Questions

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

identifier question
59254''The Woman Who Braved All''?
59254After you''ve...."You do n''t mean to say you think you''re going to lug_ me_ into it?
59254And afterwards?
59254And now,said Claude, shelving the subject,"what about that bite of lunch we were discussing a moment ago, Bertie?
59254And what do you propose to do now?
59254And where do they touch after Madeira?
59254Another time...."Sir?
59254Are they_ what_?
59254Are you going to try and smash up the show?
59254Arrangements?
59254Because you did your best, you mean?
59254Bertie,she said,"what are your immediate plans?"
59254Bingo in?
59254Bit risky, is n''t it? 59254 But how could she be?
59254But is n''t he going, too?
59254But look here,I said, being far from keen on the bally business,"why not wait awhile?"
59254But what about Van Alstyne, or whatever his name is? 59254 But what''s the idea?
59254But what_ were_ your services, dash it?
59254But who are you to pit yourself against the decrees of Fate?
59254But why are n''t you on your way to South Africa?
59254But, you silly asses, suppose Aunt Agatha finds out that I''m hiding you when you ought to be in South Africa? 59254 Can you throw your mind back to that occasion, Bertie?
59254Did you tell her that?
59254Disturbing news from Lower Silesia, what?
59254Do waitresses really talk like that?
59254Do you realise that about two hundred of Twing''s heftiest are waiting for you outside to chuck you into the pond?
59254Do you think all is well with them?
59254Do you think it is possible that he could_ see_ things not visible to the normal eye?
59254Do you want to come?
59254Does n''t he seem to want the wedding bells to ring out?
59254Eh?
59254Eh?
59254Eh?
59254Er-- pretty girls?
59254Even young Bingo?
59254Financially remunerative? 59254 For South Africa?"
59254Friday? 59254 Had a nice refreshing sleep?
59254Hallo?
59254Has it ever occurred to you, Bertie,she said,"that your Uncle George may be psychic?"
59254Has n''t your uncle forgiven you yet?
59254Have you come back to inflict your beastly society upon Miss Wardour?
59254Have you lunched here yet?
59254Have you started packing yet, Jeeves?
59254Hear that, Eustace? 59254 How about it, laddie?"
59254How do you do? 59254 How do you mean?
59254How do you mean?
59254How do you mean?
59254How should_ I_ know how waitresses talk?
59254How would this do you, Bingo?
59254I beg your pardon?
59254I mean he has n''t been feeling the strain of things a bit, has he? 59254 I must not be like Lord Windermere, must I, Mr. Wooster?
59254I say, Bingo, how_ is_ your uncle these days?
59254I suppose I ought to go down and see the dashed thing?
59254In straitened circumstances?
59254Indeed, sir?
59254Indeed, sir?
59254Is Mr. Little in trouble, sir?
59254Is he going, too?
59254Is that why you''ve come back?
59254Is this Bertie Wooster talking?
59254It is nice of you to say that, Bertie, but what I was thinking was, are they_ safe_?
59254Me, sir?
59254Mopping up the stuff to some extent?
59254My dear old chap, you do n''t for a moment imagine that we are dreaming of going to_ bed_ to- night, do you?
59254My dear old soul,I said,"what''s up?"
59254My nephew? 59254 No, really?"
59254No, really?
59254No, really?
59254Not for me?
59254Now what,said Eustace,"do you propose to do, Bertie, in the way of entertaining the handsome guests to- night?"
59254Of course, it means a lot to him, does n''t it? 59254 Packing, sir?"
59254Psychic?
59254Shifting it a bit?
59254Sir?
59254Sir?
59254Sir?
59254Sir?
59254Sir?
59254Sir?
59254Surely nothing has gone wrong?
59254That dishes the scheme, does n''t it? 59254 The same girl you were in love with the day before yesterday?"
59254The what of Eustace?
59254Too? 59254 Towards the whole species?"
59254Uncle George?
59254Wait? 59254 We were at school together, were n''t we, Bertie?"
59254Well, what do you want me to do?
59254Well, what happened then?
59254Well, what''s to be done?
59254Well?
59254What did Jeeves do? 59254 What do you make of it, Jeeves?"
59254What do you mean?
59254What do you mean?
59254What do you mean?
59254What made him change his plans? 59254 What on earth are you doing here?"
59254What on earth are_ you_ doing here?
59254What over?
59254What shock has he had?
59254What the dickens is she sending you fivers for? 59254 What would you advise?"
59254What''s all this?
59254What''s happened now?
59254What''s the idea? 59254 What_ is_ my latest?"
59254When they get on the boat and find she is n''t there, wo n''t they come buzzing back?
59254Where did you spring from? 59254 Where else?"
59254Where_ does_ he get off?
59254Which girl?
59254Why, have you met him?
59254Why, what could I do? 59254 Why?
59254Would there be anything further, sir?
59254Would you require my company on this visit, sir?
59254Yes, but what?
59254Yes, sir?
59254Yes?
59254You are n''t_ annoyed_?
59254You are?
59254You do n''t think time might induce you to change your views?
59254You heard about the binge, Bertie? 59254 You really dislike them?"
59254You surely have n''t fallen in love again-- and with a girl you''ve only just seen?
59254You think the things will be a frost?
59254You wo n''t object to putting us up, Bertie?
59254You''re really married?
59254You''re seeing a good deal of them, are you?
59254Your cousins not at home, Bertie?
59254''Oh, have you read this, Lord Bittlesham?''
59254After all,"said Claude reasonably,"South Africa has got along all right without me up till now, so why should n''t it stick it?"
59254Are you busy for the next few days?
59254Are you giving that?"
59254Are you in love with Marion Wardour, too?"
59254At having half London going about under the impression that I''m off my chump?
59254Banks?''
59254But have you reflected what your uncle''s going to say?
59254Could n''t you tell your maid to say you are not at home?"
59254Did he say?"
59254Dinner will be ready at a quarter to eight precisely, unless you desire to dine out?"
59254Do you remember the frightfully subtle scheme I worked?
59254He''s told you about the girl, of course?"
59254How about a tenner at a hundred to eight?"
59254How do you do?"
59254How do you mean?"
59254I ask you, Jeeves, as man to man, did you ever see such a chap?"
59254I expect,"said young Bingo,"that at the end of the meal-- or possibly at the beginning-- the waitress will say,''Both together, sir?''
59254I hope you are n''t ratty about it, what?
59254I mean, are n''t they apt to cut loose a bit to- morrow night if they''re left all alone in London?"
59254I mean, are n''t they in the middle of their term at Oxford?"
59254I mean, can it be done?
59254I say, I suppose you can get me a berth all right at such short notice?"
59254I should have thought that even you----""Why were they sent down?"
59254I take it you know that Orange number at the Palace?
59254I think we-- er-- met at lunch the other day, did n''t we?"
59254It''s an extension night, is n''t it?
59254Not really?"
59254Not your own, surely?"
59254Now, what about a good old bite of lunch?"
59254Oh, I say, you wo n''t say a word to Eustace about this, will you?"
59254Our little bit of trouble, I mean?"
59254Richard?"
59254Shall we be going in?"
59254Since time first began this love of ours was fated, and who are you to pit yourself against the decrees of Fate?
59254Tell me, did you draw that haughty old man from a living model?"
59254Tell me, what made you commit this rash act?"
59254Telling him you were what''s- her- name, the woman who wrote those books, I mean?"
59254The day after to- morrow, do you mean?"
59254They have not met with some horrible accident?"
59254What am I going to do?
59254What can I do for you?"
59254What did Aunt Agatha tell you?"
59254What do you mean,''too''?"
59254What do you mean?"
59254What do you think happened after you left us?
59254What on earth are you doing here?"
59254What''s the good of waiting?"
59254Where do I get off?"
59254Where do you think you''re going to stay if you stick on in London?"
59254Where have you been all this while?"
59254Where?
59254Which dock?"
59254Whisky, sir?"
59254Who is the lady?"
59254Who, as you say, am I to pit myself against the decrees of Fate?
59254Why?"
59254You do n''t mind?"
59254You do think those poor, dear boys are safe, Bertie?
59254You know as well as I do that your poor Uncle George has for many years_ not_ been a-- he has-- er-- developed a habit of-- how shall I put it?"
59254You know that beastly book you insisted on sending my uncle?"
59254You remember that girl you introduced me to at Ciro''s last night?"
59254what''s that?"
8190''S THAT?
8190A hamper, is there? 8190 A kleptomaniac?
8190A what?
8190About Bertie?
8190All your what?
8190And mine?
8190And then we might-- er-- so to speak-- chuck it away somewhere-- what?
8190And-- er-- Florence?
8190Are you consulting me professionally? 8190 Are you, Duggie, old pal?"
8190Ben,I asked my companion,"who is that youth?"
8190Bertie, shall I tell you what I suspect?
8190Bertie, will you or will you not do this perfectly trivial thing for me? 8190 But even if I-- What I mean is-- Of course, anything I can do-- but-- if you know what I mean----""You say you want to marry me, Bertie?"
8190But suppose Uncle Willoughby catches me at it? 8190 But what could be his motive for perpetrating this extraordinary theft?"
8190But would n''t it be better to have a talk with Edwin?
8190Can anything be done with them?
8190Can you imagine anything more delightful, then, than_ not_ spending a weekend with Bodfish? 8190 Cut you out?"
8190Did n''t she write to you?
8190Did you send it?
8190Did you, by Jove?
8190Do n''t you like this suit, Jeeves?
8190Do you know that Lady Florence has broken off her engagement with me?
8190Do you like them snipped much, or only a bit?
8190Do you mean to say you refuse to help me, Bertie?
8190Do you mean''also''or''a brace''?
8190Do you still want to marry that Dallas fellow? 8190 Does JONES approve your choice?"
8190Edwin is going to marry a palmist?
8190Eh? 8190 Eh?"
8190Er-- colonel, I-- er-- suppose Miss Reynolds got that dog all right?
8190Good what? 8190 Has n''t he got a copy of it?"
8190Have you ever spent a weekend at Bodfish''s place in the country?
8190Have you no influence with him, Reginald?
8190How are you going to do it?
8190How can I do it? 8190 How much?"
8190How''s that?
8190I should have seen it if it had been here-- what?
8190Indeed, sir?
8190Indeed, sir?
8190Is it really a frost?
8190Is such a contest quite----? 8190 Is this all?"
8190It would n''t be better if old Duggie went along instead?
8190Last Saturday''s?
8190Look here, Drew,said Dick;"you''ll regard what I''m going to say as said under seal of the confessional and that sort of thing, wo n''t you?"
8190Lord Emsworth? 8190 Me?
8190Mr. Craye did n''t make any objections, then?
8190Nineteen?
8190No, but see here,I said,"are you going to marry him?"
8190Not exactly; but----"What do you mean?
8190Of course, I suppose all this seems tolerably rummy to you, Jeeves?
8190Oh-- ah-- why?
8190Pansy Glucose?
8190Raffles?
8190Reggie,he said,"what do doctors call it when you think you see things when you do n''t?
8190Reginald,she said,"what is this I hear about Douglas?"
8190Shall I go and look in his room?
8190Signed?
8190Sir?
8190Sir?
8190Sir?
8190Something alive?
8190Suggestions?
8190Supposing,I suggested,"We ask Miss WHITE to choose?
8190The fact is----"Well?
8190The ingenue?
8190Then,said Tom Ellison,"what are you trying to cut me out for?"
8190To which dog do you refer?
8190Was n''t he pleased?
8190Well, Bertie?
8190Well, is it a deal? 8190 Well, to drop that, what do you propose to do about this?
8190Well, what do n''t you like about it?
8190Well, what''s wrong with it? 8190 Well?"
8190Well?
8190Well?
8190Well?
8190What about her?
8190What about him?
8190What about it, do n''t you know?
8190What about the rhymes, Willie?
8190What are you doing here?
8190What are you doing here?
8190What did you say her name was-- Dorothea? 8190 What do you mean, boy?
8190What do you mean? 8190 What do you think of that?"
8190What on earth are we to do?
8190What ought I to know about what?
8190What''s my score?
8190What''s that?
8190What''s the matter?
8190What''s the matter?
8190What''s to be done?
8190What? 8190 What?"
8190What?
8190Where''s my gun?
8190Which is to propose first?
8190Who is she?
8190Who the devil''s Harry?
8190Who?
8190Who?
8190Whom to?
8190Whose is it?
8190Why do n''t you consult a palmist?
8190Why do n''t you tell him he must n''t?
8190Why not get Edwin to do it? 8190 Why, are you setting up as a dog- fancier in your old age, colonel?"
8190Why?
8190Wilkinson Bodfish? 8190 Would you mind taking first b- b- ball, old man?"
8190Yes, sir?
8190Yes, sir?
8190Yes?
8190You can get your packing done and all that?
8190You can start in at once?
8190You do n''t imagine it can be allowed to go on? 8190 You do n''t mean that?
8190You have destroyed the manuscript?
8190You have not the key?
8190You mean----?
8190You see that box of cigars? 8190 You''re not going to the country?"
8190You_ are_ Edwin?
8190Your aunt''s?
8190_ Wha- at_?
8190A little more tea, sir?"
8190After all, though she had a wonderful profile, was it such a catch being engaged to Florence Craye as the casual observer might imagine?
8190All those decent restrictions which used to check poets have vanished, and who shall say what will be the outcome?
8190And if I did n''t burn the thing, how else could I get rid of it?
8190And, anyhow, what''s the excitement?
8190And, if it comes to that, how about Dora Thingummy?
8190Anything further?
8190Bertie, you remember asking me, when you left, to make myself pleasant to your uncle?"
8190But how?"
8190But what?
8190Can you imagine anything more awful than to spend a weekend with Bodfish?"
8190Can you manage it?"
8190DISENTANGLING OLD DUGGIE Does n''t some poet or philosopher fellow say that it''s when our intentions are best that we always make the worst breaks?
8190Darrell?"
8190Darrell?"
8190Did n''t I tell you the parcel goes off to- morrow?
8190Did you ever see just that shade of hair?"
8190Did you see them?
8190Did you think I had married Edwin?
8190Do I just walk in?
8190Do you know Bodfish?"
8190Do you know a man named Pringle?
8190Do you remember a conversation we had, Mr. Pepper, my last afternoon at the Crayes''?
8190Do you remember that moonlight night?
8190Do you see now?"
8190Do you think I''m going to die?"
8190Do you think it''s some sort of a warning?
8190Do you, or do you not?"
8190Ethel Something?"
8190Follow?"
8190Going to make my flesh creep?"
8190Got the punch?
8190Had it any special characteristics?"
8190Has n''t she seen Edwin?"
8190Have a cigarette?"
8190Have you any suggestions?"
8190Have you ever considered the latent possibilities for dramatic situations in short sight?
8190Have you seen him?
8190Hot stuff?
8190How do you know I''m not very fond of Mr. Craye?
8190How many are there?"
8190How many women with dull bronze hair does Edwin know?"
8190How much do I give her?"
8190I think he gets so much more out of life than he used to, do n''t you?"
8190I wonder if you will be seeing Florence when you get back?
8190In my Canadian canoe?
8190Is he in soft?
8190Is it not a little-- um?"
8190JEEVES TAKES CHARGE Now, touching this business of old Jeeves-- my man, you know-- how do we stand?
8190May I wish you happiness?
8190Miss Burn-- may I call you Dolly?
8190Nineteen?
8190No lyricist wants to keep linking"love"with"skies above"and"turtle dove,"but what can he do?
8190Not the one at Blandings?"
8190Not the one we know?
8190Oh, good morning?
8190On the Char?
8190Once and for all, will you do me this quite simple act of kindness?"
8190Or perhaps you would rather I showed you mine?"
8190Or would you prefer something less sensational, something more in the romantic line?
8190PHOTOGRAPHERS AND ME I look in my glass, dear reader, and what do I see?
8190Pepper?"
8190Pepper?"
8190Pepper?"
8190Pleasant, was it not?
8190Ready?"
8190See?"
8190Several?
8190Sha n''t I feel a fearful chump?
8190Still, how about that girl you used to rave about last summer?
8190Surely that''s definite enough?"
8190THE PAST THEATRICAL SEASON And the Six Best Performances by Unstarred Actors What lessons do we draw from the past theatrical season?
8190The point is, what''s to be done now?
8190Then why not say so?
8190They did n''t hit him?"
8190To play cricket?
8190Understand?"
8190Was n''t there something in what Jeeves had said about her character?
8190We two?"
8190Well, what I say is: Why not?
8190Well-- I mean to say-- what?
8190What I mean is, Florence knew I was going back to Easeby the day after to- morrow, anyway; so why the hurry call?
8190What do I do?
8190What do you think I came here for?
8190What is this dreadful secret?"
8190What then, Willie?"
8190What''s been happening?"
8190What''s going to happen?"
8190What''s the matter with having a cross- talk team and a few performing dogs there?
8190What''s the matter?"
8190What?
8190What?"
