house? |
27537 | What is it?" |
27537 | What is style? |
27537 | What is the object of it?" |
27537 | What need have I?" |
27537 | What object, pray, could I have for taking such a step? |
27537 | What self- denial? |
27537 | What was he to do? |
27537 | What was the cause of this rancour? |
27537 | What was the good of making an enemy for himself? |
27537 | What was the occasion of this politeness? |
27537 | What was the reason of this? |
27537 | What was this? |
27537 | What weapons are you going to take? |
27537 | What were the means by which she had gradually emerged from wretchedness? |
27537 | What would you have?" |
27537 | What''s the good of it?" |
27537 | What, then, was troubling her? |
27537 | What? |
27537 | What?" |
27537 | What?" |
27537 | Where are you going? |
27537 | Where do you expect him to find twelve thousand francs?" |
27537 | Where in the world was he going? |
27537 | Where is she, pray?" |
27537 | Where is the sense of this sort of thing?" |
27537 | Where is the use in being young? |
27537 | Where was he to get the money? |
27537 | Where was it that he had known them? |
27537 | Where''s the harm?" |
27537 | While she gazed at him her heart softened, a nervous reaction brought tears into her eyes, and she murmured:"Will you marry me?" |
27537 | Who compels her to keep me? |
27537 | Who had brought it there? |
27537 | Who knows? |
27537 | Who knows?" |
27537 | Who paid for the furniture?" |
27537 | Who''ll pay the amount?" |
27537 | Who, then, had tempted him to such a breach of trust? |
27537 | Why do you go to amuse yourself with virtuous women?" |
27537 | Why do you set your heart on ruining her?" |
27537 | Why had he lent the money? |
27537 | Why not obey the impulse that urges us onward?" |
27537 | Why not, later?" |
27537 | Why not? |
27537 | Why should you not?" |
27537 | Why would you not be a deputy?" |
27537 | Why? |
27537 | Why?" |
27537 | Why?" |
27537 | Without attributing to her any passionate regret, he thought she looked a little sad; and, in a mournful voice, he said:"You are enduring pain?" |
27537 | Without giving her time to reflect, he added:"Next Tuesday, I suppose?" |
27537 | Would Arnoux be seized with mistrust with regard to them? |
27537 | Would she have to become a school- mistress or a lady''s companion, or perhaps a chambermaid? |
27537 | Would you be surprised to hear that for thirty years I used to get up at four o''clock every morning? |
27537 | You are grieving, too?" |
27537 | You are playing the spy on me?" |
27537 | You have n''t anyone now but your Catau, do n''t you see?" |
27537 | You know him, do n''t you?" |
27537 | You understand? |
27537 | You''ve been told that she was rich, have n''t you? |
27537 | [ Illustration][ Illustration: Can I live without you?] |
27537 | [ L] Do you know what that is?" |
27537 | and he looked at the dead man more closely in order to strengthen his mind, mentally addressing him thus:"Well, what? |
27537 | and what number of carriages would he require? |
27537 | and, as Bazile says, who the deuce is it that is deceived here?" |
27537 | and, if so, who was her lover? |
27537 | are they not going to fight?" |
27537 | as castanets?" |
27537 | do you know how much he failed for? |
27537 | do you see? |
27537 | do you understand?" |
27537 | does n''t it strike you that at this rate you wo n''t be a very considerate husband?" |
27537 | family portraits, no doubt?" |
27537 | for him?" |
27537 | have you thought about me?" |
27537 | he exclaimed;"for what''s the cause of this display of fury?" |
27537 | is it the sword?" |
27537 | it''s not Regimbart that''s in question, is it?" |
27537 | leave me, I beg of you?" |
27537 | no!----""If I had only a proof!----""What proof?" |
27537 | so he is transported, this good Sénécal?" |
27537 | so you are visiting here?" |
27537 | to poke my nose in a squabble of that sort? |
27537 | was it possible? |
27537 | well, what of that? |
27537 | what am I do?" |
27537 | what are you doing?" |
27537 | what did she care, indeed, about that one? |
27537 | what do I care about a thing being life- like? |
27537 | what do I care about money? |
27537 | what do I care about that? |
27537 | what''s his name?" |
27537 | where are you? |
27537 | with his wife?" |
34828 | A rascal? |
34828 | About how much should it amount to? |
34828 | Am I going to get entangled with women? |
34828 | And Madame? |
34828 | And did you take his wife by the waist between the two doors,_ sicut decet_? |
34828 | And for whom? |
34828 | And so you are back again in the old spot? 34828 And this one,"went on Frederick, in a low tone,"will it be the same way with it?" |
34828 | And we''ll understand each other still better, shall we not? |
34828 | And what are we to do, then? |
34828 | And what are you going to do there? |
34828 | And what do you propose that I should do in that way? |
34828 | And what next? |
34828 | And who is that dressed like a bailiff talking in the recess of the window to a Marquise de Pompadour? |
34828 | And why are they paid? 34828 And why?" |
34828 | And you, Monsieur,said she,"do n''t you dance?" |
34828 | And your bouquet? |
34828 | Are the newspapers free? 34828 Are these all for you?" |
34828 | Are they playing on me? 34828 Are you coming to take it?" |
34828 | Are you quite well? |
34828 | Are you ready, my dear? |
34828 | As for me, I ca n''t go up; but you, surely there is nothing to prevent you? |
34828 | Astonish me? 34828 At Jacques Arnoux''s establishment?" |
34828 | At his house? |
34828 | At the Dambreuses''? 34828 But I was under the impression,"she said,"that M. Dambreuse was going to get you into the Council of State? |
34828 | But could I do so? |
34828 | But have you any bills or promissory notes? |
34828 | But if Madame Arnoux were to know about it? 34828 But your family?" |
34828 | But, at all events, tell me the news? 34828 But,"he said in faltering tones,"what does this prove?" |
34828 | But-- what about the journal? |
34828 | Can it be possible you do n''t know what it is to have a mistress? |
34828 | Could n''t you ask some of the persons that owe you money to make you an advance? |
34828 | Do n''t you recognise us? |
34828 | Do you believe in that? |
34828 | Do you know him? |
34828 | Do you know what you ought to do, my fine fellow? |
34828 | Do you occasionally see our friend Martinon? |
34828 | Do you really think so? |
34828 | Do you remember a certain bouquet of roses one evening, in a carriage? |
34828 | Do you wish to send any message to anyone? |
34828 | Does Monsieur require anything? |
34828 | For what purpose? |
34828 | From doing what? |
34828 | Has she received you? |
34828 | Have you any doubt about it? |
34828 | Have you anything to smoke? |
34828 | He came to- day, did n''t he? |
34828 | His earthenware- works are going on very well, are they not? |
34828 | How could I remember what sort of man the clerk was? |
34828 | How do you know her? |
34828 | How do you know that? |
34828 | How do you know? |
34828 | How do you think I can live over there without you? |
34828 | How is that, when her name is Marie? |
34828 | How is that? 34828 How is that?" |
34828 | How much have you got still? |
34828 | However, I understand one has certain wants-- aristocratic wants; for, no doubt, some woman----"Well, even if that were so? 34828 I give you pain?" |
34828 | I thought----"What did you think? |
34828 | I? |
34828 | Is Madame coming home to dinner? |
34828 | Is it my fault if there is a Madame Arnoux in the same street? |
34828 | Is it on account of him? |
34828 | Is she going to speak to me? |
34828 | Is that really so? |
34828 | Mamma, are you coming to dinner? |
34828 | Me? 34828 Might I carry these away with me?" |
34828 | Monsieur Roque? |
34828 | One evening, returning from Saint- Cloud? |
34828 | Ought he to get rid of them by asphyxia, as some English doctor, whose name I do n''t remember-- a disciple of Malthus-- advises him? |
34828 | Perhaps these things are tiresome to you? |
34828 | Shall we go? |
34828 | Shall you go? |
34828 | So I can say to Jacques Arnoux----? |
34828 | So happiness is impossible? |
34828 | So much the worse for you, then; you have no right----"What? |
34828 | So then, he has done you some great injury, Monsieur? |
34828 | So then, you know him? |
34828 | So, then, you did not recognise him? |
34828 | Suppose I applied to M. Dambreuse? 34828 Suppose I went back again?" |
34828 | Suppose I went to see the others? |
34828 | Suppose I were to put on her,he thought,"a pink silk dress with an Oriental bournous? |
34828 | Suppose we eat a turban of rabbits_ à la Richeliéu_ and a pudding_ à la d''Orléans_? 34828 Suppose we give him some cigars, eh?" |
34828 | Suppose we pass over him-- what do you say to that? |
34828 | Surely you got my letter? |
34828 | The amount you want is eighteen thousand francs-- isn''t it? |
34828 | The one that you put your letters to women in? |
34828 | The picture- dealer, is it? |
34828 | Then, what interest have you in defending him? |
34828 | They are calling for the organisation of labour,said another:"Can this be conceived?" |
34828 | This impugns nobody''s honour, do you understand? |
34828 | To take what? |
34828 | Was there a good supply of truffles there? |
34828 | We can bring them with us, ca n''t we? |
34828 | We like to be alone better-- don''t we? |
34828 | Well, and what about yourself? |
34828 | Well, how is she going on? |
34828 | Well, what is there to prevent you? |
34828 | Well, what then? |
34828 | Well, what then? |
34828 | Well, what? |
34828 | Well,said Arnoux, heaving a deep sigh,"you know all about it?" |
34828 | Well,said Rosanette,"what does that signify?" |
34828 | Well-- I suppose so----And, as he hesitated:"What is the matter with you? |
34828 | Well-- and this little business? |
34828 | Well? |
34828 | Well? |
34828 | Well? |
34828 | Were you not----? |
34828 | What a foot, eh? 34828 What a stupid play that was-- was it not, Monsieur?" |
34828 | What are you to do in an age of decadence like ours? 34828 What brings you here?" |
34828 | What cab? |
34828 | What could you expect,said a third,"when we see M. de Genoude giving his assistance to the_ Siècle_?" |
34828 | What do I care about him, indeed? 34828 What do I owe to this gentleman that I should be polite to him? |
34828 | What do you think of it? 34828 What do you want me to do?" |
34828 | What does it matter, if one is compensated by the enjoyment of supreme bliss? |
34828 | What does that signify to me? 34828 What does that signify?" |
34828 | What has become of you, my dear? 34828 What has happened to you?" |
34828 | What is it, pray? |
34828 | What is that, pray? |
34828 | What is the matter now? |
34828 | What is the matter now? |
34828 | What is the use of talking about all these things,said he,"when we''ll never have them?" |
34828 | What is this but a beautiful woman? 34828 What is to be done?" |
34828 | What number? |
34828 | What other woman? |
34828 | What prevents you from doing so? |
34828 | What then, mademoiselle? 34828 What''s the matter now with the ducky? |
34828 | What''s the matter now, citizen? |
34828 | What''s the use of it? |
34828 | What, are you leaving me? |
34828 | What, do n''t you know anyone who would----? |
34828 | What? 34828 When are you going to take me there with you?" |
34828 | When is Monsieur coming back? |
34828 | When you have finished, you will order your carriage, will you not? |
34828 | Where are they? |
34828 | Where is he living now? |
34828 | Where is she now? |
34828 | Where is the disgrace of passing for her lover? 34828 Where the deuce are you bringing me to?" |
34828 | Where, pray? |
34828 | Who knows? |
34828 | Who, pray, is Mademoiselle Louise? |
34828 | Who, pray? |
34828 | Whose fault is it? 34828 Whose polka, pray, is this?" |
34828 | Why do you give me pain? |
34828 | Why in the world,M. Dambreuse went on,"are you so anxious to be attached to the Council of State?" |
34828 | Why not? |
34828 | Why should I not go? |
34828 | Why should we, indeed? 34828 Why, now?" |
34828 | Why, then,said Sénécal,"have you not got the volumes of the working- men poets?" |
34828 | Why, what has he done to you? |
34828 | Why? |
34828 | Why? |
34828 | Why? |
34828 | Would not virtue in that case be merely cowardice? |
34828 | Would you like me to go back with you? |
34828 | Would you prefer a turbot_ à la_ Chambord? |
34828 | You are acquainted with him, perhaps? |
34828 | You are sending me away? |
34828 | You are staying for supper with us, are you not? |
34828 | You believe still in the police, do you? 34828 You have been there?" |
34828 | You have no need of money, I fancy? |
34828 | You know M. Dambreuse, do n''t you? |
34828 | You might find it to your advantage some time----"What do you mean by that? |
34828 | You will introduce me there later, will you not, old fellow? |
34828 | You''re getting on well all this time? |
34828 | You''ve been put out? |
34828 | You''ve come to see the master? 34828 Your verses, then?" |
34828 | ''Tis a commonplace country enough-- Italy, eh? |
34828 | A dark woman, is she not, of the middle height?" |
34828 | A little affair of the heart? |
34828 | A man- servant in a gold- laced cap came up and said:"Would Monsieur have the kindness to go below? |
34828 | A tear fell down her face; then, turning towards the young man, softly:"What is your Christian name?" |
34828 | After this he thought of Hussonnet; but where could he discover a man of that sort? |
34828 | Am I a fast woman-- I? |
34828 | Am I not free----?" |
34828 | And Arnoux, eh? |
34828 | And Théodore, the little fellow who always used to attend down stairs? |
34828 | And a fellow named Eugène? |
34828 | And as for her-- Madame Arnoux-- how could he ever see her again now? |
34828 | And he repeated,"Is it the rich man''s fault?" |
34828 | And suddenly:"Will you be the man to perform those duties, with the title of general secretary?" |
34828 | And you?" |
34828 | And, after a minute''s silence:"Where are you going this evening?" |
34828 | And, after all, why should he not? |
34828 | And, questioning the waiter:"You heard him yourself, just as I did?" |
34828 | And, turning towards Cisy:"Are we to be obliged to follow the advice of the infamous Malthus?" |
34828 | And, with a napkin under his arm, the master of the establishment himself accosted him:"You''re asking him for M. Regimbart, monsieur? |
34828 | And, without waiting for an answer, he asked Hussonnet in a low tone:"What is your friend''s name?" |
34828 | Are you English? |
34828 | Are you a judge of them? |
34828 | Are you going to obey me, damn you? |
34828 | Are you going to wait for your hidalgo?" |
34828 | Are you listening to me?" |
34828 | Are you quite sure?" |
34828 | Are you still in love with Madame Arnoux? |
34828 | Arnoux next asked:"And why do n''t you call there oftener?" |
34828 | Arnoux replied with an air of calmness:"How do you think I could live in Paris now?" |
34828 | Arnoux watched them going off; then, turning towards Frederick:"Did you like the Vatnaz? |
34828 | Arnoux?" |
34828 | As a matter of fact, how do you know, Monsieur, that I am not myself a police spy?" |
34828 | At last Arnoux would say to him,"Shall you be disengaged to- morrow evening?" |
34828 | Besides, what did it matter, when he could now visit her entirely at his ease, live in the very atmosphere she breathed? |
34828 | Besides, what was he to do? |
34828 | Besides, when Deslauriers might wait? |
34828 | But M. Dambreuse? |
34828 | But his uncle would leave him something? |
34828 | But how could he receive her--_her_, his future mistress? |
34828 | But how would he explain his fixed sojourn at Nogent? |
34828 | But how, you will say to me, can we be sure of selling? |
34828 | But in what way could the sovereignty of the people be more sacred than the Divine Right? |
34828 | But on what pretext could I ask for money? |
34828 | But where in the world is Cisy?" |
34828 | But why had he never spoken about Madame Arnoux? |
34828 | But why? |
34828 | But''tis late; suppose we go?" |
34828 | Can she receive me?" |
34828 | Can you chat with a woman yourself?" |
34828 | Cisy replied that it was"the Comtesse Dambreuse""They''re very rich-- aren''t they?" |
34828 | Could there be anything more certain? |
34828 | Do I sell myself? |
34828 | Do you remember, Mademoiselle, when you slept on my knees in the carriage?" |
34828 | Do you want me to take my oath on it?" |
34828 | Does this astonish you?" |
34828 | Finally, what would his mother say? |
34828 | Frederick added with an air of indifference:"Now that I think of it, do you still see-- what''s that his name is?--that ex- vocalist-- Delmar?" |
34828 | Frederick broke it by saying:"When could you pay back this money?" |
34828 | Frederick had no time to reflect about it, for M. Dambreuse, as soon as they were alone:"You did not come to get your shares?" |
34828 | Frederick heard some phrases, such as the following:"Were you at the last charity fête at the Hôtel Lambert, Mademoiselle?" |
34828 | Frederick interrupted him, saying in the most natural tone he could assume:"Is Arnoux going on well?" |
34828 | Frederick, growing pale, added:"And Madame?" |
34828 | Frederick, hurt by the attitude which Deslauriers was assuming, replied:"Is that my fault?" |
34828 | Frederick, taking advantage of the opportunity thus offered to talk about her, added shyly:"Could I not see her?" |
34828 | Gone to travel in Italy? |
34828 | Had he a mistress? |
34828 | Had he not a distant cousin in America? |
34828 | Had she fine eyes at one time, this woman? |
34828 | Had she spoken? |
34828 | Have you got a hundred sous to pay for my dinner?" |
34828 | Have you got the amount? |
34828 | He appeared to be collecting his thoughts; then, suddenly:"Has my case been found?" |
34828 | He asked in return:"Delicacy about what?" |
34828 | He assumed that she must be of Andalusian descent, perhaps a Creole: had she brought this negress across with her from the West Indian Islands? |
34828 | He coloured slightly; finally, addressing the old man:"Our fair friend tells me that you would have the kindness----""What of that, neighbour? |
34828 | He could not make up his mind to go away, and, with a look of entreaty:"These women you speak of are very unfeeling, then?" |
34828 | He did not know what reply to make; and, after a slight chuckle, which gave him time for reflection:"If I told you, would you believe me?" |
34828 | He next asked:"Are you quite sure of it?" |
34828 | He said, with a sigh:"So, then, you do n''t admit that a man may love-- a woman?" |
34828 | How could such a man as this fascinate her? |
34828 | How do you reconcile the principle of article 1351 of the Civil Code with this application by a third party to set aside a judgment by default?" |
34828 | How was he to accomplish this? |
34828 | How was he to get an invitation to the Arnoux''s house? |
34828 | How was he to make the most of himself? |
34828 | How was he to meet her now? |
34828 | How was it that he had not thought about her sooner? |
34828 | How was that worthy relative? |
34828 | I am in the way?" |
34828 | I ask this of you as a special favour-- eh?" |
34828 | I have been so much annoyed----""At what, pray?" |
34828 | I have done right, have I not?" |
34828 | I wanted to tell you----"He was astonished to find that she addressed him in the plural; and, as she again relapsed into silence:"Well, what?" |
34828 | In what way could they repay him for his kindness? |
34828 | Is it all over-- eh?" |
34828 | Is it true that you''re going away?" |
34828 | Is n''t it abominable? |
34828 | Is that understood?" |
34828 | Is that you, Felix?" |
34828 | Is that your opinion, Father Dussardier?" |
34828 | Is this your profession? |
34828 | It does n''t annoy you when I address you in that way?" |
34828 | Ledoux?" |
34828 | M. Dambreuse invited his young friend to take his place among them, and when he declined:"What can I do for you? |
34828 | M. Dambreuse perceived Martinon, and, drawing near his wife, in a low tone:"Is it you who invited him?" |
34828 | Mademoiselle Vatnaz went on:"And what news about the old man of the mountain?" |
34828 | Monsieur Ledoux?" |
34828 | Now do you understand? |
34828 | On one occasion, referring to a waiter who attended on him carelessly, he exclaimed:"Have we not enough of insults from the foreigner?" |
34828 | Or suppose, rather, I were to make her wear blue velvet with a grey background, richly coloured? |
