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 |
---|---|
3334 | The first to know if there were any wars between Spain and England; the second, why our merchants with their goods were embarged or arrested? |
3334 | To whom Captain Sampson was sent with Captain Goring; who coming to the said messenger, he first asked them, What nation they were? |
19139 | ''Why not?'' |
19139 | According to the Spanish relation there were fourteen vessels in the English fleet, one large ship of forty- four guns( the"Centurion"?) |
19139 | In January(?) |
19139 | It seems that an Irishman named"Don Juan Morf"( John Murphy? |
19139 | Port Ferdinando, Virginia.--He has discovered the infinite riches of St. John( Porto Rico?) |
19139 | This being perceived by the Pirates they immediately asked him where was the cabinet of the said key? |
36242 | For the kitchen:--A dozen of copper boilers( saucepans[?]) 36242 On board the''Vicaille''(?) |
36242 | They replied in French that they were friends:"Do you not recollect us? |
36242 | [ 39] Honey of canes-- molasses? |
36242 | [ 43] Lemons of strange size-- Shaddock? |
26690 | But Don Alonso not believing this, answered,''How can that be? |
26690 | For were he to be a_ French- man_ born, how came he to learn the_ Dutch_ language so perfectly as to prefer it to his own? |
26690 | For who knoweth not that all places, both Military and Civil, through those vast dominions of the_ West- Indies,_ are provided out of_ Spain? |
26690 | From what port they set forth last, when they came to seek them out? |
26690 | Have they, peradventure, wit enough to build a fire- ship? |
26690 | Or what examples can easily parallel the desperate courage of the Governour of_ Chagre? |
26690 | Or what instruments have they to do it withal?''" |
26690 | Shall these men be said to be influenced with Cowardize, who thus acted to the very last_ Scene_ of their own_ Tragedies? |
26690 | Some, who never were out of their mothers''kitchens, may ask, how these pirates could eat and digest those pieces of leather, so hard and dry? |
26690 | Soon after they brought a captain to him, whom he examined very strictly; particularly, wherein consisted the forces of those of Panama? |
26690 | There were still remaining some few prisoners not wounded; these were asked by Lolonois, if any more Spaniards did lie farther on in ambuscade? |
26690 | These were often asked,"What is become of your captain?" |
26690 | What men ever fought more desperately than the Garrison of_ Chagre? |
26690 | Whether they expected any more ships to come? |
26690 | _ Or shall we rather say that they wanted no Courage, but Fortune? |
26690 | _ What lion ever fought to the last gasp more obstinately than the Governour of_ Puerto Velo? |
26690 | are these devils, or what are they?'' |
2854 | And after his coming aboard, when they demanding"How all his company did?" |
2854 | And therefore desired to know, first, Whether our Captain was the same Captain DRAKE or not? |
2854 | But, by occasion of this demand, his brother sent one down to the Steward, to know"Whether there were any water in the ship? |
2854 | He being demanded,"What was become of his Captain and other fellow?" |
2854 | I will be one, who will be the other?" |
2854 | Or what other cause might be?" |
2854 | Our Captain answered him likewise, and being demanded"_ Que gente?_"replied"Englishmen!" |
2854 | Our Captain perceiving the feat wrought, would not hasten him; but in rowing away, demanded of them,"Why their bark was so deep?" |
2854 | There we found some Indians, who asking us in friendly sort, in broken Spanish,"What we would have?" |
2854 | They presently came forth upon the sand, and sent a youth, as with a message from the Governor, to know,"What our intent was, to stay upon the coast?" |
2854 | Thus with good love and liking we took our leave of that people, setting over to the islands of[? |
2854 | and how their wounds might best be cured? |
2854 | and next, Because many of their men were wounded with our arrows, whether they were poisoned or not? |
2854 | answered,"That they were gone ashore in their gundeloe[? |
2854 | lastly, What victuals we wanted, or other necessaries? |
32809 | What did you think when you found yourself in the hands of those barbarians? |
32809 | Why then,said Montbar, roughly,"do you tamely submit to such insults?" |
32809 | But, could he estimate the amount of labour required to procure such an enormous quantity, by people who had no other appliances than baskets? |
32809 | Can they do it, and doing it, will they give up the advantages they will thereby acquire? |
32809 | Did James want to salve his own conscience, or was it intended to satisfy those who clamoured on account of the injustice of the execution? |
32809 | Did he not know that James was friendly with the king of Spain and wanted to get from him a princess for his son Henry? |
32809 | Did not Keymis remember that these were not the days of the virgin queen, when to"singe the Spaniard''s beard"was worthy of praise? |
32809 | How was it that thou didst not die In imagining a treason so enormous? |
32809 | How were the relations to prove that the promise had not been fulfilled, and if they did so what redress could be obtained? |
32809 | If Spain wanted peace, why did her people murder a ship''s company in cold blood a little while before? |
32809 | If such was the experience of the foreigners, what must have been that of the Patriots? |
32809 | Is it any wonder that the population decreased to a wonderful degree in a few years? |
32809 | Is it any wonder that when caught the bush negro or maroon was severely punished, and that the utmost rigour of the law was exercised? |
32809 | Is it any wonder that when the excitement attendant on his release had gone off he became sick and utterly prostrated? |
32809 | This suited his ideas exactly, for were they not Roman Catholics-- the very body which he had been declaiming everywhere against? |
32809 | Where was that evil and unworthy Haytian who thought he had not accomplished the decrees of the Eternal by exterminating those bloodthirsty tigers? |
32809 | Why should Spain claim the whole of the New World? |
32809 | Why should free negroes work? |
32809 | Why should he plant for others when he himself was starving? |
32809 | of their indulgence; when would they be tired of breathing the same air? |
32809 | wert thou born of woman? |
32809 | what beast could have such a wicked son? |
36963 | Barbadoes? 36963 Have birds souls, do you think?" |
36963 | Is there no honesty extant? |
36963 | Possibly,was the reply;"but why do you ask?" |
36963 | Where are the Antilles, pray? |
36963 | Why not, señora? 36963 Barbadoes? |
36963 | Could it possibly be indigenous? |
36963 | Do they shine thus in the daytime, we are led to wonder, like the constellations in the heavens, though hidden by the greater light of the sun? |
36963 | Do you think there is any hope for her, señor?" |
36963 | Does any thoughtful person believe for one moment that such hollow service can be grateful to a just and merciful Supreme Being? |
36963 | Has the reader ever chanced to hear of"Portuguese Joe,"of Rio Janeiro? |
36963 | How is this possible? |
36963 | In the light of such a statement, we pause to ask ourselves, What is a diamond? |
36963 | Indeed, can any one tell us where we shall not find this peculiar race represented in the trade centres of the wide world? |
36963 | Is it idle and commonplace to be enthusiastic? |
36963 | Is this the_ dolce far niente_ of the Italians, the sweet do- nothing of the tropics? |
36963 | Of course it must be an atmospheric deposit, but from whence? |
36963 | What better could have been expected from Pizarro than to inaugurate and foster such a state of affairs? |
36963 | What keeps its tepid water, in a course of thousands of miles, from mingling with the rest of the sea? |
36963 | What mattered all his weary hours of watching, of self- abnegation, of cold and hunger, of incessant battling with the raging sea? |
36963 | Whence does it really come? |
36963 | Who can explain the mystery of its motive power? |
17851 | Any restraint? |
17851 | Mammy,I said,"is this you?" |
17851 | Mammy,I said,"what''s the matter?" |
17851 | You have broken it, have you? |
17851 | And then when we are quite done up, who cares for us, more than for a lame horse? |
17851 | Are there no restraints( supposing them necessary) short of absolute slavery to keep"troublesome characters"in order? |
17851 | But who cared for that? |
17851 | Did one of the many by- standers, who were looking at us so carelessly, think of the pain that wrung the hearts of the negro woman and her young ones? |
17851 | He"_ induced her to take a husband_?" |
17851 | Her husband then wrote to my master to inquire whether I was to be sold? |
17851 | How can one treat such arguments seriously? |
17851 | How can slaves be happy when they have the halter round their neck and the whip upon their back? |
17851 | If the fact were true, what brutality of mind and manners does it not indicate among these slave- holders? |
17851 | Is not this pretext hypocritical in the extreme? |
17851 | Is this then a power which any man ought to possess over his fellow- mortal? |
17851 | Mr. Wood asked him who gave him a right to marry a slave of his? |
17851 | Mrs. Pell came out to me, and said,"Are you really going to leave, Molly? |
17851 | True: But was it not her home( so far as a slave can have a home) for thirteen or fourteen years? |
17851 | Was it not there she hoped to spend her latter years in domestic tranquillity with her husband, free from the lash of the taskmaster? |
17851 | Were not the connexions, friendships, and associations of her mature life formed there? |
17851 | What''s the reason they ca n''t do without slaves as well as in England? |
17851 | When I came upon the deck I asked the black people,"Is there any one here for me?" |
17851 | While the woman was in this distressed situation she was asked,''Can you feed sheep?'' |
17851 | or which any good man would ever wish to exercise? |
50020 | ''Do you see that excellent new stone wall round the field below us?'' 50020 ''But do n''t you think there will be difficulty in procuring labor?'' 50020 ''But what makes you want freedom? 50020 ''How are you treated now?'' 50020 ''Then you like apprenticeship better than slavery?'' 50020 ''What would you do, if you were entirely free?'' 50020 ''You like apprenticeship as well as freedom, do n''t you?'' 50020 Accosting them in a friendly manner, he inquired,''What is the meaning of this? 50020 And what was the reason? 50020 Are wages lower in any quarter of the civilized world? 50020 But does that prove they are lazy? 50020 But of all common questions, it seems to me the most absurd one is,What would you_ do_ with the slaves, if they were emancipated?" |
50020 | Do you ask in what way it is to be accomplished? |
50020 | Has it come to this? |
50020 | How did they obtain these freeholds then? |
50020 | How do they get such furniture, except as the result of their own toil?" |
50020 | How does it happen that the Railway Company are equally well off for labor? |
50020 | How is it that the Water Works Company are sure to have competitors for employment? |
50020 | How is it that you are not at work this morning?'' |
50020 | In other countries, where dey is free, do n''t_ dey_ have de law?'' |
50020 | In view of these facts, is it not unjust and irrational to persist in calling immediate emancipation a"fanatical"idea? |
50020 | Is it surprising that the colored people should prefer to raise produce on a few acres of their own, to working on the plantations without wages? |
50020 | Is my authority to be interfered with by strangers? |
50020 | Is my conduct to be questioned by these people? |
50020 | It is often asked,"What is your plan?" |
50020 | Pro- slavery presses in England and America exultingly proclaimed,"Behold the effects of emancipation?" |
50020 | They replied,''In slavery time, we work,_ even_ wid de whip;_ now_ we work till better; what tink we will do when we_ free_? |
50020 | To another we said:''Where are you taking that cart- load of cane- tops to, my man?'' |
50020 | To another, who headed a group of seventy or eighty children, we said,''Where are you going, my friend?'' |
50020 | Was that an idle people? |
50020 | Was the wolf''s complaint of the lamb, for muddying the stream below him, more unreasonable? |
50020 | We said to a woman with a great bundle of cane- tops on her head,''Are you going to the Great Valley, too?'' |
50020 | What consequence was it to the planters, whether"the little black devils"( as they called them) lived or died? |
50020 | When immediate emancipation is proposed, those who think loosely are apt to say,"But would you turn the slaves loose upon society?" |
50020 | Why then have her complaints been so much louder and more prolonged, than those of her neighbors? |
50020 | where are all these people going?'' |
4068 | And if so, what has the Negro to care-- if let alone and not wantonly thwarted in his aspirations? |
4068 | And what, as a consequence of this fact, has the world ever heard in disparagement of Grenada throughout this long series of years? |
4068 | And wherefore? |
4068 | Are the Negroes under the French flag not intensely French? |
4068 | Are the Negroes under the Spanish flag not intensely Spanish? |
4068 | Are we to understand him as suggesting that voting by black electors would be synonymous with electing black representatives? |
4068 | Being thus circumstanced, thought we, what rational elements of mutual hatred should now continue to exist in the bosoms of the two races? |
4068 | But in the British Crown-- or rather"Anglo- West Indian"--governed Colonies, has it ever been, can it ever be, thus ordered? |
4068 | But is Mr. Froude serious in invoking the ostracizing of innocent, loyal, and meritorious British subjects on account of their mere colour? |
4068 | But what shall we say of the suggestion contained in the very next sentence, which we have italicized? |
4068 | But where, in the name of Heaven, where are these sortis de la cuisse de Jupiter, Mr. Froude? |
4068 | But, after all, what does our author mean by the words"a government by the blacks?" |
4068 | But, to speak the truth, is not this solicitude of our cynical defamer on our behalf, after all, a useless waste of emotion on his part? |
4068 | Can the urgency of such responsibility ever cease but with the capacity, on our own or on our brother''s part, to do or be done by respectively? |
4068 | Does Mr. Froude''s scorn of the Negroes''skin extend, inconsistently on his part, to their intelligence and feelings also? |
4068 | Granted, however, for the sake of argument, that black voters should preponderate at any election, what then? |
4068 | Has he effectually gained the ear of our masters in Downing Street regarding the inefficiency and wastefulness of Governor Irving''s pet department? |
4068 | Has he so securely bound the fickle divinity to his service as to be certain of its agency in the realization of his forecasts? |
4068 | He further asks on the same subject:--"And if the governor is to be one of their own race and colour, how long could such a connection endure?" |
4068 | Now then, applying these facts to the political history of Trinidad, with which we are more particularly concerned at present, what do we find? |
4068 | Now, is it in ignorance, or through disingenuousness, that Mr. Froude has penned this argument regarding exceptions? |
4068 | Our critic, in the plenitude of his familiarity with such matters, confidently asks:--[ 214]"Who is now made wretched by the fear of hell?" |
4068 | Referring to his hypothetical confederation with its black officeholders, our author scornfully asks:--"And how long would this endure?" |
4068 | To be( very improbably) a Croesus or( still more improbably) a Bonaparte, and to perish at the conventional age, and of vulgar disease, like both? |
4068 | Was it suffocation of the babes by means of sulphur fumes, the use of beetle- paste, or exposure on the banks of the Caribbean rivers? |
4068 | Wealth and Power? |
4068 | What are we Negroes of the present day to be grateful for to the US, personified by Mr. Froude and the Colonial[ 116] Office exportations? |
4068 | Wherefore are they so? |
4068 | Why, then, should the vote of the Negro be so especially a bugbear? |
4068 | Will these men remain for ever too poor, too isolated from one another for grand racial combinations? |
4068 | With what result? |
4068 | what can tempt mortals to incur this weight of infamy? |
43771 | After mass, the body is heaved overboard and no burial rites are said, for who shall try to save a heretic''s soul? 43771 Do n''t you remember the other verses? |
43771 | Now, Toddlekins, what did I say? 43771 There it is-- see? |
43771 | What, more lemonade? |
43771 | Where has it come from? |
43771 | All I can say is, where is the white man in Jamaica? |
43771 | All very square and very Spanish were these houses, very quaint to look upon; and if this is La Guayra, where is Caracas? |
43771 | And shall I say I have not? |
43771 | And what was that summons? |
43771 | But did I tell you how as usual bravery was rewarded? |
43771 | But whither, and to what, does it lead? |
43771 | But, shall we say it? |
43771 | Could it be that this great company were the revivified followers of the dauntless Sir Walter Raleigh, searching, centuries ago, for_ El Dorado_? |
43771 | Did it not seem that he pleaded for the white man-- that the stronger black should have more charity? |