8190What?"
8190What?"
8190What?"
8190Where are they?"
8190Where the dickens were my evening things?
8190Which suit will you wear for the journey?"
8190Who can say where this thing will end?
8190Who?
8190Why ask me?"
8190Why did n''t you let me know and collect the silver fish- slice?"
8190Why me?"
8190Why not in this?
8190Why rake up the past?
8190Why?
8190Why?"
8190Will you give her my very best love?"
8190Will you put us in first?"
8190Would not that suit you?"
8190You do n''t think my brain''s going or anything like that, do you?"
8190You know how your glasses cloud over when you come into a warm room out of the cold?
8190You must notice the difference?"
8190You''re stringing old Edwin so as to put one over on Florence?"
8190exclaimed the warrior;"is he dead?"
3580Admiral Bruix,said the Emperor in a tone showing great excitement,"why have you not obeyed my orders?"
3580Ah, well, what have I to do with that?
3580Ah, well, what were you doing there in your room all by yourself? 3580 Answer me, what has become of Vandamme?"
3580Are you asleep, Constant?
3580But how can we follow him?
3580But if the grenadiers begin to hiss like the others?
3580Good- day, Mother Marguerite,said his Majesty, saluting the old woman;"so you are not curious to see the Emperor?"
3580Have there not been enough killed?
3580Have you any children?
3580I will do well?
3580I wish this statue removed; do you hear, Monsieur Fontaine? 3580 In order that the earth should produce, it is necessary that it should be turned up, is it not so?
3580In what regiment?--"Sire?"
3580Is it because I am a king,he said one day,"that you are afraid to say thou to me?
3580Is not that the bishop?
3580Is that all?
3580It surely can not be you who made shoes for me at the l''ecole militaire?
3580Look,said one,"do you see the Little Corporal down there?"
3580Monsieur Constant,said he,"do you know what are the three capitals of the French Empire?"
3580Monsieur,replied the Emperor, more and more irritated,"I gave the orders; once again, why have you not executed them?
3580My husband is asleep, why do you come to disturb his glorious rest?
3580See here,said he,"since when did chickens begin to have only one wing and one leg?
3580See how you are,said the First Consul,"always sick and complaining; and if you stay here, who then will shave me?"
3580That reminds me,continued the First Consul, addressing his colleague,"when is your brother going to take possession of his see of Rouen?
3580These gentlemen are with you?
3580To how much does the loss amount?
3580Unfortunately, Sire,said he among other things,"I am too old to long enjoy your Majesty''s reign or profit by your kindness."--"YOU?"
3580Viewed from a political standpoint, how would the papal government in these days appear compared with the great kingdoms of Europe? 3580 Well, Louise, you are disgusted with me?"
3580Well, my children, what do you think of the wine?
3580Well,continued the First Consul,"has the harvest been fine this year?"
3580What do you come to ask here?
3580What do you think of it?
3580What does that wagon contain?
3580What is it?
3580What is it?
3580What is that?
3580What is the nature of the occupation which has detained you in Moscow?
3580What is your father''s name?
3580What shall we gain,said he,"by doubling this fort?
3580What,cried he,"do you not recognize me?"
3580Where is he, then?
3580Who knows,said he,"what terrible confusion might be produced by such news?
3580Why did you quit the service?
3580Why give that?
3580Why, what is the matter?
3580You believe in glory, then?
3580You feel better, do you not? 3580 You think that she would refuse me?"
3580''General, First Consul,''cried the frightened cardinal,''it is not a red hat, but a red cap, which that man should have?''
3580''That is true, Sire,''replied the Prince Primate I was mistaken; but how does it happen that your Majesty is so well acquainted with these matters?''
3580--"Ah, Monsieur, unless we had twenty louis, we would not be above want; but what chance is there of our ever having twenty louis?"
3580--"And Monsieur Colin, how much has he?"
3580--"And why do n''t he do so now?"
3580--"And you?"
3580--"But after all,"said the Emperor eagerly,"what is the opinion of the Duke of Bassano?"
3580--"But how much, my good woman, how much would be necessary?"
3580--"But how would you have succeeded in, striking me?"
3580--"Can you tell me the name of your general- in- chief?"
3580--"Certainly, I see that very plainly, Citizen General; but why are you mustering them?"
3580--"Do you not see him in his launch?"
3580--"Do you think they heard me?"
3580--"Do you wish to leave me, Eugene?
3580--"Duroc?
3580--"How long have you been a soldier?"
3580--"How much do you make me pay for my shoes?"
3580--"How much of each?"
3580--"How much would it take,"replied his Majesty,"to make you perfectly happy?"
3580--"I can then rely upon what you tell me?"
3580--"I, Sire?
3580--"I, Sire?"
3580--"I, my Lord, have me arrested?
3580--"My glory,"interrupted the marshal eagerly;"do you wish me to speak frankly?
3580--"Reply, I order you; was it you?"
3580--"Shall we leave you to the enemy?"
3580--"Suppose I pardoned you?"
3580--"Then, what makes you dodge your head?"
3580--"Very well, indeed, Rata; and you?"
3580--"Well, why have you put me in the place of the god of war?"
3580--"Well, you are not asleep, then?"
3580--"What can you have to say to me, you crater of Vesuvius?
3580--"What is the matter?"
3580--"What is your name, Madame?"
3580--"What matters that?
3580--"What was it?
3580--"Where did it fall?"
3580--"Why have you no cross?"
3580--"Why is that?"
3580--"You admire him greatly?"
3580--"you are a Frenchman, then?"
3580A peasant, seeing him thus some distance from his suite, cried out to him familiarly,"Oh, citizen, is the Emperor going to pass soon?"
3580According to one of the habitual expressions of the Emperor, the pear was ripe; but who was to gather it?
3580After the colonel had replied, he addressed himself to all the other officers, saying,"Who is the bravest among you?"
3580All these dangers in no wise- depressed the Emperor; and he had a habit of saying,"What have I to fear?
3580Am I not here?"
3580An Inhabitant.--"Is it true, as I am told, that the condition of affairs is so bad?"
3580And how could you have hoped to escape, after you had struck me thus in the midst of my soldiers?"
3580And noticing the fine resistance and majestic maneuvers of a frigate, he asked,"Can you believe, my children, that captain is English?
3580And when the grand marshal appeared, his Majesty inquired,"Who is the idiot that could have conceived such an idea?
3580And you, my dear, what did you do all the evening?"
3580Are we not old acquaintances, we two?"
3580Are you content?"
3580Are you not my chief architect?"
3580Are you supporting them also?"
3580Are you sure you have a good driver?
3580As soon as his Majesty saw a domino similar to the one the femme de chambre had described, he pressed my arm and said,"Is that she?"
3580At last I concluded to shake him gently; and at this the Emperor awoke with a loud cry, saying,"What is it?
3580At such a tender age could he have been conscious of his uncle''s superiority to all those who surrounded him?
3580But what do you mean by your English?
3580But what is there for me to say here of a man whose name in history will never be separated from that of the Emperor?
3580Can he be dead?"
3580Can he stand that ordeal?
3580Can it be implicitly believed?
3580Can it be possible to see anything equal to what we have seen?
3580Come, now, is there any need of formality between friends?"
3580Could Paris hold out long enough for him to crush the enemy against its walls?
3580Do you believe that, Constant?
3580Do you doubt it?"
3580Do you know it has the finest archiepiscopal palace in France?
3580Do you know what they do?
3580Do you swear it?"
3580Formerly when a highly esteemed actor was kept from his place for some time by illness( and who deserved more esteem than Dazincourt?
3580General Rapp seized the man by the arm, and said to him,"Monsieur, you have already been ordered away; what do you want?"
3580Has imagination ever dreamed anything wilder than this?
3580Have I not also critics who do not spare me?
3580Have you ever seen a foot like that?
3580Have you no mother?
3580Have you nothing to give me?"
3580He approached the soldier and said to him,"Is this, then, all that you have to say to me?"
3580He has not done it very badly, has he?
3580He recognized him instantly as having seen him in the army of Italy, and approaching him, said,"Well, my brave fellow, why have you not the cross?
3580He should not be more sensitive than I?"
3580He stopped in surprise, and addressed to the deputy his familiar inquiry,"Who are you?"
3580He tried to steal away; but the First Consul cried in a loud voice,"Who goes there?
3580He was necessarily struck by the contrast; but was there not some injustice at the foundation of this?
3580He, a good, simple, modest man living his retired life, what could the minister of general police desire of him?
3580His Majesty could hardly believe what he read and heard; and I, with several other persons, heard him exclaim,"What, he is coming here?
3580His Majesty was very angry, and said,"Has any one ever seen anything equal to these big heads?
3580His Majesty, who liked to be amused, said to her,"Ah, but why trouble yourself about him?
3580How are you?"
3580How can I believe in the good faith of those people?
3580How can such an immense superiority of numbers be indefinitely resisted?
3580How can this be doubted after the event which I here describe?
3580How could he dare to present himself before the Emperor?
3580How could such a beautiful character fail to make this angel beloved by all who knew him?
3580How is he succeeding?
3580How many models have you seen worthy of Canova or of David?"
3580How will he get out of this, the poor Emperor, whom I love so devotedly?
3580If there are abuses to be remedied, is this a time for remonstrances, when two hundred thousand Cossacks are crossing our frontiers?
3580In fact, who has proclaimed the principle of insurrection as a duty?
3580In such cases the Emperor always said,"How can a sovereign have the laws respected if he does not respect them himself?"
3580In these circumstances, I ask of all honest men, what could I do, and what would they have done in my place?
3580In this painful moment can the best of fathers wish to destroy my domestic happiness, the only kind which now remains to me?
3580Is it possible it can be he?"
3580Is it possible the enemy could really enter France?"
3580Is it possible?
3580Is it thus she would have acted if the evil reports spread by her enemies, and those of the Emperor, had had the least foundation?
3580Is that our minister of the navy who has allowed himself to fall in the water?
3580Is the carriage in good condition?"
3580Is there too much vanity in what I have just said?
3580It is not long enough for me to make you an officer, is it?
3580Larrey?"
3580Let us know; what are these conditions?"
3580Look here, what would you do to- morrow if the Little Corporal was killed?"
3580M. Yvan drew near, and the Emperor said to him,"Do you believe the dose was strong enough?"
3580Many times a day he exclaimed,"How far are we from such a town?
3580Must they then let all these men perish after most horrible sufferings, for lack of means to convey them to Dresden?
3580No, no?
3580Once only his Majesty broke the silence by a deep sigh, followed by these words addressed to one of the officers:"What time is it?"
3580One day the Emperor, meeting him at Berlin, said to him,"Well, Bisson, do you still drink much?"
3580One such poetical effusion was enough to provoke laughter( and can you blame her?
3580Or did it not rather arise from the certainty of no longer fearing it in his bed more than on the battlefield?
3580Paralyzed by the necessary consequences of the Revolution, could she have risen again and maintained her position?
3580Pillage?
3580Several Voices.--"But what, then, shall we do?"
3580That is extraordinary; what, sir, seize enfants?"
3580That sounds well, does it not?"
3580The Emperor awaited daylight in a poor hut, and in the morning said to Prince Berthier,"Well, Berthier, how can we get out of this?"
3580The Emperor exclaimed with inconceivable joy,"Can it be true?"
3580The Emperor interrupted his work to regard her:"I did not take long at my toilet, did I?"
3580The Emperor, having been informed of it by others than myself, said to me one morning at his toilet,"Constant, I owe you indemnity."--"Sire?"
3580The Emperor, much surprised, exclaimed,"What the devil does this foolish creature want with me?"
3580The Emperor, to increase his embarrassment, said to him,"Do you like chocolate, Monsieur le Duc?"
3580The Empress alone kept silence; and noticing this the Emperor said to her,"Louise, have you nothing to say to poor Constant?"
3580The Inhabitant.--"But how, then, will all this end?"
3580The brave chief of the''Philadelphi'', the pure Oudet, has been assassinated, and who is worthy to take his place?
3580The child passed through without saluting any one, when the prince stopped him and said,"Will you not tell me goodmorning?"
3580The next morning on entering as usual the First Consul''s room, to his customary questions,"What o''clock is it?
3580The soldiers were accustomed to say that four words formed the basis of the Polish language,--kleba?
3580The surgeon of this town advanced to thank the Emperor; and his Majesty examining him attentively said to him,"You have served in the army, Monsieur?"
3580Then recognizing the young lady, after having scrutinized her features more closely, he added in very evident anger,"Ah, is it you again?
3580Then turning to M. Fontaine, he continued,"Monsieur Fontaine, was my statue in the design which was presented to you?"
3580This was a more crushing blow to me than the first, and I foresaw the consequences with horror; what would be said, what would be thought, of me?
3580To those who have lived, like myself, amid the conquests and wonders of the Empire, what is left to- day?
3580Was his genius as benumbed as his body?
3580Was it the result of his satisfaction at having escaped death, which a momentary despair had made him desire?
3580Was the Emperor really so overwhelmed by his evil fortune?
3580What costume must he wear?
3580What could I hope for in France, where I had no right to anything?
3580What could he reply to the deposition of the gendarmes who had arrested him in the very act?
3580What could he reply when asked wherefore, and with what motive, he had been found alone in the night, armed with a sword, in the thickest of the wood?
3580What do they think of that in Paris?"
3580What do you want?
3580What has become of the marshal?"
3580What has he done to be thus treated?"
3580What have you to fear?
3580What is it?"
3580What is the weather?"
3580What is your name?"
3580What is your salary?"
3580What was to be done?
3580What would become of her?
3580What would the enemy say?
3580When do we arrive at Breslau?"
3580When the conquerors are dying of famine, what becomes of the conquered?
3580When the fire was hottest, the band played the air,''Where can one be better than in the bosom of his family?''
3580Where are you going?
3580Where is he?"
3580Where would the war end if the Russians fell back now?
3580Wherever I am, am I not in my own house?"
3580While I was undressing him the evening before, he said, pinching my ear,"Well, Monsieur Constant, what will you give me for my present?"
3580Who comes there?"
3580Who could believe it?
3580Who has not heard of the hardest drinker in all the army?
3580Who has ordered you to beat the alarm?"
3580Who has paid adulation to the nation while claiming for it a sovereignty which it was incapable of exercising?
3580Who was, then, the important personage struck by a French cannonball?
3580Who will be a father to him when I die?
3580Who will rear him, and who will make a man of him?"
3580Who, then, eats half of my supper?"
3580Whose picture is this?"
3580Why could they not wait a little?"
3580Why did you wish to kill me?"
3580Why is he not here?
3580Will they abandon them in misfortune?
3580Will you swear to sacrifice even your lives in their defense, and to keep them always by your valor in the path to victory?
3580Would my word be taken?
3580Would she not allow him to go and wade in the mud?"
3580Would you have done it?"
3580Would you like to lie down a little while?
3580You have heard from me lately?"
3580You know which it is?"
3580You?
3580Your Majesty can see this as well as I; are you willing to uselessly risk the lives of so many brave men?"
3580about what?"
3580added he, smiling,"do not people speak evil of me also?
3580added he, smiling;"does the site appear well chosen?"
3580already awake, Colas?"
3580and have no fear of afflicting and destroying beings who are so dear to you?"
3580and would not the chamberlains have a right to be vexed by it?
3580but do you understand that this is the revenue of one of my communes?
3580but doubtless-- why?"
3580forward, my brave cuirassiers?"
3580is it you, my dear master?"
3580niema;"bread?
3580said his Majesty, waking with a start;"what o''clock is it?
3580said his Majesty,"have you arrived, Madame?
3580said his Majesty;"what is there to fear?
3580said the Emperor,"who can desire it more than I?
3580said they,"Must we all share the same fate?"
3580sara;"water?
3580so it was you, was it?"
3580there is none;"voia?
3580vehemently inquired the Emperor;"what has happened?"
3580what have you done?"
3580what were you doing in the Faubourg Saint Germain?
3580what-- I see--do you mean to insult me, you questioner?
3580who can desire it more than I?
3580why did n''t you come with me?"
3580will they follow us everywhere?"
3580will you never let me alone?"
3580would the matter be carried as far as that?"
8176A few minutes?!
8176A wedge? 8176 And leave you chained to the rock, Andromeda?
8176And what might all this be, Jeeves?
8176And what sort of a specimen is this one?
8176Anything in the papers?
8176Archie, old scout,I said,"can the misses hear what I''m saying?
8176Are n''t we going to wait----?
8176Are you busy just now?
8176Are you mad?
8176But surely the evidence of the dead dog?
8176But why does old Blumenfield listen to him?
8176But why----? 8176 But why?"
8176But you did n''t find the snake?
8176But, Mrs. Pickett, do you realize what you are asking me to do? 8176 Ca n''t you guess it?
8176Ca n''t you understand the situation? 8176 Can you leave the show without upsetting everything?"
8176Did he leave a message?
8176Did n''t I? 8176 Did you read the Stock Exchange news?