34828 | Perhaps it would be better to go straight to the mark at once, and declare his love? |
34828 | Perhaps she was not so hard to win? |
34828 | Regimbart?" |
34828 | She exclaimed:"But what is the meaning of that-- a good fellow?" |
34828 | She had, moreover, a figure like Marthe, so that Frederick said to her, at their second interview:"Will you permit me to kiss you, mademoiselle?" |
34828 | She returned coldly:"Perhaps that wounds your delicacy?" |
34828 | She soon rose, and stretching out her hand towards him:"You do not remember me, Monsieur Auguste?" |
34828 | She was dead, perhaps? |
34828 | She went on:"What lucky chance has brought you here?" |
34828 | Since Madame Arnoux had come once, what was to prevent her from coming again? |
34828 | So there is no risk, you understand?" |
34828 | The banker added, with a display of good- nature:"Are you on friendly terms with them-- on intimate terms?" |
34828 | The dealer in faïence looked so gloomy that his companion wished to know if he were ill."I? |
34828 | The door- keeper called him back, exclaiming:"Have you a permit?" |
34828 | The picture- dealer added, with an air of simplicity:"What''s the name, by- the- by, of that young fellow, your friend?" |
34828 | The professor, displeased at listening to theories opposed to his own, asked him in a churlish tone:"And so this is your view, monsieur? |
34828 | Their house should be amusing; besides, he liked Arnoux; then, who could tell? |
34828 | Then all of a sudden:"You know him-- Père Oudry-- don''t you?" |
34828 | Then he had a talk with the waiter all about the latter''s predecessors at the"Provençaux":--"What had become of Antoine? |
34828 | Then, all at once:"Will you bet me a hundred francs that I wo n''t_ do_ the first woman that passes?" |
34828 | Then, as soon as they were alone in the dining- room, his mother said to him in a low tone:"Well?" |
34828 | Then, in a low tone:"_ He_ brought you to the ball the other night, did he not?" |
34828 | Then, without paying the slightest attentions to the obeisances of his man- servant:"Why did n''t you bring the trap down here?" |
34828 | Thereupon Hussonnet said, considering this an opportune time:"Could n''t you give me an advance, my dear master----?" |
34828 | To lead us to what? |
34828 | To tell her that he loved her? |
34828 | To whom did this hat belong? |
34828 | Undoubtedly it must be an invention, a calumny? |
34828 | Was he laughing at him? |
34828 | Was it a thoughtless act, or an encouragement? |
34828 | Was it another trick of the Maréchale? |
34828 | Was it forgetfulness on their part, or was it intentional? |
34828 | Was it in order to prevent any allusion on his part to the memories they possessed in common? |
34828 | Was it not enough to have insulted Madame Arnoux? |
34828 | Was it she? |
34828 | Was the object of this to let him know that he would get no invitation from them? |
34828 | Was this a hint? |
34828 | Was this an indirect overture? |
34828 | Was this not an engagement, a promise? |
34828 | Was this remorse or passion? |
34828 | We are melancholy?" |
34828 | Well, after all, where would be the harm of that? |
34828 | Well, what is annoying you? |
34828 | Were they advances on her part? |
34828 | What are you laughing at? |
34828 | What do I care about him after all? |
34828 | What do you think of it?" |
34828 | What do you want me to do with them? |
34828 | What does it mean-- reality? |
34828 | What does it signify?" |
34828 | What in the world could Regimbart be doing? |
34828 | What in the world was it? |
34828 | What is it but the beautiful? |
34828 | What need have we of laborious trifles, from which it is impossible to derive any benefit-- those Venuses, for instance, with all your landscapes? |
34828 | What need was there for telling us about the Valois? |
34828 | What the deuce brings you here? |
34828 | What was her name, her place of residence, her life, her past? |
34828 | What was the meaning of this invitation? |
34828 | What will they say to me?" |
34828 | What would Monsieur like to take?" |
34828 | What''s the matter with you?" |
34828 | What, then, did she mean? |
34828 | When he came back, he wanted to know from Frederick"who was that young man?" |
34828 | When he reached home again he found a letter containing these words:"What news? |
34828 | When, then, would he next see her? |
34828 | Whence came this goodwill? |
34828 | Where could Rosanette be? |
34828 | Where did it come from?" |
34828 | Where the deuce have you been? |
34828 | Where''s my case? |
34828 | Where, then, did she reside? |
34828 | Where, then, is the type?" |
34828 | Where, then, were they living? |
34828 | Who told you that?" |
34828 | Why are you going?" |
34828 | Why did n''t you do like the others, each of whom went off with a woman?" |
34828 | Why did you never say anything to me about them in your letters?" |
34828 | Why does it place shackles on the compulsory sale of real estate? |
34828 | Why does the law impede fathers of families with regard to the making of wills? |
34828 | Why had she offered him her hand? |
34828 | Why not take the risk at once of uttering the word on which his happiness depended? |
34828 | Why not? |
34828 | Why not? |
34828 | Why should he despair? |
34828 | Why should she have come there? |
34828 | Why?" |
34828 | Will you bring me your sketches one of these days?" |
34828 | Will you listen to me?" |
34828 | Would he like to be a partner in any of his own undertakings? |
34828 | Would you like me to introduce you to some women? |
34828 | Would you mind?" |
34828 | Would you not be flattered at being in that position?" |
34828 | Yes or no?" |
34828 | Yes, my good friends, one of the old_ régime_!--nice, is n''t she?" |
34828 | You are not going away again?" |
34828 | You do n''t chance to have it yourself?" |
34828 | You have no objection, is n''t that so?" |
34828 | You know his joke on the subject?" |
34828 | You would do well, Hussonnet, to touch on this matter with a word or two in your newspaper?" |
34828 | Your health is good, I hope? |
34828 | again?" |
34828 | and alone? |
34828 | and in what way?" |
34828 | and is she an accomplice of her husband?" |
34828 | are we ourselves free?" |
34828 | are you going?" |
34828 | are you so childish?" |
34828 | are you still thinking about that?" |
34828 | but with me? |
34828 | by what means? |
34828 | could I be more unfortunate than I am with these creatures?" |
34828 | do I know him? |
34828 | how are you going on? |
34828 | indeed? |
34828 | just now?--for good?--we''ll never see one another again?" |
34828 | not so unique as people say it is? |
34828 | she said,"you are trembling?" |
34828 | so you know him?" |
34828 | such things sometimes happen on the Bourse-- well, then, since I am breaking my promise to one of them, am I not free? |
34828 | what brings you back again?" |
34828 | what does it matter?" |
34828 | what does that signify? |
34828 | what''s the good? |
34828 | what''s the matter with you?" |
34828 | would you like to have a hand in it?" |
34828 | yes, will you not?" |
34828 | your case, in which you keep your notes of lectures? |
11303 | ''And Ford; what did you think of Ford''s Macbeth?'' |
11303 | ''And I never succeeded in writing my play?'' |
11303 | ''And does n''t a human being ever forgive?'' |
11303 | ''And he has left Ashwood to Mr. Price, is not that his name?'' |
11303 | ''And it was in this room that you dreamed all those dreams?'' |
11303 | ''And live here with you, I and Julia?'' |
11303 | ''And she is really the girl you intended to play Lady Hayward?'' |
11303 | ''And she refused?'' |
11303 | ''And supposing it were so, what would be your advice? |
11303 | ''And then?'' |
11303 | ''And what do you think of it? |
11303 | ''And what has become of this actress?'' |
11303 | ''And what part has he cast you for-- the young girl?'' |
11303 | ''And what will you say?'' |
11303 | ''And when did he make this new will?'' |
11303 | ''And why not, Emily?'' |
11303 | ''And why not? |
11303 | ''And why, may I ask?'' |
11303 | ''And why? |
11303 | ''And would you have him married?'' |
11303 | ''And you agree with him that I ought to go away?'' |
11303 | ''And you will come and stay with us in London? |
11303 | ''Are n''t you coming down to dinner, Emily? |
11303 | ''Are n''t you getting on this morning?'' |
11303 | ''Are you going to write about it?'' |
11303 | ''Are you quite sure?'' |
11303 | ''Are you really serious?'' |
11303 | ''Are you sure?'' |
11303 | ''But did you not hear him say at dinner that he was re- writing as he rehearsed? |
11303 | ''But do n''t you think her very handsome?'' |
11303 | ''But do you think that my refusal to marry him had anything to do with his death?'' |
11303 | ''But if he does n''t?'' |
11303 | ''But what do you propose?'' |
11303 | ''But what has she done?'' |
11303 | ''But when can I have the manuscript?'' |
11303 | ''But why? |
11303 | ''But you are not offended?'' |
11303 | ''But you will let her have the part of Lady Hayward?'' |
11303 | ''But, dearest Emily, who are"they"? |
11303 | ''But,''she said, her voice trembling,''you would not have committed suicide?'' |
11303 | ''Dandy is mine; they ca n''t take him from me, can they? |
11303 | ''Dearest Julia, you do love me, do n''t you? |
11303 | ''Did it escape? |
11303 | ''Did she ask you?'' |
11303 | ''Did you like the piece?'' |
11303 | ''Did you never break your resolutions?'' |
11303 | ''Do n''t speak like that.... Where will you go?'' |
11303 | ''Do n''t yer know?'' |
11303 | ''Do n''t you think it will run, then?'' |
11303 | ''Do we?'' |
11303 | ''Do you care for flowers?'' |
11303 | ''Do you dislike children so much, then, Emily?'' |
11303 | ''Do you like tall women?'' |
11303 | ''Do you not think I was right? |
11303 | ''Do you think he''ll ever produce it?'' |
11303 | ''Ford appeared quite satisfied then?'' |
11303 | ''Have you any proposal to make regarding her? |
11303 | ''Have you any reason for thinking that Mr. Price will do so?'' |
11303 | ''Have you been asleep?'' |
11303 | ''Have you been dreaming again?'' |
11303 | ''Have you seen the evening papers--_The Telephone_, for instance?'' |
11303 | ''Have you spoken to her on the subject?'' |
11303 | ''He knows where I am going, and is afraid I shall forget him-- aren''t you, dear old Don? |
11303 | ''How can I convince you of the injustice of your suspicions?'' |
11303 | ''How can you ask me? |
11303 | ''How could I have been so stupid? |
11303 | ''How did the piece go to- night?'' |
11303 | ''How do you know that he is coming to turn you out of Ashwood? |
11303 | ''How is this to end?'' |
11303 | ''How should I know what you know or do n''t know? |
11303 | ''How was that?'' |
11303 | ''How''s the booking?'' |
11303 | ''I can not,''she said,''and I will not, and I do not understand how you can ask me-- you who are so loyal, how can you ask me to be disloyal?'' |
11303 | ''I did hate him, did n''t I? |
11303 | ''I shall be very glad.... Do you think it wo n''t bore you?'' |
11303 | ''I suppose you have told him that I am looking thin and ill.... Men like tall, big, healthy women like you-- don''t they?'' |
11303 | ''I wish it? |
11303 | ''I wonder if he''d give me the picture of the windmill?'' |
11303 | ''I wonder what a restaurant is like; ladies dine at restaurants, do n''t they?'' |
11303 | ''I''m not dreaming, am I?'' |
11303 | ''I''m sorry,''said Mrs. Bentley,''for disturbing you, but I should like to know what fish you would like for your dinner-- soles, turbot, or whiting? |
11303 | ''If I tell you what I want, you wo n''t refuse me, will you?'' |
11303 | ''If you think this is so, had she not better leave?'' |
11303 | ''In her case, it is a necessity; but do you think she takes it?'' |
11303 | ''Is he dead?'' |
11303 | ''Is he married?'' |
11303 | ''Is he not a dear?'' |
11303 | ''Is he? |
11303 | ''Is it possible,''said Mr. Grandly,''that Mr. Burnett seriously contemplated marriage with Miss Watson?'' |
11303 | ''Is that all? |
11303 | ''Is that really true? |
11303 | ''Julia, do not say you never will?'' |
11303 | ''My dear Emily, how can you say such things? |
11303 | ''My dear Emily, how can you think of such a thing? |
11303 | ''No, you do n''t know, dear-- do you? |
11303 | ''No,''he said, taking her hands,''we are good friends-- are we not? |
11303 | ''No; I have not.... Why do you come to torment me? |
11303 | ''Not after the third?'' |
11303 | ''Not come back at all? |
11303 | ''Now, is that your idea of the scene?'' |
11303 | ''Now? |
11303 | ''Oh yes; five shillings, was n''t it?'' |
11303 | ''Oh, Julia, Julia, do you think he forgave me? |
11303 | ''Oh, my dear Emily, how can you ask such a question? |
11303 | ''Oh, what does he say? |
11303 | ''Oh, you are my only friend; you will not leave me now.... We shall always love one another, shall we not? |
11303 | ''Oh,''she said,''why do you say these things? |
11303 | ''Only pretty well? |
11303 | ''Perfectly, so far as I''m concerned; and you, Emily?'' |
11303 | ''S''pose yer know the picture?'' |
11303 | ''Shall I come with you?'' |
11303 | ''Shall I light a candle?'' |
11303 | ''Shall I send you up some soup?'' |
11303 | ''Shall we be happy? |
11303 | ''Then why do you persist? |
11303 | ''Then will you wait a moment? |
11303 | ''Then, why do n''t you do a Hubert Price in a book? |
11303 | ''Then,''she said, with a sweet and natural smile,''I''ll write to you.... We have been excellent friends-- comrades-- have we not?'' |
11303 | ''There''s no harm in that, is there? |
11303 | ''Try again? |
11303 | ''Was she acting in the piece we saw to- night?'' |
11303 | ''We know nothing for certain,''he answered; and then he said,''You and Mrs. Bentley have lived a long time together?'' |
11303 | ''Well then, may I run and tell Julia?'' |
11303 | ''Well, then,''ave a chop?'' |
11303 | ''Were you ever in love?'' |
11303 | ''Were you very fond of her?'' |
11303 | ''What are you doing? |
11303 | ''What can we do? |
11303 | ''What did you dream?'' |
11303 | ''What do you mean, Emily?'' |
11303 | ''What do you mean? |
11303 | ''What do you mean?'' |
11303 | ''What do you think of his work?'' |
11303 | ''What do you think of turbot?'' |
11303 | ''What furnishing?'' |
11303 | ''What has become of him?'' |
11303 | ''What has she done?'' |
11303 | ''What is this?'' |
11303 | ''What kind of man?'' |
11303 | ''What? |
11303 | ''Where have you been all this time?'' |
11303 | ''Where have you been hiding yourself?... |
11303 | ''Where would he find any one to play and sing to him in the evenings as you can?'' |
11303 | ''Who is she?'' |
11303 | ''Why do I go away? |
11303 | ''Why do n''t you answer me?'' |
11303 | ''Why do you hope so?'' |
11303 | ''Why not? |
11303 | ''Why not? |
11303 | ''Why not? |
11303 | ''Why should you go? |
11303 | ''Why should you not marry her?'' |
11303 | ''Why should you not take me out?... |
11303 | ''Why should you tell me these falsehoods? |
11303 | ''Will you go and ask him?'' |
11303 | ''Will you read me the play?'' |
11303 | ''With a young man hanging over her whispering in her ear?'' |
11303 | ''Wo n''t you sit down?'' |
11303 | ''Yes, dear, I promise you that, and you will promise me to try to like your cousin?'' |
11303 | ''Yes, of course-- that is to say, if----''''Why"if"?'' |
11303 | ''Yes; why not?'' |
11303 | ''You are not going to remain in the dark? |
11303 | ''You are not in earnest? |
11303 | ''You are not serious?'' |
11303 | ''You hardly expect me to believe that, do you?'' |
11303 | ''You know what the cause of it is, I suppose?'' |
11303 | ''You know when the husband meets the wife he has divorced?'' |
11303 | ''You saw her to- night?'' |
11303 | ''You say that he passed away quietly; he did not seem to suffer at all?'' |
11303 | ''You surely do n''t believe what you are saying is true? |
11303 | ''You were very poor once?'' |
11303 | ''You will do all you can to help us? |
11303 | ''You would n''t do that, would you?'' |
11303 | ''You''re rather dusty; where have you been? |
11303 | ''Your conception is clear enough; why do n''t you write the book?'' |
11303 | ''Your play,_ Divorce_, is now running at the Queen''s Theatre?'' |
11303 | A zig- zag fugitive thought passed: why did the fly- man speak of taking them to the station? |
11303 | Above all, was he incapable of finishing_ The Gipsy_ as he intended? |
11303 | Although only distantly related, you are cousins, after all-- are you not?'' |
11303 | Am I not right?'' |
11303 | And had she not loved Hubert?--no one would ever know how much; she did not know herself,--and had he not lied to her? |
11303 | And that delicate little creature in the box next to her-- that pale diaphanous face?'' |
11303 | Any harm in that?'' |
11303 | Are you asleep?'' |
11303 | Are you fond of animals?'' |
11303 | Are you going into the garden?'' |
11303 | Are you not the very woman whose influence, whose guidance, is necessary, so that I should succeed? |
11303 | Are you sure it will not bore you? |
11303 | As he was about to cross into Oxford Street, he heard some one accost him,--''Oh, Mr. Price, is that you?'' |
11303 | At last she said, and with the querulous perversity of the sick---''But even if I wished to go abroad, with whom could I go?'' |
11303 | At last she said, breaking the silence abruptly--''Is he very angry? |
11303 | At last she said,''I suppose you do n''t think so?'' |
11303 | At that moment Emily said--''May I not come too?'' |
11303 | At the end of a long silence Emily said--''Do you think clever men like clever women?'' |
11303 | At the end of a long silence Hubert said--''What are you thinking of, dearest?'' |
11303 | At the end of a long silence he said,--''Did you hear anything about the last night''s?'' |
11303 | At the end of a long silence, Hubert said,''Will you not come up- stairs, and let me read you the first act?'' |
11303 | At the end of about ten minutes the actor said,--''Well, this is a bad business; they are terribly down on us-- aren''t they? |
11303 | Because the public is too stupid?'' |
11303 | Burnett has divided his fortune, leaving Ashwood to Mr. Price, and all his invested money to Emily?'' |
11303 | Burnett?'' |
11303 | But do yer think''e''d''ave been allowed? |
11303 | But do you regret?'' |
11303 | But do you see the woman in the stage- box? |
11303 | But do you think the swans belong to them or to us? |
11303 | But does she want you to leave?'' |
11303 | But how? |
11303 | But of what use thinking of what was not to be? |
11303 | But seeing that she showed no signs of moving, she said,''Are n''t you coming down to dinner, Emily?'' |
11303 | But that presence was forbidden him-- that presence that seemed so necessary; and for what reason? |
11303 | But though Emily''s eyes seemed to know all, they seemed to say,''What matter? |
11303 | But why do you always take her part against me? |
11303 | But why do you say such things? |
11303 | But why think of the play at all? |
11303 | But would it be right for me to pay you visits in London?'' |
11303 | But you wo n''t tell any one? |
11303 | Ca n''t you understand that things may go wrong without it being any one''s fault in particular?'' |
11303 | Can not you see their black eyes turned towards the bridge?'' |
11303 | Change of air and scene?'' |
11303 | Did he say I would soon recover? |
11303 | Did he say that I was very bad? |
11303 | Did n''t you, Julia?'' |
11303 | Did those who believed in the old formulas imagine that the new formula would be discovered straight away, without failures preliminary? |
11303 | Did you never hear of Dolly Dayrell?'' |
11303 | Dinner will be ready in a few minutes; or, if you like, I will dine up- stairs; and you and Mr. Price----''''But is he coming down to dinner? |
11303 | Do I not love you? |
11303 | Do n''t you know that Ford has decided to revive_ Divorce_?'' |
11303 | Do n''t you know what I mean?'' |
11303 | Do n''t you remember how I met Hubert next morning on the lawn? |
11303 | Do n''t you think so?'' |
11303 | Do yer think the perlice would''ave stood it? |
11303 | Do yer think the public would''ave stood him doing masterpieces on the pavement? |
11303 | Do you believe in dreams?'' |
11303 | Do you know anything about Mr. Price? |
11303 | Do you know of any secret grief-- any love affair? |
11303 | Do you know this part of the country?'' |
11303 | Do you mind?'' |
11303 | Do you not know what it is to be loyal?'' |