43771 | Did she not give us the earliest news of Cervera''s mysterious fleet? |
43771 | Did you ever imagine there could be such shade? |
43771 | Do n''t you remember about Captain Kidd? |
43771 | Do you suppose he is as old as that? |
43771 | Does it mean the_ Gran Hotel de Venezuela_? |
43771 | Does it seem possible that the little brown cloves, rattling in my spice- box at home, could ever have been so fresh and soft and pink? |
43771 | For did not her children say that she would never waken more? |
43771 | For how can the country''s business go on amid the turmoil of ever- impending revolution? |
43771 | For why is there a great God above and his Holy Church on earth except to be honoured? |
43771 | Green, the green of trees and grass, you ask? |
43771 | Had n''t we seen his white hat disappear under the big, open doorway as we were on the way to market? |
43771 | Has the white blood after all so little potency? |
43771 | How can I explain it to you? |
43771 | How is it that Castro is said to have laid by a million dollars out of a twelve thousand dollars a year salary? |
43771 | How long has it been wandering, and what force is it which sends it thus unharmed, save for the loss of bark, out again into the light? |
43771 | I wonder why they are not exported more freely in place of the big, thick- coated lemons? |
43771 | Is it to be a''once upon a time''story, Dad? |
43771 | Is not this a people left like children to build up the semblance of a government from the wrong stuff? |
43771 | Is there not a strain of the Moor''s fatalism still traceable in the true Spaniard? |
43771 | More German flags; they are very interesting, but why should a party of Americans be so honoured? |
43771 | Must we be honest at the expense of all else? |
43771 | No mention of colour distinction was made: but which of us was to have the charity? |
43771 | Now, when did this mighty process begin, and what internal force is at work producing this continual outpouring upon the earth''s surface? |
43771 | Or have you never had the fun? |
43771 | Or was it for us as well? |
43771 | Strange, is it not? |
43771 | Ten anxious heads lean out from ten abbreviated windows; ten distressed voices ask in all available tongues,"Where is the Doctor?" |
43771 | This, with a few nouns sprinkled in, was my vocabulary; but I had no fears,--had we not our own interpreter? |
43771 | Was he ever intended to be a householder? |
43771 | Was there a hand outstretched beneath in the far, disappearing morning which brought the ecstasy into the soul of that lonely wanderer? |
43771 | What combination of characteristics is it that makes the Spaniard such a marvellous builder, and, at the same time, such a wretched maintainer? |
43771 | What in all the world has the Southern Cross to do with the nineteenth century? |
43771 | What is his position, and what has brought him into his present deplorable condition? |
43771 | Where are the birds once peopling these forests, like myriads of rainbows? |
43771 | Where is he? |
43771 | Where is the Doctor? |
43771 | Where is the woman with the baskets? |
43771 | Where would the Englishman be in another century in Jamaica? |
43771 | Who can tell? |
43771 | Who ever thought of carrying an encyclopedia in a steamer- trunk? |
43771 | Why did we shake every bone in our bodies over the upturned streets and boulders of Caracas? |
43771 | Why is it that our going into Venezuela was considered by some unsafe? |
43771 | Why is it that there must always be those who are constantly anticipating hot weather? |
43771 | With these I can fare sumptuously:_ ¿ Cuanto cuesta?_( How much does it cost?) |
43771 | With these I can fare sumptuously:_ ¿ Cuanto cuesta?_( How much does it cost?) |
43771 | Would Jamaica revert back to the Haïtien type, or is some hand coming to uphold the island? |
43771 | You remember? |
43771 | _ ¿ Qué hora es?_( What o''clock is it?) |
43771 | _ ¿ Qué hora es?_( What o''clock is it?) |
43771 | and what could we do? |
43771 | says Toddlekins,"that was lovely; is it true? |
43771 | where should the children escape? |
32728 | ''And what is men''s work?'' |
32728 | ''Are you a Buddhist?'' |
32728 | ''But what would you do?'' |
32728 | ''Can you tell me, then,''said I,''why the Cubans hate the Spaniards?'' |
32728 | ''Do they never wish to be idle?'' |
32728 | ''Is it possible, sir,''he said,''that you live in England and are so absolutely ignorant?'' |
32728 | ''Like it?'' |
32728 | ''True,''said Rhadamanthus,''but how would it have been if he had done anything?'' |
32728 | ''Who, then, pays for it all?'' |
32728 | ''Why do the Irish hate the English?'' |
32728 | ''Would I like the house of Baring to take me into partnership?'' |
32728 | A governor- general had been threatened seriously in Canada, why not he in the Antilles? |
32728 | Am I asked what shall be done? |
32728 | And what were we doing with it? |
32728 | And why not on the produce of a fine race of men? |
32728 | Are they of any use to us, or have we responsibilities connected with them of which we are not entitled to divest ourselves? |
32728 | Are we to start again in a new sphere, carrying with us what we have gained in the discipline of our earthly trials? |
32728 | But except Chatham who is there? |
32728 | But why, it may be asked, should not Trinidad govern itself as well as Tasmania or New Zealand? |
32728 | Can he make a speech? |
32728 | Can he make a speech? |
32728 | Did it reprove the Inquisition or send a mild remonstrance to Philip II.? |
32728 | Did they drink? |
32728 | Did they like it? |
32728 | Do we wish these islands to remain as part of the British Empire? |
32728 | Do we, or do we not, intend to retain our West Indian Islands under the sovereignty of the Queen? |
32728 | Does or does not England desire that her own people shall be enabled to live and thrive in the West Indies? |
32728 | Had it been only a passing emotion of wonder and pride, or was it a prelude to a more energetic policy and active resolution? |
32728 | Had they broken loose, or what had become of them? |
32728 | Has a captain of a man- of- war whose ship is taken from him for misconduct an immediate claim to have another? |
32728 | Has the awakening come too late? |
32728 | He had inquired why they let so fine an island run to waste? |
32728 | Here is the answer to the question so often asked, What is the use of the colonies to us? |
32728 | How could it be otherwise when they were the years of his own ascendency? |
32728 | How was it in the old times when Port Royal was crowded with revelling crews of buccaneers? |
32728 | How were the fleets supplied which used to ride there? |
32728 | How, under such treatment, could we expect them to be loyal to the British connection? |
32728 | I asked where this oath was, or what were the terms of it? |
32728 | If I am asked the question, What use is Dominica to us? |
32728 | If in Dominica, why not in Trinidad? |
32728 | Is it that the times themselves are growing serious, and even the most empty- headed feel that this is no season for levity? |
32728 | Is it the effect of the abolition of purchase, and competitive examinations? |
32728 | Is there a single instance in our own or any other history of a great political speaker who has added anything to human knowledge or to human worth? |
32728 | It was pathetic, it was ominous music; for what had we done and what were we doing to set beside it in the century for which the island had been ours? |
32728 | My first thought on waking was for the smacks and the schooner Had they sunk at their moorings? |
32728 | On the produce of sugar? |
32728 | Our other colonies can do without help; why not they? |
32728 | The officers-- what became of them? |
32728 | The question to be asked in every colony is, what sort of men is it rearing? |
32728 | They even ask you with wide eyes what else you would expect? |
32728 | They have been sacrificed to slavery; are they to be sacrificed again to a dream or a doctrine? |
32728 | Was it that Great Britain did not take her colonies into partnership at all? |
32728 | Was such a fate really hanging over her? |
32728 | We have ourselves mixed the cup; must we now drink it the dregs? |
32728 | Were the people slaves? |
32728 | What are the West Indies to us? |
32728 | What can we do more? |
32728 | What could man ask for, more than to live all his days in such a climate and with such surroundings? |
32728 | What did America offer to those who joined her which we refused to give or neglected to give? |
32728 | What form could human life assume more charming than that which we were now looking on? |
32728 | What more can I say of Dominica? |
32728 | What was it that Canada, what was it that any other colony, would gain by exchanging British citizenship for American citizenship? |
32728 | What will any one of these have left behind him save the wreck of institutions which had done their work and had ceased to serve a useful purpose? |
32728 | What would Voltaire have expected for poor mankind had he seen both the precious qualities combined in this new_ Symbolum Fidei_? |
32728 | When the account is wound up, where by the side of them will stand our famous orators? |
32728 | When the curtain falls is the play over? |
32728 | Whence did the water come for the people in the town? |
32728 | Where was it, then? |
32728 | Where would political perfection be found if not here with such elaborate machinery? |
32728 | Who is now made wretched by the fear of hell? |
32728 | Who was Michael Mahon? |
32728 | Why did they not cultivate it? |
32728 | Why may it not extend itself till it has transformed the features of all our West Indian possessions? |
32728 | Why not Jamaica, why not all the West Indian Islands? |
32728 | Why not indeed? |
32728 | Why should I continue loyal when my loyalty was so contemptuously valued? |
32728 | Why should I murmur thus and vainly moan? |
32728 | Why should a realised ideal like this pass away? |
32728 | Why should she care any more for England, which has so little care for her? |
32728 | Why would it? |
32728 | With nothing to do, no one to speak to, and nothing to kill, what could become of them? |
32728 | With such air, such scenery, such views far and wide over the island, what could human creatures wish for more? |
32728 | or is a new act to commence? |
32728 | what would not one have given to meet Aaron? |
43770 | But what shall we do about the Islands of the Blest? |
43770 | Can it be that we have been dreaming, that it was never there? |
43770 | Do you mean to infer, my dear, that if we women in America had equal suffrage, you men would stay at home and wait for the money we earn? 43770 Do you need to ask? |
43770 | So you have never gone down at sea, Rudolph? 43770 Turkey? |
43770 | What are these? |
43770 | What did she have to say? |
43770 | What did you order? |
43770 | Who are the coolies? |
43770 | Why does n''t it know enough to shine on sailing day? 43770 Would they be sent?" |
43770 | Ah, my friends of the feather toques and the winged head- gear, what have we to answer for? |
43770 | And why should not Columbus have made his ships thus fast? |
43770 | Appreciate? |
43770 | But after all these snake stories you would rather not join us in our morning walk? |
43770 | But now we may go on, and would you mind if we did n''t try to learn one bit of anything more for the rest of this beautiful evening? |
43770 | But then there''s nothing much else to do in Haïti, and why not be willing to wait for dinner? |
43770 | But there will come other days in Martinique-- there must come other days, for is not this_ Le Pays des Revenants_? |
43770 | But these dark things in the water-- where do they belong? |
43770 | But we were not to be discomfited by a rain- shower, for were we not prepared? |
43770 | But what is the use in going to a market unless we can buy something? |
43770 | But what will they see here to admire? |
43770 | But who could decide in such a mob? |
43770 | But, what could one do but look and marvel, when the sea about us was swarming with tiny boats, laden with treasures of the deep and of the forest? |
43770 | Ca n''t you see it''s the sun- dial?" |
43770 | Can it be that the plume- hunters for our Northern milliners have ranged through all these sunny islands? |
43770 | Can it be that, with these few crude tools, he can fashion so wonderfully? |
43770 | Could it be more lovely, more enchanting, more mysterious under a white sun shining from out a motionless blue heaven? |
43770 | Do n''t you know they carry down the mountainside and into the city the finest water of the West Indies? |
43770 | Do you recall the warnings of our black- coated friend of last evening-- warnings against"_ les serpents_,"as he called them? |
43770 | Do you remember a game we children used to play, which had this little refrain? |
43770 | Do you remember about the children who followed us so silently on our long walk? |
43770 | Do you think we noticed the red oilcloth table cover, the dingy lamp, and the rock- bottom sofa? |
43770 | Does a naked negro baby ever look as bare to you as a naked white baby? |
43770 | Every one must have gone down into every one''s trunk this morning; was there ever such a change? |
43770 | For nothing is it, dear one, to forget the stress of living for awhile, and let one''s spirit drop into the peace of a sleeping bell? |
43770 | For who else do you think could have cut down the trees? |
43770 | Go and see the captain? |
43770 | Go to bed, we''re all right; the sea is n''t as bad as it was before midnight, and what''s the use of worrying anyway? |
43770 | Has it ever impressed you how rarely nature appeals to one''s sense of humour? |
43770 | Has the American dentist yet untrodden fields? |
43770 | Have you heard of the feats of endurance which these young girls perform? |
43770 | How can I bring again the witchery of that vision? |
43770 | How can a civilised people be willing to turn the civic house- cleaning over to a lot of vultures? |
43770 | How far are we from the voodoo and all the savagery of Africa? |
43770 | How they will carry upon their heads, over one hundred pounds out from St. Pierre across the mountains, a distance of fifty miles in one day? |
43770 | I called to Daddy:"What''s the use going any further? |
43770 | I simply lay there wondering why, why, why, I had ever come? |
43770 | I wonder how the bride feels by this time? |
43770 | I wondered when the final smash would come and our big toy no longer swing back on its round legs? |
43770 | If we did n''t find the gutter agreeable to our over- refined sensibilities why not go where it was"Belle"? |
43770 | Is it possible that the writer of those lines had forgotten the Lady Proserpine? |
43770 | Is it possible that there are no song- birds here, and in fact no birds of plumage left about the settlements? |
43770 | It was so like the statue on the square without that the one at my side gasps,"It is he, Mother, what shall we do?" |
43770 | Let me see-- how many meals is this so far? |
43770 | Oh, I am so glad, for then you would n''t be here, would you?" |
43770 | One was Guadeloupe, the other-- what shall we call her; Florentine? |
43770 | Proserpine? |
43770 | Shall we not see you in the morning? |
43770 | So now the question is, how shall he get rid of the mongoose? |
43770 | Something was continually hammering into my ears:"Why do n''t you tell about the aqueducts? |
43770 | Tell me, what would you have said? |
43770 | The Kaiser''s subjects talk fair enough, but they unquestionably want St. Thomas-- and who knows? |
43770 | The señor''s first question was:"Have you seen the Cathedral?" |
43770 | There, now, may I go on, and may I say just what I wish of the señor without offence? |
43770 | These swarms of men and boys had come out to dive for coins-- silver preferred-- and how had they come? |
43770 | Was it upon such wrecks of life that the gentle_ Saviour_ gazed in pitying love? |
43770 | Was n''t that enough to establish a lasting bond of interest between Martinique and the wanderer from the North? |
43770 | Was n''t there just cause that I should wake him up? |
43770 | What can be keeping the shoppers so long? |
43770 | What can he be saying? |
43770 | What can the señor do without his best umbrella? |
43770 | What could I do but go? |
43770 | What does it matter? |
43770 | What good can I do by holding my breath and bracing back in this way? |
43770 | What mattered a short delay? |
43770 | Where are our monuments, our squares, our well- watered streets? |
43770 | Who knows but some of her charms might miraculously sift in through a rent in my package and breathe a spell upon my words? |
43770 | Who knows but that it is even older? |
43770 | Who says that all the true Santo Domingo mahogany was cut generations ago? |
43770 | Who shall say? |
43770 | Why are we so dumbly indifferent to that craving? |
43770 | Why did they ever have a mother who would be so unconventional? |
43770 | Why do n''t you give more information?" |
43770 | Why not leave them in the box at the consulate? |
43770 | Why, why are we of the North so blind to the soul''s necessity for beauty? |
43770 | Will he take the black umbrella of his wife''s aunt? |
43770 | Will the Germans try to block our acquisition of this group? |
43770 | Would he forswear the friendship? |
43770 | You remember it was a great ceiba to which Columbus made fast his ships on the bank of the Ozama River in Santo Domingo? |
43770 | You''re not nervous? |
43770 | were we never to begin our search? |
43770 | what is it you''re drawing?" |
43770 | what would the señor think if he should ever read these words? |