8176Did you see the snake?
8176Do n''t you like it, darling?
8176Do you find the room a trifle warm?
8176Do you imagine,she said,"that I intend to marry you?
8176Do you like the name Mabel?
8176Do you mean you''re engaged?
8176Do you understand that this boy is my son?
8176Does he always run things like this?
8176Eh? 8176 Eh?
8176Eh?
8176Eve,he said, quickly,"wo n''t you let me take you away from here?
8176Feeling fine, eh?
8176Five?
8176Goin''round to see some of the chaps and pass them the time of day, I should n''t wonder?
8176Good- bye?
8176Greedy hog, you mean?
8176Have you an alternative to offer?
8176Have you no clubs, Miss Hendrie?
8176How can you possibly explain that? 8176 How can you suggest such a thing, Mr. Pepper?
8176How did you know he lived in Pounceby Gardens?
8176How did you know it did?
8176How do you know anything has been happening?
8176How do you know?
8176How do you mean?
8176How does he look, Jeeves?
8176How long has this been going on?
8176How on earth did that happen?
8176How would he be poisoned?
8176How''s the weather, Jeeves?
8176How_ can_ the door have stuck like this?
8176I beg your pardon, sir?
8176I do n''t see anything missing,he said"I mean to say, why do n''t they wear helmets like they do in London?
8176I hope you wo n''t think I''m butting in, do n''t you know,I said,"but-- er-- well, how about it?"
8176I mean, not doing anything in particular?
8176I say, George, old man, who the dickens is that kid?
8176I say, George, what''s all this about Cyril Bassington- Bassington?
8176I say, Jeeves, can you spare a moment? 8176 I trust I was not taking a liberty in entertaining him, sir?"
8176I''ll smite the good old bell, shall I? 8176 If I''m a vegetarian, how did you account for my taking all the chicken I could get at dinner last night, and looking as if I wanted more?"
8176Indeed, sir?
8176Indeed, sir?
8176Indeed, sir?
8176Indeed, sir?
8176Is n''t it perfectly splendid, Mr. Pepper, to think that Archie''s genius has at last been recognized? 8176 It surprised you, eh?"
8176Jeeves? 8176 Look here, Ann,"I said,"Suppose I pull off some stunt which only a deuced brainy chappie could get away with?
8176Me? 8176 Miss Hendrie, will you be good enough to play?
8176Mr. Rayner,she said, after a pause,"do you remember at lunch one day at Mrs. Elphinstone''s refusing parsnips?
8176Murdered?
8176My name? 8176 My nephew has probably told you that I have been making a close study of your books of late?"
8176Nephew''s devotion, you mean? 8176 No chance of a sudden shortage, I mean, what?"
8176No?
8176Nor''A Red, Red Summer Rose,''by the same author?
8176Now,said Peter,"what do you mean by it?
8176Oh, Harold, what does it matter?
8176Oh, are you Bertie Wooster?
8176Oh, he did, did he?
8176Oh, the tie?
8176Oh?
8176On the other hand, it may n''t, what?
8176One of these emotional Johnnies, eh?
8176Or how about a bit of hot steak- pudding, with a sparkling limado to wash it down?
8176Perhaps you can give me the address of some lady who wants a companion to love and make a fuss of?
8176Ponsonby?
8176Precisely what kind of evidence?
8176Reggie, would you mind stepping into the kitchen and asking Julia for this week''s_ Funny Slices_? 8176 Reggie,"he said,"do you think a man is bound to tell his wife all about his past life?"
8176Reggie,she said,"did_ you_ shut Ponsonby in there?"
8176Revolted?
8176Sent them back?
8176She''ll cut you out of her will?
8176Sir?
8176Sir?
8176Sir?
8176Sir?
8176Sir?
8176Sir?
8176Sir?
8176Sir?
8176Sir?
8176So you''re out, young feller?
8176So you''ve got there? 8176 So?"
8176Talking of shirts,I said,"have those mauve ones I ordered arrived yet?"
8176Tell her? 8176 That is not a chicken sandwich?"
8176That means a bad time for you?
8176That?
8176The best train?
8176The cook?
8176The trouble is, how am I going to account for the fact that I can do myself pretty well?
8176The window?
8176The young gentleman, sir?
8176Then what on earth did you suggest the scheme for?
8176Then where can it be?
8176They did not soften him?
8176They would do that in the office, would n''t they?
8176Well, ca n''t you think of some way of stopping him?
8176Well, what has all this got to do with your not wanting to marry me?
8176Well, what''s it going to be to- day?
8176Well, why do n''t the policemen in New York dress properly?
8176Well?
8176Well?
8176Well?
8176Well?
8176What about him?
8176What are we going to do about it?
8176What are you doing, Miss Hendrie?
8176What case?
8176What did he die of, sir?
8176What did you do?
8176What do you mean-- it left traces of its presence outside?
8176What do you mean?
8176What do you mean?
8176What does Mr. Bassington- Bassington look like?
8176What does it mean?
8176What have you told him?
8176What is it?
8176What made you come down? 8176 What makes you so certain that Mr. Oakes is wrong?"
8176What makes you think that I am interested in trains to London?
8176What might you have missed?
8176What on earth are you doing in there?
8176What on earth do you mean? 8176 What on earth does he do that for?"
8176What on earth has Ponsonby to do with it?
8176What on earth were you doing at a subscription dance at Camberwell?
8176What problem?
8176What the deuce do you mean?
8176What the deuce do you mean?
8176What was the cause of death?
8176What would Jeeves do that for?
8176What would you like after that fish?
8176What''s become of Captain Muller? 8176 What''s been happening?"
8176What''s that on the floor beside him?
8176What''s that?
8176What''s the trouble? 8176 What''s your name?"
8176What?
8176What?
8176When can you start? 8176 When did you find him?"
8176When?
8176Where are you meeting her? 8176 Where can it be?"
8176Where did you meet her?
8176Where is he?
8176Where would be the sense of it?
8176Which one, darling?
8176Which ugly one? 8176 Who is your little friend, Sidney the Sunbeam, Jeeves?"
8176Who''s that frightful little brute, Wooster?
8176Why does n''t she kick?
8176Why should your uncle ask a fellow to lunch whom he''s never seen?
8176Why, Captain Muller, has it upset you? 8176 Why, where do you come in?
8176Will there be anything further to- night, sir?
8176Will you give me a sporting two to one, Jeeves, judging from what you have seen of him, that this chappie is not a blighter or an excrescence?
8176Without you?
8176Yes, darling?
8176Yes, sir?
8176Yes?
8176You are Mr. Archibald Ferguson, the artist?
8176You authorized the publication of this?
8176You do n''t object?
8176You do n''t think she''s the most wonderful girl you ever saw?
8176You do n''t think there''s a kind of music in the word, like the wind rustling gently through the tree- tops?
8176You have n''t been spending the last few days in the wrong house by any chance, have you? 8176 You mean that there is another explanation of the dead dog?"
8176You thought it was me? 8176 You what?"
8176You''re sure? 8176 Young Mr. Little, sir, or the elder Mr. Little, his uncle, who lives in Pounceby Gardens?"
8176_ Are_ there any books of that sort nowadays? 8176 _ You_ have?"
8176''Why?''
8176A brightish idea, what?
8176A man who expected you to upset all your plans if they clashed with some anniversary connected with his other marriage?"
8176After all, what is food?"
8176And Archie said,"Exactly-- why should n''t he?
8176And in a shaking voice Archie read: You think you are perfectly well, do n''t you?
8176Are you listening, Captain Muller?
8176At least, it was n''t a telegram: it was a cable-- from Aunt Agatha-- and this is what it said:---- Has Cyril Bassington- Bassington called yet?
8176At the Ritz?"
8176Banks?"
8176Bassington- Bassington?"
8176Blimey, you do n''t fink I''m a nark?"
8176But how?"
8176But why should he have done it?
8176But why-- what did you want to lock me in for?"
8176But you''re not married?"
8176But, if you think that I ought to stay longer----?"
8176By the way, I suppose Mrs. Pickett was pleased?"
8176By the way, do you like her cooking?"
8176Ca n''t you, dear?"
8176Come and lunch with us at the Piccadilly tomorrow, will you?"
8176Could she be meaning----?
8176Could this be Heaven?
8176Could you pack to- night, do you think, and be ready for that ten- fifty to- morrow morning?"
8176Did I describe the peculiar isolation of that room on the top floor, where the portrait was?
8176Did you see that some lunatic has been jumping around with a club and hammering the stuffing out of B. and O. P.?
8176Did you tell him to get Mr. Bassington- Bassington sacked from the''Ask Dad''company?"
8176Do n''t you agree?"
8176Do n''t you like her?"
8176Do n''t you see what this means?
8176Do you know anything about special licenses?"
8176Do you know it cost me a sovereign in tips to find out your address?
8176Do you mean to tell me you did all this as a practical joke?"
8176Do you mind if I have a drink?
8176Do you suppose King Charles laughed at my ancestor when he ate the despatches?
8176Do you think that?"
8176Do you, Archie?
8176Does Harold do all that?"
8176Does Mrs. Pickett know more about this affair than she appears to?
8176Does n''t he always go off to the inn and play bowls at this time?"
8176Fair?
8176Ferguson?"
8176For what reason?"
8176Halloa?''
8176Have you dropped it on the floor?"
8176Have you ever heard of Eunice Nugent?"
8176Have you ever heard of him, Jeeves?"
8176Have you seen the paper today?"
8176He was always a pretty cheerful sort of old man, was n''t he?"
8176How about it?"
8176How could a man be bitten by a snake in a Southampton waterfront boarding- house?
8176How did your cobra from Java get out of the room?"
8176How is our hostess?
8176How ought I to dress it?
8176How-- er-- how did you like the bally things?"
8176I do n''t know if you recollect Amelia''s brother Percy?
8176I had n''t much breath left after that, but I used what I had to say:"She does n''t object?"
8176I mean, do you have to give a month''s notice or anything?"
8176I mean, does he appear peeved and what not?"
8176I mean, you''re a pretty consummate old ass, are n''t you?
8176I say, old crumpet, did my uncle seem pleased to see you?"
8176I should say that we can win this lad''s esteem and affection with a lunch and a couple of dinners, what?"
8176I suppose you heard a noise and thought it was burglars?"
8176I wonder how he heard of it?"
8176I wonder if that is simply my imagination?"
8176If you have not got it, who has?
8176Is it there?"
8176It''s like dear Amelia, is n''t it?"
8176It''s this way-- Hallo, who''s this?"
8176Jeeves would exert himself with ten quid on the horizon, what?"
8176Keep on saying,''Yes?
8176Little?"
8176May I cut you a slice of chicken?"
8176Might he shake hands with Mr. Buffin?
8176No?"
8176Now do you see?
8176Old man touched by kindly action, what?"
8176Or do I mean orange blossom?
8176Or stormy?"
8176Or was it a subtle insult?
8176Or would you rather wait and let it be a surprise?
8176P.?''
8176Perhaps I might explain my idea further?"
8176Pickett?"
8176Pickett?"
8176Pickett?"
8176Rayner?"
8176Rayner?"
8176Rayner?"
8176Reggie, do you by any remote chance read a paper called_ Funny Slices_?"
8176Same for you, Bertie?"
8176See what I mean, what, what?
8176Show him in, will you?"
8176That one?"
8176The Constable spoke:"You ai n''t touched anything, ma''am?
8176The first thing I set myself to ascertain was-- what was the motive for the murder of Captain Gunner?
8176The question is, am I to tell her?"
8176Then I take it you know the Doughnut family?"
8176There is n''t another?"
8176There was a pause, and then Archie''s voice said,"Halloa, halloa?"
8176They''ll fight----""What''s that?"
8176This had the aspect of being an olive- branch-- could it be?
8176Was it the Indian theory that turned the trick?"
8176Was n''t it Shakespeare or somebody who said that the road to Hell-- or words to that effect-- was paved with good intentions?
8176Weak?
8176Well, I mean to say, what?
8176What I mean is, bang go your little savings and all that sort of thing; but, after all, you''re making quite a good income, so why worry?"
8176What do you mean by dashing off from my sister''s house without leaving a word for me as to where you were going?
8176What do you mean?"
8176What do you propose to do?"
8176What do you think my uncle''s going to say to all this?
8176What do you think?"
8176What for?"
8176What have you got to do with it?"
8176What motive was there for suicide?
8176What on earth are you going to do?"
8176What ought I to wear, do you think?"
8176What sort of a chap is he?"
8176What was that stuff I''ve been drinking?
8176What''s your money invested in?"
8176What?"
8176What?"
8176When I had recovered a bit, I said,"What do you mean by everything?"
8176When he had calmed down, I said,"Well then, what''s your trouble?"
8176Where is he?"
8176Who could say?
8176Who is she?
8176Why are you so dashed keen on my going?"
8176Why do n''t you go away?"
8176Why do they look like postmen?
8176Why me?
8176Why should you think that I would be anything like that?"
8176Why the dickens should a fellow come three thousand miles to be prodded by postmen?"
8176Why, then, was he lunching the girl at this God- forsaken eatery?
8176Why?
8176Why?"
8176Will there be anything further to- night?"
8176Will you come?"
8176Wo n''t you sit down?"
8176Would you marry me then?"
8176Yes?
8176You always were a fatheaded worm without any soul, were n''t you?"
8176You do n''t mean to say the day starts earlier than this?"
8176You know, of course, that Hilda is not his first wife?"
8176You may have had experience of the system?"
8176You remember what I spoke to you about, one day when we were lunching together?
8176You surely do n''t class me with Harold?"
35775A book- worm, is n''t he-- but what do you say if we discuss him over a glass of beer and some bread and cheese?
35775A test?
35775A vivisectionist?
35775All night?
35775And Fulton?
35775And have you inherited his talent?
35775And his name?
35775And if I do n''t?
35775And if I refuse to speak to- night?
35775And is it not subject, like your name, to change?
35775And the figure?
35775And the ground floor, Jussieu?
35775And the others?
35775And will they be placed at table as before, sir?
35775And will you suffer for it? 35775 And yet your name, Hume-- I think you said it might be French?"
35775And you are educated too, for I have marked your speech?
35775And you respect me?
35775And you will keep the bargain, how? 35775 And your humility?"
35775And your word of honour, sir?
35775And-- Mar-- Lady Dagmar?
35775Any relatives?
35775Anything else, Brown?
35775Are we acquainted?
35775Are you cold, dear one?
35775Are you hurt?
35775Are you ready, Beudant, Jussieu?
35775Are you?
35775Breach of promise, sir?
35775Brown, sir?
35775But how long will it last? 35775 But if I did act the hypocrite a bit in anticipating the occasion to speak as I did just now, where''s the harm, sir?
35775But then, can it be, you told him truly, yesternight, monsieur?
35775But you spoke also of an island?
35775But,I stammered, for the thought of losing her even for a day was a torture hardly to be borne,"what of Sir William Dagmar?
35775By the way, Husband, what was the result of your last examination?
35775By whom?
35775Can I help you in any way, sir?
35775Can not you see that the rogue is tipsy?
35775Can you forgive me?
35775Cash, old chap? 35775 Could you deliver it at once?"
35775Could you strain a point, Venner, and operate to- morrow night?
35775Curse you-- who are you?
35775Did he not send them on to you? 35775 Did he take his traps?"
35775Did you tell her what it was you gave her?
35775Did you?
35775Do you feel well enough for breakfast?
35775Do you intend to kill me?
35775Do you mean to say, sir, it was only that advertisement which put you on my track?
35775Do you really think so, Brown?
35775Do you refer to your uncle?
35775Do you understand French, Brown?
35775Does he know that you are out?
35775Does he yet know?
35775Does she?
35775Dr. Vernet,I said as carelessly as possible,"may I trouble you for the pepper- pot beside you?"
35775For instance?
35775Had my decoy then failed of its purpose?
35775Has my last hour come?
35775Have you no curiosity?
35775Have you such a room as I require?
35775Have you the money?
35775He got my card, I suppose?
35775He met with some unhappiness, no doubt?
35775How can you be sure of that?
35775How could I enjoy myself-- do you think-- alone?
35775How could you treat me so?
35775How do you get on with my uncle, Brown?
35775How do you know that your accursed solution did not poison him?
35775How does he pass his time?
35775How is Sir William this morning?
35775How long?
35775How much did you steal in providing to- night''s dinner? 35775 How much do you need?"
35775How much do you want, then?
35775How much have you made?
35775How much money have you saved?
35775How much that box?
35775How much?
35775How much?
35775How soon did he leave the house?
35775How, M''sieur?
35775How?
35775How?
35775How?
35775I do not know, sir?
35775I suppose you wish me to sign this?
35775I thought of Anglo- American Hotels?
35775I would not disturb you for the world,he muttered with sarcasm,"but what of your money?"
35775I''m sure I do n''t know, sir?
35775I-- see; but-- but-- how could you have known, I mean, how could you have been sure that I was I-- until you had communicated with-- with her?