11303 | Do you not see how ill she is looking? |
11303 | Do you not think she is very handsome?'' |
11303 | Do you think I am blind? |
11303 | Do you think he will come down to dinner?'' |
11303 | Do you think it will succeed this time?'' |
11303 | Do you think she would have left the room just now if she could have helped it?'' |
11303 | Do you think that I do n''t suffer? |
11303 | Do you think that I''m not wretched?'' |
11303 | Do you think they will?'' |
11303 | Do you think you can spare it?'' |
11303 | Do you think you ever will?'' |
11303 | Does Black say anything about giving her a letter?'' |
11303 | Does every one who writes plays take so much trouble?'' |
11303 | Does n''t the world seem very wonderful to you? |
11303 | Eggs and bacon?'' |
11303 | Emily raised her eyes and looked shyly at Hubert; and then, as if doubtful of herself, she said,''Do you like her? |
11303 | Every evening he listened for Rose''s footstep on the stairs.--How did the piece go?--Was there a better house? |
11303 | Got the chuck?'' |
11303 | Had he not seen them? |
11303 | Had the critic in_ The Modern Review_ told him the truth? |
11303 | Had they destroyed it? |
11303 | Had we better send for the doctor?'' |
11303 | Has he answered yours?'' |
11303 | Has he gone to his study? |
11303 | Has she been complaining about me to you? |
11303 | Have I not convinced you that you were wrong?'' |
11303 | Have you been very happy?'' |
11303 | Have you not noticed how she follows us? |
11303 | Have you noticed how poorly she is looking?'' |
11303 | He must reduce his expenditure; but how? |
11303 | He opened the conservatory door, ran across the lawn round to the front door, and came back with-- what do you think? |
11303 | He says I look it; but what''s the good of looking it when you do n''t feel it? |
11303 | His uncle? |
11303 | How can I? |
11303 | How did you leave her?'' |
11303 | How do we know that they do not suffer?'' |
11303 | How have I repaid her? |
11303 | How shall we get through our evenings?'' |
11303 | How was it that he knew where they wanted to go? |
11303 | How would he get to America? |
11303 | How would the landing look without it? |
11303 | Hubert looked up quickly, hoping Mrs. Bentley would not answer, but before he could make a sign she said--''What do you mean, Emily? |
11303 | Hubert said,"Will you come with me? |
11303 | Hubert said--''What do you think, Doctor? |
11303 | I could hardly speak.... You remember?'' |
11303 | I do n''t know how much they cost, but I''ve five shillings; can you get one for that?'' |
11303 | I do n''t think I ever saw any one act before like that-- did you?'' |
11303 | I do n''t think a man would say that if he did n''t like you, do you?'' |
11303 | I do n''t think she ever really touched the part-- do you?'' |
11303 | I hope she is n''t ill? |
11303 | I hope-- I may trust that you will remain with her?'' |
11303 | I know a great deal more than I can explain....''''But tell me, Emily, what is it you suspect? |
11303 | I know she wanted to come; but----''''But what?'' |
11303 | I love the picture of the windmill on the first landing----''''Then why not have it? |
11303 | I married when I was very young; before I had even begun to think about life I found---- But why distress these hours with painful memories?'' |
11303 | I never told you what my dreams were, but you remember how I woke up with a cry, and you asked me what was the matter?'' |
11303 | I said, Why paint? |
11303 | I says to myself, Why not go in for lovely woman? |
11303 | I shall prescribe a tonic, but----''''But what, doctor?'' |
11303 | I should miss it dreadfully when I came here-- for I daresay you will ask us to visit you occasionally, when you are lonely, wo n''t you?'' |
11303 | I was wrong; yes, I would have married him if I had known.... You do n''t believe me?'' |
11303 | I wonder how you can think of such a thing, Mr. Grandly? |
11303 | I wonder where he is now?'' |
11303 | I wonder which of us will succeed first?'' |
11303 | I''ll either carry my play through completely, realise my ideal, or----''''Remain for ever unsatisfied?'' |
11303 | I''ve seen it go better; but----''''Did you get a call?'' |
11303 | If she did not say it, can you tell me how it got about?'' |
11303 | Is he very angry?'' |
11303 | Is it true?'' |
11303 | Is not the prospect a lovely one?'' |
11303 | Is she dead? |
11303 | Is she seriously ill?'' |
11303 | Is that-- that is not all you are going to ask me for?'' |
11303 | Is this it?'' |
11303 | It had failed, and failed twice; but did that prove anything? |
11303 | It is curious that I should dream of him last night, and that you should receive that letter this morning, is n''t it?'' |
11303 | It was hardly possible that the piece could survive such notices; and if it did not? |
11303 | It would be said everywhere that I had you sent away.... You promise me not to leave?'' |
11303 | Let me light a night- light?'' |
11303 | Oh, Julia, does n''t it seem impossible? |
11303 | One ca n''t explain oneself in a scene here and there.... What are you thinking of?'' |
11303 | Reading the look of pain that had come into her eyes, he said,''You will not refuse me? |
11303 | Shall I go and fetch your hat and jacket?'' |
11303 | Shall I go and tell him that you wo n''t come down because you think he is angry with you?'' |
11303 | Shall I light your candles?'' |
11303 | Shall I open the door?'' |
11303 | She had forgotten her latch- key, and he said,''Will you allow me to let you in?'' |
11303 | She killed herself-- is that it?'' |
11303 | She would hold to her and fight for her with all her strength, but would she not fall vanquished in the fight; and then, and then? |
11303 | She would like to have this bookcase, and might she not take the wardrobe from her own room? |
11303 | Should he keep it all for himself and his art? |
11303 | Should he open it? |
11303 | Should he tell his landlady the truth? |
11303 | Should she pile falsehood on falsehood? |
11303 | Should you like to sleep a little longer, or shall I bring you up some breakfast?'' |
11303 | So I said,"Oh, what ever shall we do? |
11303 | So the piece did n''t go very well to- night?'' |
11303 | Splendid fire-- is it not?'' |
11303 | Strange, was it not strange?... |
11303 | Suddenly she said--''I wonder what Hubert is doing in London? |
11303 | Suppose he took, that very night, an overdose of chloral? |
11303 | Supposing, supposing that were to happen? |
11303 | That old, dilapidated print?'' |
11303 | That proposal of marriage; could she ever forget it? |
11303 | That second act?'' |
11303 | That''s right, ai n''t it? |
11303 | That''s true, ai n''t it?'' |
11303 | The room was grey with dawn, and you said:"Emily dear, what have you been dreaming, to cry out like that?" |
11303 | The suggestion filled Hubert''s heart with rushing pain, and he answered--''Why should we return? |
11303 | Their eyes met; and, divining each other''s thought, each felt ashamed, and Julia said--''Oh, what am I saying? |
11303 | Then Emily went on:''You wo n''t tell any one I told you? |
11303 | Then a look of yielding passed into her eyes, and she said--''Well, what is it?'' |
11303 | Then in a lighter tone:''I want you to give me a lot of things-- oh, not a great many, nothing very valuable, but----''''But what, Emily?... |
11303 | Then we can go on just the same; but if you married her, I----''''I what?'' |
11303 | Then why do people say you are going to marry her?'' |
11303 | Then why should I remain? |
11303 | There was nothing in his mind but''Will the piece succeed? |
11303 | They lingered on the landing, and Hubert said,''Wo n''t you come in for a moment?'' |
11303 | They would n''t gallop their horses like that unless they were being pursued.... Can I have the picture?'' |
11303 | To whom should he give it? |
11303 | Turning suddenly, he said--''But tell me, Emily, how are you feeling? |
11303 | VI''What will ye''ave to eat? |
11303 | Was he incapable of earning a living? |
11303 | Was it the fault of circumstances that he had not been able to finish that play? |
11303 | Well, what were we talking about? |
11303 | What are you going to do?'' |
11303 | What can happen?'' |
11303 | What did he think of divorce? |
11303 | What did his failure to write that play condemn him to? |
11303 | What did it matter even if he never wrote it? |
11303 | What did it matter? |
11303 | What did it mean, what meaning had it in the great, wide world? |
11303 | What do you accuse me of?'' |
11303 | What do you mean? |
11303 | What do you think?'' |
11303 | What do you think?'' |
11303 | What does Fate know of our little rights and wrongs-- or care? |
11303 | What induced such a change in her? |
11303 | What is he? |
11303 | What is her reason for wanting to go?'' |
11303 | What is it? |
11303 | What part of the town be yer going to-- the railway station?'' |
11303 | What shall I do if it fails?'' |
11303 | What should I do-- what should we do? |
11303 | What should he do with it? |
11303 | What should she do, what should she do, and with that motherless girl dependent on her for food and clothes and shelter? |
11303 | What stops you now? |
11303 | What was I a- saying of? |
11303 | What was it-- drink? |
11303 | What would you advise us to do?'' |
11303 | What you have to say to me is about her?'' |
11303 | What? |
11303 | When did you ever know me to tell a falsehood?'' |
11303 | When shall we go to London?'' |
11303 | Where does he live?'' |
11303 | Where was Mrs. Bentley? |
11303 | Which do I like the better? |
11303 | Who would have thought it of you?'' |
11303 | Why did she not understand? |
11303 | Why do n''t ye laugh?'' |
11303 | Why do such things happen to me? |
11303 | Why do you refuse to take the only step that may lead us out of this difficulty?'' |
11303 | Why do you tempt me to do a dishonourable action?'' |
11303 | Why not let things go on just as they are?'' |
11303 | Why not spare himself the pain? |
11303 | Why not write at once and engage the theatre? |
11303 | Why should he? |
11303 | Why should she hate you?'' |
11303 | Why should she love him? |
11303 | Why should you go away?'' |
11303 | Why will you not believe me?'' |
11303 | Will it suit you to come into the drawing- room with me?'' |
11303 | Will she forgive him? |
11303 | Will you go and fetch her, Mrs. Bentley? |
11303 | Will you promise me?'' |
11303 | Wo n''t you come in for a few minutes?... |
11303 | Would nothing happen? |
11303 | Would these people never give their attention to the stage? |
11303 | Yer do n''t follow me?'' |
11303 | You agree with me-- do you not?'' |
11303 | You are sure you do n''t want them, do you?'' |
11303 | You are surely not in earnest?'' |
11303 | You can not think that I would deceive you, Emily? |
11303 | You do n''t really intend me to go back to Emily and tell her?... |
11303 | You do not want to vex him, do you?'' |
11303 | You have not noticed that we hardly speak now?'' |
11303 | You imagine these things.... Do you suppose that Mr. Grandly would send him down here if he did not know what his intentions were?'' |
11303 | You promise me?'' |
11303 | You remember how I ran to you? |
11303 | You remember how we listened for his footstep in the passage, as he went up to bed, and how I clung to you? |
11303 | You remember that first evening? |
11303 | You think, I suppose, I did not see you showing him a ring? |
11303 | You think, I suppose, that I''m in love with Hubert? |
11303 | You will not refuse it?'' |
11303 | You will not refuse, Julia?'' |
11303 | You will stop here-- you will be my wife?'' |
11303 | You wo n''t tell Mrs. Bentley? |
11303 | You would n''t like to miss a walk with your mistress, would you, dear?'' |
11303 | You would not care to go so far?'' |
11303 | You, too, want to send me away?'' |
11303 | is it killed?'' |
11303 | or was it that the slight vein of genius that had been in him once had been exhausted? |
11303 | she said, looking at him reproachfully,''how can you?'' |
11303 | what have you been doing?'' |
11303 | why did you persuade me-- why-- why-- why?'' |
44486 | Ah, Dodo,he said,"can not you believe in me at all?" |
44486 | Ah, Dodo,he said,"what are you going to ask? |
44486 | Ah, Vivy,she said,"you have guessed it, have you? |
44486 | Ah, my own wife,he said,"what should I have done if it had been you? |
44486 | Ah, you are just off? |
44486 | Ah, you like it? 44486 Ah, you think that, do you?" |
44486 | Ah,said Mrs. Vivian softly,"he has come back, has he?" |
44486 | Ah,she said,"the old story, is n''t it? |
44486 | Ai n''t it a lark? |
44486 | And Bertie? |
44486 | Are those the weapons you would fight Lord Chesterford with, if Dodo told you to? |
44486 | Are we to begin at once? |
44486 | Are you a little tired, darling? |
44486 | Are you going in, Dodo? |
44486 | Are you sure you do n''t mind, Dodo? |
44486 | Arfly clever, is n''t she? 44486 Bertie,"said Dodo,"are you coming shooting?" |
44486 | But do you mean to say you''re going to let the coal stop there? |
44486 | But it was true? |
44486 | But what does that matter? |
44486 | But who are these dreadfully clever people? |
44486 | But you do n''t think he is an instance in particular? |
44486 | Ca n''t I do anything to help? 44486 Did Lady Chesterford give you any other orders?" |
44486 | Did n''t he always strike you as a little stupid? |
44486 | Did you expect me to believe it? |
44486 | Did you like it? |
44486 | Did you see her dance that night, mother? 44486 Did you see much of him?" |
44486 | Did you tell Dodo this? |
44486 | Did you try and see her? |
44486 | Do n''t you like Grantie, Jack? |
44486 | Do n''t you see how dangerous it is all becoming? 44486 Do things that disagree with the same thing agree with one another?" |
44486 | Do you find pity a satisfactory diet? |
44486 | Do you know the plant called honesty, Grantie? |
44486 | Do you know what Mrs. Vivian has been saying to me? |
44486 | Do you know with whom she has been staying? |
44486 | Do you know, Jack nearly shot himself the other day at a grouse drive? |
44486 | Do you mean that nothing will deter you from seeing this Austrian? |
44486 | Do you mean you''re going to leave thousands of pounds lying there in the earth? |
44486 | Do you mind my smoking cigarettes? 44486 Do you quite realise what that means?" |
44486 | Do you remember the Brettons''ball? 44486 Do you say that already?" |
44486 | Do you suppose a vulgar fraction knows how vulgar it is? |
44486 | Dodo, dear, did n''t you hear the Prince say so? |
44486 | Dodo, you will not think me preaching or being priggish, will you, darling? 44486 Does he really believe all that?" |
44486 | Does she ever lecture you? |
44486 | Does that mean that he is not honest in ordinary matters? |
44486 | Family prayers over yet, father? |
44486 | Far apart, Dodo? 44486 Hard on her?" |
44486 | Has Jack been saying it is n''t tea- time? |
44486 | Has he gone on some visit? |
44486 | Has it come to that? |
44486 | Have n''t you got a proverb about making a virtue of necessity? |
44486 | Have n''t you heard? |
44486 | Have you ever seen me other than humble-- to you? |
44486 | Have you never felt that illusion? |
44486 | Have you seen Dodo to- day? |
44486 | He was n''t vexed, was he? |
44486 | He was very sweet and dear and remembering, was n''t he? |
44486 | He''s rather amusing, is n''t he? |
44486 | His Serene Highness who? |
44486 | How could I have done it? |
44486 | How dare you think that? |
44486 | How did he get here? |
44486 | How did you know? |
44486 | How did you make him angry? |
44486 | How do you mean? |
44486 | How does he take it? |
44486 | How have you been getting on? |
44486 | How is he? |
44486 | How sweet of you,she said;"and you will go and work among the poor, and give them soup and prayer- books, wo n''t you? |
44486 | How''s Charlie getting on? 44486 I caught the earlier train,"he said;"and where are you off to?" |
44486 | I suppose I may congratulate you first? |
44486 | I suppose it would endanger its life if you stopped, would n''t it, Jack? 44486 In any case, what did you find to say about them?" |
44486 | Is Lady Chesterford in? |
44486 | Is Lady Chesterford in? |
44486 | Is Lord Chesterford up yet? |
44486 | Is he dead? |
44486 | Is it simply whether I stop here and talk to that cad? 44486 Is n''t it a lovely night? |
44486 | Is n''t it charming? 44486 Is n''t it so?" |
44486 | Is she here? |
44486 | Is this note to ask him to come? |
44486 | It is n''t to you, I suppose? |
44486 | It would spoil the delightful impression of the very dry bones? |
44486 | It''s an awful bore reading books, dontcherthink, what? 44486 It''s awfully good of you,"said he;"do you mean that you only owe me fifteen?" |
44486 | It''s quite like old times, is n''t it? 44486 It''s unlucky to spill things, is n''t it?" |
44486 | Jack, do you still love me? |
44486 | Jack, what''ll you drink? 44486 Jack, would you like to live with your wife in a little house in the country?" |
44486 | Jack, you will be, wo n''t you? 44486 Look at that stroke, perfectly rippin''you know, what?" |
44486 | Lord Chesterford is in England? |
44486 | May he come up to the nursery? |
44486 | Miss Staines does play so arfly well, does n''t she? |
44486 | Morning, Bertie,he remarked;"what''s up?" |
44486 | My observations on you, or on the world in general? |
44486 | No; what? |
44486 | Not Dodo? |
44486 | Now and then you make me feel as if you would rather like to go and live in a small cathedral town----"And shock the canons? |
44486 | Now, is n''t that selfish? |
44486 | Oh, Dodo, so soon? |
44486 | Oh, Edith, you are a good chap; is n''t she, Mrs. Vivian? 44486 Oh, come, Lady Grantham,"he replied,"you do n''t think so badly of me as that, do you?" |
44486 | Oh, did you never hear him sing last year? |
44486 | Oh, my dear Chesterford, what does that matter? |
44486 | Oh, that''s French, is n''t it? |
44486 | Oh, that''s part of my charm, is n''t it? |
44486 | Oh, what? |
44486 | Ouf,said Dodo;"that sounds homelike to you, does n''t it? |
44486 | Poor little chap, he always took to me from the first, do you remember? 44486 Poor old man,"she said,"did they call him names? |
44486 | Sha''n''t I go on to the next chapter? 44486 Shall I seem rude if I say I do n''t want to? |
44486 | Shall I tell her ladyship it is round? |
44486 | She has been telling me I do not love you enough-- isn''t she ridiculous? |
44486 | Surely the intelligent animal, who knows several languages, may read its own advertisement? |
44486 | That sort of horror? |
44486 | That''s something fearful, is n''t it? 44486 The Prince? |
44486 | The congregation-- haf they arrived? |
44486 | Then you think it does n''t matter whether society is composed of people without morals? |
44486 | Then you will excuse my leaving you? |
44486 | Then-- then Dodo is tired of me? |
44486 | There''s nothing wrong with you, is there? |
44486 | Vivy, what can I do? 44486 Was Patience a man? |
44486 | Was n''t Prince Waldenech there himself? |
44486 | Was that your unspoken thought, or was it not? |
44486 | Well, Algy,she said,"how are the flowers going on? |
44486 | Well, Lord Harchester,remarked Dodo,"how is your lordship to- day? |
44486 | Well, what then? |
44486 | Well? |
44486 | What about delusions, Miss Grantham? |
44486 | What am I to think about then? |
44486 | What are their names? |
44486 | What are you going for? |
44486 | What book have you got hold of there? |
44486 | What class? |
44486 | What did Edith agree with you about? |
44486 | What did Mrs. Vivian say to you? |
44486 | What did he say then? |
44486 | What do you believe? |
44486 | What do you call indifferent things? |
44486 | What do you think of him, as far as you''ve seen? |
44486 | What does she want Bertie for? |
44486 | What if I do n''t? |
44486 | What is it? |
44486 | What is it? |
44486 | What is the upshot of all your observations? |
44486 | What is your high game? |
44486 | What made you tell that chap that we were engaged? |
44486 | What on earth are we quarrelling about? |
44486 | What right has he got to propose to you, I should like to know? |
44486 | What was he there for? |
44486 | What''s her method? |
44486 | What''s the name of the little man and his moustache? |
44486 | Where do you keep your cigarettes, Edith? 44486 Where have you been, Edith?" |
44486 | Where shall we go now, Jack? |
44486 | Which you gave him? |
44486 | Who are my old friends if you are not? |