43770 | yes, he responds with great ardour, but with what result? |
21453 | After? |
21453 | And now,said he,"I will go out and meet Mr Clare and Walter-- down on the neck, are they not? |
21453 | And what are you afraid of? 21453 And, what do you say to yonder craft?" |
21453 | Another? 21453 Are you come to take us from this?" |
21453 | Are your halliards all clear there, boys? |
21453 | At it, ai n''t you, boys, with forecastle appetites? 21453 Boys,"I cried,"boys, where are you?" |
21453 | But you will though, wo n''t you, Captain, and make Mr Clare, too? |
21453 | Come here, sir,said Harry to Ugly;"now why have you not eaten this nice meal, eh?" |
21453 | Good- night, boy; ca n''t you say something, Captain Gruff? |
21453 | Has all this been an hallucination? |
21453 | Have you got any, Clump? |
21453 | Higginsons? 21453 I hope that we shall get the_ Youth_ safe at her moorings before night comes, or a storm either-- shall we not?" |
21453 | Is it possible? |
21453 | Is it so very funny to see Clump doing honour to a day once so big with the fate of England and the world? 21453 Is that anchor ready?" |
21453 | Is that you, Clare? 21453 Is the chest secured with a key?" |
21453 | Mr Clare,called out Captain Mugford,"wo n''t you twist two of the boys''lines together and bend them on that gaff? |
21453 | My hebbens, Massa Drake, wat did scar you? |
21453 | No? 21453 Oh, that is it, Clump-- consolation, eh? |
21453 | Phil,interrupted Mr Clare,"what light is that flaring up away ahead there on your lee bow?" |
21453 | Shall I bring him down, sir? |
21453 | Shall we all be there together, father, and for the whole summer, and without any school? 21453 Was he willing to die,"I asked,"just as we were on the threshold of safety?" |
21453 | Wat will you''ab, sir? |
21453 | We must let go another anchor-- eh, Harry? |
21453 | We''ll hope so,answered Captain Mugford, who pulled out his pipe and filled it hard, continuing,"Who''ll hand me out a light from the cuddy?" |
21453 | Well, gentlemen, are you ready to proceed? |
21453 | Wen you''se cum''ere nudder time,''spect dese ole black folks be gwine''way-- be gwine''crost de ribber Jordan? |
21453 | What is all this, my poor fellow? |
21453 | What stuff,sang out Walter, laughing;"what puts that in your head, Bob?" |
21453 | What think you, Davis? 21453 What will I have, ay? |
21453 | Where are they now? |
21453 | Where away? |
21453 | Which way will''re go, sir? |
21453 | Who are you, big voice? |
21453 | Who are you, who dare to come and invade our territory? |
21453 | Who harmed you, Bar? 21453 Why,"asked Drake,"what are you going to do, Bob, with bullets and buckshot?" |
21453 | Young shipmates, you remember how Mr Clare talked to you one day in the_ Clear the Track_--eh? 21453 _ Massa_ Tregellin''s house, is it? |
21453 | ''Spects de ole house git cole an dull to yous now;''spects de yun Massas want git home?" |
21453 | ------------------------------------------------------------------------ What was going on at the cape all this time? |
21453 | --it was the voice we had heard before--"wake up and let us in?" |
21453 | A ninety- pound halibut, eh?" |
21453 | About five fathoms, is it?" |
21453 | All right? |
21453 | An I''se to fire de gun, eh? |
21453 | And you have been running the bunnies till you are blown, and your masters would not shoot-- eh? |
21453 | Ar''n''t yous gwine afore dey is done dead? |
21453 | Are you ready to go about? |
21453 | Bob and I have a little secret service to attend to, which ca n''t be postponed; so will you shoot the ducks for me?" |
21453 | Bread and butter? |
21453 | But talking about the good times we have had, I have enjoyed our shooting best of all, and so has Ugly, I''ll bet-- haven''t you, Ugly?" |
21453 | But tell me, did you come here alone? |
21453 | But was it possible for us to hold out? |
21453 | By the way, there is a hatchet with us, is there not? |
21453 | Can it be that our young are no longer to be nourished on sago, rice, or maize? |
21453 | Can you tell me if any people are residing on your island who may wish to leave it? |
21453 | Captain, where do you propose landing us? |
21453 | Could the Captain be there, sleeping yet? |
21453 | Did you take notice h- e- ow he was overboard as quick as you spoke, afore I started a shut? |
21453 | Do n''t you shake in your boots already? |
21453 | Do you see?" |
21453 | Eh, Mr Clare?" |
21453 | Eh? |
21453 | Give us a light, shipmate?" |
21453 | Had the Allies been beaten at Waterloo, what might not have become of our beloved country? |
21453 | Had the little fellow been washed overboard from some vessel? |
21453 | Had they been hidden there by smugglers, or by whom? |
21453 | Have you any water on board?" |
21453 | Have you no companions?" |
21453 | He ai n''t much hurt, is he?" |
21453 | He would have meat or other things to get for the table, but would always reach the boat first in returning, and when he saw his"young master?" |
21453 | How will that do, eh, old fellow?" |
21453 | I say, boys, wo n''t Mr Clare wish he had had a hand in catching that haul?" |
21453 | I thought to myself what good will all their wealth be to them if the ship goes down? |
21453 | If so, you''ll not forget them to- night-- will you?" |
21453 | Is it not so, Jacob?" |
21453 | Is the degradation of effeminate land rats, cheese- eaters, wharf robbers, stable vermin, to come upon us? |
21453 | Is the mainsail ready for hoisting?" |
21453 | Massa Clare, Massa Capting, ar''n''t yous gwine? |
21453 | Mathematics in a vessel''s hold, what was it but a foreshadowing of navigation? |
21453 | Mr Clare called to us,"Boys, what are you whispering about over there?" |
21453 | Nearly forty years deaf, but I hear God''s voice within me_ now_, louder and louder every day; and what has He done for us to- day? |
21453 | So she bent forward anxiously, and asked him in a voice full of concern--"Wat''s dat, Massa Drake-- wat''s dat you say?" |
21453 | Some of your nonsense, boys, eh?" |
21453 | Tell me first-- Vidocq? |
21453 | The clear water of the bay soused in impatient little ripples against the boats we stood ready to enter, as if to say,"Well, why do n''t you come on?" |
21453 | The first words that were distinguishable from the reef were--"Is that you, Mr Clare? |
21453 | Then we heard a shot, but knew by the report that it was not Harry''s gun, and Drake called down the stairs,"Clump, who fired?" |
21453 | They had rounded the cape, and old Phil asked again--"Whar ne- e- ow, Capting-- in shore, you think, or straight ahead?" |
21453 | Ugly, boy, are you glad to see the old Captain trudging over the rabbit- ground? |
21453 | Was there a fond master mourning for him in Newcastle, England, or in Newcastle, Pennsylvania? |
21453 | Wen I''se done berry you, ou yer''spects gwine''posit Clump en de bowels ob de arth, ay? |
21453 | Were they now our property? |
21453 | What can it be?" |
21453 | What can it be?" |
21453 | What could have become of our young shipmate? |
21453 | What could it be that I was to encounter? |
21453 | What did it mean? |
21453 | What do you think of it, Mr Clare, eh?" |
21453 | What do yun Massas shoot?" |
21453 | What else is so delightful and health- giving? |
21453 | What is it worse than what we have been working for? |
21453 | What was to be the result? |
21453 | When do you sail?" |
21453 | When the guns were washed, dried, and rubbed off with oil, I said to Clump,"Have you got any bullets or buckshot?" |
21453 | Where could Mr Clare be all this time? |
21453 | Where is our` life on the ocean wave''? |
21453 | Where is your pain?" |
21453 | Who writes me notes? |
21453 | Who''ll have the first fish?" |
21453 | Without school? |
21453 | Yes, Mr Clare? |
21453 | You say it is all loaded and ready, eh? |
21453 | You will go with us, sir, I hope? |
21453 | You''se gwine sure?" |
21453 | can we sail to- day?" |
21453 | did n''t we three give a terrific chorus of assent? |
21453 | or had he swum off some neighbouring beach to bring a stick for his master? |
21453 | or had they killed him? |
21453 | said Harry;"was there ever a jollier place for fun?" |
21453 | what in the name of all that''s marine does this mean? |
21453 | where is that?" |
21453 | where is, I say, where` a home in the rolling deep''? |
21453 | which way shall we have the breeze when it does come?" |
21453 | woy''se ole Juno afeer''d? |
36621 | ''Sdeath, sir, how dare you!--_ Sir Chr._''Sdeath, sir, how dare you look an honest man in the face? |
36621 | ''Sdeath, sir, would you have me travel like a lord? |
36621 | ''sbud, do you doubt my glass? |
36621 | All right, think ye? |
36621 | And how came you, sir, to impose upon me, and assume the name of Inkle? |
36621 | Ar''n''t I governor of Barbadoes? |
36621 | Are you then really acquainted with the whole affair? |
36621 | At it again, eh? |
36621 | But are you sure, now, you ar''n''t mistaken? |
36621 | But did you mind the women? |
36621 | But do we muster all hands? |
36621 | But how do you like this, Wows? |
36621 | But how the plague am I to live here? |
36621 | But suppose you meet an old shabby friend in misfortune, that you do n''t wish to be seen speak to-- what would you do? |
36621 | But then, the report of his hospitality-- his odd, blunt, whimsical friendship-- his whole behaviour--_ Nar._ All stare you in the face; eh, Campley? |
36621 | But what are we to do next, sir? |
36621 | But where shall I look for safety? |
36621 | But you have had a lover or two in your time; eh, Wowski? |
36621 | But, in two words, will you dispose of her, or no? |
36621 | But, old Medium, what have you to say for your hopeful nephew? |
36621 | D''ye understand your lesson? |
36621 | Do you like it? |
36621 | Do you think I travel merely for motion? |
36621 | He great prince? |
36621 | His hair puffed? |
36621 | How can I, in honour, retract? |
36621 | I had forgot one material point-- you ar''n''t married, I hope? |
36621 | I wish my countrywomen could see me----But wo n''t your warriors kill us? |
36621 | Is n''t it fine? |
36621 | Is not it, as it were, a marriage made above? |
36621 | Is that young Indian of yours going to our market? |
36621 | My presence might distress her-- You conceive me? |
36621 | Od''s my life!----Now for the news-- If it is but as I hope-- Any dispatches? |
36621 | Our black fair? |
36621 | Sail._ Do? |
36621 | Tell me how it happened? |
36621 | Tell me, my good fellow-- what said the wench? |
36621 | What did your countrymen do for the poor fellow? |
36621 | What he''s at his multiplication table again? |
36621 | What make you love me now? |
36621 | What must we do, lads? |
36621 | What plan can I follow? |
36621 | What say you, girl? |
36621 | What the deuce should I be afraid of? |
36621 | What the plague made you loiter so long? |
36621 | What then? |
36621 | What was it? |
36621 | What? |
36621 | Why hover about the city, instead of boldly attacking the guard? |
36621 | Why not? |
36621 | Why, sure, friend, you would not live here with a black? |
36621 | With white and grey hair, eh, my pretty beauty spot? |
36621 | You are acquainted with his character, no doubt, to a hair? |
36621 | You remember the instructions I gave you on the voyage? |
36621 | Zounds, have not I given you proofs? |
36621 | Zounds, what harm did I ever do to be hunted to death by a pack of bloodhounds? |
36621 | [_ Aside._] I fancy, young gentleman, as you are such a bosom friend of the Governor''s, you can hardly do any thing to alter your situation with him? |
36621 | [_ Aside._][_ Exit.__ Inkle._''Sdeath, what am I about? |
36621 | [_ Aside._]_ Med._ Why, what the devil is the matter with you? |
36621 | [_ Clapping INKLE on the shoulder._]_ Sir Chr._ How came you to know him? |
36621 | [_ Exit.__ Sir Chr._ Well-- shall I see the girl? |
36621 | [_ Exit.__ Wows._ Who be that fine man? |
36621 | [_ In a whisper._]_ Inkle._ Are they all gone by? |
36621 | [_ Kisses her._] Well, how do you do? |
36621 | [_ Peeping in at the door._]_ Trudge._ May I come in, sir? |
36621 | [_ Stroking his chin._] Was it like mine? |
36621 | [_ To the Governor._]_ Sir Chr._ Well, young gentleman? |
36621 | [_ WOWSKI goes to TRUDGE._]_ Yar._ And shall we-- shall we be happy? |
36621 | _ 2d Plant._ What were the sailors aboard? |
36621 | _ Camp._ Will my Narcissa consent to my happiness? |
36621 | _ Inkle._ And where is Yarico? |
36621 | _ Inkle._ Are there no better inns in the town? |
36621 | _ Inkle._ Have you provided a proper apartment? |
36621 | _ Inkle._ I follow you-- Yet, can you run some risk in following me? |
36621 | _ Inkle._ I have no means-- how can I? |
36621 | _ Inkle._ Is he so hasty? |
36621 | _ Inkle._ Joy!----of what? |
36621 | _ Inkle._ Suppose, old gentleman, you had a son? |
36621 | _ Inkle._ Trudge, how far are the sailors before us? |
36621 | _ Inkle._ Well, is the coast clear? |
36621 | _ Inkle._ What does the booby want? |
36621 | _ Inkle._ Whence comes your intelligence, sir? |
36621 | _ Inkle._ Why sure you ar''n''t afraid? |
36621 | _ Med._ And is n''t it determined, between the old folks, that you are to marry Narcissa, as soon as we get there? |
36621 | _ Med._ Shall they? |
36621 | _ Med._ Then what the devil do you do here, hunting old hairy negroes, when you ought to be obliging a fine girl in the ship? |
36621 | _ Med._ Well, Sir Christopher, what do you say to my hopeful nephew now? |
36621 | _ Med._ Who, I afraid? |
36621 | _ Med._ You were? |
36621 | _ Nar._ What signifies talking to_ me_, when you have such opposition from others? |
36621 | _ O say, simple maid, have you form''d any notion__ Of all the rude dangers in crossing the ocean?__ When winds whistle shrilly, ah! |
36621 | _ Oh then turn about, my little tawny tight one!__ Do n''t you like me?_ Wows. |
36621 | _ Patty._ And this is she he has brought to Barbadoes? |
36621 | _ Patty._ Gemini; what did you do? |
36621 | _ Patty._ Lord your honour, what young lady could refuse a captain? |
36621 | _ Patty._ Lord, ma''am, how could that be? |
36621 | _ Patty._ Lord, madam, how is it possible to help talking? |
36621 | _ Patty._ Well; and tell me, Trudge;--she''s pretty, you say-- Is she fair or brown? |
36621 | _ Patty._ Well? |
36621 | _ Patty._ What, all alone? |
36621 | _ Plant._ Aye, aye, natural enough at sea.--But at how much do you value her? |
36621 | _ Plant._ I mean, is she for our sale of slaves? |
36621 | _ Plant._ She''s your slave, I take it? |
36621 | _ Sir Chr._ And did you, Narcissa, join in--_ Nar._ How could I, my dear sir, disobey you? |
36621 | _ Sir Chr._ But you would not sell her, and be hang''d to you, you dog, would you? |
36621 | _ Sir Chr._ From the quay? |
36621 | _ Sir Chr._ So much the better.----Foibles, quotha? |
36621 | _ Sir Chr._ Who? |
36621 | _ Sir Chr._ Who? |
36621 | _ Trudge._ And what became of him at last? |
36621 | _ Trudge._ Aye, what was that for? |
36621 | _ Trudge._ Can you keep a secret? |
36621 | _ Trudge._ Did n''t you hear a noise? |
36621 | _ Trudge._ Fine men, eh? |
36621 | _ Trudge._ Let''s see now-- What are you to do, when I introduce you to the nobility, gentry, and others-- of my acquaintance? |
36621 | _ Trudge._ Me? |
36621 | _ Trudge._ No? |
36621 | _ Trudge._ Why would you do that? |
36621 | _ Trudge._ Why, there''s no great harm in''t, I hope? |
36621 | _ Trudge._ Will you? |
36621 | _ Trudge._ Wo n''t you look and see? |
36621 | _ Wampum, Swampum, Yanko, Lanko, Nanko, Pownatowski,__ Black men-- plenty-- twenty-- fight for me,__ White man, woo you true?_ Trudge. |
36621 | _ Who?_ Wows. |
36621 | _ Wows._ For what you leave me? |
36621 | _ Wows._ No, no-- not you-- no--[_Running to him anxiously._]_ Trudge._ No? |
36621 | _ Wows._ Steal!--What that? |
36621 | _ Wows._ What that? |
36621 | _ Wows._ You great man in your country? |
36621 | _ Wows._ You not love me now? |
36621 | _ Wows._ Your countrymen dress so? |
36621 | _ Yar._ And do you know the danger that surrounds you here? |
36621 | _ Yar._ And sha n''t it, sha n''t it indeed? |
36621 | _ Yar._ I knew we should-- and yet I feared-- but shall I still watch over you? |
36621 | _ Yar._ Nay, do not laugh at me-- but is it so? |
36621 | _ Yar._ Say, stranger, whence come you? |
36621 | a tawny? |
36621 | and how are you to recommend yourself, when you have nothing to say, amongst all our great friends? |
36621 | and what were her colours? |
36621 | and you learnt it from a strange man, that tumbled from a big boat, many moons ago, you say? |
36621 | another woman? |
36621 | blood, ar''n''t I in the West Indies? |
36621 | did he teach you to smoke? |
36621 | did n''t you do as you were ordered? |
36621 | did n''t you speak to her? |
36621 | did she say she''d come? |
36621 | he!--Do you think any smart, tight, little, black- eyed wench, would be struck with my figure? |
36621 | he''ll arrive with the next vessel, depend on''t-- besides, have not I had this in view ever since they were children? |
36621 | how can she unmov''d e''er see__ Her swain his death incur?__ If once the squire is seen expire,__ He lives with her._ All. |
36621 | how could you help it? |
36621 | is this a time to jest? |
36621 | let it be light and airy, d''ye hear? |
36621 | pardon me; but you''ll find that hereafter-- besides, you, doubtless, know his character? |
36621 | the fine lady''s complexions? |
36621 | was he like me? |
36621 | what form is this?----are you a man? |
36621 | what means, then, must be used for my safety? |
36621 | what''s that? |
36621 | what''s the meaning of this? |
36621 | whence can it proceed? |
36621 | why this? |
36621 | why what shall I do, if I get in their paws? |