35775In broad daylight?
35775In what pocket is the key of your master''s door?
35775Inject?
35775Is Dr. Rudolf Garschagen identical with Mr. Seth Halford?
35775Is he like his photographs?
35775Is it as bad as that?
35775Is it possible?
35775Is that true?
35775Is the market at all upset?
35775Is there anything in my appearance?
35775Mademoiselle Le Mar denies that you gave her any packet, Hume?
35775Making a poultice, nurse?
35775Married?
35775May I lock the door?
35775More?
35775Mr. Sefton Dagmar?
35775Must I wait for ever?
35775No one can hear us, can they?
35775Now that you have broken with your friends,I muttered suddenly,"what will you do?"
35775Now, what''s your business?
35775Now?
35775Once more, Jussieu?
35775One moment, Venner, where are you?
35775Ought not we to tell the police at once about him, sir?
35775Perhaps, perhaps, m''sieur-- if he withstands the torture and persists to lie, you will then torture me? 35775 Please to tell me what it was?"
35775Pounds or dollars?
35775Shall we avoid details?
35775Sir Charles,she began, in low vibrating tones,"this man looks very ill. What have you done with him, and what is the matter with his hand?"
35775Sir,said I,"have you seen Sir William this morning?"
35775Some big coup on exchange, I presume?
35775Spoke some foreign lingo, did n''t they?
35775Ten?
35775The jewels you purchased with the ten thousand pounds that you extorted from me?
35775The woman I love?
35775Then I have not long to live?
35775Then, some ham and eggs?
35775There,said I to myself,"is a man who wishes more passionately to win than the rest, but why?"
35775They will not kill you, Marion?
35775This morning, sir, about two hours ago, a man came here and asked to see you----"His name?
35775To whom?
35775Uncle in?
35775Was Brown a partner in your rascality?
35775Was that Mr. Dagmar who went out a while ago?
35775Well, Brown,said he,"what do you think of my luck?"
35775Well, Brown?
35775Well, Mr. Sims,I muttered,"may I depend on you?"
35775Well, Sims, I hope that you have profited by my example and advice?
35775Well, now,he replied with a leer of admiration,"who else would you suppose?
35775Well, sir, that is, Lord Darnley?
35775Well, sir?
35775Well,he said,"you are here, what can I do for you?
35775Well?
35775Well?
35775Well?
35775Well?
35775What are you doing now?
35775What can I do but kill you?
35775What can I do for you, monsieur?
35775What claim has that woman upon you?
35775What did this-- this double of me say and do?
35775What do you know of rule three?
35775What do you mean?
35775What do you want me to do?
35775What do you wish of me?
35775What does he want with a valet, then?
35775What else?
35775What guarantee do you require?
35775What has my wish to do with you?
35775What in blazes am I to do?
35775What is all this?
35775What is his name, sweetheart?
35775What is it?
35775What is it?
35775What is the bill of fare?
35775What is the matter with Sir William?
35775What is the matter, Brown?
35775What is this Sefton Dagmar like?
35775What is this Stelfox Steele like to look at, Gregson? 35775 What is your name, and what is your price?"
35775What is your name?
35775What is your name?
35775What mercy did you show to me-- you infamous wretch?
35775What next Marion?
35775What object could I serve? 35775 What the deuce has happened?"
35775What thing, my sweetheart?
35775What will you give for it?
35775What would you do?
35775What would you do?
35775What''s yer name?
35775What, did you commit yourself with the police?
35775What?
35775What?
35775When and where shall we meet again?
35775When could you commence your duties?
35775When did you come up?
35775When?
35775Where am I?
35775Where are the jewels?
35775Where are they hidden, then?
35775Where does he sleep?
35775Where is Beudant, your brother negro?
35775Where is Butts?
35775Where is Cavanagh?
35775Where is Jussieu?
35775Where is Marion Le Mar?
35775Where is Sir Charles Venner at this moment?
35775Where is he to be found?
35775Where is he to be found?
35775Where is my uncle?
35775Where to now, monsieur?
35775Where to, sir?
35775Who are you?
35775Who is the last, Mr. Nevil Pardoe, Butts?
35775Who is there?
35775Whose shall it be this time, friends?
35775Whose?
35775Why are-- you-- in London?
35775Why delay? 35775 Why do you tell me now?
35775Why should I pardon you?
35775Why should you doubt my word, monsieur? 35775 Why was it, Brown?"
35775Why?
35775Why?
35775Will he really kill me, do you think?
35775Will three hundred do?
35775Will you betray your master?
35775Will you come?
35775Will you not talk to me a while?
35775Will you really, sir?
35775Will you save it?
35775Will you tell me if I guessed aright?
35775Will you try some oatmeal, Hume?
35775Will your guests be the same as last time, sir?
35775Would it not be as well to move on?
35775Would you marry me, mademoiselle?
35775Would you recognize him again?
35775Yes, and she is here to confront you?
35775Yes, but will you bring the coffin here?
35775You are Brown, I suppose?
35775You are remembering the deceit I practised on Sir William Dagmar?
35775You conceive then that you owe me extraordinary reparation?
35775You do not wish to go?
35775You fool,he repeated in tones of repressed passion,"if there were even ninety-- what of it?
35775You have a latch- key, perhaps?
35775You have attendants?
35775You have determined then to murder me tonight?
35775You mean, that to- morrow night you will torture me?
35775You mean?
35775You rang, madam?
35775You rang, sir?
35775You take a cab,I began,"and you drive to ze Marble Arch, zere you get out, und you take a''bus to Cricklewood, you mind dat?"
35775You will kill yourself?
35775You would really torture me?
35775_ Qui va là?_ Who is dare?
35775_ Qui va là?_ Who is dare?
35775A few months more or less, what does it matter?
35775A stirring tale full of the spice of adventure, breathless in interest, skilful in narrative.... Who could refrain from reading such a story?"
35775AND SHALL TRELAWNEY DIE?
35775Am I right?"
35775And if so, how shall I discover the spy?"
35775And where was Marion?
35775And who else is there in the house?"
35775Anything else?"
35775Belloc?"
35775Beudant?"
35775Brown?"
35775But Sir Charles Venner''s voice answered at once, in very angry tones:"Beudant, Jussieu, what the devil are you doing?"
35775But even if they are reliable, how do you know that he did not bleed to death from the wound you made in his heart?"
35775But how to effect my purpose?
35775But in order to save time, Hume, be good enough to tell me your first lie at once?"
35775But now I asked myself the question:"Agar Hume, what will you do?
35775But tell me did you send for the police after you discovered that the man had gone?"
35775But what about my breakfast this morning, Brown?"
35775But what next?
35775But what then?
35775But why?
35775But you, my friend, how do you regard him?"
35775By the way, have I the honour of your acquaintance?"
35775By worshipping that memory?"
35775Did she study me?
35775Did the old buck give you a bad night?"
35775Did you ever hear the maxim I invented for the ruling of my life?
35775Did you sell the shares, sir?"
35775Did you speak to me, sir?"
35775Do you forget that she betrayed me?
35775Do you not agree with me?"
35775Do you remember Miss Le Mar calling you to her room one certain evening and asking you questions of your race and parentage?"
35775Do you want a receipt, sir?"
35775Ducker?"
35775Even if Mr. Cavanagh were dead, and I began to doubt if my perturbed examination of his body had given me the truth, who could accuse me of his death?
35775Fool that you are, ask yourself would she have married you?"
35775Have I ever in my life deceived you?"
35775Have you ever been betrayed by the creature you adored?"
35775Have you ever loved, you man of ice?
35775He scratched his head,"How fur?"
35775He tells me that when your commission is deducted I am to receive £ 650,000?"
35775He waited until we heard the street door close, then he said quietly:"And how is your mother, Brown?"
35775Hein?"
35775Help me to live, if only for a little while-- a few short hours?
35775Her art was perfect, for she used to add:"How, dear Agar, could you trust me, if you proved me capable of breaking a solemn oath, sworn to God?"
35775Hif I was to drop a plate''e''d ring to know what the devil I meant by it?"
35775How are you feeling yourself, Venner?"
35775How is the pulse, Fulton?"
35775How long did you stay in the corner where he put you?"
35775How long?"
35775How many shares did you sell to- day?"
35775How much may I put you down for?
35775How will he get on without you?"
35775I can not see these wretched creatures die, as day by day they perish, without often asking myself the question-- are we justified?
35775I felt secure and almost happy-- was I not a capitalist?
35775I gave them to her when we left the house last morning?"
35775I not vant you to do nozzing wrong, my boy, hein?"
35775I snarled,"would you run away from an old friend?
35775I spose you did n''t make out hanything they said, Brown?"
35775I turned at last, and said:"Have you money?"
35775I wondered, and what was her opinion?
35775I''m, I''m in great trouble, sir?"
35775If that should happen, Monsieur, you will take him away at once; is it not so?"
35775If your uncle knew you were here, who knows what he might say?"
35775In which of the omnibuses and cabs trailing behind me was he then seated?
35775Is it murder that you contemplate?"
35775Is it not so?"
35775Is it possible that your father was my countryman?"
35775Is that all?"
35775It is evident that she thought me a lunatic, but what cared I for that?
35775M. Beudant, is there no hope for me?
35775My first thought as I stepped into the street was this:--"Am I to be shadowed?
35775Not exactly a gentleman, I suppose?"
35775Now he is waiting in the vestibule, is he not?"
35775Of course, you''d like to turn me out of the place neck and crop; I might interfere with your precious scheming, hey?
35775One other day?
35775One pitiful"poor chap, he looks down in the mug, Bill, do n''t he?"
35775Or will you send me a cheque?"
35775Shall I call a cab for you, sir?"
35775Shall we do all this, monsieur?"
35775Shall we not, monsieur?"
35775Shall we say two hundred pounds?"
35775Sims?"
35775Sims?"
35775So you think I would follow your example of a moment since?
35775Steele?"
35775Steele?"
35775The question is, are you the man to handle the affair?"
35775There suddenly occurred to me to ask myself this question:"Agar Hume, how long will you permit such habits to persist?"
35775Was Jussieu trying to dig a way out?
35775Was it just possible that the winner of the cheque was bound, by rule, to apply the money to some esoteric purpose?
35775Were these people men of flesh and blood, I asked myself, or ghouls?
35775Were wild animals confined in those sheds?
35775What am I to bear?"
35775What do n''t I owe you?"
35775What do you make of it?"
35775What do you say, Mr. Brown; shall we split the difference?"
35775What do you say?"
35775What had he to say?"
35775What more have you to tell me?"
35775What of that?"
35775What price would they exact?
35775What reply did you give him?"
35775What should we do without her?"
35775What then is your name?"
35775What then?
35775What would happen, I wondered, in a real fair battle of wits, each of us forewarned of the encounter?
35775What?"
35775Whatever is the matter?"
35775When can you be ready to settle?"
35775When is he in the best humour-- morning, afternoon or evening?"
35775When is she to be buried?"
35775When will Butts return?"
35775Where then?
35775Where to hide it?
35775Whereon this wonder speedily arose: what would she think of me if she could know?
35775Which is it, Brown?"
35775Why Brown, I''m his only living relative, his sole heir, and how do you think he treats me?"
35775Why did he do it, sir?"
35775Why did you leave your last place?"
35775Why not enlighten me?
35775Why, I asked myself, should they always converse in French, if they had nothing better worthy of concealing?
35775Will any give me odds?"
35775Will you bet, or any one?"
35775Will you step inside?"
35775Will you torture me, m''sieur?"
35775Would we strive again, and who would win on the third and fatal meeting?
35775Would you care to see?
35775You know him, do n''t you?"
35775You know now what you do?
35775You must have heard of him?"
35775You understand?"
35775You understand?"
35775You understand?"
35775You will tell her, or shall I?"
35775You will understand that I can not discharge you in my own name?"
35775You''ve heard about his latest scheme, to corner wolfram, have n''t you?"
35775a bit of a hermit, eh?"
35775and why of death-- to- day?"
35775he cried,"have you?"
35775he cried--"did you indeed?
35775he grated out,"what would you do?"
35775he is that sort, is he?"
35775he muttered,"and a lone hand, too-- eh?"
35775is he rich?"
35775said Dr. Fulton suddenly,"can I have a word with you?"
35775said I, looking at him very keenly,"do you vish to earn a sovereign?"
35775said I,"what are you intending to do with the money given you by the dice to- night?"
35775said I,"when did I give you permission to drink my champagne?"
35775she cried,"what ails you, dear?"
35775she murmured,"you thought I was Nurse Hargreaves?"
35775what was it?"
10911All of them?
10911And do you believe that?
10911And do you remember that time I told you I was really Priam Farll?
10911And may I carry it away with me?
10911And what did you do to him?
10911And what was the result of this sanguinary encounter?
10911And what was your object?
10911And you''ve always lived like that, alone like; no home; travelling about; no one to look after you, properly?
10911And you''ve never said a word?
10911Another place?
10911Any what?
10911Any women up?
10911Are they?
10911Are you the doctor?
10911But what do you mean?
10911But where''s my hat?
10911But why?
10911But you did n''t believe?
10911By the way, what''s wrong with him, do you think?
10911Ca n''t you understand? 10911 Can I speak to you a minute?"
10911Did he make you any offer of money?
10911Did you do that?
10911Did your little dealer guess whose work they were?
10911Do I seem shy to you?
10911Do n''t you remember, Henry,she went on whimpering to Priam,"how you said you would n''t be married in a church, not for anybody?
10911Do n''t you?
10911Do you really expect the jury to believe that tale?
10911Do you really recognize my husband?
10911Does he mean to come back?
10911Does it mean--?
10911Does n''t that strike you as odd?
10911Duty?
10911Farll,said Mr. Oxford,"is about the only modern painter that can stand the company that that picture has in this room, eh?"
10911Harry,said his wife,"do n''t you think you''d better sit down?"
10911Has your husband any birthmarks-- er-- on his body?
10911Has your husband any moles?
10911Have n''t you anything smaller?
10911Have they cleared off?
10911Have they cleared off?
10911Have you any idea,Vodrey inquired,"why your husband refuses to submit his neck to the inspection of the court?"
10911Have you got it here?
10911Have you got such a thing as a pen?
10911Have you never seen them except in a mirror, my good woman?
10911Have you put sugar in this?
10911Have you two moles?
10911He do n''t look as if he''d had''ardly as much drink as''ud wash a bus, does he?
10911How could I know? 10911 How did you know?"
10911How did you recognize him?
10911How do you do?
10911How does it strike you?
10911How much can you sell it for?
10911How much did you pay for it?
10911How much has Witt paid you altogether for my pictures?
10911How much have you got in Cohoon''s?
10911How was I to tell?
10911How would you like this?
10911How''s the invalid going on?
10911I can rely on you to see that he goes at once?
10911I say, Alice,he said, as she stirred,"you remember when first I told you I could paint?"
10911I suppose you''ll not deny,said Henry the younger,"that Priam Farll would n''t be likely to have_ two_ valets named Henry Leek?"
10911I think you said Werter Road, Putney?
10911I thought you were simply here with a new master, Why are you staying here alone?
10911I wonder if I might venture to ask you to come back to town with me?
10911In a cab, sir?
10911In what name was the letter signed?
10911Is he in?
10911Is it all right?
10911Is it right?
10911Is n''t it amusing?
10911Is that your husband?
10911Is this Mr. Henry Leek''s?
10911Is this it?
10911Is this----?
10911It never occurred to you to make any inquiries?
10911It_ is_ for you, is n''t it?
10911Like my photograph?
10911Look here, Mr. Henry Leek,the elder proceeded,"do you know what I should do if I was you?
10911Look here,he said to Priam;"what the devil do you want?"
10911Mr. Crepitude,said the judge,"can you not phrase your questions differently?"
10911Mr. Farll''s relatives?
10911Never seen him before?
10911No?
10911No?
10911Not_ the_--?
10911Now, candidly, do n''t_ you_ think it''s very, very good?
10911Now, when did you come to be perfectly sure that, your husband was the real Priam Farll?
10911Oh, he''d sent you his photograph?
10911Oh, is n''t it?
10911Oh, you will, will you?
10911One lump, or two?
10911Really?
10911See that?
10911Shall I tell you one thing that puts me against these restaurants?
10911Shall we go straight to the dining- room now,asked Mr. Oxford,"or will you have a gin and angostura first?"
10911Shall we go upstairs?
10911Shall you take another place?
10911So that your present husband was calling himself Henry Leek before the death?
10911So you wo n''t take two hundred and fifty?
10911Suppose they make you? 10911 Suppose we go in again and have some tea?"
10911Suppose we take coffee in the smoking- room?
10911Suppose you come down and just have a little peep at mine?
10911Taken off?
10911The same kind of picture that you had been selling at ten pounds?
10911Then at first you did n''t believe your husband was the real Priam Farll?
10911Then how do you explain this, sir?
10911Then it''s this Henry Leek that is buried in Westminster Abbey, instead of you?