44486 | Who taught you this? 44486 Who told you?" |
44486 | Who was out at Zermatt when you were there? |
44486 | Whose? |
44486 | Why ca n''t I treat him like anyone else? |
44486 | Why did he propose to call me out? |
44486 | Why did n''t you put your silly old head in the light? |
44486 | Why do you say that duelling has done out? |
44486 | Why not? |
44486 | Why should I worry myself with playing scales? |
44486 | Why the deuce should Chesterford be born a marquis and not I? 44486 Why, what do you mean?" |
44486 | Will no knowledge of what the man is really like, stop you holding further intercourse with him? |
44486 | Will you do what I ask you? |
44486 | Wo n''t you go to bed? 44486 Would it amuse me, do you think?" |
44486 | Would you be so good as to let me see the telegram? |
44486 | Would you dislike having to be serious very much? |
44486 | Would you like to see Jack? |
44486 | Would you never get tired of your wife, do n''t you think,continued the Princess,"if you shut yourselves up in the country? |
44486 | Would you think me very heartless if I said''Yes''? |
44486 | Yes, my darling,said he;"you would n''t have had me beat you, would you? |
44486 | Yes; but your music is the expression of your conclusions, is n''t it? |
44486 | You are sure you are n''t thinking of anyone in my case-- of Jack, for instance? |
44486 | You do n''t despise me for feeling that? |
44486 | You entirely decline to listen to reason? |
44486 | You had a nice time then, abroad? |
44486 | You here? |
44486 | You knew it all? |
44486 | You like her, do n''t you, Chesterford? 44486 You mean for fear of her putting a wrong construction on it? |
44486 | You mean that he wo n''t have to make much allowance for me? |
44486 | You mean that in the light of subsequent events it would have been reasonable in him to ask me to keep away from you? |
44486 | You mean that there would be no increase in crime if the law did not punish? |
44486 | You mean you attach no weight to my wishes in this matter? |
44486 | You will be brave, wo n''t you? 44486 You''re going up a hill, I suppose?" |
44486 | You''re not going? |
44486 | You''re sure it''s nothing more? |
44486 | A tall, handsome man in peer''s robes?" |
44486 | Ah, what could I do? |
44486 | Algy, why do n''t you have service out of doors at Gloucester? |
44486 | Am I to tell him that my husband is afraid he''ll corrupt my morals? |
44486 | Am I, Jack?" |
44486 | And Chesterford? |
44486 | And do you know Mr. Spencer, dear Miss Grantham? |
44486 | And here I am enjoying myself, when she-- Maud, did you hear? |
44486 | And how do you do, dear Mr. Broxton? |
44486 | And the Marquis is your cousin, is he not? |
44486 | And what does it matter what other people think?" |
44486 | Are n''t I a wise woman, Jack? |
44486 | Are n''t you jealous?" |
44486 | Are n''t you? |
44486 | Are we going to have grouse?" |
44486 | Are you an apostle, Jack?" |
44486 | Are you determined to marry this man? |
44486 | Are you going out on the picnic? |
44486 | Are you going to have the mirror figure? |
44486 | Are you really going? |
44486 | Are you stopping to lunch? |
44486 | As Edith had chiefly written the Mass while smoking cigarettes after a hearty breakfast she merely said,--"How does anything come to anyone? |
44486 | Awkward, is n''t it?" |
44486 | Bertie Arbuthnot''s singing tenor, and he''s not very quick-- are you, Bertie? |
44486 | Besides, do you think that it''s an advantage to associate with people who are good for you? |
44486 | Bring some cigarettes, Walter, or would you rather have a cigar, Jack? |
44486 | Broxton?" |
44486 | But after that, what then? |
44486 | But are you determined about the coal mine?" |
44486 | But it is rather overwhelming, is n''t it? |
44486 | But what followed? |
44486 | Ca n''t she stop? |
44486 | Ca n''t you see there are some things I can not help doing, and some I must do?" |
44486 | Can the Ethiopian change his skin?" |
44486 | Can you blame me for choosing the one, and avoiding the other? |
44486 | Can you honestly say that you are still a friend of mine?" |
44486 | Charming, was n''t it? |
44486 | Chesterford, of course, was going, and Jack, and Maud and her mother; it was quite a small party; and was n''t Jack a dear? |
44486 | Chesterford, we wo n''t quarrel at all, will we? |
44486 | Chesterford, you shut it up, did n''t you, for several years, until you thought of bringing me here? |
44486 | Could n''t I get a feller to learn it for me?" |
44486 | Did Dodo then never think of her late husband with tenderness? |
44486 | Did his desire for Dodo grow stronger with seeing her? |
44486 | Did it ever enter your very pink head that you were a most important personage? |
44486 | Did n''t you think our ball went off rather well? |
44486 | Did she see you this morning? |
44486 | Did you ever know, Jack--"even Dodo found it hard to get on at this moment--"did you ever know-- he knew all? |
44486 | Did you ever play, the game of marking people for beauty, and modesty, and cleverness, and so on? |
44486 | Did you have to take powders when you were little, Lady Grantham?" |
44486 | Did you stop, to the end? |
44486 | Did you think he was saying grace, or did you tell him not to be insolent?" |
44486 | Do a baby''s eyes change when he gets older? |
44486 | Do n''t you adore the opera, Mr. Broxton? |
44486 | Do n''t you know how some sounds produce that effect? |
44486 | Do n''t you like him immensely? |
44486 | Do n''t you see that that sort of thing wo n''t do with Chesterford? |
44486 | Do n''t you think I''m a very charming girl, and do n''t you think he''s a very charming boy?" |
44486 | Do n''t you think so? |
44486 | Do n''t you think that girl sings beautifully? |
44486 | Do you altogether like it?" |
44486 | Do you feel dreadfully shocked?" |
44486 | Do you find us very interesting?" |
44486 | Do you know the Prince?" |
44486 | Do you know the hoop figure? |
44486 | Do you mind my smoking in the drawing- room? |
44486 | Do you suppose it dies? |
44486 | Do you think I should take all the trouble with the praying- table and so on, if I was n''t?" |
44486 | Do you think he knew me, Dodo?" |
44486 | Do you think it knows me?" |
44486 | Do you think it will be amusing? |
44486 | Do you think we''d better have the skull, Edith? |
44486 | Do you want beer? |
44486 | Do you, Jack? |
44486 | Dodo danced that night with unusual perfection, and who has not felt the exquisite beauty of such motion? |
44486 | Dodo, may I have him down?" |
44486 | Dodo, will you do this for me? |
44486 | Does shooting bring on the inspiration, Edith? |
44486 | Does that look as if I wanted to see him so dreadfully?" |
44486 | Edith, may I give them the milky ham? |
44486 | Edith, why are n''t we two nice, little simple painters who could sit down, and be happy to paint that, instead of turning ourselves inside out? |
44486 | Had Jack been hideously tempted and not been able to resist? |
44486 | Handel seems to me infinitely more satisfactory, I can understand him,''I simply say,''For Heaven''s sake, then, why do n''t you go to hear Handel? |
44486 | Has he gone quite away?" |
44486 | Have you ever been here before? |
44486 | Have you ever known me make a fool of myself? |
44486 | Have you got any musical footmen or housemaids?" |
44486 | Have you got over it, by the way? |
44486 | Have you seen Bertie yet, Jack? |
44486 | Have you seen him? |
44486 | Have you seen the baby? |
44486 | Have you seen the boy? |
44486 | Have you shot well? |
44486 | He is Serene, is n''t he? |
44486 | He walked in as cool as a cucumber, and said,''Howdy?'' |
44486 | He wanted to see Dodo; why on earth should n''t he? |
44486 | He wondered vaguely whether something would break, and, if so, what? |
44486 | Here she was feeding with an enviable appetite, and where was the cub? |
44486 | How could she appeal to this woman, who looked at everything from only her own standpoint? |
44486 | How dare you ask me?" |
44486 | How did it begin? |
44486 | How long had it been going on? |
44486 | How old are you, Edith? |
44486 | How should it? |
44486 | How will Dodo have taken it?" |
44486 | I do n''t look it, do I, Lady Grantham? |
44486 | I do n''t think I''m vulgar, do you? |
44486 | I do n''t think there ever was a saint Dodo before, or is it saintess? |
44486 | I hope they''ve brought some_ pâtà ©,_ Do n''t you like_ pâtà ©_? |
44486 | I sha''n''t shock your servants, shall I? |
44486 | I shall go there this evening; shall I see you?" |
44486 | I should have stopped at home singing hymns, I suppose, instead of going out to dinner; but what then? |
44486 | I suppose Maud has n''t heard?" |
44486 | I suppose he''ll play, wo n''t he? |
44486 | I think that''s the one, of my great- grandfather, is n''t it? |
44486 | I wanted the one in A, only there are no French horns in the village-- isn''t that benighted? |
44486 | I''m a little-- Who is it, Walter? |
44486 | If Chesterford goes to attend to bailiff''s business, why should n''t I go and dance? |
44486 | Is Lord Chesterford at home?" |
44486 | Is he coming shooting?". |
44486 | Is it that certain attributes of pure womanliness run through the female of animals, or that every woman has a touch of the tigress about her? |
44486 | Is it to be an honest tail? |
44486 | Is lordship masculine, feminine, or neuter, Chesterford? |
44486 | Is n''t it big?" |
44486 | Is n''t it nice to have Jack again?" |
44486 | Is n''t it so? |
44486 | Is n''t it so?" |
44486 | Is n''t it sweet? |
44486 | Is n''t that Maud next him? |
44486 | Is n''t the scene charming?" |
44486 | Is there such a thing as a grilled bone?" |
44486 | It is better to have that, is n''t it? |
44486 | It was rather damping, was n''t it? |
44486 | It would have been pleasant to have a countess''s corpse''s blood on your head, would n''t it?" |
44486 | It''s an arful bore having to learn French, is n''t it? |
44486 | It''s so awfully sad about Marguerite, is n''t it? |
44486 | It''s very amusing, is n''t it?" |
44486 | Jack was silent for a minute or two, then he said,--"What is the use of this, Dodo? |
44486 | Jack who?'' |
44486 | Jack, I am yours-- will you come?" |
44486 | Jack, do n''t you think I shall make an excellent matron? |
44486 | Jack, do you like Edith? |
44486 | Jack, have you been trying to steal the silver? |
44486 | Jack, have you finished? |
44486 | Jack, what do you mean by writing me such a stupid letter? |
44486 | Jack, what will you do to me if I get bored when we''re married?" |
44486 | Jack, why did you come here suggesting these horrible things?" |
44486 | Jack, will you say grace? |
44486 | Jack, you will make me very happy? |
44486 | Kidneys do come from sheep, do n''t they? |
44486 | Let''s see, how does the hoop figure go?" |
44486 | Let''s see, whom do you know? |
44486 | London was as bad as Dresden, and again, where was the harm? |
44486 | Look at the sun through those fir- trees-- isn''t it lovely? |
44486 | Maud, where are we lunching, and have you had a nice drive, and has Bertie been making love to you? |
44486 | May I call? |
44486 | May I come and see you to- morrow?" |
44486 | May I introduce you to Miss Grantham? |
44486 | May I tell Maud she may call you Cousin Jack? |
44486 | May I tell everyone? |
44486 | May you see? |
44486 | Miss Staines? |
44486 | Mr. Broxton, would you like me to push you off a gate?" |
44486 | Mr. Featherstone had a habit of finishing all his sentences with"what?" |
44486 | Mrs. Vivian came very soon after, and she offered to go for you, and met you in the Park, did n''t she?" |
44486 | Mrs. Vivian will tell you all about those things, I suppose?" |
44486 | Must I congratulate him?" |
44486 | Must you wag it whenever you are pleased, Grantie? |
44486 | No? |
44486 | Now, Dodo, could I have done that after eating two poached eggs?" |
44486 | Now, have you finished? |
44486 | Oh yes, he was there; did n''t I say so?" |
44486 | Oh, yes, this is the second act, is n''t it? |
44486 | Or are you afraid of her too?" |
44486 | Or is there a kidney tree? |
44486 | Shall I black my face? |
44486 | Shall I lie down on the floor for you to begin?" |
44486 | Shall I want castanets? |
44486 | Shall we tell Miss Grantham and Mr. Broxton our little secret, Maud? |
44486 | Shall we turn?" |
44486 | She does n''t know yet, I suppose? |
44486 | She was engaged to Jack, was she? |
44486 | She went to a garden- seat, and remained there in silence so long that the footman asked her:"Will there be an answer, my lady? |
44486 | She wished to marry Jack, did she? |
44486 | She''s a friend of yours; is n''t she, Nora? |
44486 | Should I have been any kinder to-- to anybody? |
44486 | Should I have been less objectionable when things went wrong? |
44486 | So charming, is n''t he? |
44486 | So you will, wo n''t you? |
44486 | Sugar, Jack? |
44486 | Suppose you only think you are pleased, when you are not really, what does the tail do then? |
44486 | Supposing she wished to pick roses when you wanted to play lawn tennis?" |
44486 | That is something-- isn''t it, Dodo? |
44486 | The hunt itself does n''t begin till the 15th, does it?" |
44486 | The marriage was a grand mistake, true, but given that, was not this simply so many weeks of unhappiness saved? |
44486 | The question is,''Who is master?'' |
44486 | Then Bertie said,--"Do you want my advice?" |
44486 | Then as an after- thought he inquired:"Whom to?" |
44486 | Then he said,--"Dodo, is this irrevocable? |
44486 | Then why not see her freely and frequently? |
44486 | There''s no word for''thank you''in Spanish, is there, mother? |
44486 | They are very unsafe, are n''t they?''" |
44486 | This is your dance, is n''t it? |
44486 | This, of course, led to his offering to go himself, and would Dodo come with him? |
44486 | Tommy Ledgers, is n''t it? |
44486 | Two lumps? |
44486 | Vivian?" |
44486 | Was Dodo''s apparent unconsciousness of the tenor of what he had said genuine or affected? |
44486 | Was n''t it rude of him?" |
44486 | Was not her daughter engaged to a marquis and a millionaire? |
44486 | Was not her house going to be filled with the brightest and best of our land? |
44486 | Was she a devil? |
44486 | Was there any other possibility? |
44486 | Was there any other reason? |
44486 | We split over Calvinism-- who was Calvin? |
44486 | We?" |
44486 | Were you here with Charlie Broxton, Miss Staines? |
44486 | What am I to do?" |
44486 | What are you and Bertie sitting here for like two Patiences on monuments? |
44486 | What are you so glum about? |
44486 | What did all this imply? |
44486 | What did it all mean? |
44486 | What did you say to him?" |
44486 | What do you suppose''Knocked''em in the Old Kent Road''means? |
44486 | What do you want me to say?" |
44486 | What good does it do anyone that I should suffer?" |
44486 | What happens to the sheep after they take its kidneys out? |
44486 | What has he done to have a title and fortune and Dodo that I have been given the chance to do?" |
44486 | What is the good of it all, if I may n''t enjoy it? |
44486 | What on earth have you got to say to him?" |
44486 | What right had he to behave like this? |
44486 | What shall I give you for a wedding present? |
44486 | What should you like? |
44486 | What time is it? |
44486 | What was he that other men were not? |
44486 | What was the position, after all? |
44486 | What was the use of a conscience that took the sugar out of your tea, and yet could not prevent you from drinking it? |
44486 | What was the use of all this retirement? |
44486 | What''s that book, Maud?" |
44486 | What''s that she''s playing?" |
44486 | What''s the good of having friends if you do n''t trot them out?" |
44486 | What? |
44486 | When is Mr. Broxton leaving?" |
44486 | When is it to be?" |
44486 | Where are the others? |
44486 | Where did you get it? |
44486 | Where have you been?" |
44486 | Where was the harm? |
44486 | Where would it stop? |
44486 | Where''s Chesterford? |
44486 | Where''s the gravy spoon? |
44486 | Who is that girl standing there with the poodle? |
44486 | Who leads the cotillion with me? |
44486 | Who wrote the Catechism? |
44486 | Who''s that ringing at our door- bell? |
44486 | Why ca n''t I even like him? |
44486 | Why ca n''t I help hating him? |
44486 | Why ca n''t I love him? |
44486 | Why could n''t he have accepted the position sooner? |
44486 | Why did n''t you come and see me this morning? |
44486 | Why did n''t you come?" |
44486 | Why did you say you did not care a pin what he thought?" |
44486 | Why did you tell him to do that?" |
44486 | Why do n''t they let you go out this lovely day?" |
44486 | Why do n''t we have family prayers here? |
44486 | Why does she say that sort of thing to me? |
44486 | Why have you never asked her to stay here? |
44486 | Why leave a creed that satisfies you?'' |
44486 | Why was the baby ever born? |
44486 | Will he be with, you to- night? |
44486 | Will he come early to- morrow? |
44486 | Will ten suit you? |
44486 | Will you come, Chesterford? |
44486 | Will you forgive me?" |
44486 | Will you give us the time, Professor?" |
44486 | Will you ring for tea, dear? |
44486 | Wo n''t it be lovely? |
44486 | Would he like some beer first? |
44486 | Would you have thought it reasonable if Chesterford had entreated me never to see you-- to keep away for God''s sake, as you said just now?" |
44486 | Would you like to see her to- night?" |
44486 | Would you like your wife to be the fashion?" |
44486 | You are going off to- morrow, are n''t you? |
44486 | You can get some cub- hunting, I suppose, Chesterford? |
44486 | You could n''t eat poached eggs at a ball-- could you? |
44486 | You could n''t wear it round your hat, could you?" |
44486 | You do n''t mind my seeing him, do you, Chesterford?" |
44486 | You do n''t want me not to go, dear, do you?" |
44486 | You know her, do n''t you? |
44486 | You start with it in the left hand, do n''t you? |
44486 | You''d noticed the resemblance, no doubt?" |
44486 | You''re a great friend of his, are n''t you? |
44486 | You''re twenty- nine too, are n''t you? |
44486 | Your opinion is fiction, but I am the fact on which it is founded, and what do you take me for? |
44486 | is it true?" |
44486 | or was she, after all, a woman? |
44486 | rather than,"Why do n''t you behave like other people?" |
44486 | she asked;"or would you rather stop out a little longer?" |
44486 | was she a tiger? |
56577 | A new will? |
56577 | Adrian,Joanna called, whisperingly,"Adrian, is that you?" |
56577 | Adrian? 56577 Adrian? |
56577 | Adrian? |
56577 | Ah, my poor friend, then all is well? |
56577 | Ah, yes? |
56577 | Am I not always ready to attempt the impossible for your sake, dear Mademoiselle? |
56577 | And do you intend me to understand, Margaret, that you are desperately in love with Mr. Challoner in return? |
56577 | And in addition to its other peculiarities is this famous country devoid of a postal system, may I ask? |
56577 | And it hurts you? |
56577 | And most convincing? |
56577 | And pray, how far did you go with him? |
56577 | And the first time? |
56577 | And what became of the boy? |
56577 | And why not? 56577 And you will come often to visit me?" |
56577 | And, if I am Bibby Smyrthwaite, what the devil is that to you? |
56577 | Are you executor? |
56577 | Are you going again to exclude me, are you going to shut the door on me, because I have been that which you qualify by the word''impertinent''? |
56577 | Are you not then sorry for me? |
56577 | As far as they go? 56577 Beattie, Beattie?" |
56577 | Been having the periodic rumpus with the maids again? |
56577 | Both? 56577 But are these ladies really of flesh and blood? |
56577 | But did n''t you get my note? |
56577 | But how,_ chère Mademoiselle_, but how? |
56577 | But if he should be dying? 56577 But need she embrace any cause?" |
56577 | But not under compulsion, not out of pity? |
56577 | But supposing,she said,"I really do n''t want a house at Marychurch at all-- what then? |
56577 | But that reminds me-- speaking of Beattie, I mean-- what do you want done about the lease of this house? 56577 But what possible object could Haig have in repeating the story if it was n''t true? |
56577 | But what would you have, dear cousin? 56577 But why should she fear to like me?" |
56577 | But why? |
56577 | But you admit, at least, that they are practically extremely impeding? 56577 But you forbid me to telephone, so how am I to communicate with you unless I write? |