36621 | with what? |
36621 | wo n''t they remind you,__ To sigh with regret, for the grot left behind you?_ Yar. |
36621 | you mean to sell her? |
55100 | A nice fellow, Jones; eh? 55100 And be at Cien Fuegos on the 28th?" |
55100 | And if the ounces be wanting, and they do n''t get married? |
55100 | And is commerce tolerably flourishing? |
55100 | And is justice ultimately done on the offenders? |
55100 | And the women? |
55100 | And then he''ll come back to you? |
55100 | And what is the prevailing disease of the colony? |
55100 | And who manages the church? |
55100 | And who shaves them? |
55100 | And why did you come to visit such a region as this? |
55100 | And will they not get another? |
55100 | And will you not return home? |
55100 | And you,said I, to the mild voice,"will not you return?" |
55100 | Are you sea- sick? |
55100 | Are you sure of that? |
55100 | Are you talking of sugar? 55100 But do they mind being locked up alone?" |
55100 | But what_ do_ they do? |
55100 | But will nothing grow there? |
55100 | But will they not look elsewhere for other work? |
55100 | But you did love him? |
55100 | Can anything be done to stop it, James? |
55100 | Do n''t you like going in the droger? |
55100 | Do you ever find it dull here? |
55100 | Do you observe,said a lady to me,"that the women when they walk never hold up their dresses?" |
55100 | Does it? |
55100 | How can you blame the Captain- General,they have said,"when the same thing is done by the French and English consuls through the islands?" |
55100 | I say, how about that bath? |
55100 | Into the very hole? |
55100 | Is there a public- house,I exclaimed, feverishly,"in this---- place?" |
55100 | It is love then that ails you? |
55100 | James,said I,"might I trouble you to leave those boots, and see the bath filled for me?" |
55100 | Madam,said I,"is there an inn here; and if so, where may it be?" |
55100 | No; she kept no hotel now- a- days-- what use was there for an hotel in St. Georges? 55100 Nothing? |
55100 | Oh, you live at Kingston? |
55100 | People often do come out and go back again without ever reaching the crater at all, do n''t they? |
55100 | Said a mass over him? |
55100 | Served me right; did n''t it? 55100 Start at four?" |
55100 | Taken up with a class? |
55100 | The Jew is going to be married then? |
55100 | Then what''s the harm of the droger? |
55100 | Well,said I,"and what do you think of it?" |
55100 | Well; it was n''t de ting, was it? 55100 What of Trinidad?" |
55100 | Where shall I call for you? |
55100 | White art thou, my friend? 55100 Who on earth is that princess?" |
55100 | Who you call fellor? 55100 Why did he not go home?" |
55100 | Why the mischief do n''t you come on? |
55100 | Will they pitch into one another? |
55100 | Will you have a long drink or a short one? |
55100 | Wonderful that; is n''t it? |
55100 | You do n''t think much of yellow fever? |
55100 | You do n''t think we have, do you? |
55100 | You tink so? |
55100 | Your heart would permit of your doing that? |
55100 | A few friends were to dine with me that day; and where would have been my turtle soup had Soulouque and his suite taken possession of the house? |
55100 | A nice house of assembly, is n''t it?" |
55100 | After all, what we should desire first, and chiefly-- is it not the truth? |
55100 | After that, how can I say ought against the hotel? |
55100 | And are the Americans the first bumptious people on record? |
55100 | And how could they fail to be satisfied, looking at their advantages? |
55100 | And if he travel for pleasure how can he possibly find less? |
55100 | And if so, why disturb such contentment? |
55100 | And is it not reasonable to suppose that you do do so? |
55100 | And is not this God''s ordinance? |
55100 | And may we not boast that this is the only object looked for in all our treaties and diplomatic doings? |
55100 | And that waiter, David; was he not for good- nature the pink of waiters? |
55100 | And then where are our professions for the amelioration, and especially for the Christianity of the human race? |
55100 | And then who ever smiled as she smiled? |
55100 | And what shall I say of Greytown? |
55100 | And what then? |
55100 | And when shall I see that gallant young lieutenant again? |
55100 | And who can blame the black man? |
55100 | And who have displaced so many of the poor and weak, and spread abroad so vast an energy, such an extent of power as we of England? |
55100 | And why should we begrudge the same career to America? |
55100 | And you, are you willing to assist him in his views? |
55100 | Are there not white men enough-- men and brothers-- to do the somewhat disagreeable work of soldiering for him? |
55100 | Are these men so punished as to deter others by the fear of similar treatment? |
55100 | Are we not to be protected from competition? |
55100 | Are we to associate with the children of such women, and teach our daughters that vice is not to be shunned?" |
55100 | Bull?" |
55100 | But if so, what of Trinidad? |
55100 | But may we not say that that giant has been killed? |
55100 | But nevertheless, who can stand by quiescent and see a brute half murder the poor woman whom he should protect? |
55100 | But one has to think of that doctor''s dictum--"The prevalent disease, sir? |
55100 | But shall I not write a distinct chapter as to this most respectable little island-- an island that pays its way? |
55100 | But then, what is the use of mountains? |
55100 | But what could I do? |
55100 | But what could Lords and Commons do in Malta, or in Jersey? |
55100 | But what does the negro care? |
55100 | But what if the work be not as yet good? |
55100 | But what is the use of expostulating with a man who ca n''t speak a word of English? |
55100 | But what of that? |
55100 | But what shame of that? |
55100 | But what, O lady, of their grandchildren? |
55100 | But when did Sir Robert Peel''s pledge in one year bind even his own conduct in the next? |
55100 | But when has truly mighty work been heralded by magniloquence? |
55100 | But which colony is second in the race?" |
55100 | But who can tell what government will prevail in New Granada in forty- nine years? |
55100 | But who will put his capital into a country in which the President can pass any law he pleases on his own behalf? |
55100 | But why should not the men be taken up to the mountains, as has been done with the white soldiers in Jamaica? |
55100 | But with whom did the fault chiefly lie? |
55100 | By what other process have poor and weak races been compelled to give way to those who have power and energy? |
55100 | Can I have my clothes washed? |
55100 | Can it be wondered at that in his heart of hearts he should still have a sort of yearning after slavery? |
55100 | D''you like dat name?" |
55100 | Did any of my readers ever see the beds of an Irish cotters establishment in county Cork? |
55100 | Did any one of my readers ever have a berth allotted to him just over the screw? |
55100 | Did we have any grand words from old George Stephenson, with his"vera awkward for the cou"? |
55100 | Do we not, in regard to all our friends, take the good that we find in them, aware that in the very best there will be some deficiency to forgive? |
55100 | Does she not daily show that she is unfit to hold it? |
55100 | From the invention of a new constitution to that of a new shirt is it even wanting? |
55100 | From whence is that sum to be procured? |
55100 | Gentlemen capitalists, will you on this showing take shares in the concern? |
55100 | Have we a right to expect that he should be perfect? |
55100 | He goes home, and what does he say of us? |
55100 | He is a man and a brother, and shall we not regard him? |
55100 | How could it be kept while the quicksilver was standing at eighty- five in the shade? |
55100 | How many new eras have there not been? |
55100 | How on earth was she to get herself dressed, it occurred to me then, if we should postpone our journey and remain there? |
55100 | How should we look at the English politician who would propose to sell it to the United States; or beg Spain to take it as an appendage to Cuba? |
55100 | How would this affect the clearance? |
55100 | How, indeed, can it be otherwise? |
55100 | However, I ought to forgive him, for did he not return to me sixpence discount, unasked? |
55100 | I replied in my ignorance;"has not one to go by the music in Jamaica?" |
55100 | I said;"is not that high?" |
55100 | I will not dig cane- holes for half a crown a day; and why should I expect him to do so? |
55100 | I wonder whether I could make the process in any simple way intelligible; or whether in doing so I should afford gratification to a single individual? |
55100 | If I ask Mrs. So- and- So here, how can I keep out Mrs. Such- a- One? |
55100 | If all this canal grandiloquence would pave the way to"transit,"might it not be well? |
55100 | If he be vituperative, who can wonder at it? |
55100 | If labourers be brought here, will not these white people again cultivate their grounds? |
55100 | If they lie to you, can not you lie to them? |
55100 | If you do n''t drink your wine after dinner, why not take it before? |
55100 | In Costa Rica, Don Juan Rafael Mora, familiarly called Juanito, is now the president, having been not long since re- elected(?) |
55100 | In how many pages is its history written? |
55100 | In what compound are we to look for the full strength of each component part? |
55100 | Is he not a man and a brother?" |
55100 | Is it fair to put warders among such men, so well able to act, so ill able to control their actions? |
55100 | Is it not for that reason that we hold Gibraltar, are jealous about Egypt, and resolved to have Perim in our power? |
55100 | Is it not the case that the Anti- Slavery Society has done its work?--has done its work at any rate as regards the British West Indies? |
55100 | Is it not thus that Great Britain, speaking to him from the high places in Exeter Hall, shouts to him in his death struggles? |
55100 | Is it not thus that we should accept their little efforts? |
55100 | Is it not true that we would fain make all ways open to all men? |
55100 | Is not this peculiar eloquence used in propagating all French projects for increased civilization? |
55100 | Is there anything to eat? |
55100 | It may seem harsh to say so thus plainly; but will any philanthropical lover of these lower classes deny the fact? |
55100 | It was then one: and where was he to call for me? |
55100 | Many of them are in their way good; but are they not such as we have generally seen in the lower spheres of life? |
55100 | May we not say that, having got rid of them out of St. Vincent, we can afford to get rid of them altogether? |
55100 | Must it not be so also with the Jamaica planters? |
55100 | Oh, my hard taskmaster of the sugar- mill, is he not better off than thou? |
55100 | Oh; we are getting into the trade- winds, are we? |
55100 | Or is it even possible to conceive of a world progressing without such a love? |
55100 | Putting these two things together, would not any simple man advise them to abandon sugar? |
55100 | Shall we not again be slaves, in reality, if not in name? |
55100 | Shall we not be driven from our squatting patches? |
55100 | Shall we not have to work?" |
55100 | Shall we not starve; or, almost worse than that, shall we not again fall under Adam''s curse? |
55100 | Should I go back and ask for a seat, if it were but on a bench in the government scullery, among the female negroes? |
55100 | Should punch be as strong as brandy, or as sweet as sugar? |
55100 | Since you are in such a hurry, shall we make a start of it?" |
55100 | That the fact of the colony having been conquered need preclude it from the benefit(?) |
55100 | The great West Indian question is now this: Is there reasonable ground for such hope? |
55100 | The laws even are still French, and the people are, I believe, blessed(?) |
55100 | The political question that presses upon me in viewing Jamaica, is certainly this-- Will the growth of sugar pay in Jamaica, or will it not? |
55100 | The question stands thus: can not he be made to do so? |
55100 | These very people of whom we are speaking, would they not be your cousins but for the lack of matrimony? |
55100 | They are both very respectable, no doubt; but what were their grandmothers?" |
55100 | This again is a matter of considerable importance, as, indeed, where is it not? |
55100 | To have done their appointed work, and done it well,--should not this be enough for any men? |
55100 | Under these circumstances, who can feel sympathy with her, or wish that she should retain her colony? |
55100 | Vaminos? |
55100 | Was I not dressed from my chin downwards, and was not that enough for her? |
55100 | Was Luther apt to speak with great phraseology? |
55100 | Was there aught of the eloquent sententiousness of a French marshal about the lines of Torres Vedras? |
55100 | Well, what has the Don said of my beard? |
55100 | What could a man do when so appealed to but rush quickly from beneath his musquito curtains to her rescue? |
55100 | What could a man say to him on so terribly mortal a subject? |
55100 | What could he have said to his young wife''s mother when she came to meet him at Southampton, expecting to throw her arms round her daughter? |
55100 | What has a man to wish for but that? |
55100 | What have they been doing in the Ionian Islands? |
55100 | What if we should put our money into the canal, and future presidents should refuse to be bound by the agreement? |
55100 | What is our old aristocratic planter to do with a negro churchwarden on one side, and a negro coroner on another? |
55100 | What is that to consumption, whose visits with you are constant, who daily demands its hecatombs? |
55100 | What love can he have for Spain? |
55100 | What minister can pledge his successors? |
55100 | What more can a man rationally want if he travel for business? |
55100 | What must the place be during the nine months when Parliament does not sit? |
55100 | What other place could I name? |
55100 | What should I do? |
55100 | What should make us dull? |
55100 | What was I to do? |
55100 | What was it to me that she was as black as my boot, or that she had come to look after the ship''s washing? |
55100 | What wonder that Presidents so spoken of should sign away their lands and waters? |
55100 | What would be said of an English agriculturist who burnt his straw? |
55100 | What would the world now be without it? |
55100 | What would they do in the Scilly Islands? |
55100 | Where shall I sleep? |
55100 | Where should I go? |
55100 | Where was I to go? |
55100 | Where would my cacao- plants be then?" |
55100 | Who cares? |
55100 | Who could ask more, madam, than to bask in such sunshine as yours from year''s end to year''s end?" |
55100 | Who is not sick of the grandiloquence of French progress? |
55100 | Who knows what may occur between this and the end of the century? |
55100 | Who knows, or has known, or ever seen, any man that has returned happy from the diggings, and now sits contented under his own fig- tree? |
55100 | Whom shall we name next? |
55100 | Why else should they have been named after him of the heavens who first suffered from such mishaps? |
55100 | Why not Juanito as well as any one else? |
55100 | Why not allow the claim; or seem to allow it, if practicable? |
55100 | Why should a negro enlist any more than work? |
55100 | Why should he care for the busher? |
55100 | Why should not those felons-- for such they all are, I presume, till the term of their punishment be over-- why should they sleep after five? |
55100 | Why should such a man be shut up for life at such an outlandish place? |
55100 | Why should we think that Providence should work more rapidly now in these latter ages? |
55100 | Why that drinking of spirits and smoking of tobacco among men whose term of life in that prison should be a term of suffering? |
55100 | Why those long twelve hours of bed and rest, spent in each other''s company, with noise, and singing, and jollity? |
55100 | Will coarse abuse and the calling of names avail anything? |
55100 | Will such back and belly arrangements as those I have described deter men from sin by the fear of its consequences? |
55100 | Would n''t they hang a cloth over it for a shilling?" |
55100 | Would not a strict Governor, with due reference to Downing Street, do almost as well? |
55100 | and what was I to do with myself for three hours? |
55100 | do n''t you know what quick dances are? |
55100 | how about that bath?" |
55100 | or frowned as she can frown? |
55100 | or of some English cotter''s establishments in Dorsetshire, Wiltshire, and Somersetshire? |
55100 | said I;"and he with such a beautiful nose?" |
55100 | that we would have them open to ourselves, certainly; but not closed against any human being? |
55100 | the soldiers say in Bermuda when they complain of their own; and who can answer them? |
55100 | what dat?" |
55100 | what have they done in Jamaica? |
55100 | where was the lava? |
55100 | why should he work at thy order? |
55100 | why should their diet be more than strong health requires? |
55100 | why should their hours of work be light? |
22033 | ''Fraid of dem Haiti niggers? 22033 ''Where did you find these papers?'' |
22033 | A bit done up, eh? |
22033 | A pirate hoard? |
22033 | An''there is mo''kinds of debbil- trees''an them on Terror Cove? |
22033 | And Cecil, Father? |
22033 | And have the thefts stopped? |
22033 | And if I do not go? |
22033 | And it has n''t blown itself out? |
22033 | And the big, black ogre? |