10911Then no money passed between you that day?
10911Then what were you thinking of?
10911Then why are you staying here?
10911Trouble?
10911Was he a good master?
10911Was that before or after the death of the man who was buried in Westminster Abbey?
10911Water hot?
10911Well, I had n''t, had I?
10911Well, why did n''t you keep on leaving it alone?
10911Were you wanting rooms?
10911What age were you?
10911What are you crying for?
10911What are you going to do with it?
10911What are your wages?
10911What arrangements have you made during the day?
10911What did Aylmer say about it?
10911What did you want to draw up the blinds for?
10911What do you mean?
10911What do you want with it?
10911What does it all mean?
10911What does that matter?
10911What duty?
10911What for?
10911What is it? 10911 What is your opinion,_ maître_,"he asked,"of the ultimate value of Farll''s pictures?"
10911What made you think so?
10911What makes you think I''m Priam Farll?
10911What price this?
10911What the devil do I want?
10911What time is it?
10911What was your master''s full name?
10911What''s all this?
10911What''s all this?
10911What''s that red streak behind?
10911What''s your name, anyhow?
10911What? 10911 What?"
10911What_ are_ you doing up there?
10911What_ do_ people go to matrimonial agencies for?
10911When are they coming back?
10911Where are Mr. Farll''s relatives to be found?
10911Where are they?
10911Where is Mr. Henry Leek?
10911Where is the kitchen here?
10911Where''s your ticket of admission?
10911Who bought it?
10911Who first had recourse to the agency?
10911Who have?
10911Who is it?
10911Who was the fellow?
10911Who?
10911Why did n''t you expect me?
10911Why did the police shift her?
10911Why did you refuse it?
10911Why for both our sakes?
10911Why not?
10911Why,she exclaimed,"have n''t you got a new place?"
10911Why?
10911Why?
10911Will you come in?
10911Will you come quietly?
10911Will you come quietly?
10911Will you come this way?
10911Will you kindly pass this cup to your mother?
10911Will you take five hundred,_ maître_?
10911With a letter?
10911Wo n''t you come in?
10911Would it be for long?
10911Would you care to go to the Alhambra or somewhere?
10911Would you really like to? 10911 Yes, did n''t you know that?
10911Yes,said he, and added to himself,"But where?"
10911You accepted the offer?
10911You do n''t know? 10911 You do n''t mean in the bedrooms?"
10911You do n''t mean to say you did n''t_ see_ those posters?
10911You do n''t mean to say, ma''am,said Mrs. Leek"that he--?"
10911You do n''t think I overpraise it, do you,_ cher maître?_ Mr. Oxford finished, still smiling. 10911 You met your husband through a matrimonial agency?"
10911You say you first met your husband outside St George''s Hall?
10911You surely have n''t been aspinalling that bath- room chair?... 10911 You thought he was lying?"
10911You were wrong, were n''t you? 10911 You would?
10911You would?
10911You''ve got the evening papers?
10911You_ are_ Priam Farll, are n''t you?
10911You_ are_ Priam Farll, are n''t you?
10911Your name is Priam Farll?
10911( Yet how could the diplomatic Mr. Oxford have guessed that Priam had never been in a club before?)
10911***** CHAPTER X_ The Secret_"What do you mean?"
10911After a pause she resumed bravely:"So Mr. Farll was one of these artists?
10911After all, a Dean-- what was it?
10911After that, was anybody going to argue that he ought not to be buried in the National Valhalla, a philanthropist so royal and so proudly meek?
10911Alice interrupted his impassioned discourse by putting the loaded toasting- fork into his hands,"while I make the tea?"
10911Alice, gazing around, chiefly with her mouth, inquired suddenly--"What''s that printing there?"
10911And I suppose this place is even dearer?"
10911And I was right?"
10911And do n''t you remember how you would n''t let poor little Johnnie be baptized?
10911And do you know what idea rushed from his heart to his brain?
10911And how I gave way to you, like I always did?
10911And how could he explain to Alice?
10911And how did he get into the organ loft?"
10911And if he chose to call himself by another name, why should he not do so?
10911And if you really_ are_ thinking of getting married, what are you to do?
10911And no occupant of a smoker in a morning train ever took his pipe out of his mouth to ask,"What is the johnny?"
10911And then, why should he be compelled, by means of a piece of blue paper, to go through the frightful ordeal and flame of publicity in a witness- box?
10911And was he such a great painter, after all?
10911And was he to be robbed of this incomparable woman by ridiculous proceedings connected with a charge of bigamy?
10911And was not he himself Priam Farll, the authentic Priam Farll, vastly greater than any Dean?
10911And what is there except a matrimonial agency?
10911And what of it?"
10911And what was this thirty- six thousand pounds to be for?"
10911And yet, if incapable of such an enormity, why had she not waited for him on one of the platforms?
10911And, taking Mr. Oxford''s hated hand, Priam said again,"How do you do?"
10911Anything mysterious?
10911Are you sure they are n''t on the left side?"
10911Art?
10911As one of the gentlewomen passed near him, he asked modestly--"How much, please?"
10911Astounding, was it not, what could happen in three years?
10911At which stage the vast newspaper public suddenly woke up and demanded with one voice:"Who is this Priam Farll?"
10911But anyhow suppose we walk along Oxford Street all the same?
10911But how had she identified him?
10911But why should Leek dispatch photographs of his master to strange ladies introduced through a matrimonial agency?
10911But, Henry----""Well?"
10911Ca n''t we go somewhere else?"
10911Can you?"
10911Could he confront Duncan Farll?
10911Did n''t you hear me tell you?
10911Did n''t you know I was dieting?
10911Did you earn it when you abandoned your children born and unborn?
10911Did you earn it when you ill- treated our poor mother?
10911Did you earn it when you left her, with the most inhuman cruelty, to fend for herself in the world?
10911Did you ever see such toast as that curate made?"
10911Did you?"
10911Do you mind telling me at what period you painted it?"
10911Does n''t that strike you as excessively curious?"
10911Farll''s?"
10911Farll?"
10911Farll?"
10911Father Luke, is that you?
10911Have n''t I given you a box before now?
10911Have n''t you finished?
10911Have you earned it?
10911Have you forgotten as you''re on point duty?"
10911He sent another photograph-- the photograph of your husband?"
10911Heaven knows--""Would you mind just toasting this bread?"
10911Henry, how could you?
10911Here?"
10911His modesty tried to say that this was slightly overdone; but his impartiality asked,"Really, what_ could_ they say against me?"
10911How could he explain?
10911How could she give him confidence about his absurd picture?
10911How did you make his acquaintance?"
10911I And how is one to know who there is at the other end of the telephone?
10911I know because I''ve been through--""You do n''t mean to say he threatened_ you_ with the flat- iron?"
10911I say-- what''s the matter with a matrimonial agency, anyhow?
10911I''ve noticed that on the sides of furniture vans, have n''t you?
10911I-- I speak for the family, and I--""Sugar?"
10911If I could just see----""Will you come in?"
10911If a man was an honest man, why should he flee the public gaze, and in the night?
10911If he chose to marry a simple woman, and live in a suburb and paint pictures at ten pounds each, why should he not do so?
10911If he had done, do you suppose he''d have parted with them for fifty pounds apiece?
10911If he had not been able to convince Alice that he was not Henry Leek, could he hope to convince these visitors?
10911Is n''t that what it''s called?
10911Is that Putney Bridge?"
10911It engendered the horrible suspicion,"Suppose he''s_ seriously_ ill?"
10911It''s just the kind of work that might be brilliantly imitated, if the imitator was clever enough, do n''t you think?"
10911It''s over now, I suppose?"
10911It''s very''andsome, is n''t it?"
10911John?"
10911Leek''s?"
10911Leek?"
10911Leek?"
10911Leek?"
10911May I ask how much?"
10911No shame in wanting to get married, is there?
10911Not a seed- cake, a plum- cake?"
10911Now do n''t you agree with me?"
10911Now do you remember that sole?
10911Now, what conceivable justification------?
10911Now,_ cher maître_, what do you think of my position?"
10911Of course, if you are really Priam Farll, you remember all about that?"
10911Or why did n''t Oxford hire some one to pick a quarrel with him in the street and carry the quarrel to blows, with a view to raiment- tearing?
10911Parker''s?"
10911Poulet chasseur?
10911Priam Farll then overheard the following conversation:--_ Man_: Well, what are you going to have?
10911Said Lady Sophia simply,"Now, Mr. Farll, shall I have to give evidence or not?
10911Shall we?"
10911She would surely not imagine that he had slipped away from her on purpose?
10911Should n''t a woman recognize the father of her own children?"
10911So he said, in his confusion--"Suppose we go and have something to eat?
10911Suppose we have lunch?"
10911That day when Mr. Oxford paid him five hundred pounds?"
10911The only question is: shall we suit each other?
10911The question was: How could Priam be trapped in the net of the law?
10911Then the question would arise, Why?
10911Then:"Two hundred and fifty?"
10911Was a hundred and forty thousand pounds and the dignity of the British nation worth the bearding of Duncan Farll?
10911Was he anything but a clever dauber whose work had been forced into general admiration by the efforts of a small clique of eccentric admirers?
10911Was not this magnificently unlike the ordinary benefactor of his country?
10911Was not this sublime?
10911Was not this true British pride?
10911Was she a lady?
10911We behave naturally under all circumstances-- for why should a sane man behave otherwise?
10911We both want to get married, so it would be silly to pretend we did n''t, would n''t it?
10911Well, did you find out anything interesting?
10911Well, it''s not too late to have a messenger, is it?"
10911What book ought one to be reading, then?
10911What could he do?
10911What could he say?
10911What did he offer you?"
10911What did it lead to?
10911What did you two naughty boys fight about?"
10911What do you think?"
10911What have you been doing to- day?
10911What if he did suffer under a delusion?
10911What is your opinion of it,_ maître_?"
10911What next?
10911What was it?
10911What would you have said, you being a man?
10911What''s it about?
10911What''s that got to do with me?"
10911What''s that there, after''broke up in confusion''?"
10911What''s the band playing?
10911What''s- his- name?"
10911When are you going to try on?"
10911When were you last paid?"
10911Where do you think we can have a good talk?
10911Whereupon he would simply shake his head, and she would steam forwards--"Then who are you?"
10911Who could deny now the reiterated statement that_ he_ was a bigamist?
10911Who could have guessed that the seeds of lunacy were in such a man?
10911Who ever saw a public- house empty, or Peter Robinson''s?
10911Who gave you permission to come up here?"
10911Who knows?
10911Who would have guessed that beer could fail in England?
10911Why be disappointed in him?
10911Why could n''t he have left his money to you, or at any rate to the hospitals or something of that?
10911Why did n''t the judge commit him for contempt of court?
10911Why expect more from him?
10911Why should he be dragged out of his tranquillity because two persons in whom he felt no interest whatever, had quarrelled over his pictures?
10911Why should his life have been made unbearable in Putney by the extravagant curiosity of a mob of journalists?
10911Why?
10911Will you?"
10911Yet how can you hope for our respect?
10911You are in a----""Do you mean me?"
10911You are sure that it was n''t he who tore_ your_ clothes off?"
10911You are sure you remember that?
10911You do n''t suppose I''m going to leave a lot of dirty things in the house, do you?
10911You know it depends on you?"
10911You see in this weather he ca n''t go out much-- not to work-- and so he--""Could I see him in his studio?"
10911You see the fix?"
10911You take me?
10911You thought my mind was wandering, did n''t you?"
10911_ Alice Challice_"I suppose you are Mr. Leek, are n''t you?"
10911_ Is_ this lettuce?
10911_ Man_: And what did he reply?
10911_ Man_: Did you ever meet Priam Farll, Father Luke?
10911_ Man_: Has Omar Khayyam reached the theatrical world?
10911_ Man_: He-- he made up to you?
10911_ Man_: Let me put_ that_ in, eh?
10911_ Man_: Well, shall we say a lettuce salad, and a Perrier and soda?
10911_ Man_: What do you know?
10911_ Man_: Why did n''t you tell me that for the interview?
10911_ Man_: Why not?
10911_ Man_: Why?
10911_ Master and Servant_"Will there have to be an inquest?"
10911_ Moles_, you said?
10911_ Waiter_: Half a bottle of Heidsieck?
10911_ Waiter_: Lettuce salad, and a Perrier and soda?
10911_ Woman_: How much is six months''screw?
10911_ Woman_: Is Lord Nasing so keen as all that?
10911_ Woman_: Oh, so you do send seats to the press?
10911_ Woman_: Priam Farll?
10911_ Woman_: Story?
10911_ Woman_: Will he last?
10911_ Woman_: Will you promise not to chatter?
10911asked the gentlewoman abruptly, and as he was plainly at a loss she added,"Crumpets or tea- cake?"
10911asked the glossy man, with the air of saying,"Can you grant me this supreme favour?"
10911said the organist with conviction, and then to Priam Farll:"Who are you?
8164''Ere, what does all this mean?
8164A row?
8164About a year, is n''t it?
8164Am I to understand, sir, that, because you are rich and I am poor, you think that you can buy my self- respect?
8164And as to the picture itself-- when I''ve got it?
8164And how is the poor, dear Prince?
8164And if I did, do you suppose I did n''t expect you to have the sense to break your promise?
8164And it''s all right?
8164And shirts?
8164And the girl who was to slide gracefully into his uncle''s esteem by writing the book on birds?
8164And there''s another thing: What are we to do about Mr. Todd? 8164 And white ties?"
8164And you ca n''t remember?
8164And you''re really Alfred?
8164And you, Mr. Lattaker,said the Count,"may I conduct you to the presence of my high- born master?
8164Anyone about?
8164Are n''t you bucked?
8164Are you Mr. Medwin? 8164 Are you comfortable at your hotel?"
8164Are you doing anything this afternoon?
8164Are you feeling better now?
8164As ugly as that?
8164At which hotel?
8164Bertie, old scout,said Rocky, in a quiet, sort of crushed voice,"we''ve always been pals, have n''t we?
8164Besides, old top,I said,"I did it all for your sake, do n''t you know?"
8164Bill, old scout,I said,"there are n''t any frightful girls or any rot of that sort stopping here, are there?"
8164Birdsburg?
8164But I say, you know, what about me?
8164But could a child of that age have a soul like that? 8164 But do n''t you think it''s making rather heavy weather over a trifle?"
8164But if I''m caught?
8164But supposing it has n''t?
8164But who would do it?
8164But would he?
8164Ca n''t Jeeves think of anything?
8164Ca n''t you think of anything to do?
8164Ca n''t you understand?
8164Can you think of anything?
8164Carry him in?
8164Clarence?
8164Corky around?
8164Could I ever forget? 8164 Could he put it a little clearer, Bertie?"
8164Could n''t you find her?
8164Did he say when he would be back?
8164Did you call, sir?
8164Did you call, sir?
8164Did you catch it?
8164Did you do that? 8164 Did you have any trouble sneaking them away?"
8164Did you meet him?
8164Did you say that Lord Pershore went to prison voluntarily?
8164Did you tell him?
8164Do n''t you see? 8164 Do n''t you think-- shouldn''t we be going on to the beach?"
8164Do n''t you understand? 8164 Do n''t you?"
8164Do you dress for dinner every night, Bertie?
8164Do you expect him back to dinner?
8164Do you know how long I''ve been married?
8164Do you know, Reggie,she said suddenly,"that only a few months ago Clarence was very fond of cats?"
8164Do you live here?
8164Do you mean me?
8164Do you mean to say that anyone would be mug enough to part with solid cash just to shake hands with my uncle?
8164Do you mean to say you''ve managed to get anybody?
8164Do you mean to say, young man,she said frostily,"that you expect me to drink this stuff?"
8164Do you think nobody''s got any troubles except you? 8164 Do you want me to go back to the country, Aunt Isabel?"
8164Do you wish me to accompany you, sir?
8164Do? 8164 Does this luxurious flat belong to my nephew Francis?"
8164Eh? 8164 Eh?"
8164Eh?
8164Eh?
8164Eh?
8164Eh?
8164Eh?
8164Eh?
8164Er--''Venus''?
8164Father,said Clarence,"did you meet a mewing cat outside?
8164Fifty dollars?
8164Finished with your uncle?
8164Fluffed in his lines, did he?
8164Forgotten whether it''s the twentieth or the twenty- first, or what? 8164 Get my letter?"
8164Go away?
8164Gone out?
8164Had he a hat?
8164Halloa?
8164Has George a mole like that?
8164Have you got him, Bill?
8164Hello, is that Tootles?
8164How are you feeling this morning?
8164How did you get them?
8164How do you do, Mr. Pepper? 8164 How do you do, sir?"
8164How do you do?
8164How do you mean, forgotten?
8164How does he do it, Bertie?
8164How many suits of evening clothes have I?
8164How much?
8164How on earth did you know that he was fond of birds?
8164How the deuce do you know anything about it?