56577 | But, dear cousin,he said, in a mildly argumentative manner,"do n''t you emphasize the obligation of truth- telling unnecessarily? |
56577 | But, dearest, most deeply valued friend, tell me, tell me, may I believe that she does then care? |
56577 | But, my poor friend,she reasoned,"how is it possible for me to do that?" |
56577 | But,Joanna protested, with a smoldering violence,"but if I am certain, morally certain, that my unfortunate brother is dead?" |
56577 | Can you hesitate, Madame? |
56577 | Communicated to your cousin, Mr. Savage, Miss Margaret Smyrthwaite? |
56577 | Cousin Adrian,she said, hurriedly,"has any one ever told you-- do you know-- I think you ought to know-- about our brother William-- about Bibby?" |
56577 | Dead? 56577 Desperately in love?" |
56577 | Did I not tell you we are_ en fête_? 56577 Did I? |
56577 | Did you not tell Miss Beauchamp you were going away? |
56577 | Do n''t you good English people set an exaggerated value upon self- control, perhaps? |
56577 | Do they? 56577 Do you not appear a little tired, a little pale?" |
56577 | Do you? |
56577 | Does n''t it stand to reason, since we are talking of true love? |
56577 | Does n''t that follow as a matter of course-- a''necessary corollary,''as Joanna would say? 56577 Does not the difficulty of answering letters one has never received occur to you?" |
56577 | For little girls? |
56577 | Fred Lawley come up to the scratch yet? |
56577 | Had neater and sweeter things to look up, eh, Colonel? |
56577 | Has it ever occurred to you why we worship our mothers? |
56577 | Have I not already commanded you to be silent? 56577 Have n''t we just concluded all that?" |
56577 | He had no children, poor man? |
56577 | How can I tell, how can I tell? |
56577 | How did you know, or was it by chance that you came? |
56577 | Hum-- hum-- is it as bad as that, then? 56577 I need not put it more plainly, need I?" |
56577 | I only wanted to give you an instance-- Nannie, would you mind sitting down? 56577 I sincerely trust there is n''t any question of an inquiry?" |
56577 | I-- insincere? |
56577 | If I did not marry Adrian,she went on,"what then? |
56577 | In good faith? |
56577 | In the papers, do you mean? |
56577 | Indeed? |
56577 | Indeed? |
56577 | Is it a fraud, a heartless experiment, coming to- day to see me thus? 56577 Is it any wonder after the painful fatigues of yesterday? |
56577 | Is my father dead, then? |
56577 | Is n''t there another rather obvious explanation of Madame St. Leger''s attitude-- the fear of liking you a little too much? |
56577 | Is not marriage for me ancient history? 56577 Is not that precisely why you find me slightly vexatious, my dear Mr. Savage, that I am only too sincere, a veritable model of sincerity?" |
56577 | Is one ever as devout, ever as patriotic, as one ought to be? |
56577 | Is one so very sure they are the hands of the Almighty? 56577 Is she ill, then, poor lady, one of those pensive abstractions whom it has been your interesting mission to materialize and rejuvenate?" |
56577 | It all goes to them? |
56577 | Kindly take your dirty paw off my sleeve, will you? 56577 Kissing your hand-- do you mean?" |
56577 | Madame St. Leger is not with them? 56577 Maggie, did you settle any dates to- night? |
56577 | Mamma, dearest,little Bette whispered, politely,"I like it of course, but you will excuse me if I mention that you are squeezing me so very tight?" |
56577 | Miss Smyrthwaite did n''t explain the nature of the alterations very fully then, I take it? |
56577 | Monsieur will take command, he will intervene to help us? 56577 My dear lady, is it necessary to ask that question, in face of such remarkable charm and beauty? |
56577 | Now does it occur to you why any other affair of the heart, in Mr. Savage''s case, is preposterous and unthinkable? |
56577 | Oh, you did, did you? |
56577 | One''s hand? 56577 Or as sincere?" |
56577 | Pardon me, but in not forgiving them did he not himself, perhaps, commit the very gravest of all mistakes? |
56577 | Rentoul Haig? 56577 Robin''s Rest-- why not Joseph''s Coat?" |
56577 | Say, but you ca n''t leave me alone in this God- forsaken hole? |
56577 | See then, M. Byewater, if you please, can you tell me the name of them? 56577 See, do not art, nature, the cumulative result of human experience, combine to discredit his methods and condemn his objects?" |
56577 | Shall I tell you what the something was which so moved me? |
56577 | She is very beautiful, is she not, my Madonna of the Future? |
56577 | Since when have you taken to answering the front door yourself? |
56577 | So long as that? |
56577 | So that I may leave the stage conveniently clear for you,_ mon petit_? |
56577 | So that''s the blooming name of the blooming place where your people live, is it? 56577 So you are going,_ mon vieux_? |
56577 | That''s something new, is n''t it? 56577 The disposition of the property is intricate?" |
56577 | The first time? |
56577 | The gray mare is n''t the better horse yet awhile, eh, Miss Marion, your friends the suffragettes notwithstanding? |
56577 | The ice is satisfactorily broken then? 56577 Then from the first, the very first,"she gasped,"did you never mean to marry me?" |
56577 | Then nothing is changed-- nothing is altered between us? |
56577 | Then where is your logic, where is your reason? 56577 Then you do n''t know about Madame St. Leger, Nannie?" |
56577 | Then, then,René Dax cried,"since you acknowledge my power, will you consent to leave my Madonna alone? |
56577 | There,he said, with a singular sly gleefulness,"there-- you see, Madame, behind the port folio- wagon? |
56577 | Though if I were, I see no occasion for your scolding me about it, Nannie.--What does make you so restless and cross to- night? 56577 To me? |
56577 | To-- to whom? |
56577 | Umph-- and pray what, my dear, has that precious piece of information to do with it? |
56577 | Unless what? |
56577 | Useless? |
56577 | We may consider the whole of our business concluded? |
56577 | Well, why not? 56577 What did you suppose he''d been coming here for constantly?" |
56577 | What do I know? |
56577 | What earthly concern is it of yours? 56577 What further reason, that he, the janitor, otherwise Adrian the Magnificent, was away?" |
56577 | What is the matter, Joanna? |
56577 | What more have they to ask? |
56577 | What on earth has Bee to do with it? |
56577 | What was that? |
56577 | What''s up with young Master Highty Tighty? |
56577 | What, the deuce, does that matter to you? |
56577 | What-- what precisely do you mean when you speak of his making love to you, Margaret? |
56577 | Where did he go? |
56577 | Who are you, what are you,he cried,"you mincing little devil? |
56577 | Why could n''t you send Isherwood to say you wanted to speak to me? 56577 Why did n''t my instinct warn me, thick- headed fool that I am? |
56577 | Why have you refused me? 56577 Why not admit that I was right in foretelling that you would find those shadowy ladies, and your mission to them, of absorbing interest? |
56577 | Why should I talk now it''s no use? |
56577 | Why the devil could n''t you leave me alone? |
56577 | Why waste so much energy in the effort to maintain an appearance of Red Indian stoicism and impassivity? 56577 Why,_ ma toute belle_, is anything wrong? |
56577 | Why? 56577 Why? |
56577 | Why? |
56577 | Will he recover? |
56577 | With the Gallic cock set symbolic at the top of the flag- staff? |
56577 | Yes and no? |
56577 | Yes-- yes? |
56577 | Yes? |
56577 | Yes? |
56577 | Yes? |
56577 | Yet is it not unpardonable in any man to resemble the insufficiently fried section of a flat fish? 56577 You appreciate the force of that which I say regarding my mother and my little Bette?" |
56577 | You are glad? 56577 You do n''t like it? |
56577 | You had a deplorable crossing-- fog, coming into Calais? 56577 You have dropped him? |
56577 | You have let Robin''s Rest, let our house, Joe, our own dear little house, without ever telling me? 56577 You have yourself visited the exhibition, dear Anastasia?" |
56577 | You hold the property should remain in the family-- go to the direct heirs, the next of kin? 56577 You may have heard of the trouble we are in at the Tower House?" |
56577 | You mean it is not me, but my fortune, Challoner is in love with? 56577 You mean that Miss Beauchamp does her best for me, too?" |
56577 | You observe my drawing? |
56577 | You say if I choose,he began;"but the question is, can I choose? |
56577 | You think so? |
56577 | You understand what I say? 56577 You will take Beattie over to Marychurch to look at the house?" |
56577 | You wish me to understand that you believe me to be quite fairly honest and competent? |
56577 | You''ll excuse me if I leave you, Colonel? |
56577 | You''ll not forget to tell them about the broken glass? |
56577 | You, Colonel? |
56577 | _ Mon vieux_, is that you? |
56577 | --Was it possible that Madame St. Leger''s repeated refusals to receive him were other than accidental? |
56577 | And as sum total and result what remained? |
56577 | And assuredly that is enough, and more than enough? |
56577 | And how? |
56577 | And in this, Gabrielle''s generation, how, save by experiment, could you possibly prove that independence might n''t very much pay? |
56577 | And in what has this everlasting preaching of responsibility ended? |
56577 | And pray what next?" |
56577 | And so, like a dear, kind young man, you told him who everybody was?" |
56577 | And then he proceeded to walk back with you, I suppose?" |
56577 | And then-- yes and no-- what next?" |
56577 | And to what extent would she make him pay? |
56577 | And was n''t he, Adrian, consequently under a gigantic debt of gratitude to Horace for so speedily taking his departure and leaving the coast clear? |
56577 | And what on earth does it all mean? |
56577 | And when may we hope for the pleasure of seeing you again on this side of the silver strip?" |
56577 | And when she had obtained this man''s confession?" |
56577 | And who may your people be, if you please, and what is your business with them?" |
56577 | And who, after all, would thank him? |
56577 | And, after all, what simpler? |
56577 | And, as against all these tragedies, to what does the other amount? |
56577 | And, if I may be allowed one question more, has this very edifying piece of family news been communicated to Margaret?" |
56577 | And, looking at the actual facts, was n''t the woman most to blame? |
56577 | And, since then, was it not to him Gabrielle and her mother, Madame Vernois, had repeatedly turned for advice in matters of business? |
56577 | And, with multiplied apologies, might he depend upon finding her alone? |
56577 | And-- to carry the question a step farther-- did this connote corresponding ignorance on her part in other directions? |
56577 | Are his articles so impossible? |
56577 | Are n''t I my own master?" |
56577 | Are not such tellings the delightful and perfectly legitimate small change of a gallant man''s affections? |
56577 | Are there not circumstances which render connivance at suicide more than permissible? |
56577 | Are you sure of your facts?" |
56577 | As to René Dax''s exhibition? |
56577 | Better? |
56577 | Blind, deaf, maimed, impotent, yes-- yes-- is it not beyond all words magnificent? |
56577 | But I told you in my note Bee was away to- night?" |
56577 | But a proven case of death or only an accepted one?" |
56577 | But from a woman-- surely it was different, permissible? |
56577 | But have they ever been young? |
56577 | But he found dozens of other women charming, and did not scruple to-- as good as-- tell them so.--Why not? |
56577 | But how to make such a return? |
56577 | But if it is true that he may die? |
56577 | But in the summer I''d just as soon lie out.--Say, can I have the rest of the fowl?" |
56577 | But in this case what reason? |
56577 | But in what do these take their rise? |
56577 | But just what will you tell them?" |
56577 | But still in her room? |
56577 | But supposing I do n''t like the house when I see it? |
56577 | But to dote? |
56577 | But was n''t that the best proof of the absence of danger? |
56577 | But what about a second loveless marriage, made now in the full bloom of her womanhood? |
56577 | But what if it were true? |
56577 | But where is Colonel Haig now?" |
56577 | But where''s the use of my taking extensive precautions to shield you if you go and invite gossip like this?" |
56577 | But, in plain truth, what future remained? |
56577 | Butchers, carrion- feeders, what can they tell me which I do not know already? |
56577 | By being snubbed, depressed, depreciated, grumbled at, scolded, made to think meanly of herself? |
56577 | Byewater?" |
56577 | Byewater?" |
56577 | Byewater?" |
56577 | CHAPTER V PASSAGES FROM JOANNA SMYRTHWAITE''S LOCKED BOOK"You wo n''t go sitting up writing to- night, Miss Joanna? |
56577 | Can I do otherwise, seeing how different my own prospects are? |
56577 | Challoner?" |
56577 | Challoner?" |
56577 | Challoner?" |
56577 | Could the servants have talked? |
56577 | Dax?" |
56577 | Dearest friend, you do not say to me both-- not both?" |
56577 | Did I not read it all years ago, when I was still but an infant?" |
56577 | Did it not stand for the loom upon which the whole pattern of her character and conduct was woven? |
56577 | Did you see the lightning then? |
56577 | Do n''t I see everything which is going? |
56577 | Do not you think it would be rather dangerous to leave me here alone? |
56577 | Do you follow me?" |
56577 | Do you propose to disgrace me, as well as yourself, by fighting in the open street? |
56577 | Do you suppose they have n''t tongues in their mouths or eyes in their heads? |
56577 | Do you want to get rid of us? |
56577 | Does n''t it occur to them that a young man, in his position, has affairs of his own in plenty to attend to?" |
56577 | Does n''t it occur to you there are questions which one does n''t ask?" |
56577 | Does n''t sound very substantial, does it? |
56577 | Does that imply that I have stayed away too long? |
56577 | For could this, which he had just asserted regarding himself, be asserted with equal truth regarding the Tadpole of genius? |
56577 | For did they not really take things rather ridiculously hard, these excellent English people? |
56577 | For here are we not all Feminists, every man- jack of us? |
56577 | For it had come to that-- he had grown so ignominiously chicken- livered-- had he the pluck to go on or should he throw up the game? |
56577 | For might n''t he take it as a fortunate omen that the proofs should come to hand on this so fortunate day? |
56577 | For on second thoughts, were these psychologic determinations so well worth the practical cost of them? |
56577 | For surely these showed handsomely on the credit side of his day''s pleasure? |
56577 | For to what covert? |
56577 | For was it conceivable that those two-- Margaret and Challoner-- in any degree shared, or affected to share, poor Joanna''s infatuated delusion? |
56577 | For was it not idle to suppose that her husband differed from other men? |
56577 | For was n''t_ la belle Gabrielle_, after all, his, and not Adrian''s, discovery? |
56577 | For was not she intrinsically the product and exponent of the said tradition and system? |
56577 | For what could, in point of fact, have happened previous to his arrival to produce so amazing a result? |
56577 | For where exactly, in respect of the resistance of that beloved beleaguered city, did René come in? |
56577 | For why should malice find entrance in this particular connection? |
56577 | For why, in the name of diplomacy, of logic, of Eros himself, had Adrian Savage elected to vanish at this moment of all conceivable moments? |
56577 | For why, of all days in the year, should he hear from Joanna to- day? |
56577 | For, assuredly, the sentiment of this second and living picture of her was less abstract, more warm and directly human? |
56577 | For, look at the ghastly episode what way you pleased, how could he be blamed for it? |
56577 | For, of the two living persons whom she had recently come to hold dearest, was n''t the one changed and the other absent? |
56577 | Go-- and never speak to me again about this-- never dare to do so-- never-- never-- do you hear?" |
56577 | Had n''t he said no end of nasty things about his, Challoner''s, coming marriage? |
56577 | Had n''t she run after him just all she knew how? |
56577 | Had n''t she subjected him to a veritable persecution? |
56577 | Had the cloud lifted, leaving his mind clear, permitting an interval of lucidity, of reason and normal thought? |
56577 | Had the empty tabloid bottle and the tumbler with a film of white sediment clouding the inside of it, become a matter of common knowledge? |
56577 | Had they no power of averaging, no little consolations of good- tempered philosophy? |
56577 | Had they no sense of proportion? |
56577 | Had universal paralysis seized the heart of things, she asked herself, of which this desert, voiceless Paris was the symbol? |
56577 | Has Miss Smyrthwaite told you of the alteration she proposes making in her will?" |
56577 | Have I not served for you,_ tres chère Madame_, a good seven years?" |
56577 | Have n''t I as much right to the pavement as that liveried brute of yours? |
56577 | Have you no real desire to console or bring me hope?" |
56577 | Have you not then been with him all the time since we have last seen you?" |
56577 | Have you now come to apologize? |
56577 | He can not touch all my toys with his little cane and make them come alive? |
56577 | He might have been weak, might have been a confounded fool even; but then, had n''t every man, worth the name, a soft side to him? |
56577 | His cue was an intelligent exchange of ideas then? |
56577 | How can we ever thank them sufficiently for this? |
56577 | How can you do otherwise, since not only your sense of dramatic necessity but your goodness of heart will be engaged? |
56577 | How can you know?" |
56577 | How could he be certain, moreover, that it was for his sake, and not mainly for her own, she had sent that precious bit of millinery flying? |
56577 | How could he consent to cut himself from all this and take Joanna''s meager and unlovely body in his arms? |
56577 | How could one help being deceitful when one was always dodging some silly trumped- up fault- finding or bother? |
56577 | How could such devotion fail to attract, fail to create a response? |
56577 | How could they help doing so? |
56577 | How dare René observe, still more how dare he record them? |
56577 | How long do we keep you?" |
56577 | How to effect her escape? |
56577 | How to reform, to recreate, her attitude and outlook? |
56577 | How to temporize until rescue should in some form come to her? |
56577 | How was it possible to sear those poor eyes, extinguishing light in them forever by application of the white- hot iron of truth? |
56577 | Hush? |
56577 | I am at liberty to make this redistribution of my property? |
56577 | I could not do otherwise than tell you of this unexpected journey, could I? |
56577 | I intend to be my own mistress--""And his master?" |
56577 | I never have understood your craze for hoarding--""But-- but-- Adrian?" |
56577 | I said,''Where?'' |
56577 | I saw you droop, grow dejected, pull your beard, wipe your eyes, eh? |
56577 | I shall be mad-- unless--"CHAPTER III IN WHICH THE STORM BREAKS"Unless-- unless-- what?" |
56577 | I suppose, on the whole, I had better ask you to renew the lease for a year, or six months, unless-- unless--""Unless what?" |
56577 | I was rewarded; for it knocked the bluster pretty effectually out of you, eh,_ mon vieux_? |
56577 | If you accepted the latter, did negations and denials logically follow, compelling you to let the former go? |
56577 | If you wo n''t take proper care of your own reputation I must take care of it for you-- isn''t that as clear as mud?" |
56577 | In how far was he to blame? |
56577 | In thus reviving painful memories do you not defeat the very object of my presence?" |
56577 | Indeed, I appreciate that consideration, but while it causes me gratitude, it increases my regret.--You will not think me officious or intrusive? |
56577 | Is gain of the abstract ever worth loss in the concrete? |
56577 | Is it for long? |
56577 | Is it not ravishing?" |