22033 | And what general impression did you get from the meeting? |
22033 | And what is that? |
22033 | And what''s that? |
22033 | And when? |
22033 | And why? |
22033 | And you? |
22033 | And you? |
22033 | Are they so frequent? |
22033 | Are you afraid to follow me? |
22033 | Are you coming, too? |
22033 | Are you sure? |
22033 | Are you the boy Dinville cabled about? |
22033 | But did n''t the President try to find the hoard on his own account? |
22033 | But do n''t I go and say good- by to the City Editor, or the Managing Editor, or anyone? |
22033 | But has every hurricane a center? |
22033 | But how could I do that? |
22033 | But how did you get in? |
22033 | But how were they found there? |
22033 | But suppose the cables are broken there, too? |
22033 | But what do you want? |
22033 | But what does he do? |
22033 | But what is he? |
22033 | But what starts them, sir? |
22033 | But where does the shark come in? |
22033 | But where, and but how? |
22033 | But why? |
22033 | But yes, Monsieur, what would you? 22033 But, what you t''ink, Sah? |
22033 | But,cried the lad in surprise,"what can that all imply? |
22033 | Ca n''t get a berth? 22033 Can anyone tell what wealthy Englishmen do?" |
22033 | Can you get some? 22033 Christophe''s treasure?" |
22033 | Consulate? 22033 Did you eat any of the fruit?" |
22033 | Did you not hear Senor Cecil say that I was to be sure you did not get lost? |
22033 | Did you see anything of the eruption yourself? |
22033 | Do I know? |
22033 | Do you know anyone around these parts? |
22033 | Do you know anyone who has a motor boat? |
22033 | Do you know why they come at all? |
22033 | Do you really think it will come here? |
22033 | Do you suppose he knows anything about flowers? |
22033 | Do you think they''ll learn? |
22033 | Do you want a guide, Senor? |
22033 | Do you want to come? |
22033 | Does anyone in Cuba know? 22033 Does not the young Senor know him? |
22033 | Eh, what? 22033 English?" |
22033 | Ever do any reporting? |
22033 | Food for fishes? |
22033 | From that kid who just went out? |
22033 | German? |
22033 | Haiti? |
22033 | Has he a place on this coast? |
22033 | Has the Pitch Lake, discovered so many centuries ago by Sir Walter Raleigh, had anything to do with it? |
22033 | Have ye forgotten,answered the mate in a return query,"or did n''t ye ever know? |
22033 | Have you any soap- weed root? |
22033 | Have you seen Cecil? |
22033 | How about me, Doctor? |
22033 | How did you get in here? |
22033 | How soon can you get me there? |
22033 | How will you go? |
22033 | How? |
22033 | How? |
22033 | I wonder what Father would say I ought to do? |
22033 | If the young Senor will accompany me to the stable? |
22033 | In half an hour he''ll feel as well as ever, and by tomorrow he''ll be terribly ill."For de sake, Mister Ol''Doc, I got to rub um tomorrow? |
22033 | Is that all your trouble? |
22033 | It is that you know Manuel Polliovo? |
22033 | It wo n''t rub off? |
22033 | Jes''how does a tree make a smell, Mister Ol''Doc? |
22033 | Make it? 22033 No?" |
22033 | Oh, eh? 22033 Perhaps you borrowed a pair of wings from the Englishman?" |
22033 | Pirates? 22033 Reckon that high- powered air rifle came in handy, eh?" |
22033 | So? |
22033 | Surely you ca n''t expect me to save your life merely to run my own neck in a noose? |
22033 | That my father has gone already? |
22033 | That''s where all the pirates came from, was n''t it? |
22033 | The Americans? |
22033 | The Yellow Viper? |
22033 | Then why should you do a good turn for this Manuel? |
22033 | There''s no cure for it? |
22033 | This Dimanche was at once asked if he had found Christophe''s treasure, for where else would a man find Spanish doubloons of a century ago? 22033 To govern themselves, you mean? |
22033 | Up where? |
22033 | Warning? 22033 Was he already going up to the Citadel?" |
22033 | Was it Manuel who sent you the money? |
22033 | Was it you, Father, who did the shooting? |
22033 | Well, how are you going to run it down? 22033 Well, what would you? |
22033 | Were the buccaneers Spaniards? |
22033 | What are you doin''here? |
22033 | What can such a disturbance be? 22033 What could a shark do with gold, if he had it?" |
22033 | What do we do? |
22033 | What do you know about this? |
22033 | What does he know about a republic? 22033 What does he look like?" |
22033 | What does he want, this''white''? |
22033 | What does it all mean? |
22033 | What for? 22033 What for?" |
22033 | What had happened? |
22033 | What happens? 22033 What is incredible?" |
22033 | What others were there? |
22033 | What place is that? |
22033 | What was the_ Roddam_? |
22033 | What would you? 22033 What''s a privateer?" |
22033 | What''s the hurry? |
22033 | What''s this for? |
22033 | What''s this story? 22033 When do we go to bed?" |
22033 | Where do you suppose it comes from, Stuart? 22033 Who is this man Cecil?" |
22033 | Who knows? 22033 Who said anything about money? |
22033 | Who was it said that? |
22033 | Whose car was that? |
22033 | Why are they beating that drum, Hippolyte? |
22033 | Why do the guarijos live like hogs in a sty? 22033 Why not?" |
22033 | Why not? |
22033 | Why should n''t you be paid for it, just as well as anyone else? 22033 Why?" |
22033 | Why? |
22033 | Why? |
22033 | Yes,answered Stuart,"what are they for?" |
22033 | You agree? |
22033 | You are afraid of each other? |
22033 | You are not afraid that Mont Pelà © e will begin again? |
22033 | You go into Cap Haitien alone? |
22033 | You know me, then? |
22033 | You mean those that look like feathers, with the quills so much thicker than usual? |
22033 | You think I''m in trouble and running from the police, eh? 22033 You think not?" |
22033 | You want to buy one? |
22033 | You want to get back for the voodoo dance? |
22033 | You would make yourself a black man? |
22033 | You''re not afraid to? |
22033 | You''re not going on to Havana? |
22033 | You-- Stuart? |
22033 | Again, and for the last time-- could a volcano give any further warning? |
22033 | Again-- what further warning could any volcano give? |
22033 | And why should the ghost walk if it had not a reason to walk? |
22033 | And why will he ask this rent? |
22033 | And you notice that those quills, as you call them, are not parallel, but all point in the same direction, like the sticks of a fan? |
22033 | Are they better than negroes?" |
22033 | Are ye there still? |
22033 | But from whence? |
22033 | But how?" |
22033 | But just what could Manuel be doing if he dared such drastic action? |
22033 | But that Cecil should have talked loosely of so vital, so terrible a secret? |
22033 | But what does it amount to? |
22033 | But why should the shark swallow them? |
22033 | But, if so, who had sent the boy? |
22033 | Ca n''t your car make it?" |
22033 | Can you handle a typewriter?" |
22033 | Chapter VI["] What happens? |
22033 | Could the Englishman be shooting? |
22033 | Could the Englishman, Guy Cecil, be to blame? |
22033 | Did his fellow- conspirators want to get rid of him? |
22033 | Did they count on his shooting the boy, in a panic, and being lynched for it, there and then, on the street of Cap Haitien? |
22033 | Do they only happen here? |
22033 | Do you happen to know of any?" |
22033 | Do you see those three mares''-tail high- cirrus clouds?" |
22033 | Do you suppose he''s just some sort of a conspirator, or swindler, sometimes rich and sometimes poor, according to the hauls he has made?" |
22033 | Do you understand so far?" |
22033 | Does America, which made us a republic, help us? |
22033 | Does anyone, anywhere, know? |
22033 | Does the Chief think I''m startin''a kindergarten? |
22033 | Eh?" |
22033 | Ever see one?" |
22033 | For what mysterious reason did he offer himself as a guide to the haunted place of meeting? |
22033 | From cultivated plantations? |
22033 | From whom?" |
22033 | Got your typewriter? |
22033 | Has not the ghost of Christophe been seen to walk there? |
22033 | He began as the boy entered the door,"Ye''re Stuart Garfield, eh? |
22033 | How about that?" |
22033 | How about your passport?" |
22033 | How are you going to get all the facts in the case? |
22033 | How came this ragged Haitian urchin to know? |
22033 | How did he come to know the pass- word of the conspiracy? |
22033 | How does that sound to you?" |
22033 | How old would you take him to be?" |
22033 | How was he to get out? |
22033 | I suppose I can count on your never mentioning this meeting?" |
22033 | If a black, to what race did this boy belong? |
22033 | In that case, what could the other conspirators be doing without him? |
22033 | Is that it?" |
22033 | James?" |
22033 | Kidd,''Bloody''Roberts and all the rest?" |
22033 | Know him?" |
22033 | Now, is there anything more?" |
22033 | Off for the West Indies again, eh?" |
22033 | Or of his being imprisoned, tried and executed for murder? |
22033 | Or should he kill the boy, himself? |
22033 | Right away?" |
22033 | Should he reveal the secret and have his fellow- conspirators kill him? |
22033 | Should he turn him over to the machetes of the negroes? |
22033 | Stay-- was this boy a negro boy? |
22033 | Stuart sat silent for a moment, then,"Are there any more signs?" |
22033 | That this boy was disguised suggested that he was in fear for his life; but, if so, why was he there? |
22033 | The negro looked back at his passenger once or twice, and muttered,"Train- sick? |
22033 | To govern themselves in a civilized manner? |
22033 | Tonight? |
22033 | Vellano flamed out,"The United States will not answer us when we pray, nor listen when we speak? |
22033 | Was Cesar Leborge playing him false? |
22033 | Was he a black, at all? |
22033 | Was this boy a negro? |
22033 | What are they? |
22033 | What can these be? |
22033 | What did the boy know? |
22033 | What did you think of things in Haiti when you left?" |
22033 | What do they look like?" |
22033 | What do you want?" |
22033 | What does that mean? |
22033 | What further warnings could any volcano give?" |
22033 | What happens? |
22033 | What kind of a warning? |
22033 | What mystery lay behind? |
22033 | Whence came these bullets that made no sound? |
22033 | Where are you going to get all the money that it will take? |
22033 | Where did you meet him?" |
22033 | Where to?" |
22033 | Which comes first?" |
22033 | Who can you trust to help you in this? |
22033 | Who goes there?" |
22033 | Who knows? |
22033 | Who was this boy? |
22033 | Who''s that?" |
22033 | Why could he not stain his skin coffee- color, like a Haitian boy? |
22033 | Why did you mention the Citadel of the Black Emperor?" |
22033 | Why had he paid for them, then? |
22033 | Why had his father not come back? |
22033 | Why have you posted men to murder Manuel and me, in the granadilla wood, between here and Cap Haitien?" |
22033 | Why is it?" |
22033 | Why? |
22033 | Will you be so good as to visà © him through? |
22033 | With sixty- five million gourdes he might push away the President and be president himself, who knows? |
22033 | Wonder if I did n''t ought to say somet''ing?" |
22033 | Yes? |
22033 | You heard that drum, the night before last? |
22033 | You know what a scoop is?" |
22033 | You think it''s planned against the United States''?" |
22033 | asked Stuart in surprise,"are the negroes mutinous?" |
22033 | cried the boy,"I''m really and truly a journalist?" |
22033 | he cried, using the Haitian idiom with its perpetual recurrence of"Yes"and"No,"and went on,"and where is Monsieur your father?" |
22033 | he cried, using the Haitian idom[ idiom] with its perpetual recurrence of"Yes"and"No,"and went on,"and where is Monsieur your father?" |
40937 | A large room with two beds, I presume? |
40937 | And am I-- really-- the''nicest girl you know,''that you came so straight to me with your proposal? |
40937 | And have you told me the entire truth in all things? |
40937 | And how shall you describe me? |
40937 | And now you are out, will you get back again, or take a friend''s advice and stay out? |
40937 | And now, as these things must all be settled, what salary do you wish to pay? |
40937 | And the bracelet, will you do me the favor to find some way in which it may be returned to the owner? |
40937 | And were you so very-- very wicked? |
40937 | And what do you think her character would resemble when she returned with you from your journey? |
40937 | And what was it about? |
40937 | And yet, how can I judge a girl who has always been under the watchful eye of a kind father or brother? |
40937 | And you must not interrupt me, either with approval or disapproval? |
40937 | And you will save Jack? |
40937 | And-- Edgerly? |
40937 | And-- do I do that-- for you? |
40937 | Any prizes? |
40937 | Are n''t you going ashore? |
40937 | Are n''t you sorry yet? |
40937 | Are you dictating? |
40937 | Are you doing that as faithfully as you promised? |
40937 | Are you going to answer that letter of Miss Brazier''s? |
40937 | Are you interested in criminology? |
40937 | Are you really going to carry out this senseless project? |
40937 | Are you serious? |
40937 | Are you very, very sorry you took me with you? |
40937 | Berths? 40937 But our names on the passenger list?" |
40937 | But who can tell,she said, growing earnest,"that even some you mention have not repented of their acts and are trying to redeem themselves? |
40937 | But why,she asked,"did you use the other? |
40937 | But you will stop-- you will say no more? 40937 But, do you think it would be interesting-- to-- any one else?" |
40937 | But, whatever name it is, how are you? 40937 But-- you wish you had n''t?" |
40937 | Ca n''t you sit between us? 40937 Can you manage a string tie?" |
40937 | Can you see him anywhere at this moment? |
40937 | Can you think of anything I might add, to round out the tale, as it were? |
40937 | Come in here when you are ready; or, shall I come there? |
40937 | Could I make arrangements to come out here and board while I remain on the island? |
40937 | DO YOU REALLY WANT ME? |
40937 | Did I not? |
40937 | Did you give him the original check? |
40937 | Did you say two thousand? |
40937 | Do n''t I know that? |
40937 | Do n''t I look quite like a married woman? |
40937 | Do n''t you notice that I am wearing another ring? |
40937 | Do n''t you really see the difference? |
40937 | Do n''t you think her very handsome? |
40937 | Do n''t you think such earnestness in the chase deserves its full reward? |
40937 | Do you know me? |
40937 | Do you really mean that this exposure took place in a New York theatre, at a regular performance? |
40937 | Do you really want me to? |
40937 | Do you really want me? |
40937 | Do you recollect to whom you are speaking? 40937 Do you remember suggesting on the steamer,"I asked,"that as we had to lie to others we ought to tell the truth among ourselves? |
40937 | Do you sleep as lightly as that? |
40937 | Do you want me to fix yours? |
40937 | Do you want to read a letter I have received, warning me against you? |
40937 | Do you write novels? |
40937 | Does any person, on the Madiana, know that the name in the passenger list is not your true one? |
40937 | Does it surprise you to learn that? 40937 Does n''t an author have to know-- before he begins his story-- how it will end?" |
40937 | Don, have you told the whole truth in that manuscript? |
40937 | Don,he said, paying no attention to my motion toward a chair,"what is the trouble between you and Statia? |
40937 | Eggert? |
40937 | For whom? |
40937 | Had n''t you better book for the entire cruise? |
40937 | Has something pricked you, too? |
40937 | Has the boat started yet? |
40937 | Have you arranged the-- the other matter? |
40937 | Have you decided? |
40937 | Have you deserted us entirely? |
40937 | Have you forgotten that we are some little distance from Manhattan Island? |
40937 | Have you had your coffee? 40937 Have you not drawn the long bow a little here?" |
40937 | Have you not received it? |
40937 | Have you the typewriting machine here? |
40937 | He is unjustly accused? |
40937 | He''s got to go, too, then? |
40937 | How can I get it to you? |
40937 | How can I, if you enjoy the journey? |
40937 | How can I, when I do not know what you are going to say? |
40937 | How can we meet them? |
40937 | How comes it you are here, yourself? |
40937 | How could you show a thing like that to me? |
40937 | How could you tell those casual acquaintances what you concealed from me? |
40937 | How did he know your right name? |
40937 | How do I know you will not make me out the most disreputable female that ever lived? 40937 How do you know that?" |
40937 | How do you know? |
40937 | How do you think that will do? |
40937 | How many of the brave young chaps you talk about can gain as much as that? 40937 How old are you?" |
40937 | How shall we begin, then? |
40937 | How will you find anything better? |
40937 | How? |
40937 | I have been thinking,she remarked, after one of her long pauses;"would it not be best for me, to take your family name? |
40937 | If I leave you to decide,said Miss May, with lips that whitened at the words,"what will you advise me?" |
40937 | If Statia is set on keeping the wonderful secret, how can you expect me to divulge it? |
40937 | If you would only give me one kiss when you say that so prettily,I began--"Breaking the rules already?" |
40937 | Is it worth publishing, that''s the point? 40937 Is n''t it about time, though, that we had something in the way of refreshment?" |
40937 | Is not our separation from them final? |
40937 | Is there no love affair between you? |
40937 | Is there, then, anything that you have heard, or suspect, against my reputation? |