8164How would you like to have to look at that every time you sat down to a meal?
8164How''s that?
8164How?
8164I beg your pardon, sir, but did Mr. Voules ask you for the afternoon?
8164I beg your pardon, sir?
8164I beg your pardon?
8164I believe you have a Mr. Lattaker on board-- Mr. George Lattaker?
8164I say, Jeeves, this is a bit thick, what?
8164I say, you have n''t had a row with Corky, have you?
8164I suppose Mr. Bickersteth is a bit braced at the way things are going-- what?
8164I suppose it bowled the poor blighter over absolutely?
8164I suppose you have n''t breakfasted?
8164I wonder if I have ever happened to mention to you, sir, a Mr. Digby Thistleton, with whom I was once in service? 8164 If I might make a suggestion, sir?"
8164If the Duke of Chiswick is his uncle,I said,"why has n''t he a title?
8164Indeed, sir?
8164Indeed, sir?
8164Is Lord Pershore in, Jeeves?
8164Is Mr. Bickersteth''s father dead, too?
8164Is it your intention to go to an hotel, sir? 8164 Is my brother like me?"
8164Is n''t Rockmetteller home?
8164Is she alone?
8164Is that the''Venus''?
8164Is that you, Reggie? 8164 Is this a practical joke?"
8164It''s a fine bit of memorizing,I said;"but how does it help?"
8164It-- it sorts of leers at you, does n''t it?
8164Jeeves, there''s no place like home-- what?
8164Jeeves,I said,"have n''t you any scheme up your sleeve for coping with this blighter?"
8164Jeeves,I said,"what on earth are you talking about?"
8164Jeeves,I said,"what on earth is Mr. Bickersteth to do?"
8164Leave any money?
8164Lord Pershore gone to bed, Jeeves?
8164May I come up?
8164Meet whom?
8164Might I speak to you with regard to that matter of his grace, sir?
8164Mr. Fred Stone?
8164Not returned? 8164 Not to live in the country?"
8164Now, tell me honestly, how does it strike you?
8164Of course, old man, I only saw the kid once, and then only for a moment, but-- but it_ was_ an ugly sort of kid, was n''t it, if I remember rightly?
8164Oh, ca n''t you understand? 8164 Oh, well, as it were, what?
8164Oh?
8164Or cold?
8164PS.--Seen old Ted lately?
8164Payable in advance?
8164Pictures?
8164Pill, sir?
8164Put him up? 8164 Rather like the chappie whose heart was''in the Highlands a- chasing of the deer,''Jeeves?"
8164Rather? 8164 Reggie,"said Bill at last,"how exactly do you feel about facing Clarence and Elizabeth at breakfast?"
8164Remove the eye of authority and where are you?
8164Reporters? 8164 Sad, Jeeves, what?"
8164Saving money? 8164 See everything?
8164Seen George?
8164Seen her?
8164She did n''t happen to mention that I added the words,''I do n''t think''?
8164Sir?
8164Sir?
8164Sir?
8164Sir?
8164Sir?
8164Sir?
8164Sir?
8164Sir?
8164Sir?
8164Sir?
8164Sir?
8164Sir?
8164Sir?
8164Sir?
8164So father found you again, did he? 8164 So you do remember some things?"
8164So you''re having your piano tuned?
8164So you''ve got back, what?
8164So you''ve popped over, eh? 8164 Stay in the country all the time, do you mean?
8164Stella, you remember Count Fritz?
8164Stopping with friends-- what?
8164Supposing they shoot, old scout?
8164Surely the duke believes that Mr. Bickersteth is doing well in business, and all that sort of thing?
8164Tea, tea, tea-- what? 8164 Tea?"
8164The jolly old roof- tree, and all that sort of thing-- what?
8164Then you are really George Lattaker?
8164Then, what are you going to do about it?
8164There will be no reporters among them?
8164Think I was going to stop on now I''m a gentleman of property? 8164 Think?
8164This is a surprise, what?
8164Thought of anything, Jeeves?
8164Till your wife mentioned it?
8164Uncle,he said,"are you doing anything special to- morrow afternoon?
8164Voules,I said,"are you under the delusion that I''m going to be Queen of the May?
8164Warm?
8164Was he-- has he been-- was he very worried?
8164Was it true what that man said?
8164Well, Bruce, my boy; so the portrait is really finished, is it-- really finished? 8164 Well, I do n''t think there''s anything more, is there?
8164Well, Mr. Todd''s letters ought to brace Miss Rockmetteller all right, what?
8164Well, baby?
8164Well, do n''t you see that that brings it down to two days? 8164 Well, then, you would have noticed it if he had had a mole like this on the back of his neck, would n''t you?"
8164Well, then----?
8164Well, was n''t it enough?
8164Well, we had better bring him in, eh?
8164Well, well, well, what?
8164Well, what am I to do?
8164Well, when is her birthday?
8164Well?
8164Well?
8164Well?
8164What about it?
8164What about it?
8164What about you?
8164What are you going to do about it?
8164What are you going to do?
8164What can we do about it?
8164What could I do? 8164 What did I tell you?"
8164What did you tell me?
8164What do you get for slugging a Serene Highness? 8164 What do you make of that, Jeeves?"
8164What do you mean by playing this trick?
8164What do you mean by the expression''Bucks you up''?
8164What do you mean, sir?
8164What do you mean-- my peculiar scent? 8164 What do you suggest, Jeeves?"
8164What do you think, Bertie?
8164What do you want?
8164What does he think of it all?
8164What does it mean?
8164What does this mean?
8164What happened?
8164What is a surprise?
8164What is it?
8164What is the matter?
8164What man?
8164What message have you for Birdsburg, Duke?
8164What on earth''s the matter?
8164What on earth?
8164What the deuce do you mean by''Hi''?
8164What was all the trouble about?
8164What will Lady Malvern say when she finds out?
8164What''s his trouble now?
8164What''s that?
8164What''s that?
8164What''s that?
8164What''s that?
8164What''s the good of that now? 8164 What''s the trouble, old scout?"
8164What''s the trouble? 8164 What''s this for?"
8164What''s to be done? 8164 What''s wrong with this tie?
8164What''s your name?
8164What, Miss West?
8164What, pipped?
8164What- o?
8164What?
8164What?
8164What?
8164When did you get the idea of taking Miss Rockmetteller to the meeting? 8164 Where are you speaking from?"
8164Where is he, then? 8164 Where is he?"
8164Where is he?
8164Where is my wandering boy to- night and all that sort of thing, what?
8164Where''s everybody, Jeeves?
8164Where''s that dog, Jeeves? 8164 Where?
8164Where?
8164Who cares?
8164Who the deuce is Lady Malvern, Jeeves?
8164Who the deuce is Rollo?
8164Who was it?
8164Who''s it from?
8164Who?
8164Why Boston?
8164Why Jeeves? 8164 Why do n''t I what?"
8164Why do n''t you wish her many happy returns? 8164 Why is it surprising that I should visit my only nephew?"
8164Why, whatever makes you think that?
8164Why?
8164Will that be all, sir?
8164Will you kindly tell my nephew''s man- servant to prepare my room? 8164 Wo n''t you have an egg or something?
8164Would you care for a cup of tea?
8164Would you desert a pal at a time like this?
8164Would you like some more soda- water? 8164 Wrong?
8164Yes, but----"But what? 8164 Yes, old boy?"
8164Yes, sir? 8164 Yes, sir?"
8164Yes, sir?
8164Yes, sir?
8164Yes?
8164Yes?
8164Yes?
8164Yes?
8164Yes?
8164Yes?
8164Yesterday was----?
8164You are sure this gentleman is not Mr. George Lattaker?
8164You ate something that disagreed with you last night, did n''t you?
8164You could n''t come down here, could you?
8164You did n''t do a thing to His Serene Nibs, did you?
8164You do n''t mean honestly she said that?
8164You do n''t mean to say you ca n''t think of anything, Jeeves?
8164You do n''t mean to tell me that you were expecting it?
8164You do n''t mean-- in prison?
8164You have not found him?
8164You kissed her?
8164You know, Jeeves, say what you like-- this is a bit thick, is n''t it?
8164You let him go?
8164You mean, sir?
8164You owe Lord Pershore fifty dollars?
8164You really wo n''t meet the rest of them?
8164You see?
8164You see?
8164You think he''ll cut up rough?
8164You want me to----?
8164You were his constant companion, then?
8164You would do it, would n''t you, Jeeves?
8164You would have noticed it if he had?
8164You would?
8164You''ll come along, wo n''t you, Bertie, and have a drink at the flat?
8164You''ll shake hands with them and so forth?
8164You''re sure he went to Boston?
8164You''re waiting for Corky, are n''t you?
8164You''ve been swimming with him perhaps?
8164You''ve met Bertie Wooster, Aunt Isabel?
8164You''ve noticed that, too?
8164Young man,he said,"you would not betray me?
8164Your aunt? 8164 Your nephew''s man- servant?"
8164_ Well?_she said, and her teeth gave a little click.
8164''Ah, Angela, has not this gone on too long?
8164''Ah, Marie,''or whatever her name is-- Jane-- Agnes-- Angela?
8164''Boofer lady, does''oo love dadda?''
8164***** Have you ever been turned down by a girl who afterwards married and then been introduced to her husband?
8164A little buttered toast with the tea?
8164After this-- this deceit and foolery?
8164All right so far, what?
8164And how the deuce could I, even if I knew every girl in the place?
8164And the charming Miss Stella, she is well, I suppose not?"
8164And you know yourself what Elizabeth is like when one gives her her head?"
8164Any ideas?"
8164Any relation to Edward Pepper, the colliery owner?"
8164Anything up?"
8164Are n''t you, Motty darling?"
8164Are they all still at breakfast?
8164Are you a great friend of Rockmetteller''s?"
8164Are you my Uncle Augustus?"
8164At how much a head?"
8164Aurea?"
8164Bickersteth?"
8164But how were we to get him into his clothes again?
8164But what I mean is, where do I come in?
8164But what''s he doing here?"
8164But----""Pepper?
8164Can Freddie play the piano?"
8164Can this be love?"
8164Can you get me some right away?"
8164Can you hear a mewing cat?"
8164Can you read, boy?
8164Child speaks like,''Boofer lady, does''oo love dadda?''
8164Cohan?"
8164Corcoran?"
8164Corcoran?"
8164Could n''t you run down here for a few days?
8164Did n''t I say that Alfred would fix things for George?
8164Directly Stella Vanderley broke off our engagement I----""Broke off your engagement?
8164Do n''t you think it would be rather a wheeze if you were to----""After what has happened?
8164Do n''t you think so, Jeeves?"
8164Do n''t you, Jeeves?"
8164Do you eat a lot of fish, Jeeves?"
8164Do you know Marvis Bay?
8164Do you know those little books called_ When were you Born_?
8164Do you know, all through dinner I had a kind of rummy idea that there was something I''d forgotten, but I could n''t think what?"
8164Do you mean to say you go through this sort of thing every night, Bertie, and enjoy it?
8164Do you mind if I go in and tell this man to come on to us when he''s finished here?"
8164Do you realize that most days I do n''t get out of my pyjamas till five in the afternoon, and then I just put on an old sweater?"
8164Do you realize that this child has to be undressed, and bathed, and dressed again?
8164Do you suspect Mr. Bickersteth would suspect anything, Jeeves, if I made it up to five hundred?"
8164Does one ring a bell or shout a bit?
8164For instance, ca n''t you remember the last time she had a birthday?
8164For my clubs?"
8164Get rid of something?"
8164Had a pleasant trip?"
8164Has he turned up?"
8164Have you breakfasted?
8164Have you ever been accepted by the girl you love, Reggie?"
8164Have you ever heard of twin- brothers who were n''t exactly alike?
8164Have you ever noticed his head, Bertie, old man?
8164Have you ever seen a bull- pup chasing a bee?
8164Have you ever seen that picture,"The Soul''s Awakening"?
8164Have you ever trodden on a rake and had the handle jump up and hit you?
8164Have you got him tied up?"
8164Have you seen these pictures?"
8164Here?"
8164His Serene Highness asks repeatedly,''Where is my brave preserver?''
8164How are you?
8164How can I marry her?"
8164How could there be when it''s barely ten o''clock yet?"
8164How do you do, Mr. Wooster?
8164How do you do?"
8164How do you suppose you can ever make yourself popular if you go about touching people on the shoulder?
8164How does that hit you?"
8164How long are you down for?"
8164How long were you engaged?"
8164How much longer does that infernal sleuth intend to stay here?
8164How near do you get to it?"
8164How on earth can I dance when I do n''t know a soul to dance with?
8164How on earth can I dress up like that?
8164How should I know where?
8164How the deuce could Jeeves know anything about it?
8164How''s everybody?
8164I mean, you know I''d do you a good turn if you asked me?"
8164I mean-- what?
8164I read it twice, then I said,"Well, why do n''t you?"
8164I suppose she''s paying all the expenses now, is n''t she?"
8164I woke to hear him saying:"So what on earth am I to do?"
8164I wonder if they''ll catch the fellow?"
8164I''ll phone down to the kitchen and ask them to send it up now-- what?"
8164If you come to that, it''s hardly my place to be flung out of the flat like this and have to go to an hotel, what?"
8164Is there anything else you would like?"
8164Making a long stay in America?"
8164Marshall?"
8164Never come to New York?"
8164Niag''ra Falls, Yellowstone Park, and the jolly old Grand Canyon, and what- not?"
8164No doubt you read my book,_ India and the Indians_?
8164No?
8164No?
8164Now tell me, old sport, as man to man, how does one get in touch with that very decent chappie Jeeves?
8164Now you see?"
8164Now, are we narrowing it down, or are n''t we?
8164Oh, gosh?
8164Or a sausage or something?
8164Or have you dined?"
8164Or something?"
8164Pepper?"
8164Pepper?"
8164Perhaps you have met him?
8164Perhaps you will give us the pleasure of your company at dinner to- night, Mr. Wooster?
8164Profit practically----""What is all this nonsense about hens?
8164Shall I remove the letter?"
8164Silly question?
8164Still hard at it?"
8164Sturgis?"
8164Surely I''ve put it plainly enough?"
8164Surely you must have noticed the change in me, Rockmetteller?
8164That''s it, is n''t it, Jeeves?"
8164The gentleman who came to see Mr. Lattaker?
8164The hansom cab one?"
8164The very first words I spoke were,"Corky, how about your uncle?"
8164Then he does n''t know?
8164Then old Chiswick turned to Bicky:"Well?"
8164Then will you join us?"
8164Then you come along----""But how can I work it that way?"
8164There was something in her eye that seemed to say:"Out of a city of six million people, why did you pick on me?"
8164Think I have n''t thought?
8164Understand?"
8164Unless you get your eight hours, where are you?
8164Voules would n''t give us away, would you, Voules?"
8164Want to see him?
8164Was he carrying a hat?"
8164Was that all she said I said?"
8164Well, he still seems-- er--_interested_ in them, what?"
8164Well, how about getting this job finished and going to bed?
8164Well, if you''re the Duke of Chiswick, why is n''t he Lord Percy Something?
8164Well-- er-- in the circumstances, how about it?"
8164Well?"
8164Were you walking in your sleep?"
8164What about it?"
8164What are you doing here?"
8164What are you talking about?
8164What can I do?
8164What can a fellow do with a fellow like that?
8164What could I do?
8164What did you do it for?
8164What did you give her?"
8164What do you do to get like that, Jeeves?
8164What do you mean-- saving money?"
8164What do you mean?"
8164What do you mean?"
8164What do you mean?"
8164What do you think, Jeeves?"
8164What do you want me to do?"
8164What is it Shakespeare or somebody says about some fellow''s face being sicklied o''er with the pale cast of care?
8164What on earth am I going to do?"
8164What on earth am I to do?"
8164What on earth do you think you''re doing?
8164What on earth put that into her head?"
8164What sort of weather was it?
8164What the deuce is all this, Reggie?"
8164What was the game?
8164What will you do for clothes?"
8164What would you gain by it?"
8164What you want----""But what''s she going to thank me timidly for?"
8164What''ll you have?"
8164What''s Jeeves got to do with it?
8164What''s it matter if I forgot what day we were married on or what day she was born on or what day the cat had the measles?
8164What''s the idea?"
8164What''s the matter with it?"
8164What''s the matter?"
8164What''s the sense of it?
8164What''s the trouble, Bicky?"
8164What''s the use of a great city having temptations if fellows do n''t yield to them?
8164What''s the use of saying''Think''?
8164What?
8164What?"
8164When is my wife''s birthday?''
8164Where else should I go?"
8164Where is it?
8164Where''s my hat?
8164Where''s that confounded hat?
8164Where''s the kid?
8164Which of you adopted this little treasure?"
8164Who is he, then?"
8164Who wants Jeeves?
8164Who was that with you?"
8164Who''s to say you are n''t Alfred if you swear you are?
8164Who?"
8164Whom shall I say?"
8164Whose work is this?