56577 | Is it not the very height of ingratitude thus to cavil and to doubt?" |
56577 | Is it not, therefore, inevitable that some should get off the true lines, and make mistakes injurious to themselves and lamentable to others?" |
56577 | Is it original, startling, eh? |
56577 | Is it such an unheard- of thing that he should wish me to marry him?" |
56577 | Is n''t it all horrible enough already without you trying to scare me? |
56577 | Is n''t that my acknowledged little hobby, my dear? |
56577 | It is not true? |
56577 | It occupied your time and thoughts to the exclusion of all else-- now, was it not so? |
56577 | It was blitheringly silly, for, who the devil would be on the lookout for tracks? |
56577 | Leger?" |
56577 | Leger?" |
56577 | Let it over my head?" |
56577 | Let you know the date of the funeral? |
56577 | Living in the midst of deceptions, what weapon except deceit-- and in this case deceit was tacit only-- remained to her? |
56577 | Lord and Lady Baughurst-- why not? |
56577 | Madame would write? |
56577 | Marie? |
56577 | Marry him? |
56577 | May I soon come back? |
56577 | Maybe you are not acquainted with his work, Madame St. Leger? |
56577 | Might he call? |
56577 | Might n''t the poor Tadpole know very much best what was best for him? |
56577 | Morocco? |
56577 | Morocco? |
56577 | Mrs. Spencer began to speak, but he hulled down her voice by asking, rather loudly:"By the way, where is Miss Beattie?" |
56577 | Must he, taking his courage rather brutally in both hands, disillusion her and risk the results of such disillusionment? |
56577 | My ribs ache still.--There, Nannie, is that little sample of love- making illuminating enough?" |
56577 | Nevertheless he hungered for first- hand news, thirsted for retailable detail; and who could supply these better than Challoner? |
56577 | Not dislike of me? |
56577 | Notwithstanding repudiation of sentiment, was the soft side still uppermost? |
56577 | Now you promise you''ll ring, Miss Joanna, if you should feel nervous or poorly in the night? |
56577 | Now, what about is the amount, approximately, I mean-- if you are free to tell me?" |
56577 | Old age comes on apace, eh, Mrs. Gwynnie? |
56577 | Omen that the story would strike home and its readers acclaim him as a doer of notable and living work? |
56577 | Only let Monsieur look for himself, and declare whether a more verminous gaol- bird has ever been presented for his inspection?" |
56577 | Only, pardon me, where on earth have you been?" |
56577 | Or that his passion for her was unique, without predecessors? |
56577 | Or would they, weakly faltering and failing, let it fall to the ground and be shattered? |
56577 | Or, making allowance for his ill- health and acknowledged eccentricity, parley with and humor him? |
56577 | Or, was it only that the instinct of self- preservation had taken-- as under the stress of poverty it almost must take-- a predatory form? |
56577 | Ought you to undertake the exertion of receiving visitors? |
56577 | Prejudice? |
56577 | Quite sudden, was it-- quite unexpected?" |
56577 | Really, I ca n''t see what you have to object to on the score of position, Joanna? |
56577 | Really, it suited him to a tee, for had not his own poor little wife fallen a victim to the fell disease in question? |
56577 | Remember all the Andrew Merriman business?" |
56577 | Rentoul Haig? |
56577 | Savage?" |
56577 | Savage?" |
56577 | Savage?" |
56577 | Savage?" |
56577 | Shall we go and see how they are getting on? |
56577 | She was obliged to him, of course; yet, in honest truth, was she so very much pleased by his readiness to take the hint? |
56577 | Should I prove presentable to the funny old gentlemen at the local club, or should I compromise him? |
56577 | Should he push the construction of the new under- cliff drive, for instance? |
56577 | Should she resent the said ways, soundly snubbing him? |
56577 | So safeguarded, what, she asked herself, could disquiet her soul or harm her? |
56577 | So-- well-- do you remark how I have changed my decorative scheme since you last visited me? |
56577 | Some other plan to propose, did you say? |
56577 | Stupid of me, was n''t it? |
56577 | Such lamentable lapses will occur at times-- are there not, alas, members of the most respectable, the most distinguished, families who turn badly? |
56577 | Support me.--Ah yes, in London you observed many changes? |
56577 | Supposing I am really determined to stay on here at our dear old Robin''s Rest?" |
56577 | Supposing I really prefer to remain at Stourmouth? |
56577 | Surely she had exaggerated the disturbing influences which could be exercised by so quaint and relatively insignificant a creature? |
56577 | Surely you must have seen, Nannie? |
56577 | Surely, Madame, I need not explain to you any further? |
56577 | Take all your famous heroes of history-- weren''t there funny little tales about every one of them, from the Royal Psalmist downward? |
56577 | Tell you your way, you young fool, your way where?" |
56577 | That horrible shrieking laughter was in his ears-- or was it only the squealing of the tortured rabbits? |
56577 | That, in the first shock of the idea being presented to you, you should strongly express your alarm, your distaste? |
56577 | The domestic hearth? |
56577 | The eighteenth- century stage was many things which it had, no doubt, much better not have been, but was it heavy? |
56577 | The old man cut up well?" |
56577 | The sofa? |
56577 | Then added,"I-- I am at liberty to mention this very interesting piece of information, Miss Beauchamp?" |
56577 | Then what would she, Joanna, see? |
56577 | Then, too, where does the benefit of increasing age come in unless you claim the privileges of indiscretion conferred by it? |
56577 | Then--"Adrian stammered,"then you will marry me?" |
56577 | There are plenty of cushions.--When Giovanni has filled the large bronze bowl-- you see which I mean-- there upon the ebony pedestal?" |
56577 | There''s no help for that--""Magsie, you know her windows are open? |
56577 | Therefore, for him, practically, what followed? |
56577 | Therefore, until further developments declare themselves-- I beg your pardon? |
56577 | Therefore, what had better happen? |
56577 | They''re just, of course, part of the--""Whole show?" |
56577 | Thus, taking up the tag- end of René Dax''s speech, she asked, unwillingly, almost fearfully:"Unless-- unless what?" |
56577 | To reject such affection, is not that to throw away, in a sense, a positive fortune? |
56577 | Unless, by chance, she was laughing at him out of her larger wisdom? |
56577 | Upon my word, is it convincing?" |
56577 | Was I not right?" |
56577 | Was it conceivable his friend had turned traitor, had interfered, saying or hinting at that which might, socially, justify such denial of admission? |
56577 | Was it conceivable that she craved to have that moment repeat itself? |
56577 | Was it conceivable that she, Joanna-- of all created women-- was trying to buy him? |
56577 | Was it possible they had some connection with Adrian''s absence? |
56577 | Was it the price of her independence to hurt a faithful friend so sorely as all this? |
56577 | Was n''t he very much a fool, then, for his pains? |
56577 | Was n''t it just exactly the egregious Tadpole all over? |
56577 | Was n''t it so?" |
56577 | Was no marriage between the old Faith and the new science, the new democracy, possible? |
56577 | Was not Stourmouth renowned as a health resort, and are not hospitals the accredited highroad to royal favor? |
56577 | Was not the whole habit and conduct of her life vindicated, inasmuch as it led to this superb result? |
56577 | Was she, Joanna, living in worlds very much unrealized, where all manner of things of primary importance remained unknown to or misinterpreted by her? |
56577 | Was there any draftsman living who could compare with René Dax? |
56577 | Was there no middle way? |
56577 | Was this what Anastasia Beauchamp hinted at? |
56577 | Well, did n''t he propose she should be, in a sense, just that-- his domestic and social centerpiece? |
56577 | Were those poor hungry hands strong enough to close upon and hold it? |
56577 | What about the British flag you waved so vigorously five minutes ago?" |
56577 | What can have occurred? |
56577 | What can one do? |
56577 | What did this mean? |
56577 | What had he done, by word, act, or look, to provoke or to foster Joanna''s most lamentable infatuation? |
56577 | What is it, Joanna?" |
56577 | What is this that I hear about our good, clever Mr. Stacpole''s leaving for New York?" |
56577 | What more natural then than that you should recoil from the idea of his return? |
56577 | What more, then, have the members of your adored sex to ask?" |
56577 | What on earth, who on earth was the fellow? |
56577 | What should he do? |
56577 | What story was current in Stourmouth, he wondered? |
56577 | What was there to show in the way of harvest for all that strenuous and painful sowing? |
56577 | What were they all doing over there, the dear people whose friendship spelled for him more than half the joy of living? |
56577 | What were we responsible for? |
56577 | What, in the name of all which makes a man''s life worth living, did he care about the fate of that forbidding North African coast? |
56577 | What-- because I definitely and irrevocably willed it-- must and should happen? |
56577 | When may we expect you back?" |
56577 | Where on earth does all her money go to?" |
56577 | Where then can she be?" |
56577 | Who among us is free from anxieties and troubles--_des ennuis_? |
56577 | Who can do otherwise than behold with approval that smart, well- groomed, abundantly amatory, I grant you, but also abundantly chivalrous fowl? |
56577 | Who were we responsible to?" |
56577 | Why ca n''t you go away?" |
56577 | Why can not I trust him more? |
56577 | Why did n''t I get to that hateful carrion- bird''s roost of a studio an hour, half an hour earlier? |
56577 | Why did you not write and tell me?" |
56577 | Why fear to be human? |
56577 | Why have you deprived us all of the joy of your superb musical gift?" |
56577 | Why have you never let me see you?" |
56577 | Why not? |
56577 | Why not? |
56577 | Why should I be otherwise? |
56577 | Why should I not go, my dear fellow? |
56577 | Why should the girls have all the stuff?" |
56577 | Why should you interfere with me? |
56577 | Why, Monsieur, could not this man of whom you tell me return your cousin''s great love?" |
56577 | Why, and for what? |
56577 | Why, at this eminently psychologic moment, was he not here? |
56577 | Why, the dickens, had his great- aunt committed the maddening error of marrying into it? |
56577 | Why? |
56577 | Why? |
56577 | Why? |
56577 | Why?" |
56577 | Will it be cruel and purposeless, too? |
56577 | Will you consent not to make any further attempt to interfere between her and me, to pay court to and marry her?" |
56577 | Would her daughter,_ la belle Gabrielle_, entertain it? |
56577 | Would it trouble you too much to come into the library with me? |
56577 | Would she be at home to- night after dinner, say about eight forty- five? |
56577 | Yet how could I remain silent when all which affects you necessarily concerns me so profoundly?" |
56577 | Yet was n''t it perfectly in the part? |
56577 | Yet what more fatuous, what more execrably bad taste than to assume just that too much? |
56577 | Yet, after all, what can one expect? |
56577 | Yet, after all, why not? |
56577 | You agree with me, Adrian? |
56577 | You are William Smyrthwaite-- Bibby-- are you not?" |
56577 | You are not acquainted with Chambéry, M. Byewater? |
56577 | You can do quite nicely on that?" |
56577 | You did not like them?" |
56577 | You did not stay in town? |
56577 | You do n''t mind my asking?" |
56577 | You do n''t think we can be overheard?" |
56577 | You do n''t want to commit social suicide, do you, and find every door shut in your face? |
56577 | You express a pious hope further developments never will declare themselves? |
56577 | You have seen those in the aquarium? |
56577 | You know her affection for me? |
56577 | You mourn her very truly, very much?" |
56577 | You must be going, too, Colonel Haig?" |
56577 | You permit me to speak quite freely? |
56577 | You recognize it as unpardonable? |
56577 | You say Margaret is quite composed now? |
56577 | You think she will sleep?" |
56577 | You will remain, yes? |
56577 | You''re sure the door of-- of papa''s room is shut and locked?" |
56577 | You-- you assent?" |
56577 | _ ma toute belle_, how are you, and how is the poor, darling mother? |
56577 | and can you not conceive it? |
56577 | he exclaimed,"who has dared to offer her annoyance?" |
56577 | how, without gross and really sickening cruelty, to dispel her disastrous delusion? |
56577 | just Heaven-- and what things, then?" |
56577 | my God-- but if it was true, if, as he claimed to be, he was her brother, how can I go to her with his blood on my hands? |
56577 | my heart-- have I any left? |
56577 | she said,"yes and no? |
56577 | so you''re off at once then, are you?" |
56577 | the good years, the good years,"she said,"when love and all the world is young!--May you believe that she cares, my dear boy? |
56577 | these climbing roses, are they not ravishing?" |
56577 | well that rests more with you than with me, does n''t it? |
56577 | why did n''t I know?" |
56577 | why, in Heaven''s name, did Adrian Savage absent himself? |
56577 | why,"he added, as the sibylline countenance softened somewhat,"have you elected to let me, to let your many friends, remain in ignorance? |
56577 | you decide to accompany me? |
11720 | ''He knows that you are ill, I suppose?'' 11720 A woman?" |
11720 | Afraid of me, or of yourself, Marian? |
11720 | Am I to conclude, then, that you were silent because you had nothing to communicate? 11720 Am I to read this?" |
11720 | An old house in that lane across the way? |
11720 | And I suppose all the letters for people in this neighbourhood pass through your hands? |
11720 | And Miss Nowell-- what made her leave the cottage? 11720 And Mr. Holbrook was in debt when he married, I suppose?" |
11720 | And Mr. Whitelaw will only lend the money upon one condition? |
11720 | And Stephen; did you see him? |
11720 | And about these other troubles, Mr. Saltram, which have no relation to money matters; you will not give me your confidence? |
11720 | And am I never to hope that you will find some one else, better worthy of your regard than Marian Nowell? |
11720 | And are the father and mother both dead? |
11720 | And did you hear no more of your son after this? |
11720 | And do none of you know why she went away, or where she has gone? |
11720 | And do you believe that Mr. Nowell is still living to claim his inheritance? |
11720 | And do you really love me? |
11720 | And has your marriage brought you happiness, Marian? |
11720 | And have you taken no further steps, no other means of communicating with her? |
11720 | And he is really much better, quite out of danger? 11720 And he took that?--he wanted as much as that?" |
11720 | And her father? |
11720 | And how about Mrs. Branston, John? 11720 And how about Mrs. Branston? |
11720 | And how do you know that she is with her father? |
11720 | And how has it gone? |
11720 | And if she happened to take your fancy, you would leave her all your money, I suppose? |
11720 | And if she should die childless, I should get all the free- hold property? |
11720 | And if you do n''t get the money from Stephen, what will happen? |
11720 | And if, after infinite trouble, you should find her the wife of another man, what reward would you have for your wasted time and lost labour? |
11720 | And it is a property of some importance, I conclude? |
11720 | And she never seemed depressed or unhappy? |
11720 | And she told them nothing of her intention to leave Lidford? |
11720 | And she-- she forbade you to let me know of her safety? 11720 And the husband?" |
11720 | And the lady is all that is charming, of course? |
11720 | And this Mr. Holbrook is now Miss Nowell''s husband? 11720 And this fellow whom she has jilted is pretty well off, I suppose?" |
11720 | And was there any satisfaction for you in the meeting? |
11720 | And what has he done with the books? |
11720 | And what took you into that quarter of the world? |
11720 | And where''s this room where you say the woman is shut up? |
11720 | And you can assure me that she is in good hands? |
11720 | And you did n''t refuse him, Marian? |
11720 | And you found your father waiting for you? |
11720 | And you go back to Hampshire? 11720 And you have brought me news of my husband? |
11720 | And you have really not been ill? |
11720 | And you positively refuse to tell me where Mrs. Holbrook is to be found? |
11720 | And you think he loved her, do n''t you? |
11720 | And you think him a good man? |
11720 | And you think she loves me, Jack? |
11720 | And you will make it your business to look for her, sir? |
11720 | And you will marry her, I suppose, Jack, as soon as her mourning is over? |
11720 | And you will trust me better after that promise? |
11720 | And you''d sell me to him for two hundred pounds, father? |
11720 | And your own affairs, Jack-- how have they been going on? |
11720 | And, Sarah,--was it you, Sarah? 11720 Are they living there still?" |
11720 | Are you quite sure of that? 11720 Are you sure of that?" |
11720 | But do n''t you think there may be a reason for Mrs. Pallinson''s dislike of my friend? |
11720 | But how will you find him? |
11720 | But how, if my daughter declines to see you, as she does most positively? 11720 But if the lady in question refuses to have anything to say to you?" |
11720 | But is there to be no atonement for my broken life, rendered barren to me by this man''s act? 11720 But of course your client has been perfectly frank in her communications with you upon this subject?" |
11720 | But the gospel was meant to be our guide in common things, was n''t it, Mrs. Pallinson? 11720 But the money, father-- the money for the crops-- how has it gone? |
11720 | But there is some one else interested in an indirect manner I infer from your words? |
11720 | But what have I to do with that? |
11720 | But who are her people, and how did she fall into his hands? |
11720 | But why should he have taken her away from this place in a secret manner? |
11720 | But why withhold the father''s address? |
11720 | But why, Belle? |
11720 | But why, my dear? |
11720 | But you like Mrs. Branston, do n''t you, Jack? |
11720 | By what means do you hope to discover this? |
11720 | By you, of course? 11720 By you?" |
11720 | Can I do anything to ease you, Stephen? |
11720 | Can I see the man who drove them? |
11720 | Can not you be satisfied with knowing that she is happy? |
11720 | Can you forgive my husband for his part in the wrong that has been done you? 11720 Can you tell me her father''s name?" |
11720 | Can you tell me the name and address of her friends in London-- the young ladies with whom she went to school? |
11720 | Could n''t you borrow it of some one else besides Stephen Whitelaw? |
11720 | Could you believe that a man would be so childish, Gilbert? |
11720 | Could you describe him? |
11720 | DEAR SALTRAM( wrote the Baronet),--"What do you mean by this iniquitous conduct? |
11720 | Did Mrs. Holbrook positively decline to see me? |
11720 | Did he find anything? |
11720 | Did he seem much agitated? |
11720 | Did master hear it? |
11720 | Did n''t I promise you that all would go well if you were patient? 11720 Did n''t I tell you so?" |
11720 | Did no one come here yesterday to inquire for Mrs. Holbrook towards evening? |
11720 | Did she drop no hint as to the whereabouts of this place to which they were going? |
11720 | Did she ever tell you anything about Mr. Holbrook-- his position or profession? 11720 Did she mention me during the time that followed Captain Sedgewick''s death?" |
11720 | Did she seem happy in her mind during that time? |
11720 | Did the half- pay Captain teach her that, I wonder? 11720 Did you go to Wygrove, then?" |
11720 | Did you imagine that I should rest until I had seen you once more, Marian? 11720 Did you please to wish to see the apartments, sir?" |
11720 | Did you say there was no one in there-- no one? |
11720 | Did you see Captain Sedgewick, or Marian, while you were down there? |