40937 | Is this true? |
40937 | It is a peculiar arrangement, though, take it altogether, is it not? |
40937 | It is settled, then? |
40937 | It is supposed to be; but how can we tell that some may not follow our example and stop off at one of the islands? 40937 Marjorie,"I began;"may I call you''Marjorie?''" |
40937 | Marjorie,I exclaimed, suddenly,"have you ever been in love?" |
40937 | Marjorie,I whispered, for I could not resist the desire to hear her say it,"do n''t you care for me, just a little bit?" |
40937 | May n''t I tell the driver now to take us to a restaurant? |
40937 | Mr. Camran, do you think it is fair to press me like this? |
40937 | Mr. Wesson, what does this mean? |
40937 | Must you put in such things as that? |
40937 | No gloves? |
40937 | Now, how do you intend that I shall travel-- if it is decided that I am to go? |
40937 | Of what use am I to you? |
40937 | Oh, why have you done this? 40937 Or Laps?" |
40937 | Really? |
40937 | Shall I submit a few questions to you, or would you rather put some queries of your own? |
40937 | So you''re going to throw it up, are you? |
40937 | Sorry? 40937 Supposing when you are ready to take one of the other boats you find every cabin full?" |
40937 | Tear it up? |
40937 | The shirt stud, I think is yours,he went on, affably,"and the earrings belong to your cousin? |
40937 | Then you wish to hear it? |
40937 | Then your charmer has decided not to go with you? |
40937 | There does n''t seem much to found a murderous attack on in those two things, does there? 40937 To travel in the Tropics?" |
40937 | Twenty- five? |
40937 | Was there ever another man who would put such things about himself in cold type? |
40937 | Well, did you expect yesterday morning''s? |
40937 | Well? |
40937 | What age would you prefer your secretary to be? |
40937 | What are you going to do with that poor creature? |
40937 | What can I do to thank you? |
40937 | What can he do? |
40937 | What could I do with a lot of gowns-- and-- lingerie? |
40937 | What did you hear to disturb you, a mouse? |
40937 | What difference can it make? 40937 What do you mean?" |
40937 | What do you want of me? |
40937 | What do you want? 40937 What do you want?" |
40937 | What does it mean to you, the money you have lost by us? 40937 What harm can he do us?" |
40937 | What harm would it do,I said, at 11 o''clock,"when I leave you at your door at night, if you gave me just a little-- a very little-- kiss? |
40937 | What is it now? |
40937 | What is the matter? |
40937 | What is the matter? |
40937 | What is there to do here? |
40937 | What kind of a husband do you think you would make? 40937 What kind of clothing should I need?" |
40937 | What name shall I register for the lady''s room? |
40937 | What names? |
40937 | What other letters did you get? |
40937 | What prevents you? 40937 What sensations?" |
40937 | What was the row about? |
40937 | What would you say to a typewriter? |
40937 | When do you wish me to leave the city? |
40937 | Where the devil did you come from? |
40937 | Which of them do you imagine it will be? |
40937 | Who but a born novelist,she said,"would have deemed it worth while to tell that I objected to having the door of our little dining- room locked?" |
40937 | Who can say what evil might have crept into her life, had she been compelled to face the cruel world and fight for her bread? |
40937 | Who is she? 40937 Who is that lady?" |
40937 | Who is the man that came to me at the top of the stairs? |
40937 | Why I want to kill the mongoose? |
40937 | Why do you think it necessary,she asked, frowning,"to pay me that kind of compliment?" |
40937 | Why do you want to kill that helpless thing? |
40937 | Why does she not come? |
40937 | Why does she write to you? |
40937 | Why is it reckless? |
40937 | Why, do you want some? |
40937 | Why, who sent you these ancient things? |
40937 | Why,she asked, slowly,"is the world arranged so unevenly? |
40937 | Why? 40937 Will that list get into the newspapers?" |
40937 | Will you come up to my rooms? |
40937 | Will you inquire if my baggage has been brought on and have the smaller trunk sent down here as soon as possible? |
40937 | Will you kindly introduce me to this gentleman? |
40937 | Will you sell him to me? |
40937 | Wo n''t it be hard to find a woman of twenty- four years with the skill and judgment that your situation seems to require? |
40937 | Would you bathe my head a little? |
40937 | Would you-- would you come round to the house and talk it over with both of us together? |
40937 | Yes; but the gain to my reputation that would have resulted-- who will compensate me for that? 40937 You are in earnest? |
40937 | You are not sorry-- yet? |
40937 | You are quite willing? |
40937 | You are sure you will not be sorry for what you are doing? |
40937 | You can do that? |
40937 | You did n''t really mean that you would leave here just on account of Mr. Wesson''s coming? |
40937 | You do not-- no, you do not hate me? |
40937 | You want to buy a mongoose? |
40937 | You were in my room? 40937 You were in my room?" |
40937 | You will come-- if I call you? |
40937 | You will give me a dollar for the mongoose? |
40937 | You will leave it to me? 40937 You will let me call you Don?" |
40937 | You will write as soon as possible? |
40937 | You would not be so cruel as to deceive me? |
40937 | You''ve given up your plan? |
40937 | Your name, then, is David Camran-- am I right now? |
40937 | ( How could you do anything else?) |
40937 | And what are your stipulations? |
40937 | Are you afraid to be alone with me? |
40937 | Are you going to occupy your room alone?" |
40937 | Are you not tired of the expense I cause you?" |
40937 | At what hour can I expect you to- morrow at the district attorney''s office? |
40937 | But why did he let you take it from him without making the least resistance? |
40937 | Can you not hire some capable young man, who would act as an assistant and companion combined?" |
40937 | Could anything be more candid than this straightforward statement? |
40937 | Did I overstate it, when I described it to you yesterday?" |
40937 | Did I wish him to wait for an answer? |
40937 | Did he say anything to intimate it?" |
40937 | Did she consider me merely a puppet, to be played with? |
40937 | Did you enjoy your dance?" |
40937 | Did you never read these words of Shakespeare? |
40937 | Do n''t you think I am a lovely girl, now? |
40937 | Do n''t you think I might secure the right sort of person in that way?" |
40937 | Do you care to tell me why? |
40937 | Do you intend to do anything disagreeable about the matter?" |
40937 | Do you mean to say that your final declination of my offer is based on the fact that I read your private correspondence?" |
40937 | Do you recall looking in at my screen door and seeing me in the attitude of prayer? |
40937 | Do you remember the time you bathed my forehead with cologne? |
40937 | Do you think that a fair transaction?" |
40937 | Do you wish to say anything in regard to that?" |
40937 | Edgerly arrested? |
40937 | Eggert?" |
40937 | Fear of yellow fever quarantine is what led us to change our mind about remaining in Martinique; you understand?" |
40937 | For what?" |
40937 | Had I been waiting very long? |
40937 | Had she run away merely for the sake of being pursued? |
40937 | Had you never met him before this trip?" |
40937 | Have you forgotten our compact, dear one? |
40937 | Here, with this confession before us, need we go on longer without a definite understanding? |
40937 | Home? |
40937 | How can I best protect my good name, if I accept your generous offer? |
40937 | How can I help it, when you are so kind to me? |
40937 | How can you endorse such a wicked, cruel thing?" |
40937 | How could a woman of that description so affect a man like you?" |
40937 | How did you like my description of your beauty? |
40937 | How long is your journey to last and what pay do you intend to offer? |
40937 | How much cash shall you require?" |
40937 | I could take a male companion, but do you imagine he would have any influence with me if I started to go wrong? |
40937 | I cried,"you have entirely forgiven me?" |
40937 | I forced that card on you as nicely as any conjurer could have done it, did n''t I? |
40937 | I had a place that I detested, but how could I be sure you would prove a more considerate employer than the one I was to leave? |
40937 | I took her own reply from my pocket to give it verbatim, upon which she said--"Have you kept that all this time? |
40937 | I went into your room at midnight, do you recollect? |
40937 | I would pardon her anything but a refusal] in relation to a few personal matters? |
40937 | If I go off alone to some distant part of the world, what is to prevent my beginning again on the old road and ending where I did before? |
40937 | If Wesson had stolen that book, what was there to show that he had not stolen my diamond, and those of Marjorie and of Miss Howes? |
40937 | If there had been anything very wicked in my mind, do you think I would have come here to tell you about it? |
40937 | If you really thought I was in danger, why did you not do the patriotic thing and offer to go in her place? |
40937 | Is Eggert''s place in quarantine?" |
40937 | Is it any wonder I was happy? |
40937 | Is n''t there some way to accomplish that?" |
40937 | Is there any reason against that?" |
40937 | Is there anything else you would like to know?" |
40937 | It is a common question of my correspondents,"Are your novels ever founded on fact?" |
40937 | It''s a rather unusual collection of occurrences, do n''t you think?" |
40937 | My husband was on the steamer with us when we left St. Croix, and-- where, do you suppose? |
40937 | No man would like to have this story printed, with his real name, in the daily newspapers; now, would he? |
40937 | Now, once more, my dear Donald, where does this leave you and me? |
40937 | Offer my hand to Statia? |
40937 | Perhaps that is what Froude saw which made him say in his book that there are fireflies in Barbados-- who can tell? |
40937 | Recovered from my love for you? |
40937 | Say, can you get at your soap?" |
40937 | Shall you be at home all day?" |
40937 | She had nothing to take back in what she had said relating to a certain matter,( what woman ever took back anything?) |
40937 | She thought a little while and then said, suddenly:"You-- you are not married, I suppose?" |
40937 | Still, how was he to know? |
40937 | Sunday? |
40937 | Tell me how I can best secure that result?" |
40937 | Tell me only this-- you are going?" |
40937 | Tell me, is he living? |
40937 | The blonde mustache, the"hazel eyes,"the"engaging countenance?" |
40937 | The reader will expect-- certainly the feminine reader-- a description of the sight that met my eyes, and how can I give it? |
40937 | Then why should he come to the Marine in broad daylight, and get into that row, that nearly spilled all the milk? |
40937 | They lasted, on the average, a week, while this--""Might last a month?" |
40937 | Thomas?" |
40937 | Twelve? |
40937 | Was I deceiving myself by paying too much attention to her protestations? |
40937 | Was ever so much given for so little? |
40937 | Was it because you were afraid to trust me?" |
40937 | Was it not the part of common prudence to"foresee the evil and hide?" |
40937 | Was it possible Wesson had given up his drive? |
40937 | Was she after all an adventuress who meant to get what she could in advance, and disappear when the time of departure came? |
40937 | Was she attacked with incipient jealousy of this unknown one, even while she approved of her counsel? |
40937 | Was there anything to pay? |
40937 | Were they going to argue that point over between them? |
40937 | Wesson worried you at Eggert''s, did n''t he? |
40937 | Wesson?" |
40937 | What awful crime have you committed? |
40937 | What business had he to offer me his arm?" |
40937 | What chance will they have with their faces exhibited everywhere? |
40937 | What could I think but, with his almost exclusive opportunities on the steamer, he was the guilty man? |
40937 | What could be more propitious? |
40937 | What did I want there? |
40937 | What do they consist of-- actual typewriting or keeping dull care from drawing wrinkles on your manly brow? |
40937 | What do you think that confounded Wesson is saying to Eggert?" |
40937 | What do you want?" |
40937 | What earthly business had I in the room of a young, unmarried woman, before she was out of bed? |
40937 | What good can it do to print the faces of those unhappy people? |
40937 | What size shall the letter be?" |
40937 | What was he doing at Barbados unless to watch for another chance to ply his profession? |
40937 | What will come next? |
40937 | What will happen to the girl on that journey? |
40937 | What would happen when she and I were alone together for weeks and weeks? |
40937 | What would you say to a novel based on the very trip we are making?" |
40937 | What would your masculine friends say if you told them your plan? |
40937 | When she came to Hume''s question,"What is to keep you from falling in love with your secretary?" |
40937 | Where did Wesson get the jewelry? |
40937 | Where did you come from? |
40937 | Where would you suggest that we stop, Barbados? |
40937 | Who are your letters from?" |
40937 | Who could be there, at that time of day? |
40937 | Why are some provided with all they want, and more, while others have to study each item of actual necessity?" |
40937 | Why ca n''t I-- there would n''t be any harm, would there?--lie on this smaller bed just as I am, and you can get your sleep over yonder?" |
40937 | Why did he continue to remain at the hotel? |
40937 | Why not say that little word that will make me the happiest man who breathes?" |
40937 | Why should I blame my Uncle Dugald for putting me under guardianship, after I was supposed to have reached the years of discretion? |
40937 | Why should I blame poor Daly for doing what his profession and the law he followed dictated plainly? |
40937 | Why should I not induce her to go? |
40937 | Why should we not have afternoon or evening receptions by professional models in their native undress? |
40937 | Why, Marjorie, what is the matter with you?" |
40937 | Why, now, did I give up attacking your bank account when such a good opportunity still remained? |
40937 | Why?" |
40937 | Will you pardon me for being perfectly frank,[ Pardon her? |
40937 | With a locked door, what could I do? |
40937 | Would I never learn the first principles of common sense? |
40937 | Would they believe in the innocence of your motive, as you ask me to do?" |
40937 | Would you come over, say Tuesday evening?" |
40937 | Would you?" |
40937 | Would-- would you like to come in and bathe my head? |
40937 | You came on the Madiana? |
40937 | You did n''t think I brought you out here just to throw away money, did you? |
40937 | You have engaged two?" |
40937 | You have left the advertisement for insertion? |
40937 | You know the check for$ 350 that you gave him when he buncoed you on the Madiana? |
40937 | You-- you would n''t rather I would come to your rooms? |
40937 | do you expect to marry him?" |
40937 | is he still single? |
40937 | or had the chambermaid returned with some article needed? |
40937 | she asked,"or three?" |
40937 | what shall be done with him?" |
29047 | ''What is it, old lady?'' 29047 ''What is it?'' |
29047 | And I may be elected to Parliament-- who knows? 29047 And how then was the devil dressed? |
29047 | And you did not deceive her, I hope? |
29047 | And you fleeced them? 29047 Any cruisers down that way?" |
29047 | Any thing in sight? |
29047 | Ask smiling honor to proclaim What is glory, what is fame? 29047 But he confessed, Ricardo, and you gave him absolution?" |
29047 | But really, Piron,broke in the commodore upon this voluble harangue,"do you give heed to these barkings of that old clerk?" |
29047 | But the ship, my son? |
29047 | But the wind did n''t come fair, eh? |
29047 | But what think ye, lads? |
29047 | Certainly, doctor; why not? 29047 Did you happen to see their officers,_ amigo_?" |
29047 | Do you think we shall need assistance, my son? |
29047 | Dry talking, is n''t it, Stingo? |
29047 | For where, my friend-- back to France? |
29047 | Given to him by a connection of his family, was it, Paddy? 29047 He called me coward, did he? |
29047 | How many times has the_ capitano_ been married? |
29047 | How was she rigged? |
29047 | I say, old nigger, hand us a little more of that slush, will ye? 29047 I went into the storm, And mocked the billows of the tossing sea; I said to Fate, What wilt thou do to me? |
29047 | It''s all the same, eh? 29047 Mean? |
29047 | No treasure, I presume? |
29047 | Not take it, eh? 29047 Nothing more?" |
29047 | Oh,_ mi padre_, how art thou? |
29047 | Paul, Paul, what is this I hear? 29047 Rat lick me?" |
29047 | S''pose Massa Ossifa him pick shell of land- crab, wid crisp pepper for salad? |
29047 | Shall I assassinate my old doctor, and run the risk of being arrested and hung? 29047 Sir?" |
29047 | So, my friends,exclaimed the commodore,"you wish to hear what became of me after I last parted with you?" |
29047 | Suppose you bring little Mouse with you; I like children; and perhaps you will excuse the younker from keeping his watch to- night? 29047 Tell me,_ mon cher Capitaine_ Blunt, how many hours or minutes will it be before I shall behold my husband?" |
29047 | That counts off about half your crew, eh? |
29047 | That''s all, is it, you drunken beast? 29047 That''s all, is it?" |
29047 | The best part of it? |