8164Why interfere with life''s morning?
8164Why is n''t he Lord What- Not?"
8164Why?
8164Why?"
8164Will that meet the situation, sir?"
8164Will there be anything further?
8164Will you do it, Rockmetteller?
8164Will you-- for my sake?"
8164Wilmot is in Boston?"
8164Wo n''t you go back to the country to- morrow and begin the struggle?
8164Wo n''t you, for my sake, try, Rockmetteller?
8164Wooster?"
8164Wooster?"
8164Wooster?"
8164Would n''t that have given Sherlock a jolt?
8164Would you like a cup of tea?
8164You do n''t think I''m going to chuck a future like this for anything under five hundred o''goblins a year-- what?"
8164You follow me?"
8164You go up to them and say:"When''s the next train for Melonsquashville, Tennessee?"
8164You have never met my son, Wilmot, I think?
8164You heard it all, did n''t you?
8164You know that pre- what- d''you- call- it you get sometimes?
8164You must have seen that I was no longer the careless, thoughtless person who had urged you to dance in those places of wickedness?"
8164You remember?"
8164You would n''t leave me to do all that single- handed?
8164You would not tell Clarence?"
8164You''re English, are n''t you?"
8164man, why do n''t you say something?"
10554''My darling,''he will say tenderly,''is there anything I can do?'' 10554 ''What sort of noises?''
10554''Who ever loved that loved not at first sight?''
10554A bicycle?
10554A human life is a human life, what?
10554A lovely morning, is it not?
10554A note for me, Jeeves?
10554A touch of salmon?
10554A what?
10554A whisky and soda, eh? 10554 Ah, you''ve noticed it, have you?
10554Ah? 10554 All right?
10554All the same----"Well?
10554Already?
10554Anatole''s?
10554And Angela was there?
10554And I''m not a bit thin on the top.... What the dickens are you grinning about?
10554And are you emboldened?
10554And at dinner you will push, as arranged?
10554And declined to unbelt?
10554And even after that you did n''t so much as press her hand?
10554And fell in love at first sight?
10554And how about this pessimism we hear of? 10554 And how did he react to that?"
10554And how long did this nuisance continue?
10554And instead of giving her the understanding and sympathy to which she was entitled, what do you think this blasted Glossop did? 10554 And looked like something on a slab?"
10554And make a speech?
10554And now it''s nearly dinner- time, you say? 10554 And the thought that springs to your mind, no doubt, is that I shall have my work cut out to fix things up?"
10554And then?
10554And to drink? 10554 And what about my side of the thing?"
10554And what is he doing about it?
10554And what''s wrong with the colour of my hair?
10554And yet, if he wants this female to be his wife, he''s got to say so, what? 10554 And you came away feeling that he needed a bracer?"
10554And you think the chances of getting into uncle-- into my uncle by marriage''s ribs are slight?
10554And your Uncle Cyril thought it funny?
10554Any particular reason, or just a whim?
10554Anyway, you stick to it that you were in love with her?
10554Are n''t you looking forward to this rout or revel?
10554Are the tyres inflated?
10554Are you going for a stroll?
10554Are you here, Bertie?
10554Are you sure?
10554At Eton?
10554At a moment like that?
10554Be what?
10554Because you feel that if it were done when''tis done, then''twere well it were done quickly, sir?
10554Been here long?
10554Bertie, will you be chivalrous now?
10554Bertie,he said,"do you remember what I swore I would do to the chap who stole Angela from me?"
10554Birds? 10554 Braced?
10554But I say, Jeeves, what?
10554But Mr. Fink- Nottle''s not in London?
10554But are you sure of your facts? 10554 But did you not give me to understand, sir, that you wished to see Mr. Fink- Nottle to advise him on his affairs?"
10554But do n''t tell me that when he saw how shirty she was about it, the chump did n''t back down?
10554But do n''t you understand? 10554 But have you considered,"I said,"that you may have got a wrong line on Gussie''s performance this afternoon?
10554But how could anything go wrong? 10554 But how did that start the trouble?"
10554But if Mr. Fink- Nottle should decline, sir?
10554But it did n''t do any good?
10554But surely you are not proposing to wear it in England, sir?
10554But was n''t it turning the corner two years ago?
10554But what can I say about the sunset?
10554But what caused this change of heart?
10554But what does it mean?
10554But what on earth can you do?
10554But what on earth would she want to get rid of you for?
10554But what,I mused, toying with the envelope,"can this female be writing to me about?"
10554But why did he want to talk about newts?
10554But why do you want me? 10554 But you love her, do n''t you?"
10554But, Bertie, you do n''t mean you know these Traverses?
10554But, Tuppy,I said,"why not?
10554But, dash it, what is all this? 10554 But, dash it,"I said,"ca n''t you see what this is going to do for you?
10554But, sir----"You were saying, Jeeves?
10554Ca n''t we? 10554 Chasing him?"
10554Could?
10554Decline? 10554 Definitely over, is it?"
10554Did Gussie seem taken aback? 10554 Did he mention her name?
10554Did n''t you put any soda in it?
10554Did she do that?
10554Did she say anything?
10554Did you give him your story of the two Irishmen?
10554Did you, darling?
10554Do n''t keep saying,''What?'' 10554 Do n''t know what?"
10554Do n''t tell me you were contemplating descending to that old he- saved- her- from- drowning gag? 10554 Do n''t you know these people?"
10554Do n''t you remember? 10554 Do what?"
10554Do you know what''s happened? 10554 Do you remember that kids''school we went to before Eton?"
10554Do you think he looks silly?
10554Drinks, do you mean? 10554 Drowning myself, you mean?"
10554Eh? 10554 Eh?"
10554Eh?
10554Eh?
10554Eh?
10554Eh?
10554Eh?
10554Eh?
10554Eh?
10554Eh?
10554Eh?
10554Eh?
10554Elaborate, sir?
10554Eloquent? 10554 Engaged, what?"
10554Everything pretty smooth now, I trust?
10554French?
10554From Miss Bassett, Jeeves?
10554From whom, Jeeves?
10554From whom, Jeeves?
10554Fruit salad?
10554Get up and dress?
10554Girlish banter, what?
10554God''s daisy chain?
10554Gone to bed, eh?
10554Gussie?
10554Has Market Snodsbury Grammar School burned down?
10554Has he been talking about newts?
10554Has n''t she come clustering round you yet?
10554Have mumps broken out? 10554 Have you and Jeeves had a row?"
10554Have you been having a drink?
10554Have you ever made a speech, Bertie?
10554Have you locked the door, Jeeves?
10554Have you no delicacy, no proper feeling?
10554Have you nothing to tell me about Angela?
10554Have you seen Mr. Fink- Nottle, Jeeves?
10554He did, did he? 10554 He has, has he?"
10554He is not all right otherwise?
10554Home truths?
10554How are you, old man?
10554How did you go?
10554How do you know I''ll be all right? 10554 How do you know they wo n''t?
10554How do you know they wo n''t? 10554 How do you know?
10554How do you mean-- me and my''Well, Gussie''?
10554How do you mean----well?
10554How do you mean?
10554How do you mean?
10554How much?
10554How? 10554 How?
10554How?
10554Hullo?
10554Hullo?
10554Hullo?
10554Hullo?
10554Hullo?
10554I beg your pardon?
10554I have already had occasion, Jeeves,I said rebukingly,"to comment on the way you say''Well, sir''and''Indeed, sir?''
10554I mean, the surgeon''s knife, what?
10554I mean, why is n''t it? 10554 I say, what are we going to do?"
10554I suppose she cursed me properly?
10554I suppose you realize, Jeeves,I said, for though one dislikes to rub it in, these things have to be pointed out,"that all this was your fault?"
10554I take it you believe in love at first sight?
10554I''m not an ass.... Am I an ass, Jeeves?
10554Indeed, Jeeves? 10554 Indeed, sir?
10554Indeed, sir? 10554 Indeed, sir?
10554Indeed, sir?
10554Indeed, sir?
10554Indeed, sir?
10554Indeed, sir?
10554Indeed, sir?
10554Indeed, sir?
10554Indeed, sir?
10554Indeed, sir?
10554Indeed, sir?
10554Indeed, sir?
10554Injudicious? 10554 Is he still upset about that income- tax money?"
10554Is it likely that I would come out here in order to talk drivel?
10554Is one to have no privacy, Glossop?
10554Is that based on psychology?
10554Is that door locked, Jeeves?
10554Is that my tea, Jeeves?
10554Is that so? 10554 Is that true?"
10554Is the_ Boudoir_ on the rocks?
10554Is this Hildebrand Glossop speaking?
10554Is this dudgeon, Jeeves?
10554Is''propinquity''the word you wish, sir?
10554It was, was it? 10554 It''s no good saying''Sir?''
10554It''s no good saying''Sir?'' 10554 Jeeves,"I said,"do n''t keep saying''Indeed, sir?''
10554Jeeves,I said,"do you know what?
10554Jeeves,I said,"do you know what?"
10554Jeeves,I said,"may I speak frankly?"
10554Just passing through, or come to stay?
10554Keep him for the long winter evenings, what?
10554Keep what up?
10554Laughably simple, eh? 10554 Lend you a handkerchief?"
10554Made inquiries?
10554Me in love with Angela? 10554 Me?"
10554Must you drivel, Bertie? 10554 My dear Tuppy, does one bandy a woman''s name?"
10554My tea, Jeeves?
10554Newts?
10554Newts?
10554No details?
10554No lamp?
10554No, sir?
10554No, sir?
10554Nobody missing, is there?
10554Now what?
10554Now what?
10554Off where?
10554Offensive?
10554Oh, Gussie''s coming, is he? 10554 Oh, dash it, old man, nothing?
10554Oh, hell? 10554 Oh, it''s so difficult.... How can I say it?...
10554Oh, it''s you, is it?
10554Oh, no? 10554 Oh, psychology?"
10554Oh, she was with you all the time at Cannes, was she?
10554Oh, the cab? 10554 Oh, were you?
10554Oh, yes?
10554Oh, yes?
10554Oh, yes?
10554Oh, yes?
10554Oh, you met Madeline at Cannes, did you? 10554 Oh, you went to the larder last night?"
10554Oh, you''re acting for him, are you?
10554Oh? 10554 Oh?
10554Oh? 10554 Oh?"
10554Oh?
10554Oh?
10554Oh?
10554Oh?
10554On what point?
10554One of those glue things on toast?
10554Parrots?
10554Pat and Mike?
10554Peeved?
10554Pop down, you mean?
10554Possibly you are not aware that I once won a Scripture- knowledge prize at school?
10554Push away a dinner cooked by Anatole?
10554Push it away untasted?
10554Push my dinner away, eh?
10554Quick ones?
10554Really?
10554Release you?
10554Roast, sir?
10554Seemed to like her, did he?
10554Seen Jeeves anywhere?
10554Seppings, how does this skylight open?
10554Shall I tell you something?
10554She came in with my aunt?
10554She did?
10554She will, will she?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554Sir?
10554So you think I''m going to strew prizes at this bally Dotheboys Hall of yours?
10554Soda?
10554Somebody else? 10554 Something on your mind, Jeeves?"
10554Spot of pie?
10554Still eating plenty of fish?
10554Suppose that''s where he''s lurking?
10554Surely not?
10554Tell me, Jeeves,I said, wishing to know the worst,"what sort of a girl is this girl of Gussie''s?"
10554Telling him?
10554That baffled him, what?
10554That great brain of yours has really clicked as ever in the hour of need?
10554That''s what I say: What about it?
10554The chap with the nose?
10554The dining- room?
10554The fire bell?
10554The jacket, you mean?
10554The key of the back door, sir?
10554The nuts firm, the brakes in order, the sprockets running true with the differential gear?
10554The prizes, eh? 10554 The sunset?"
10554The wind?
10554The young lady is an acquaintance of yours, sir?
10554Then perhaps you will explain how it is that she happens to come to be engaged to him?
10554Then shall we just say no more about it; keep what has happened as a tender little secret between ourselves?
10554Then what do you mean you''ve got good news?
10554Then what the dickens did he talk about?
10554Then what,I said keenly,"did you want to go and get engaged to him for, you unreasonable young fathead?"
10554Then what?
10554Then you have not heard, sir?
10554There was, eh?
10554These dreamer types do live, do n''t they?
10554These things take it out of one, do n''t they? 10554 They did n''t throw eggs, or anything?"
10554This surprised you, no doubt? 10554 Through the skylight?"
10554Through where?
10554To what end, Thomas? 10554 Tough luck on both of them, what?"
10554Turned you down?
10554Twenty- four hours?
10554Uncle Tom''s not feeling too bucked about it all, you say?
10554Uncle Tom?
10554Was Tuppy after you?
10554Was there much more of it after I went?
10554Was there something you wanted to see me about?
10554We?
10554Well, I''ll tell you one thing-- he''ll be in a jolly sight more inflamed cerebral condition if Tuppy gets hold of him.... What''s the time?
10554Well, Jeeves,I said,"it was certainly one of those afternoons, what?"
10554Well, Jeeves?
10554Well, dash it, with a thing like that to give you a send- off, why did n''t you cash in immediately?
10554Well, did n''t he?
10554Well, how about it? 10554 Well, how was I to know that a man with a mind like yours would grasp it so quickly?"
10554Well, old thing,I said,"I''ve heard all about your little dust- up So those wedding bells are not going to ring out, what?"
10554Well, what are boils?
10554Well, what''s to be done?
10554Well, why not? 10554 Well, why not?"
10554Well, why was n''t that the happy ending? 10554 Well?"
10554Well?
10554Well?
10554Well?
10554Well?
10554Well?
10554What Bassett business?
10554What about Gandhi?
10554What about it?
10554What about?
10554What are you talking about?
10554What boy?
10554What did you have?
10554What did you say?
10554What did you want her for?
10554What do I do when I get there?
10554What do you make of it, Jeeves?
10554What do you mean, be very careful?
10554What do you mean, your efforts? 10554 What do you mean,''home truths''?
10554What do you mean-- sir, yes, sir? 10554 What do you mean?"
10554What do you suggest, then? 10554 What do you think you''re made up as?"
10554What does all this mean?
10554What door?
10554What gave you that impression, dear?
10554What happened then?
10554What happened?
10554What has he got against Pierrots?
10554What is this, Aunt Dahlia?
10554What is?
10554What man?
10554What report?
10554What shall I do?
10554What sort of landscape?
10554What sort?
10554What stopped him?
10554What the devil do you think you''re talking about?
10554What the devil,he asked,"are you talking about?"
10554What the hell did you mean by telling her that I used to be covered with ink when I was a kid?
10554What wall?
10554What was it?
10554What was?
10554What''s he doing here?
10554What''s the good of being sorry?
10554What''s the good of that to me? 10554 What''s the matter?"
10554What''s the sense of saying,''Do n''t mention it''? 10554 What, in your opinion, will the harvest be?"
10554What,I said gently,"is this all about?
10554What? 10554 What?
10554What? 10554 What?
10554What?
10554What?
10554What?
10554What?
10554What?
10554What?
10554What?
10554What?
10554What?
10554What?
10554What?
10554What?
10554What?
10554What?
10554What?
10554What?
10554What?
10554When I wore it at the Casino at Cannes, beautiful women nudged one another and whispered:''Who is he?''
10554When did this happen?
10554When did you ever mention any device to me?
10554When did you ever take me for a chump?
10554When you say''No, sir,''do you mean''Yes, sir''?
10554Where did you ever hear of Jael, the wife of Heber?
10554Where''s Angela?
10554Where''s the lamp?
10554Where, darling? 10554 Where?"
10554Who are you?
10554Who did you hear it from?
10554Who is? 10554 Who locked this door?"
10554Who was she?
10554Who was the ass, who was the chump, who was the dithering idiot who talked me, against my better judgment, into going without my dinner? 10554 Who were walking along Broadway?"
10554Who would n''t be?
10554Who''s Waterbury?
10554Who?
10554Who?
10554Who?
10554Why do n''t you get Uncle Tom?
10554Why not open the damn thing and see?
10554Why not? 10554 Why not?"
10554Why odd?
10554Why this break with a grand old tradition?
10554Why was the door locked?
10554Why''s that?
10554Why?
10554Why?
10554Why?
10554Why?
10554Will he? 10554 With a suspicion of salad?"
10554Would n''t he give it to you?
10554Would that be a normal dose for an adult defeatist, do you think?
10554Yes, Jeeves?
10554Yes, Jeeves?
10554Yes, Jeeves?
10554Yes, Jeeves?
10554Yes, lovely, is n''t it?
10554Yes, sir, but----"What do you mean-- but?
10554Yes, sir?
10554Yes?
10554Yes?
10554You are n''t suggesting that I should climb down?
10554You are n''t suggesting that you think this scheme I have been sketching out is Jeeves''s?
10554You are not aware that a marriage has been arranged and will shortly take place between Mr. Fink- Nottle and Miss Bassett?
10554You back?