11720 | Did you tell him about his wife''s good fortune-- the money left her by her grandfather? |
11720 | Did you wish to look at anything in antique silver, sir? |
11720 | Do I think she loves you? 11720 Do you know if he wrote books-- if he was what is called a literary man-- living by his pen?" |
11720 | Do you know if these people at the Grange have had any one staying with them lately-- any lodgers? |
11720 | Do you know of any place in the ownership of a gentleman who would be likely to lend his house to a friend? |
11720 | Do you know where he was going? |
11720 | Do you not consider the case rather an urgent one, Mr. Medler? 11720 Do you really think so? |
11720 | Do you think that, Mr. Fenton? 11720 Does it really, my girl? |
11720 | Does that young man expect you to leave him money? 11720 Does the doctor call it a dangerous case?" |
11720 | Eh? 11720 Ellen, is it you? |
11720 | For heaven''s sake, what do you mean, father? 11720 For no good, I should think,"replied Mrs. Tadman;"what should anybody give you money for?" |
11720 | For what good? |
11720 | Get downstairs, ca n''t you? |
11720 | Gilbert,he said at last,"what have they done with my wife? |
11720 | Gilbert,he said very quietly,"is it really you?" |
11720 | Had Mrs. Holbrook anything valuable about her at the time of her disappearance? |
11720 | Had he many books here? |
11720 | Had n''t you better go and lie down a little, sir? 11720 Had there been any other influence at work, Marian? |
11720 | Had they many visitors? |
11720 | Has Mr. Saltram never been in his right senses since that day? |
11720 | Have I been mad? |
11720 | Have I not said that I am a poor man, hopelessly impoverished by your extravagance? |
11720 | Have you any idea where they were going to live after their marriage? |
11720 | Have you any idea who the lady is? |
11720 | Have you any notion what the property is worth? |
11720 | Have you any notion where Mrs. Holbrook or her father is to be found? 11720 Have you any reason to suppose your son still living?" |
11720 | Have you seen Mrs. Holbrook since that morning when she left London for Hampshire, immediately after her grandfather''s death? |
11720 | Have you seen her often since her husband''s death? |
11720 | Have you seen him, Medler? |
11720 | Have you seen much of your friend Mr. Saltram since Sunday? |
11720 | Have_ you_ any fear that we shall not suit each other, Marian? |
11720 | He came to ask you for money for his journey, did he not? |
11720 | He does n''t suspect why you want it, does he, father? |
11720 | He is living, then? 11720 He promised to pay you, of course?" |
11720 | He was very angry, I suppose? |
11720 | He''s not going to die, is he? |
11720 | How can I do that, father? |
11720 | How could I expect that he would care for me in the smallest degree, after his desertion of my mother? |
11720 | How did she go? 11720 How did you find out that Marian was my wife?" |
11720 | How is that? 11720 How is that?" |
11720 | How long did he stay? |
11720 | How long do you mean to stay in England? |
11720 | How long is it since I''ve seen Mr. Nowell-- Mr. Percival Nowell, sir? |
11720 | How long is it since you saw Mr. Nowell, your former employer''s son? |
11720 | How so? 11720 How unfortunate?" |
11720 | How was it that I never came across him? |
11720 | I do n''t know about the wickedness of it,Mr. Whitelaw responded, with rather a sullen air;"a daughter is bound to obey her father, is n''t she? |
11720 | I do n''t suppose my little girl ever showed you her mother''s jewel- case, did she, Gilbert? |
11720 | I should say I have, sir, times and often since he''s been ill.''Marian, why do n''t you come to me?'' 11720 I suppose you know all about your grandfather''s will?" |
11720 | If there should be no result from your advertisement, what will you do? |
11720 | If you will be so kind as to tell me where they have gone? |
11720 | In heaven''s name, what can have put such a preposterous notion into your head? |
11720 | In what manner did this Mr. Holbrook impress you? 11720 In what way?" |
11720 | In which room? |
11720 | Including Martin, Belle, when he fell in love with your fair self? |
11720 | Is it a novel? |
11720 | Is it far from here? |
11720 | Is it? 11720 Is n''t there? |
11720 | Is she pretty? |
11720 | Is that you, Gilbert? 11720 Is there anything amiss, Jack?" |
11720 | Is there no other door to the room? |
11720 | Is there no other way? |
11720 | Is this love at first sight? |
11720 | Is your late master''s granddaughter, Mrs. Holbrook, here? |
11720 | It is no one whom I know, I suppose? |
11720 | It is rather awful, is n''t it, for me to speak of marriage at all within a few months of my husband''s death? 11720 It''s a fine old place, is n''t it?" |
11720 | John, what are you doing? |
11720 | Left yesterday morning? |
11720 | Let him do what? 11720 Like her? |
11720 | Lord a mercy, mum, be that you? |
11720 | Lord bless the girl, what need is there of all this talk about what she will be and what she wo n''t be? 11720 Marian, I thought you and I had no secrets from each other?" |
11720 | Marian, have I done anything to forfeit your love? |
11720 | Marian,he cried,"Marian, why have you left me? |
11720 | My dear fellow, do n''t you see that it is fate, and not Mr. Holbrook, that has done you this wrong? 11720 My dear uncle, what is the matter?" |
11720 | My husband has been dead ever so long now, and what need have we to study the opinion of the world so much? 11720 Need n''t I? |
11720 | Not in love yet, John? |
11720 | Not often since your master''s death: but how often before? |
11720 | O, how did you find this place? 11720 O, it''s you, is it, sir?" |
11720 | O, you do n''t, do n''t you, Miss Impudence? 11720 Ought not Mrs. Holbrook to have remained to hear the reading of the will?" |
11720 | Safe? 11720 Seen your son lately? |
11720 | Shall you consider it your duty to seek out or advertise for Percival Nowell? |
11720 | She did n''t reject you? |
11720 | She had a watch and chain, I suppose? |
11720 | She has been placed in possession of her property, I suppose? |
11720 | She is safe-- then all this alarm has been needless? 11720 She is well?" |
11720 | She said that-- my wife told you that? |
11720 | Sir David? |
11720 | Sir,exclaimed Percival indignantly,"do you imagine me capable of speculating upon the untimely death of my only child?" |
11720 | So she''s gone to America with her father, has she? |
11720 | So soon? |
11720 | So soon? |
11720 | Stephen,she cried, half awake and very much, frightened,"what was that?" |
11720 | Strange, is it not? |
11720 | Surely your agent could get some information out of Medler''s clerk; it''s in his trade to do that kind of thing, is n''t it? |
11720 | That young man lives in the house with you, I suppose? |
11720 | The river has been dragged, I suppose? |
11720 | The west wing,he muttered;"is that burnt?" |
11720 | Then he is really the only person who could profit by her death? |
11720 | Then how should I, mum? 11720 Then it would be easiest to get in that way?" |
11720 | Then why do you say these things to me? 11720 Then you apprehend danger?" |
11720 | Then you do not know where she went on leaving this place? |
11720 | Then you fancy there is a good bit of money in question? |
11720 | Then you know how deeply he sinned against you, and how much he valued your friendship? 11720 Then your father had slept at Malsham the night before?" |
11720 | There is no one except Mrs. Holbrook interested in Mr. Nowell''s will, I suppose? |
11720 | There is no particular person whom you suspect? |
11720 | They are not very brilliant, are they? 11720 This Mr. Holbrook was very fond of her, I suppose?" |
11720 | This is strange news,he said,"and it will cause the postponement of your marriage, I suppose?" |
11720 | To her father? 11720 To- night? |
11720 | Very ill-- that means dangerously ill? |
11720 | Very young? |
11720 | Was Miss Nowell long at Wygrove before her marriage? |
11720 | Was it either of you girls that screamed just now? |
11720 | We never heard you come in, and when the bell rung----"Is Mr. Saltram worse? |
11720 | Well, Gilbert, old fellow, what do you think of the lady? |
11720 | Well, John? |
11720 | Well, you silly girl, he would n''t use the room if he thought it was haunted, would he? 11720 Well,"said this gentleman, in his usual off- hand manner,"how''s the governor?" |
11720 | Were you wishing to make any inquiries about the last occupants of Hazel Cottage, sir? |
11720 | What a spirited one she is, ai n''t she, now? |
11720 | What am I to tell your grandfather when I see him? |
11720 | What am I, that I should measure the force of his temptation,he said to himself,"or the strength of his resistance? |
11720 | What can I do for you this evening? |
11720 | What can the police do more than you or I? 11720 What did he say to that?" |
11720 | What do you mean by that? |
11720 | What do you mean? |
11720 | What do you say to three hundred acres-- over three hundred, nigher to four perhaps? |
11720 | What fancies? |
11720 | What good can arise out of any discussion of this subject, Belle? 11720 What good can come of that?" |
11720 | What good use have I made of my life in the past, Gilbert? |
11720 | What ground have you for such an idea? |
11720 | What grounds have you for supposing his guilt possible? |
11720 | What have I done with her? 11720 What have you done with her?" |
11720 | What influence? |
11720 | What is that, my darling? |
11720 | What is that? |
11720 | What is the business? |
11720 | What is the matter, Gil? |
11720 | What is the wrong that she has done you? |
11720 | What kind of a place is Crosber? |
11720 | What makes you suppose that I have any knowledge of him? |
11720 | What of her husband? 11720 What should we scream for? |
11720 | What strange gentleman? |
11720 | What things? |
11720 | What warrant have you for all those things? 11720 What was that man here for, then, Stephen? |
11720 | What was that? |
11720 | What was that? |
11720 | What would he care for that? 11720 What young lady?" |
11720 | What''s put that stuff in your head? |
11720 | What''s that to you? 11720 What''s that to you? |
11720 | What''s the matter? |
11720 | What, are you afraid of me? 11720 What, child?" |
11720 | What, have you never been here? |
11720 | Whatever could go to put it in your head as it was me? |
11720 | When did he come here last? |
11720 | When shall I see you again? |
11720 | When will she come? |
11720 | Where did she go? |
11720 | Where is she? |
11720 | Where shall I tell the man to drive, mum? |
11720 | Where would you advise me to take him? |
11720 | Whereabouts? |
11720 | Who betrayed my secret? |
11720 | Who can tell what he may suspect? 11720 Who else is there that would lend me two hundred pounds? |
11720 | Who else was there? 11720 Who is going to tamper with it?" |
11720 | Who is it? 11720 Who is the lady?" |
11720 | Who told you that I have money to leave? |
11720 | Who told you that I have not forgotten her? |
11720 | Who told you that? |
11720 | Who was it that screamed just now? 11720 Who''s that?" |
11720 | Who''s that? |
11720 | Why not, pray? |
11720 | Why should I do so? |
11720 | Why should I do that? |
11720 | Why should he want me out of the room? 11720 Why should she wish to hide herself from me? |
11720 | Why should you doubt that? |
11720 | Why so, Gilbert? |
11720 | Why the---- have n''t you got a fire here? |
11720 | Why was that, Marian? |
11720 | Why will he not accept the smallest favour from me? |
11720 | Why, dear uncle? |
11720 | Why, my goodness, who can that be? |
11720 | Why, what could have taken you that way, Gilbert? |
11720 | Will she come to me, do you think? |
11720 | Will she? |
11720 | Will you be so good as to shut that door, sir, quite securely? |
11720 | Will you give me your word of honour that Marian''s husband and John Saltram are not one and the same person? |
11720 | Will you step upstairs and ask her to come down to me? |
11720 | Will you tell me if she is in London? |
11720 | Will you tell me what they were like? |
11720 | Will you tell me what this Holbrook is like in person, Sir David? 11720 Will you try to forgive my husband also?" |
11720 | Wo n''t you stop and take some luncheon? 11720 Would it break your heart if I were to recall my promise, Gilbert?" |
11720 | Would it not be a good plan to put an advertisement into the_ Times_, addressed to Mrs. Holbrook, from a relation? 11720 Would you, my lass?" |
11720 | Yes, John; and what is left for the living when that burial is over? 11720 Yes,"he muttered;"come along, ca n''t you? |
11720 | Yet you can positively assure me that she is in safety-- her own mistress-- happy? |
11720 | You believe this man, Gilbert? |
11720 | You came to town alone, Marian? |
11720 | You do n''t know who this Mr. Holbrook is? |
11720 | You do n''t mind my reading your father''s letters, Marian? |
11720 | You do not know where she is? |
11720 | You have a very high opinion of him, I suppose? |
11720 | You have done well out yonder, I hope, Gilbert? |
11720 | You have heard nothing of him, then, I presume? |
11720 | You have looked for that letter, I suppose? |
11720 | You have never taken any measures for finding him? |
11720 | You have not been to Lidford since I left England, I suppose? |
11720 | You have talked of a physician, Mr. Mew; would it not be well to call one in immediately? |
11720 | You know me, do n''t you-- the man who was once your friend, Gilbert Fenton? |
11720 | You mean to remain until the funeral is over, I suppose? |
11720 | You suspect some unknown rival? |
11720 | You think not? |
11720 | You were upstairs with your master? 11720 You will not allow him to do so, I hope?" |
11720 | You would do what, John? |
11720 | Your own experience has been unfortunate, then? 11720 Your superior in years, I know, but in what else?" |
11720 | Your wife? 11720 _ You_ heard me, Ellen? |
11720 | ''My fortune?'' |
11720 | A woman? |
11720 | Against your own sense of right?" |
11720 | Am I dead, and parted from her? |
11720 | And I have been thinking, Jack, that you might run down to Liverpool with me to- morrow, and see the last of me, eh, old fellow?" |
11720 | And after that? |
11720 | And did you hear nothing? |
11720 | And do you know that she is not really my niece-- only a poor waif that I adopted fourteen years ago?" |
11720 | And his face-- what was it in his face that startled her with such a sudden sense of strangeness and yet of familiarity? |
11720 | And how has the poor dear been while I was away?" |
11720 | And how has the world been going with you, Gilbert? |
11720 | And if I should die before my grandchild comes to me, you will see that she has her rights, wo n''t you? |
11720 | And if it was an appointment with any one belonging to Malsham, why could n''t it have stood over till Saturday? |
11720 | And in the event of your granddaughter dying without children, would n''t you rather let the estate go to your son?" |
11720 | And now, what is this care of yours, Mr. Fenton? |
11720 | And the children of Israel-- have they not been clamorous? |
11720 | And then, after a pause, he asked himself,"What could he want with Mrs. Branston, at a time when every moment was precious? |
11720 | And to think that I, who thought myself so strong in the wisdom of the world, should have let such a prize slip through my fingers? |
11720 | And was the rustic business pleasant, Gil? |
11720 | And what does he want to see the house for, I should like to know? |
11720 | And what then, my dear sir?" |
11720 | And when did he come back?" |
11720 | And who else is there? |
11720 | And without such a marriage, what would be her fate when I am gone? |
11720 | And yet how many people are happy in it? |
11720 | And yet what else do I know of her? |
11720 | And yet who could have thought that things would have gone against me as they did? |
11720 | And you and Mr. Saltram have been friends all that time? |
11720 | And you are really going to marry a girl with this disreputable mystery about her belongings?" |
11720 | And you are very angry with her, of course?" |
11720 | And you call that being in good hands, Mr. Medler? |
11720 | And you do believe that I''m sorry for you, do n''t you?" |
11720 | And you expect to retain your place here, I suppose, if the business is carried on?" |
11720 | And you think that Mr. Saltram will be steady when he is married? |
11720 | And you were not dull at Lidford?" |
11720 | And you will take care of him, Mr. Fenton, will you not?" |
11720 | Are you crazy, girl? |
11720 | Are you mad, Stephen?" |
11720 | Are you really in love with her, John?" |
11720 | As bad as that? |
11720 | Because she is lovely? |
11720 | Branston?" |
11720 | But John Saltram, what of him? |
11720 | But if it should come to this-- don''t you understand? |
11720 | But in the first place, I want to know by what right you stole my wife away from her home-- by what right you brought her on this voyage?" |
11720 | But shall I find the old man alive? |
11720 | But what could he want there?" |
11720 | But what face? |
11720 | But what have you been doing since I saw you last?" |
11720 | But why can not I be your friend, Marian?" |
11720 | But why did he not come with you to- day? |
11720 | But why not in that direction, Belle? |
11720 | But you have not forgotten me, I hope?" |
11720 | But you wo n''t tell Mrs. Holbrook that, sir?" |
11720 | By the way, have you seen anything lately of that old man you told me about-- Miss Nowell''s grandfather?" |
11720 | By the way, is not that Sir David Forster''s place?" |
11720 | By what right could he interfere in the conduct of her affairs? |
11720 | By what right do you call yourself my daughter''s husband? |
11720 | Can I ever be less than her lover, I wonder? |
11720 | Can you be his friend, knowing what he has done?" |
11720 | Can you give me house- room here for a night or two, or shall I put up at Crosber?" |
11720 | Can you name any other advantages which she possesses?" |
11720 | Can you suggest no one from whom I am likely to obtain information?" |
11720 | Come, Nell, you''re not going against your father, are you?" |
11720 | Could he doubt that this energetic warm- hearted girl was right, and that some foul deed had been done, of which Marian Holbrook was the victim? |
11720 | Could he, or could he not endure the strain that he had put upon himself within the last eight- and- forty hours? |
11720 | Did I ever say that you came between me and fortune-- was I mean enough, base enough, ever to say that? |
11720 | Did John Saltram really mean to follow those two to Liverpool, I wonder? |
11720 | Did he really wish her to be happy-- happy with the rival he so fiercely hated? |
11720 | Did he strike you as worthy of her?" |
11720 | Did she go of her own free will?" |
11720 | Did she know any one, a stranger, sojourning in that neighbourhood called Holbrook? |
11720 | Did she know that I was ill, and yet stayed away from me?" |
11720 | Did you happen to meet him while you were down there?" |
11720 | Did you hear him just now? |
11720 | Did you suppose I should submit to lose you without hearing from your own lips why I have been so unfortunate?" |
11720 | Did you take any particular notice of them?" |
11720 | Did you wish to see the lady?" |
11720 | Do the doctors say that?" |
11720 | Do you know anything of the detective force?" |
11720 | Do you know of any one else whom she may have liked better than me-- any one whose influence may have governed her at the time she left Lidford?" |
11720 | Do you know the size of Stephen Whitelaw''s farm?" |
11720 | Do you mean a big old- fashioned house standing far back in a garden?" |
11720 | Do you mean to say that my friend Mr. Saltram went to London?" |
11720 | Do you think I could get over next Christmas with them as I''ve got?" |
11720 | Do you think I should sit idly here, if the best measures had not been taken to find your wife?" |
11720 | Do you think that John Saltram has some secret love- affair upon his mind?" |
11720 | Do you want to break my heart?" |
11720 | Do you want to make a scene, and render yourself ridiculous to every one here? |
11720 | Do you wish to see him?" |
11720 | Ellen asked at last, in a plaintive despairing tone;"no other way, father?" |
11720 | Fenton?" |
11720 | Fenton?" |
11720 | Fenton?" |
11720 | For what? |
11720 | Friendship, brotherly affection, those chastened sentiments which he had fancied had superseded all warmer feelings-- where were they now? |