29047 | The what? 29047 Two masts, you say?" |
29047 | Well, Mr. Binks, did you clearly make out the vessel you saw this morning under the land? |
29047 | Well, what next? |
29047 | Well, what next? |
29047 | Well, what then? |
29047 | What are you two laughing at, my sister? |
29047 | What brig is that? |
29047 | What d''ye think of that, Ben? |
29047 | What did you say about a lost child and a Madame Rosalie? |
29047 | What do you say, Cleveland? |
29047 | What does that mean? |
29047 | What else, my daughter? |
29047 | What has become of my Ig-- Ig-- naçio-- the one- eyed old villain who has persecuted me for forty years? 29047 What have I on hand besides gold? |
29047 | What is glory-- what is fame? 29047 What sort of man?" |
29047 | What tale do the roaring ocean And the night wind, bleak and wild, As they beat at the crazy casement, Tell to that little child? 29047 What though when storms our bark assail, The needle trembling veers, When night adds horror to the gale, And not a star appears? |
29047 | What was she like? |
29047 | What was the name of that cape, Darcantel, where the schooner was destroyed? 29047 What?" |
29047 | Where are you from, and where bound? |
29047 | Where away? |
29047 | Where? |
29047 | Where? |
29047 | While feet and tongues like lightning go With-- What cheer, Luke? 29047 Why, Harry, what the deuce did you come down here for?" |
29047 | Why, sir, and would you believe it? 29047 You did n''t take the offer of the old lady as a figure of speech, I presume?" |
29047 | You did not find his spirit subdued, then, by bread and water? |
29047 | You must have kept a sharp look- out, though? |
29047 | You remember, Don Ignaçio, how the''Juno''frigate nearly ran us under, and yet never gained a fathom on us in nine hours? |
29047 | You say, captain, that you saw a schooner at daylight, eh? 29047 _ Bueno!_"was responded aloud; and then to himself:"Do n''t ask or receive favors, eh? |
29047 | _ Como se va?_ How goes it with my_ compadre_? 29047 _ Como se va?_ How goes it with my_ compadre_? |
29047 | _ Como?_said Señor Ignaçio,"_ our_ profession?" |
29047 | _ Como?_said Señor Ignaçio,"_ our_ profession?" |
29047 | _ Oh, cierto!_Why not? |
29047 | _ Quien sabe?_( who knows?) |
29047 | _ Quien sabe?_( who knows?) |
29047 | _ Si, señor!_said Pedillo, respectfully;"and how goes Señor Gibbs,_ capitano_?" |
29047 | _ You_ saw the schooner, eh? |
29047 | ''Happy to inform you,''is he? |
29047 | ''What''s your boy''s name, good wife, And in what good ship sailed he?''" |
29047 | ( sputtered the ruffian, as he pulled a pistol from his belt,="ho!= you mean fight, do ye?") |
29047 | A breeze, eh? |
29047 | And a little more work than when you were playing flag- lieutenant, eh? |
29047 | And do n''t you remember, Hardy, how they yelled at us, and we thought they were deserters from that English gun- boat in St. Jago? |
29047 | And how the captain arrested the pair of them when they got on board for going out of signal distance? |
29047 | And what did the doctor propose to do with him in case he was not to be stung to death by insects, sand- flies, musquitoes, and what not? |
29047 | And what thought those boyish imps of reefers? |
29047 | And what would you say, now, if I should order the doctor to cut off your other leg close behind your ears, you beast?" |
29047 | And who to, pray?" |
29047 | And why do the roaring ocean And the night wind, wild and bleak, As they beat at the heart of the mother, Drive the color from her cheek?" |
29047 | And, by the way, suppose you come on shore this afternoon for a stroll, and in the evening we will have a little game of_ monté_--eh?" |
29047 | Are they renown''d-- can they be great, Who hurl their fellow- creature''s fate, That mothers, children, wives may grieve?" |
29047 | Babette?" |
29047 | But how is madame?" |
29047 | But what made that old negro in spotless white, standing at the door, jerk his head back and open his great eyes till there was no black left in them? |
29047 | But what part of America?" |
29047 | But what sort of a man in appearance is your father-- a doctor, I think you said?" |
29047 | But where was the"Martha Blunt?" |
29047 | But where was the"Rosalie,"late"Perdita,"all this time? |
29047 | But who''s left in the boat, Gomez?" |
29047 | By the way, Mr. Hardy, will you do me the favor to take a glass of wine with us after gun- fire?" |
29047 | By the way, where did this rich stuff come from?" |
29047 | Captain Brand went on with his narrative:"Where was I? |
29047 | Cleveland, with a broad pennant and a squadron? |
29047 | Come in, will ye? |
29047 | Come, will you go with me? |
29047 | D''ye hear there, ye infarnal Blunt?" |
29047 | D''ye hear?" |
29047 | D''ye hear?" |
29047 | D''ye know that that ship has been a hangin''about the north side of Cuba for ever so long, interruptin''our trade? |
29047 | D''ye smoke? |
29047 | Did Commodore Cleveland, as a saddened flash of thought swept over his handsome face, while he stood on his quarter- deck, dwell on those scenes? |
29047 | Did n''t suffer, I hope? |
29047 | Did the commander think of all this? |
29047 | Dios!_ what has become of the little man? |
29047 | Do n''t you feel a fresh thorn at every slow pulse of the heart they are aiming at? |
29047 | Fine scenery this about here-- never visited Jamaica before? |
29047 | For did n''t he drag his own old father and mother down to a dishonored grave? |
29047 | For where art thou?" |
29047 | Glass of Madeira with you, doctor?" |
29047 | Grazed clear, eh? |
29047 | Had he trodden on a snake, or seen his compadre, or had that white finger waved him away? |
29047 | Hand him up here, will ye? |
29047 | Has n''t died on the v''yage, has she? |
29047 | He gave it me, you know, together with some other trinkets, for saving his life-- a-- you remember? |
29047 | He touched the bell overhead as he spoke, and, putting his mouth to the tube, asked,"Any thing in sight?" |
29047 | Here the pair laughed short laughs, when Brand continued his questions with,"And how did he take the bait?" |
29047 | How are the sick? |
29047 | How do you get on aboard your prize? |
29047 | How in thunder am I to climb this ladder? |
29047 | How stands the account?" |
29047 | How would to- morrow morning do? |
29047 | How''s my boy-- my boy?'' |
29047 | Howsoever, I s''pose ye can swim?" |
29047 | I am not old; here is my strong right arm yet; and who can stop me?" |
29047 | I said, rather sharply, to Pedillo;''and how dare you intrude inside my cabin?'' |
29047 | I say, cucumber shins, is that''ere woman as is talkin''as black as you be?" |
29047 | I think you paid the bill for me? |
29047 | Is he going to lave? |
29047 | Is n''t it so, my pilot?" |
29047 | Is the sister handsome? |
29047 | Kitch hold on that lower end, will ye? |
29047 | Know him? |
29047 | Master Blunt, what was the name of that man- o''-war vessel as was lyin''by you this morning?" |
29047 | No signs of a breeze yet, eh?" |
29047 | No such shame may cause your boy to blush for his mother?" |
29047 | No? |
29047 | No? |
29047 | No? |
29047 | No? |
29047 | No? |
29047 | No? |
29047 | No? |
29047 | No?" |
29047 | No?" |
29047 | No?" |
29047 | Not so roomy as the old frigate, eh? |
29047 | Not tired of cane- planting yet? |
29047 | Now, Tom Stewart and Don Stingo, what are you grinning about? |
29047 | Of course you would-- who doubts it? |
29047 | Or shall I receive more negotiable commodities in gold, cochineal, or silks? |
29047 | Parson or chaplain, eh?" |
29047 | Perhaps I was mistaken, the sun blazes so fiercely, eh?" |
29047 | Perhaps you may know Monsieur Jules Piron?" |
29047 | Presented to you by a connection of your family, was it? |
29047 | Santa Cruz rum and a tumble down the hatchway, perhaps, eh? |
29047 | She knew that before, did she? |
29047 | So-- give us another push, will ye? |
29047 | Some little accident? |
29047 | Stomach and head all clear after our long dinner of yesterday?" |
29047 | Suppose you tink ob beating dis big frigate troo de channel? |
29047 | Take a pinch out of it? |
29047 | That shake of your head convinces me-- not if they roast you alive?" |
29047 | That''s all, is it? |
29047 | The gallant little Frenchman smiled in acquiescence, and, taking off his glazed hat with the air of a courtier, said,"_ Pardieu!_ certainly; why not? |
29047 | The maimed ruffian only muttered,"Your friend, eh? |
29047 | The mate caught the enthusiasm of the skipper, and, jumping up on the break of the deck cabin, he sang out,"D''ye hear there, lads? |
29047 | The_ capitano_, Don Ignaçio Sanchez-- wasn''t that his name, doctor? |
29047 | Then turning to the padre, he said,"You would perhaps like a cordial, my father, to take the chill off your stomach? |
29047 | Then what could it be for? |
29047 | Try another pinch,_ amigo_? |
29047 | Was it a dream, Captain Brand? |
29047 | Was n''t he, Darky?" |
29047 | Well, my good Banou, what news of your master?" |
29047 | Well, what next? |
29047 | What detains her? |
29047 | What did she say? |
29047 | What has happened?" |
29047 | What have_ I_ done to vex you?" |
29047 | What made that old dealer in precious stones and trinkets turn paler than his old topaz face as he yelled frantically for his older Creole wife? |
29047 | What say you, Mr. Binks? |
29047 | What say you,_ compadre_? |
29047 | What say you,_ compadre_?" |
29047 | What say you?" |
29047 | What shall it be? |
29047 | What? |
29047 | What_ was_ his name? |
29047 | Where is she? |
29047 | Where''s the corvette?" |
29047 | Whither? |
29047 | Who can tell? |
29047 | Who-- who-- in the name of the Blessed Virgin, art_ thou_?'' |
29047 | Why did I cut the old launch adrift before I got in myself? |
29047 | Why did n''t the fool forge others, then? |
29047 | Why have you been so long away from me? |
29047 | Why should my son drag me through this hole? |
29047 | Why, how''s this? |
29047 | Why, madame, it is only a week ago that a lot of us dined with him at his estate of Escondido; you know it, madame? |
29047 | Why, now, did the touch of his hand make her heart beat faster, and send a thrill of joy through her frame? |
29047 | Why, what has put such thoughts into your head? |
29047 | Why, you know it once belonged to the Captain General of Cuba, old Tol de rol de riddle rol-- what was his name? |
29047 | Will you join us? |
29047 | Wo n''t you?" |
29047 | Would you have me drag such a carcass through the cavern and consign him to consecrated earth, when he refused the last holy offers of salvation?" |
29047 | Ye have been off the island, eh? |
29047 | Yes? |
29047 | Yes? |
29047 | Yes? |
29047 | You has n''t a drop of summut to drink, has you, Captain Brand? |
29047 | You never were here before, I think? |
29047 | You understand, sir? |
29047 | You would like to take a mutual shot with him, though? |
29047 | _ Hola, mi padre_, will you wash your hands in water before sitting down? |
29047 | _ La Señorita_--hiccough-- with the almond- shaped eyes--_Santissima!_--hic-- how did she bear the-- death of her-- hic-- mother?" |
29047 | _ Quien sabe?_( Who knows?)" |
29047 | _ Quien sabe?_( Who knows?)" |
29047 | _ Quien sabe_--who knows? |
29047 | _ bon capitaine_, how could you deceive me? |
29047 | a graze of a grape- shot, eh? |
29047 | am I right?" |
29047 | amigo mio!_ But how do I know but you may have made a little mistake, and described another haunt besides the Island of Pines, off in this direction?" |
29047 | an ugly scratch, that, across your jaw-- a splinter, eh? |
29047 | and did he pick up any information there?" |
29047 | and do you think, you brave, honest little Irishman, that he would sleep a wink the less sound for putting you to death? |
29047 | and how do, Joe? |
29047 | and how long do you expect to stop in Purgatory?" |
29047 | and tell all about that thin curl of smoke, which you believe to have been made by that coal- eyed Ig-- Ig-- naçio, away up there by the inlet? |
29047 | are you for breaking the commodoor''s decanters and wine- glasses, in the belief that ye are the eerthquak yersel?" |
29047 | at it again, are ye? |
29047 | broke in the padre,"what then?" |
29047 | but,_ quien sabe_? |
29047 | can I see the man?" |
29047 | captain,"said the gentleman, with a bewildering stare,"what''s all this? |
29047 | compadre!_ How goes the friend of my soul?" |
29047 | did n''t you say, at your grand dinner in Kingston, that you would never allow a woman to darken your doors?" |
29047 | do ye sleep? |
29047 | do you call half a bottle a sip? |
29047 | even until my pennant, nailed to the truck, sinks beneath the bloodstained waves?" |
29047 | exclaimed the captain, who was in advance,"how goes it with my doctor?" |
29047 | exclaimed the girl, with anguish;''she was saved?'' |
29047 | handsome? |
29047 | him want small, red, plump snapper, make mizzible brile?" |
29047 | is it a bargain? |
29047 | is it thinking of old Clinker and his''arthquake ye are?" |
29047 | is that you, Master Gibbs?" |
29047 | little Master Henri loves his Banou, eh? |
29047 | muttered the man in the saloon,"where was that brat picked up?" |
29047 | my Baba, you have not forgotten to feed our jolly Gibbs there below? |
29047 | nigger passengers, hay? |
29047 | no other motive than curiosity?" |
29047 | no?" |
29047 | not even a sip of that nectar,_ compadre mio_?" |
29047 | one of those stout pins gone? |
29047 | or shall I carry the stuff with me, and run the chance of disposing of it on the Spanish Main?" |
29047 | said he, as he sat down to this repast,"you have a bottle of good Madeira, and a flask of Hock left? |
29047 | said the mate, as he began again the cymbal pot and spoon music;"becalmed, ai n''t he?" |
29047 | says Rat to Beaver,"what''s that? |
29047 | she went on,''when shall we get to Porto Rico and_ our_ dear father? |
29047 | shouted Captain Blunt, clapping his hands,"what said I, Madame Rosalie, when we saw the sun setting up his lee backstays a while ago? |
29047 | tell me, good_ capitaine_,"said she, turning in a pretty coquettish way to the skipper,"when shall we get in port?" |
29047 | that tall man in black? |
29047 | that you, old nigger? |
29047 | what has pierced my leg? |
29047 | what have we here? |
29047 | what is the matter?" |
29047 | what noise is that?" |
29047 | what says he? |
29047 | what will papa say to- morrow when he sees his brave Henri?" |
29047 | where is your friend, Cleveland? |
29047 | who''s that? |
29047 | will ye? |
29047 | you clap your hands, eh? |
29047 | you do, eh? |
29047 | you do? |
29047 | you mean fight, do ye?" |
29047 | you will, eh? |
29047 | you wo n''t take a sip of Tinta, and you can only stop a minute because you are to dine with your uncle the commodore, eh? |
29047 | you would, eh? |
29047 | you young scamp, this small nose smells the oranges and cinnamon, eh? |
21357 | A good word for you-- for one who has been ready to risk his life again and again to help me? 21357 About Pete, father?" |
21357 | Afraid? 21357 Ah, that puzzles you, do it, zir? |
21357 | Ah, who knows? |
21357 | Ah, why indeed, when you''re getting better? |
21357 | An''s''pose these two poor men wanted to hurt you; what then? |
21357 | And as that''s impossible, father--"We must grin and bear it, Nic-- eh? |
21357 | And did he see you, father? |
21357 | And leave you there? |
21357 | And round and round? |
21357 | And the dogs, Pete? |
21357 | And they''d want it here just the same as they would at home, though it is a foreign country? |
21357 | And we''re to be messmets reg''lar sarving under Captain Revel and Master Nic? |
21357 | And what about a fish- hook? |
21357 | And what about the guns? |
21357 | And who would believe us at a place like this, where we know that poor wretches are brought to go up to the plantations? |
21357 | And you''d have woke me if you had known? |
21357 | And you''ll trust me, zur? |
21357 | And you''re going to try if you can find where they keep the boat to- night? |
21357 | And you''re sure the dog has n''t hurt you much? |
21357 | And you? |
21357 | Any one in her? |
21357 | Are n''t drowned, I suppose? |
21357 | Are n''t we? |
21357 | Are n''t you a bit hard on me, Master Nic? |
21357 | Are you better? |
21357 | Are you mad? |
21357 | Are you one of this fellow''s comrades? |
21357 | Are you there, Pete Burge? |
21357 | Are you two going to keep on talking till to- morrow morning? |
21357 | As ever came out of it-- eh, Nic? |
21357 | Awake, Nic? |
21357 | Ay, is this all, Master Nic? |
21357 | Bean''t dead, be he? |
21357 | Been so bad? |
21357 | Been to sea before? |
21357 | Beg pardon, sir,he said;"speaking respeckful like--""What is it?" |
21357 | Begun, lad? 21357 Better? |
21357 | But I say, do you ever think about running away? |
21357 | But after he was on board the other vessel? |
21357 | But do you think it likely that my poor boy was among the prisoners? |
21357 | But do you think the sailors will find their way here in the dark? |
21357 | But do you think we can reach the mouth of the river without being stopped? |
21357 | But food-- provisions? |
21357 | But he''ll get it off, wo n''t he, zir? |
21357 | But how are we to get a fire, Pete? |
21357 | But look here, Nic-- did you change your things? |
21357 | But quite well again now? |
21357 | But the dogs? |
21357 | But the high ground yonder, or the woods? |
21357 | But the hook, man-- the hook? |
21357 | But these two? |
21357 | But we are not on board ship? |
21357 | But what about these men-- are they going to stay in the neighbourhood? |
21357 | But where are the dogs? |
21357 | But where are we? |
21357 | But why did n''t he speak out and tell him? |