10554You consider total abstinence a handicap to a gentleman who wishes to make a proposal of marriage, sir?
10554You did n''t seem to know it so dashed well, what, what?
10554You did, eh?
10554You did-- what?
10554You do n''t know her?
10554You do n''t mean he''s in love?
10554You do n''t mean me?
10554You do n''t mean that?
10554You do n''t mean that?
10554You do n''t mean you''ve got a bite already?
10554You do not admire this jacket?
10554You do, do you? 10554 You do, do you?"
10554You expect me to work that in, do you, into a speech to be delivered to an audience of boys, every one of whom is probably riddled with adenoids? 10554 You extracted the thorn?"
10554You feel that Miss Angela''s strictures should not be taken too much_ au pied de la lettre_, sir?
10554You feel that Miss Bassett, despite what has occurred, still retains a fondness for Mr. Fink- Nottle, sir?
10554You gather that too, do you?
10554You got engaged to Gussie just to score off Tuppy?
10554You got in, then?
10554You got my note?
10554You got the name correctly? 10554 You have n''t seen him, by any chance?"
10554You know my cousin Angela?
10554You know young Tuppy Glossop?
10554You mean he''s sitting on the roof?
10554You mean imagination boggles?
10554You mean that all this while the key has been in Jeeves''s possession???
10554You mean that all this while the key has been in Jeeves''s possession???
10554You mean that all this while the key has been in Jeeves''s possession???
10554You mean there''s someone else?
10554You mean you want to call it all off? 10554 You mean''Hullo,''do n''t you?"
10554You mean, something went wrong?
10554You might just slide down and fetch it, will you?
10554You rather expect to be coming along shortly with another of your schemes?
10554You stand there and tell me you were in love with that Bassett disaster?
10554You take what?
10554You think a Wooster would do that?
10554You think it funny, do you?
10554You think so, sir?
10554You think, on the whole, not drown myself?
10554You thought it funny?
10554You were n''t nervous?
10554You will not come to me when all is over and ask me to jettison the jacket?
10554You wo n''t do it, you mean?
10554You wore it, sir?
10554You''ll do it?
10554You''re in love with some other bloke?
10554You''re still sticking to that?
10554You''ve heard of this business of mine, I suppose? 10554 You?
10554Young Glossop?
10554Young lady?
10554Your side?
10554A Wooster?"
10554A bit above par at the moment, as it were?"
10554A bit grave, he seemed to me to be looking, and I probed the matter with a kindly query:"Something on your mind, Jeeves?"
10554A bit on the hollow side, what?
10554A bit slow in the uptake, surely?
10554A marked coldness of the feet, was there not?
10554A respectable English country house or a crimson dancing school?
10554Admitted that all the evidence points to a more sinister theory, what price him simply having got a touch of the sun?
10554All pretty clear so far, what?
10554Am I correct?"
10554And Gussie, you say, is in the same posish?"
10554And Jeeves considered----""And why not as a Pierrot?"
10554And are you proposing to continue your stroll?"
10554And do you know why he tried to dissuade me?
10554And even if they don''t-- Bertie, shall I tell you something?"
10554And if things were different-- I wonder----""Eh?"
10554And then?"
10554And though, by dint of sidling, too, I had managed to keep the bench between us, who could predict how long this happy state of affairs would last?
10554And what I was rather wanting to ask you, if we happened to run into each other, was-- well, what about it?"
10554And what is Gussie''s trouble?"
10554And what took you there?"
10554And when you say"At once"do you mean"At once"?
10554And why do I despise him?
10554And why not, boys and ladies and gentlemen?
10554And why not?
10554And why not?
10554And why, Jeeves?
10554And yet,"he said, pausing and eyeing the child keenly,"how are we to know that this has all been open and above board?
10554And, when he spoke, one spotted the tremolo in the voice:"You really think that?"
10554Angela said, did n''t she mean a python?
10554Angela?"
10554Any more?"
10554Anybody been phoning or calling or anything during my abs.?
10554Are you a pessimist, Bertie?"
10554As I recall it, the dialogue ran something as follows: SELF: Well, Jeeves, here we are, what?
10554At this, I take it, she lowered her eyes and said,"Oh, yes?"
10554At what hour would you suggest bonging the bell?"
10554Aunt Dahlia steadied herself against the sideboard, and spoke in a low, husky voice:"Faces?"
10554Bertie._ Hers in reply stuck a sinister note:_ Oh, so it''s like that, is it?
10554Bertie._ To this I received an answer during the after- luncheon sleep:_ What on earth is there to be perplexed about, ass?
10554Besides, is n''t there something in the book of rules about a man may not marry his cousin?
10554Besides, what business had she being in London at all?
10554But I suppose you drew blank?"
10554But how about the cats?"
10554But what on earth can have brought him up to London?"
10554But what then?
10554But what''s it got to do with me?"
10554But why, Jeeves?
10554But you are n''t proposing to keep this up, of course?"
10554But, dash it, if we go ringing fire bells in the night watches, sha n''t we scare half the domestic staff into fits?
10554But-- may I be quite frank with you, Bertie?"
10554Ca n''t you guess?"
10554Ca n''t you realize the position?
10554Ca n''t you see how pleased we all are?
10554Ca n''t you see that this is simply another of those bally gestures which are rapidly rendering Brinkley Court a hell for man and beast?
10554Can I be of any assistance?"
10554Can you answer me that, Simmons?"
10554Can you imagine, Bertie?"
10554Can you imagine?"
10554Can you really get us out of this mess?"
10554Can you see him declining?
10554Care to come for a saunter?"
10554Care to hear it?"
10554Could Aunt Dahlia have slept on it and changed her mind?
10554Could Gussie, unable to face the ordeal confronting him, have legged it during the night down a water- pipe?
10554Could Jeeves have got you into Brinkley Court?
10554Could Lloyd George do it, could Winston do it, could Baldwin do it?
10554Did I say I could bite a tiger?"
10554Did he recede from his position?"
10554Did n''t I tell you I had everything taped out?"
10554Did n''t I tell you it would be a flop?"
10554Did n''t you?"
10554Did nothing strike you as odd in the tone of my remarks?"
10554Did you happen to notice that he was n''t looking very roguish this morning?"
10554Did you tell him his attitude struck you as defeatist?"
10554Do n''t you see what this means?
10554Do you grasp the psychology?
10554Do you know any?"
10554Do you know how a male newt proposes, Bertie?
10554Do you know what brought Aunt Dahlia up here this morning?
10554Do you know where he is now?"
10554Do you know, I found him in the larder at one o''clock this morning, absolutely wallowing in a steak- and- kidney pie?
10554Do you recollect the Bosher incident?"
10554Do you seriously believe that a trifling disagreement about sharks would make a girl hand a man his hat, if her heart were really his?"
10554Do you think Brinkley Court is a leper colony or what is it?
10554Do you think I am made of marble?
10554Do you think I do n''t know?
10554Do you think that that would make any difference to the vim with which the latter would leap to the former''s aid?"
10554Do you think you could get me one?"
10554Do you?"
10554Does he buzz off when I shout a cry, and leave me peaceable?
10554Does it make sense?
10554Due to what is known as the maternal instinct, what?"
10554Elusive?
10554Fink- Nottle?"
10554Fink- Nottle?"
10554Fink- Nottle?"
10554Fink- Nottle?"
10554For it was you, my sweet child, who rang that bell, was it not?"
10554Get run over by a steam- roller or something?"
10554Go to it, lad.... What''s that stuff you''re eating?"
10554Golly, Jeeves, it''s lucky he did n''t get at that laced orange juice on top of that, what?"
10554Gussie waits without, you say?"
10554Gussie was in here, was he?"
10554Had you any other contributions for him?"
10554Hand me a sock or two, will you?"
10554Have a spot?"
10554Have you ever heard of Market Snodsbury Grammar School?"
10554Have you ever seen James Cagney in the movies?"
10554Have you ever seen your uncle in pyjamas and a pistol?"
10554Have you forgotten that telegram I sent to Gussie Fink- Nottle, steering him away from the sausages and ham?
10554Have you got that clear?"
10554Have you seen her sideways, Bertie?
10554Have you seen her?"
10554Have you, Jeeves?"
10554Have you,"I asked, slipping into the shirt and starting to adjust the cravat,"been gnawing on the thing at all?"
10554He said to your aunt,''God bless my soul, Dahlia, what are you doing here?''
10554He specifically recommended that definite costume?"
10554Her voice, when she spoke, was whispery:"You mean-- for love?"
10554How about that newt bloke?"
10554How did he make out at the fancy- dress ball?"
10554How do you know?"
10554How do you mean, a job?
10554How do you mean?"
10554How do you react to that?"
10554How do you think I look, Bertie?"
10554How does that check up with your data?"
10554How long have you been an old friend of mine, Bertie?"
10554How much gin did you put in the jug?"
10554I am somebody, is n''t it?
10554I believe he''s in that cupboard.... What''s in this cupboard?"
10554I could, could n''t I?"
10554I do n''t want you to think----Life is such a muddle, is n''t it?"
10554I let go another hard one, with a bit more top spin on it than the first time:"Friends?
10554I mean, what am I?
10554I mean, why should anybody split his trousers?
10554I muttered an"Oh, yes?"
10554I put it to you, Jeeves, can you see him declining?"
10554I said''What?''"
10554I sat on this promptly:"No business of mine when I see two lives I used to go to school with wrecked?
10554I suppose you came here this morning to seek his advice?"
10554I suppose you were out on the tiles last night?"
10554I take this opportunity of informing you that I object equally strongly to your''Sir?''
10554I told my cab to wait.... Will you see if it''s there, Jeeves?"
10554I was able to speak:"What?"
10554I''ll tell you, shall I?"
10554I''ve been through that sort of thing once, what?
10554If you want to give my butler a laugh, what does it matter?
10554In that case, I would simply have said,"Listen,"and she would have said,"What?"
10554In the post- orange- juice era?"
10554In the present instance, there is absolutely nothing to say''Sir?''
10554In what frame of mind do you consider that that tigress would approach you?"
10554Ironical, what?
10554Is Anatole going?
10554Is anything the matter, Dahlia, darling?''
10554Is it by your wish, madam, that Mr. Fink- Nottle is making faces at Monsieur Anatole through the skylight of his bedroom?"
10554Is it true that you cheated when you won that Scripture- knowledge prize?"
10554Is that a pretty affair?
10554Is that convenient?
10554Is the place closed on account of measles?"
10554Is this a time for Fink or any other kind of Nottle?"
10554Is this amusing for me?
10554Is''acrid''the word I want?"
10554It is best to be candid about this, do n''t you think?
10554It''s a small world, is n''t it, what?"
10554Jeeves lost his grip?
10554Just for tonight, to please Aunt Dahlia?"
10554Kindest to be frank and straightforward?"
10554Let him attempt to do it on orange juice, and what ensues?
10554Life is very sad, is n''t it?"
10554May I?"
10554Me and Angela?"
10554Mr. Glossop''s, you mean?"
10554No doubt he will also toll that fire bell of his as a mark of respect-- And what might you want, my good man?"
10554Not good enough for you?"
10554Not really?
10554Not the old fire- alarm thing?"
10554Of what use to pull stuff like that?
10554On the other hand, chain him up and put a green- baize cloth over him, and where were you?
10554One hardly knows whether to smile or weep, what?"
10554Or am I thinking of grandmothers?
10554Or do n''t you think so?"
10554Or is it ineptness?
10554Or is it the fourth?"
10554Presumably he had been given the elbow by his better self, but why?
10554Purvis?"
10554SELF: Have a good time at Ascot?
10554SELF: Win anything?
10554Shall I tell you why?"
10554Should I sigh a bit when we meet, do you think?"
10554So you''ve won the Scripture- knowledge prize, have you?"
10554Tell me frankly, Jeeves, are you in pretty good shape mentally?"
10554Tell me, Gussie, to settle a bet, do you really like that muck?"
10554The cab, eh?...
10554The corn chandler leaned against me and muttered"Whoddidesay?"
10554The thought amuses you?"
10554The trouble spread,""Indeed, sir?"
10554Then for what do blighters sit on my window so cool as a few cucumbers, making some faces?"
10554There was a board of governors at Eton, was n''t there?
10554They are having eggs and bacon and champagne.... What did you say?"
10554This is a bedroom, what- what, not a house for some apes?
10554To be quite candid, Jeeves, I have frequently noticed before now a tendency or disposition on your part to become-- what''s the word?"
10554To which she replied,''Well, if it comes to that, my merry somnambulist, what are you?''
10554Tonight''s the night, what?
10554Travers''s?"
10554Travers._ I then dispatched the following message, wishing to get everything quite clear:_ When you say"Come"do you mean"Come to Brinkley Court"?
10554Travers._ Three cigarettes and a couple of turns about the room, and I had my response ready:_ How do you mean come at once?
10554Tuppy made a suggestion:"Why not take out one of the cars and drive over to Kingham and get the key from Seppings?"
10554WITH AFFECTION AND ADMIRATION-1-"Jeeves,"I said,"may I speak frankly?"
10554Was it nice, Tuppy, was it quite kind to take the bloom off Angela''s shark like that?
10554Was it not you who threw away that o.j.?"
10554Was there any momentary softening in her gaze as she fixed it on you?"
10554Well, Jeeves, what news on the Rialto?
10554What birds?"
10554What did you expect a sensitive, temperamental French cook to do, if you went about urging everybody to refuse all food?
10554What did you think I meant?
10554What do you mean by planting your loathsome friends on me like this?
10554What do you say when you''re distributing prizes?"
10554What does anything matter now?"
10554What exactly is it that they put into haggis?
10554What has been happening here since I left?
10554What is Brinkley Court?
10554What makes you sceptical?
10554What on earth did he do after that?
10554What on earth does a chauffeur want to dance for?
10554What sort of a job?"
10554What the devil am I to say, Bertie?
10554What the dickens shall I say?"
10554What was What''s- His- Name-- the chap who begat Thingummy?
10554What was the row about?"
10554What was there to be peeved about?
10554What were you doing out here, anyway?"
10554What were you talking drivel about?"
10554What will ensue?
10554What would you expect the attitude of that mother to be?
10554What would you have done if you had been Angela?
10554What''s the trouble?
10554What''s this one?"
10554When finally she spoke, it was to deliver an impressive boost:"Bertie, do you read Tennyson?"
10554Where did you meet?"
10554Where do you get that_ faute- de- mieux_ stuff?
10554Where is the sweet, gentle, womanly spirit of the Angelas?
10554Where is this foul bone- shaker?"
10554While I stood musing thus, Aunt Dahlia, in her practical way, was coming straight to the point:"What''s all this?"
10554Who is this Spink- Bottle?
10554Who shut them?"
10554Who was that chap?"
10554Why a job?
10554Why did I, Jeeves?"
10554Why do n''t you think this scheme will work?"
10554Why is n''t the race to the swift?"
10554Why not chuck the whole idea of hitching up with me?
10554Why should n''t she simply walk downstairs?"
10554Why this ill- concealed animus?"
10554Why worry about a laughably simple job like distributing prizes at a school?"
10554Why, if I had not your interests sincerely at heart, should I have ticked you off, as stated?"
10554Why, then, if not for the motives I have outlined, should I knock you to Angela?
10554Why, then, should this not be so with Augustus Fink- Nottle and Hildebrand Glossop?
10554Why?"
10554Will you please lay off?
10554Wo n''t you stop it just this once?
10554Wooster?"
10554Worrying about Angela, I suppose?
10554Would n''t people say that, Jeeves?"
10554Would you care to hear what steps I have taken?"
10554Yes, Jeeves?"
10554Yes, Jeeves?"
10554You are n''t going to try to make out that that rotten fire bell scheme of yours had anything to do with it?"
10554You ask me what is it?
10554You can see that it''s a bit elaborate?"
10554You could have knocked me down with a f."Engaged to him?"
10554You deliberately assert that you loved that weird Gawd- help- us?"
10554You did n''t?"
10554You do n''t mean to say you are n''t looking forward to it?"
10554You do n''t suppose I did n''t want to distribute those prizes, do you?
10554You do n''t suppose she really wants to marry me, do you?
10554You go to Jeeves, and what does he do?
10554You going, Jeeves?"
10554You have n''t got an idea?"
10554You here?"
10554You inserted in that jug-- shall we say a tumblerful of the right stuff?"
10554You married, by any chance?"
10554You mean that anything in the shape of mixed bathing and moonlight strolls she conducted solely in your company?"
10554You must see that?"
10554You off?"
10554You remember Angela''s shark?"
10554You remember me losing all that money at baccarat at Cannes?
10554You remember that time at the girls''school?"
10554You think I like it?
10554You think that this would clean everything up?"
10554You would bring that pie up, would n''t you?
10554You''ll admit that?"
10554You''re going to hitch up with Gussie, after all?"
10554_ G_ for''gastritis,''_ l_ for''lizard''----""Oh, glimmering?
10554of something?"
10554or"Indeed?"