11720 | From the station here?" |
11720 | Gilbert asked again;"what of him?" |
11720 | Gilbert exclaimed in blank amazement;"when?" |
11720 | Go to him at once, and tell him my suspicion, tax him broadly with treachery, and force him to a direct confession or denial? |
11720 | Good gracious me, is the lady in number 7 your wife? |
11720 | Had he been really as confident as he had seemed, as the days had gone by, one after another, without bringing him any tidings of her? |
11720 | Had he hidden her away for some secret reason of his own, and then acted out the play by pretending to search for her? |
11720 | Had he much reason to doubt two minutes afterwards, when John Saltram raised himself on his gaunt arm, and looked piteously round the room? |
11720 | Had he not dreamed of a bright home which was to be his at this time, a home beautified by the presence of the woman he loved? |
11720 | Had his chosen friend-- the man he loved so well-- been able to enlighten him, and had he coldly withheld his knowledge? |
11720 | Had she been mistaken about this man all the time? |
11720 | Had she ever seen him before? |
11720 | Had you seen your husband, Mr. Holbrook, at that time?" |
11720 | Hard lines, is n''t it, Jack?" |
11720 | Has he been delirious to- day?" |
11720 | Has he been long ill?" |
11720 | Has the lady gray eyes, and dark- brown hair, and a very bright expressive face?" |
11720 | Have n''t you found him so?" |
11720 | Have n''t you something pleasant to tell your old uncle-- something that a girl generally likes telling? |
11720 | Have you any notion to whom it belongs, or who lives there?" |
11720 | Have you any wish that she should be found?" |
11720 | Have you ever brought her here? |
11720 | Have you ever given her a wife''s license, or a wife''s place? |
11720 | Have you ever heard that?" |
11720 | Have you gone crazy, you old fool?" |
11720 | Have you got the key?" |
11720 | Have you never seen my face before?" |
11720 | He has done so, I presume?" |
11720 | He liked her uncle; what more natural than that he should like that gallant soldier, whom Marian adored as the first of mankind? |
11720 | He was at home and alone, the boy told her; would she please to send in her card? |
11720 | He was expected on this particular afternoon, you say?" |
11720 | He will come again to- day, I suppose?" |
11720 | His youth was fast going-- nay, had it not indeed gone from him for ever? |
11720 | Holbrook?" |
11720 | Holbrook?" |
11720 | Holbrook?" |
11720 | Holbrook?" |
11720 | Holbrook?" |
11720 | Holbrook?" |
11720 | Holbrook?" |
11720 | Holbrook?" |
11720 | How am I to bear it?" |
11720 | How can you explain her abrupt flight from him in the face of this?" |
11720 | How can you suppose me so blind as not to understand that? |
11720 | How did Mrs. Holbrook leave this place? |
11720 | How has the world gone with you since we parted at Liverpool last year?" |
11720 | How have I lived, Gilbert? |
11720 | How have the current expenses of my illness been paid? |
11720 | How is it that my vile carcass is not in their hands?" |
11720 | How many lies have you not told to hide that which any honest man would have been proud to confess to all the world?" |
11720 | How many weeks and days?" |
11720 | How soon would he be able to answer that question? |
11720 | How was he to tell her? |
11720 | I am not to see her then, I suppose; not to be told her address?" |
11720 | I did n''t ask you to love me, did I? |
11720 | I fear I was right; you have been ill, have you not?" |
11720 | I seem almost a stranger to you, perhaps?" |
11720 | I suppose she''s some relation of yours, by- the- bye, sir, judging by the interest you seem to take in her affairs?" |
11720 | I thought Mr. Holbrook was quite unknown to you?" |
11720 | I want to know whether Jacob Nowell is still living?" |
11720 | I wonder what his only son will say to that,"added Mr. Tulliver, looking very curiously at Percival Nowell,"supposing him to be alive? |
11720 | I wonder whether the fulfilment of one''s heart''s desire ever does bring perfect contentment? |
11720 | If his successful rival had been indeed a stranger to him, what reason could there be for so much mystery in the circumstances of the marriage? |
11720 | If this man Holbrook were indeed a friend of Sir David Forster''s, how did it happen that John Saltram had failed to recognize his name? |
11720 | If you are not in a very great hurry, would you mind getting into the carriage, and letting me drive you round the Park? |
11720 | In what respect did I deceive you?" |
11720 | Is he still living?" |
11720 | Is it all in hard cash?" |
11720 | Is she as charming as ever?" |
11720 | Is that such a common quality, I wonder? |
11720 | Is the man dark or fair-- short or tall?" |
11720 | Is the name quite strange to yourself?" |
11720 | Is there a ladder anywhere?" |
11720 | Is there any doubt as to the lady''s fortune?" |
11720 | Is there any special objection to the lady?" |
11720 | Is there anything wrong to- night?" |
11720 | Is this death? |
11720 | It must have woke you, did n''t it?" |
11720 | It seems like madness, does it not? |
11720 | It was Christian charity, eh, Gilbert? |
11720 | It was not the act of a friend?" |
11720 | John Saltram, as you have a soul to be saved, what have you done with Marian-- with-- your wife?" |
11720 | Long ago, or only very lately? |
11720 | Marian?" |
11720 | Marry a man she disliked? |
11720 | Might it not rather proceed from some secret trouble of mind, some hidden care?" |
11720 | Monday shall we say, or Sunday? |
11720 | Not much vigour in my biceps now, eh?" |
11720 | Nowell?" |
11720 | O God, how many months have I been lying here? |
11720 | O, Marian, Marian, why were you not more candid?" |
11720 | O, my God, what was that happened before I was ill? |
11720 | O, my love, my love, why did you forsake me so cruelly? |
11720 | O, she''s too grand a person to be talked of by such as me, is she? |
11720 | Oh, do n''t you think the men could get to my room and save it?" |
11720 | One of the servants, do you mean?" |
11720 | Or shall I bide my time, wait and watch with dull dogged patience, till I can collect some evidence of his guilt? |
11720 | Rather hard upon him, is n''t it?" |
11720 | Saltram?" |
11720 | Shall I do this? |
11720 | Shall I fetch the steward for you?" |
11720 | Shall we push on there this afternoon?" |
11720 | She is an amiable girl; I have nothing to say against her-- but----""But what, Belle?" |
11720 | She is at home, I suppose?" |
11720 | She is married to some one else, then, I suppose?" |
11720 | She is still at Lidford, I suppose?" |
11720 | She was a lone unprotected woman, and how was she to pay her rent and taxes if her best floor was occupied by a non- paying tenant? |
11720 | She was willing that I should suffer all the anguish of uncertainty as to her fate? |
11720 | Sir David asked presently;"and how can I be of use to you?" |
11720 | So, my dear Mr. Carley, if you have_ no_ objection----""Steph,"said the bailiff abruptly,"do_ you_ want me out of the room? |
11720 | Strange, is n''t it, for a man with all that money to have lived such a life as your father''s?" |
11720 | Tadman?" |
11720 | Tadman?" |
11720 | Tadman?" |
11720 | Tell me, my darling, is there any hope for me?" |
11720 | That is rather strange, is n''t it?" |
11720 | That was a different thing, of course; yet was it likely this man could have returned, and his father''s lawyer have remained ignorant of his arrival? |
11720 | That''s rather a queer start, ai n''t it, Nell?" |
11720 | That''s rather quick work, is n''t it, dear boy?" |
11720 | The woman must surely be dead, or why should he have taken such pains to cover her face? |
11720 | Then you do not know----""I do not know what?" |
11720 | Then you really admire the little woman, Gilbert?" |
11720 | To what part of Hampshire?" |
11720 | Tulliver?" |
11720 | Was her disappearance any work of his, after all? |
11720 | Was it any touch of real feeling, or only selfish apprehension, that quickened its throbbing? |
11720 | Was it not at the hazard of his life that he had gone upon this sudden journey, reckless and excited, in a fever of hope and delight? |
11720 | Was it not enough to know that this girl had broken faith with you? |
11720 | Was it not likely to be a Midlandshire man who had lent Marian''s husband his house? |
11720 | Was it possible, looking at the business from a darker point of view, to imagine any guilty reason for the carrying out of such a plot? |
11720 | Was it real?" |
11720 | Was it strange if John Saltram had fallen in love with her? |
11720 | Was it worth living, that monotonous business life of his? |
11720 | Was she not his goods, his chattels, bought with a price, as much as a horse at a fair? |
11720 | Was she not his wife-- his very own-- powerless to hold him at bay in this manner? |
11720 | Was that real, Gilbert? |
11720 | Was the body only crushed by the burden of the mind? |
11720 | Was there any result?" |
11720 | We shall be so pleased to see you; you will name an early day, wo n''t you? |
11720 | Were poverty and obscurity hard things to bear for you? |
11720 | Were they all united in treachery against him? |
11720 | What am I to think, what am I to believe?" |
11720 | What can I say? |
11720 | What can I think, except that you are one of the most generous of women?" |
11720 | What can he think worse of me than that? |
11720 | What can this house matter to him, unless he was going to buy it? |
11720 | What could I do, Nelly? |
11720 | What could Stephen want with him? |
11720 | What could he do less than friendship would have done, although his affection for this old friend of his youth had perished for evermore? |
11720 | What could people living in such a place as this know of her whom he sought? |
11720 | What could she have said to him if she had been compelled to tell him of her engagement to Stephen Whitelaw? |
11720 | What could she say to him? |
11720 | What did it matter where he was, if she were with him? |
11720 | What did you show him the house for? |
11720 | What do you mean by that?" |
11720 | What do you think of it?" |
11720 | What does he come here for, with his masterful ways, unless it''s to turn us out of house and home? |
11720 | What excuse could she have made for marrying a man about whom she had been wo nt to express herself to Frank Randall in most unequivocal terms? |
11720 | What fear is there of your being sent to prison, because I wo n''t marry Stephen Whitelaw? |
11720 | What had I done to merit your desertion of me?" |
11720 | What had he done with Marian? |
11720 | What had he done with Marian? |
11720 | What have you been doing all this time, and where have you been?" |
11720 | What if she were to call upon Mr. Saltram at his Temple chambers? |
11720 | What if this man Medler had been lying to him from first to last, and was plotting to get old Jacob Nowell''s fortune into his own hands? |
11720 | What interest can you possibly feel in his affairs?" |
11720 | What is her surname, by the way?" |
11720 | What is it Lady Macbeth says? |
11720 | What is this business about which your solicitor bothers you?" |
11720 | What more could he have demanded from her? |
11720 | What more natural than that she should make such a mistake, at a place with such deficient postal arrangements as those which obtained at Lidford? |
11720 | What motive could he have for such a thing? |
11720 | What shall I do? |
11720 | What was he there for? |
11720 | What was it to be? |
11720 | What was more natural than that John Saltram should have found his doom, as he had found it, unthought of, undreamed of, swift, and fatal? |
11720 | What was the use of her fortune, if she could not employ it for the relief of the man she loved? |
11720 | What was the use of paying first- class fare on board a first- class vessel, if one were subject to annoyance of this sort? |
11720 | What was there she would not do for the love of that dearest and noblest of men? |
11720 | What would a man of your age be without some kind of career? |
11720 | What would a weak inexperienced woman be between two such men? |
11720 | What''s the good of my muddling my brains with figures to- night? |
11720 | What, in heaven''s name, are you talking of?" |
11720 | When did Percival Nowell come to England?" |
11720 | When did he die?" |
11720 | When do you sail?" |
11720 | When do you think of going back to Lidford?" |
11720 | When shall I be strong enough to travel?--to- morrow, or if not to- morrow, the next day; surely the next day-- eh, Gilbert?" |
11720 | When will you go down to Rivercombe?" |
11720 | Where and when? |
11720 | Where had she seen him before? |
11720 | Where was Marian Holbrook, that new- found friend whom she had loved so well, and whose fate remained so profound a mystery? |
11720 | Where''s Steph?" |
11720 | Where?" |
11720 | Who could have brought this cruelty about? |
11720 | Who could this John Holbrook be? |
11720 | Who else could have had sufficient power over her to beguile her away from her home? |
11720 | Who else is there to get it? |
11720 | Who else was interested in doing her any wrong? |
11720 | Who should be shut up there, and you live in the house and not know it? |
11720 | Who should say that he had not taken some iniquitous means to rid himself of the tie that had grown troublesome to him? |
11720 | Who should say that such an interval would not come, or who could tell what such an interval might reveal? |
11720 | Who should say which? |
11720 | Who''s been hurt?" |
11720 | Whom next could he question? |
11720 | Why can not you be truly generous, Gilbert, and pardon him? |
11720 | Why did money pass from him to you? |
11720 | Why did you come?" |
11720 | Why do you never call upon me?" |
11720 | Why does he not trust me a little more?" |
11720 | Why does n''t he come to me? |
11720 | Why has she been kept away from me?" |
11720 | Why is it? |
11720 | Why is not your husband with you, by the bye?" |
11720 | Why should Stephen hide any one in his house? |
11720 | Why should he want to show the place to a stranger? |
11720 | Why should she not come to me here? |
11720 | Why should we delay longer than to make all necessary arrangements? |
11720 | Why should you not go in for this thing, Gil?" |
11720 | Why was it that you never wrote to me to tell me the complete change in your feelings?" |
11720 | Why waste any further emotion in regrets that are as useless as they are foolish?" |
11720 | Why wo n''t you trust me? |
11720 | Why, how should she know anything about it? |
11720 | Why, surely, Gil, that is not a question upon which you want another man''s judgment?" |
11720 | Will marriage, or custom, or the assurance that we belong to each other for the rest of our days, take the poetry out of our lives? |
11720 | Will that suit you?" |
11720 | Will you be so kind as to step inside?" |
11720 | Will you come and smoke your cigar with me to- night? |
11720 | Will you come too? |
11720 | Will you dine with me at the Pnyx at seven to- night? |
11720 | Will you insert an advertisement in the_ Times_, Gilbert, under initials, telling her of my illness, and entreating her to come to me?" |
11720 | Will you tell me who and what he is-- his position in the world, and so on?" |
11720 | With what end?" |
11720 | Wo n''t you be pleased to take a seat?" |
11720 | Wo n''t you try to save her?" |
11720 | Would anything else keep her from me when I call for her, the poor child that loved me so well? |
11720 | Would not the time soon come in which its dreariness would oppress him as the dulness of Lidford House had oppressed him to- night? |
11720 | Would not the very fact of this desolation coming to her from his lips be sufficient to make him hateful to her in all the days to come? |
11720 | You are aware that a letter reached her a few hours before she left Hampshire? |
11720 | You did not meet the husband, then, I suppose?" |
11720 | You had it, have n''t you?" |
11720 | You have abandoned those revengeful intentions you appeared to entertain, when you were last in this house?" |
11720 | You have advertised, of course?" |
11720 | You have seen her?" |
11720 | You have seen or heard from them since the funeral, I suppose?" |
11720 | You have told him about me, I suppose?" |
11720 | You mean to say you think she''s alive, then?" |
11720 | You remember my asking you if you had ever heard the name of Holbrook before your hunt after Marian''s husband? |
11720 | You were there?" |
11720 | You will let me go to her, Gilbert, the instant I am able to travel, as soon as I can drag myself anyhow from this bed to the railway? |
11720 | You will not stand between me and my love?" |
11720 | You will take care that she is not cheated by her husband, or by any one else?" |
11720 | You wo n''t squander the money, will you, my dear, as your father would, if it were left to him?" |
11720 | You''d rather see your father in gaol, I suppose, if it came to that?" |
11720 | Your father has n''t been deceiving me, has he?" |
11720 | and does he look upon me as a possible rival?" |
11720 | and have you no pity for the fate of your wife, no interest in the life of your only child?" |
11720 | and how can he help thinking that? |
11720 | and what do you want?" |
11720 | and what has Stephen Whitelaw done with his money? |
11720 | and why do you suspect that any harm has befallen her?" |
11720 | and why should Marian have so carefully avoided telling him anything about her husband? |
11720 | and why should he grudge her the inheritance of his wealth? |
11720 | and you want to know who he is? |
11720 | are there many so luckless as to love once and once only, and who, setting all their hopes upon one cast, lose all if that be fatal?" |
11720 | can all the memory of the past plead with me for him when I think of these things? |
11720 | cried Mr. Whitelaw savagely,"and a drunken old fool into the bargain.--Why do you let her muddle herself with the gin- bottle like that, Ellen? |
11720 | cried his wife reproachfully,"how could you ever consent to such a wicked thing?" |
11720 | demanded the other bitterly;"and what have I to look forward to in the future? |
11720 | exclaimed the Captain;"then you have never seen Heatherly, I suppose?" |
11720 | had there been no shapeless terror in his mind, no dark dread that when the knowledge came, it might be something worse than ignorance? |
11720 | he asked at last;"why does n''t she come to me? |
11720 | he cried,"do you mean to say that you have solved the mystery of Marian Holbrook''s fate? |
11720 | he exclaimed, with undisguised disappointment,"it''s you, is it, sir? |
11720 | he exclaimed;"she is with Mr. Nowell-- the father who neglected her in her youth, who of course seeks her now only for the sake of her fortune? |
11720 | how and where they had first met?" |
11720 | how could you, and with another man''s money?" |
11720 | how long she had known him? |
11720 | how many take the right road? |
11720 | muttered Gilbert,"is this man the blackest villain that ever cumbered the earth? |
11720 | or did you find life rather dull down at Lidford? |
11720 | or does church- going, and psalm- singing, and Bible- reading come natural to all women? |
11720 | or hire you for that, or pay you for it? |
11720 | or only a part of my delirium? |
11720 | or what power could Marian have, once under her father''s influence, to resist his will? |
11720 | or would he ever be able to answer it? |
11720 | she exclaimed,"am I set free?" |
11720 | she said, in a frightened, breathless way;"did you hear that?" |
11720 | that you know her to be alive-- safe-- well, and have kept back the knowledge from me?" |
11720 | travel to America in his weak state of health?" |
11720 | what claim could he assert to defend her interests? |
11720 | what evidence have you to produce to prove that you are not a bare- faced impostor? |
11720 | who could have shut you up in that room?" |
11720 | who would listen to any romantic notion about a promise made to the dead? |
11720 | whose face? |
11720 | why wo n''t you let me be your banker?" |
11720 | you can hold her up as a paragon of perfection after she has thrown you over in the most heartless manner? |
11720 | you want to know whether your rival is handsome, I suppose? |
11720 | your father''s something more than a stranger to you, is he? |