21357 | But would you dare to swim across the river-- the alligators? |
21357 | But you are better now? |
21357 | But you were not bitten? |
21357 | But you will make some inquiries, sir? |
21357 | But your side won, then, and I''m a prisoner? |
21357 | But-- but why? 21357 Ca n''t I? |
21357 | Ca n''t you see that now''s your time? |
21357 | Can you hear the hounds now? |
21357 | Can you two fellows row? |
21357 | Captain Revel? |
21357 | Could we make sure by trying to see whether there is any one on guard at the barrack- door? |
21357 | Dare we? |
21357 | Dead, Pete? |
21357 | Dear lad? |
21357 | Dessay it is, zir; but I do n''t care what they calls it-- Ah, would you? |
21357 | Did I? |
21357 | Did Pete Burge jump in to save my life? |
21357 | Did n''t you hear me telling you, sir? 21357 Did you ever see anything like it, Nic, my boy?" |
21357 | Did you see somebody yesterday, then, father? |
21357 | Did you speak to him, father? |
21357 | Did you, father? |
21357 | Do n''t it zeem strange what a differ a black skin makes in a man? |
21357 | Do you hear? 21357 Do you think you''ve come out here for a holiday, you insolent dogs?" |
21357 | Do you want to shut us up there, and keep us prisoners till your neighbour comes? |
21357 | Do you, zir? 21357 Eh, my lad, what is it?" |
21357 | Eh? 21357 Eh? |
21357 | Feel better? |
21357 | For what? |
21357 | For who knows what she may have aboard, or what good ship may have been wrecked? |
21357 | Game? |
21357 | Getting hot, are n''t it? |
21357 | Go back? 21357 Going to zhake hands?" |
21357 | Grins? |
21357 | Had a good night, Pete? |
21357 | Harm, Pete? |
21357 | Has any one been down to the river? |
21357 | Have they bitten him? |
21357 | Have they killed you, Master Nic? |
21357 | Have you your whip with you, Saunders? |
21357 | Have you-- have you escaped from up yonder? |
21357 | Heah dat, Zerk? |
21357 | Hear something, Bill? |
21357 | Hear''em? |
21357 | Here are the others coming, Bill,cried Nic.--"What are you going to do this time?" |
21357 | Here, Mary, what is there that can be cooked for Captain Lawrence''s breakfast? |
21357 | Here, Saunders,he said,"why is that boy not in irons?" |
21357 | Hot work hoeing the rows, eh? 21357 How are you going to get me avore the Justice, Master Nic?" |
21357 | How can that be? 21357 How can that be?" |
21357 | How dare you say that? |
21357 | How do I know, sir? |
21357 | How do you know? |
21357 | How do you like that? |
21357 | How long will it be? |
21357 | How would it be, then, if you sent me word in good time in the morning? 21357 How, father?" |
21357 | How, my lad? 21357 How, then?" |
21357 | Hullo, Nic, my boy; been overboard? |
21357 | Hungry too, eh? |
21357 | Hurt? |
21357 | I did n''t say it was to kill men with, did I? 21357 I said, are they your dogs?" |
21357 | I say, father,said Nic merrily,"is n''t that making troubles, and fancying storms before they come?" |
21357 | I see, I see,said Captain Lawrence;"but do you think they''ll fight well?" |
21357 | I take in de light, sah, and den go fetch de irons? |
21357 | I zay, though; could n''t get to be more friends still wi''the dogs, and make''em fight for uz, could we? |
21357 | I''m glad they escaped, poor fellows,said Nic;"but is that scoundrel Dee with them?" |
21357 | If we find our way? 21357 Into the jaws of the great alligators, Pete?" |
21357 | Is it? |
21357 | Is the frigate in sight? |
21357 | Is this all on us? |
21357 | It ca n''t be; can it, dear? |
21357 | Just now? |
21357 | Knife, has he? |
21357 | Know where they keep the boat, Master Nic? |
21357 | Know why, do n''t you? |
21357 | Light- hearted, zir? 21357 Likely, are n''t it?" |
21357 | Looked at what? |
21357 | Make friends? |
21357 | Makes quakers? |
21357 | Master Nic,he whispered excitedly,"what do you think of that?" |
21357 | Me, zir? 21357 Mind shaking hands, mate?" |
21357 | No disease, have you? |
21357 | No go_ wob_,_ wob_, sah? |
21357 | No''top clap irons on dese two, sah? |
21357 | No, sir; cert''n''y not, sir,faltered the frightened girl, turning wonderingly to Nic, her eyes seeming to say,"Please, sir, is master going mad?" |
21357 | Not much in his way, father, is it? |
21357 | Not now, boys; lie down.--Ah, what''s that? |
21357 | Now then, can we crawl to it under cover? 21357 Now then,"muttered the overseer,"how long is he going to be with that lanthorn? |
21357 | Of what? |
21357 | Oh yes, father, I see; but are the sailors coming? |
21357 | Oh!--Here, what''s the matter with you, boy? |
21357 | Oh, why did n''t I watch it? |
21357 | On our grounds? |
21357 | Our side won? |
21357 | Pete Burge, father? |
21357 | Pete,he said quickly,"why not take the head off the pole? |
21357 | Please me, boy? 21357 Prisoners been quiet?" |
21357 | Quarrelling among themselves? |
21357 | Ready, my lads? |
21357 | Ready, then? |
21357 | Risk getting zeen and shot? |
21357 | Run away? 21357 Say what agen?" |
21357 | Shake-- hands, sir-- with you, cap''n? |
21357 | Silence, you scoundrel!--How dare you? |
21357 | So now then, you promise? |
21357 | So you''re both runaways? |
21357 | Some of our men too? |
21357 | Speak-- sensible-- why should n''t I? |
21357 | Start? |
21357 | Take''em with us? |
21357 | Taken bad-- aboard ship? |
21357 | Them dogs bite, master? |
21357 | Then they are coming to- night? |
21357 | Then what are you going to do? |
21357 | Then why did n''t you call me up? |
21357 | Then you found out nothing? |
21357 | Then you pretty well know when to expect them? |
21357 | Then,said Captain Revel,"you have sent them away?" |
21357 | There now, are n''t it zummat like one of our big pike at home? 21357 There, Nic,"he cried triumphantly;"what did I say? |
21357 | There, what did I tell you? |
21357 | There, you see what they''re like, and know what you have to expect-- What? |
21357 | They only come when the pool''s full of salmon, you say, after a bit of rain in the moors? |
21357 | They thrash you, then, because you are not strong enough? |
21357 | Think he''ll come round again? |
21357 | Think of what, zir? |
21357 | Think they''ll do it? |
21357 | Thinking of food, Pete? |
21357 | Tie big''tone to um head first, massa? |
21357 | To run? |
21357 | To try for our salmon again? |
21357 | To- night, was n''t it? |
21357 | WHAT''LL MASSA SAY? |
21357 | Waiting to sail? |
21357 | Was I nearly drowned, zir? |
21357 | Was n''t that something moving on the right bank? |
21357 | Well, Nic, my boy,cried the visitor,"how''s the dad? |
21357 | Well, old fellow,he said gently;"whose dog are you?" |
21357 | Well, sir, why do n''t you answer? |
21357 | Well, there''s plenty, are n''t there, master? 21357 Well, what of that?" |
21357 | Well, what sort of a lot do they seem? |
21357 | Well, why do n''t you take it? |
21357 | Well, your honour, why not? |
21357 | Well,cried the overseer,"is he quite dead?" |
21357 | Well,said Nic sharply,"have you repented?" |
21357 | Were you nearly drowned? |
21357 | What about, zir? |
21357 | What about-- our escaping? |
21357 | What about? |
21357 | What are you going to do? |
21357 | What are you laughing at, Bill? |
21357 | What bit of''possum? |
21357 | What can I do, lad? |
21357 | What did he say, father? |
21357 | What do you mean by that? |
21357 | What do you mean-- in the colour? |
21357 | What do you mean? |
21357 | What do you mean? |
21357 | What do you say, my men? |
21357 | What does it all mean? |
21357 | What for, Master Nic? |
21357 | What for, sir? 21357 What for?" |
21357 | What for? |
21357 | What good can it do him till he can think? |
21357 | What is it, Pete? 21357 What is it, Solly?" |
21357 | What is to prevent me creeping in and getting them, Pete? |
21357 | What is, father? |
21357 | What sort of fellows are they? |
21357 | What vor?--pulling you out when you was drownding? |
21357 | What was that you were saying to me just now? |
21357 | What zay? |
21357 | What''s that? |
21357 | What''s that? |
21357 | What''s the matter with you? |
21357 | What''s the row about? |
21357 | What, sir? 21357 What, sir? |
21357 | What, sir? 21357 What, sir?" |
21357 | What? |
21357 | What? |
21357 | What? |
21357 | What? |
21357 | Where are we now? |
21357 | Where are we, then? |
21357 | Where shall I find you, zir? |
21357 | Where''s Solly? |
21357 | Where''s that there moog o''zyder, lads? |
21357 | Where''s the huff- cap? |
21357 | Where? 21357 Which way?" |
21357 | While you are gone? |
21357 | Who goes there? |
21357 | Who said that? |
21357 | Who wants to lead? |
21357 | Who''s going to run? |
21357 | Who''s going to try to escape? |
21357 | Who''s that? |
21357 | Why am I here? 21357 Why did n''t I think of it before?" |
21357 | Why did n''t they iron you? |
21357 | Why did n''t you bring some, you black fool? |
21357 | Why did n''t you call me? |
21357 | Why did n''t you get hold o''me and pull me in? 21357 Why did n''t you tell me?" |
21357 | Why do n''t you speak-- why do n''t you speak? |
21357 | Why does n''t Pete say something? |
21357 | Why have I been so bad? 21357 Why not wait for a good opportunity?" |
21357 | Why not? |
21357 | Why, Master Nic, you are n''t never gone and let me sleep all night? |
21357 | Why, Nic?--why? |
21357 | Why, a- mussy me, Master Nic? |
21357 | Why, sir, why? |
21357 | Why, what is it, old lad? |
21357 | Why, you are n''t going to sneak out of it, are you? |
21357 | Why? |
21357 | Why? |
21357 | Why? |
21357 | Why? |
21357 | Will ye? |
21357 | Will you give me your word that you will leave the fish alone? |
21357 | Wo n''t die, will he, sir? |
21357 | Wrong? 21357 Yes, and sold-- perhaps eaten by this time, eh?" |
21357 | Yes, yes,cried Nic querulously;"but who is it?" |
21357 | Yes; where could he run to-- back to Africa? 21357 You do n''t believe me, sir?" |
21357 | You do n''t want to kill nobody in a fight such as we''re going to have, do ye? |
21357 | You here? |
21357 | You mean the boat? |
21357 | You remember us, then? |
21357 | You tell Mass''Saunder? 21357 You will let me write to my friends?" |
21357 | You''ve been bad, have n''t you? |
21357 | You-- you will not forsake me? |
21357 | Zay, Humpy, how is it with ye? 21357 Zay, Master Nic, why do n''t you join in chorus? |
21357 | Zee Humpy Dee look at me, Master Nic? |
21357 | Zee um, zir? |
21357 | ''Most got to that t''other zattlement, are n''t uz?" |
21357 | An''if dogs not catch um, where run to? |
21357 | And do you notice what a peculiar gleam there is in the air, and how the flies bite?" |
21357 | And s''posing we got the boat, what then, zir? |
21357 | And who minds that?" |
21357 | Any idee where we be?" |
21357 | Are n''t you hurt, then?" |
21357 | Are you afraid?" |
21357 | Are you keeping a good, sharp lookout?" |
21357 | Are you one of this fellow''s comrades?" |
21357 | But I zay, master, you wo n''t die now, will you?" |
21357 | But I zay, you are better now, are n''t you?" |
21357 | But I zay, you''ll show fight if they should catch up to uz?" |
21357 | But as they moved off towards the house, one thought was in both minds as presenting the greatest obstacle they had to dread: Where were the dogs? |
21357 | But what about that treacherous hound? |
21357 | But what are you thinking about?" |
21357 | But would you mind telling me, sir, where we''re going?" |
21357 | But-- I say, Master Nic, what did you do with that bacon and bread?" |
21357 | Ca n''t you wean him from it? |
21357 | Ca n''t you zee what I mean?" |
21357 | Can you stand like that and see the man drown before your eyes?" |
21357 | Captain Lawrence there?" |
21357 | Could n''t we try to escape again?" |
21357 | Did n''t you hear''em?" |
21357 | Did n''t you tell me he was alive?" |
21357 | Did they take yourn?" |
21357 | Did you?" |
21357 | Do him good-- do all on us good, and we''re all glad to ha''got with such a good master; are n''t we, lads?" |
21357 | Do n''t you see it means rain? |
21357 | Do you hear?" |
21357 | Do you say that what he tells me is not true?" |
21357 | Do you see?" |
21357 | Do you see?" |
21357 | Do you think we could tie a few leaves together for hats?" |
21357 | Do you?" |
21357 | Durst us jump down?" |
21357 | Feel better?" |
21357 | For, just when the dogs were free of the shed and were baying their loudest, the settler, at the head of his men, turned to Saunders:"Hear that?" |
21357 | From the plantation?" |
21357 | Going to give me a noo steel hook?" |
21357 | Had n''t we better deal with them as they deal with us? |
21357 | He''s a sharp un, Master Saunders, are n''t he?" |
21357 | Hear that?" |
21357 | Hear the fall?" |
21357 | Heard the thunder, of course?" |
21357 | Heavy boat? |
21357 | Here''s our chance; shall we take it?" |
21357 | Here, Pete, old man, how are you now?" |
21357 | Here, what are you doing?" |
21357 | How dare you speak to me like that?" |
21357 | How dare you?" |
21357 | How is this to end?" |
21357 | How long did Jack Lawrence say that he was going to stop about Plymouth?" |
21357 | How many men can we muster?" |
21357 | How to make Pete grasp the fact that he was coming to join him? |
21357 | How will that do?" |
21357 | How''s the Gaffer?" |
21357 | I do n''t mean Humpy Dee and his lot when I zay` we,''because you will go off wi''me if I zee a chance?" |
21357 | I say, Master Nic, you are n''t offended at me for making so bold?" |
21357 | I say, my boy, I-- that is-- er-- was n''t I a little bit crusty this morning to you and poor old William Solly?" |
21357 | I say, you do n''t think Jack Lawrence has gone yet?" |
21357 | I suppose I have some papers to sign?" |
21357 | I zay, how far do you make it to the landing- place where we come aboard the boat?" |
21357 | I zay, though, you do n''t think they got another boat and passed us while we were asleep, do you?" |
21357 | Is anything wrong?" |
21357 | It''s dreaming, are n''t it, and we did n''t get away?" |
21357 | Just then one of the other men said, in the broad Devon burr:"Zay, lads, bean''t they going to give uz zum''at to eat?" |
21357 | Look at his eyes; he can hear what we say.--Coming round, then, my lad?" |
21357 | Look here; did n''t we have a fight with you and your men to- night?" |
21357 | Look here; do you dare to reach out your hand and pat him?" |
21357 | Not thuzty, are you? |
21357 | Now, what am I to do?" |
21357 | Oh, I zay, it do n''t mean tasting me first to zee whether I''m good, do it?" |
21357 | Oh, here''s Solly.--Here, you, sir, what about those two signal flags? |
21357 | Oh, wheer be ye? |
21357 | Pete Burge made no reply, and there was silence again, till it was broken by Nic, who said suddenly:"Have you been very bad too?" |
21357 | Pete came close to him, placed his lips nearly to his ear, and shouted,"Cap?" |
21357 | Pete snored again, moved uneasily, and began to mutter in a low tone:"Could n''t throw Humpy Dee?" |
21357 | Quick, sir; do you hear?" |
21357 | Ready?" |
21357 | Ready?" |
21357 | S''pose one of them dogs had you by the throat, would n''t it be useful then? |
21357 | Say, lads, we''re going to have a night of it, eh?" |
21357 | See that bit of silvery cloud yonder over Rigdon Tor? |
21357 | See that river as we come up here?" |
21357 | Seen any of the others?" |
21357 | Shall I cut you some bread?" |
21357 | Shall I give a whistle?" |
21357 | Should he help, or should n''t he? |
21357 | So suppose we shakes hands agen?" |
21357 | Some one had come up, and in a low whisper Nic heard the words:"All right?" |
21357 | Surely you did n''t go?" |
21357 | Surely you do n''t mean that we''ve had poachers again?" |
21357 | That would make him speak-- eh?" |
21357 | That zounds queer, Master Nic, do n''t it? |
21357 | That''s tumbling into the hole you made for zomebody else, is n''t it? |
21357 | The big black took the fetters and balanced them in his hand, looking at his superior as much as to say,"Will these do?" |
21357 | The falls will not come on my head any more, will they?" |
21357 | The plantations? |
21357 | Then all at once he said:"What do you zay to our going quietly down to the water some night, dropping in, and zwimming for it?" |
21357 | Then they''ll hand us over to a judge o''some kind, and as soon as he hears your story you''ll be all right; and-- and--""Yes, Pete?" |
21357 | Then, loudly,"king''s men?" |
21357 | They was going to bring a cart up the road yonder, waren''t they?" |
21357 | Think Humpy Dee and them others will get away and come back again?" |
21357 | Think I''m one, mates?--think I''m going to do as I said, and let him go and blab, so as to get into favour here? |
21357 | Think he''s got a boat?" |
21357 | Think you could ha''made him keep back when there was a fight, Master Nic?" |
21357 | This announcement, though almost a repetition, seemed to stun Nic for the time; but he began again:"We had a desperate fight, did n''t we?" |
21357 | Took the boat, I s''pose, and rowed down?" |
21357 | Understand that, master?" |
21357 | Was I-- er-- a bit irritable?" |
21357 | Was that the doctor whom I heard talking yesterday?" |
21357 | Was there a storm?" |
21357 | We''re ready to fight, all on us-- eh, mates?" |
21357 | Well, I''ve thought a deal about them dogs, and dogs is dogs-- eh, Master Nic?" |
21357 | Well, what are you staring at? |
21357 | Well, why not? |
21357 | Well,"he continued,"why do n''t you go in? |
21357 | Well? |
21357 | What are we going to do now?" |
21357 | What are you going to do this morning-- read?" |
21357 | What can the dear old dad have thought when he found me gone? |
21357 | What did you go and stop zo long under water for?" |
21357 | What do you mean by giving the young master the lie?" |
21357 | What do you mean?" |
21357 | What do you say to that, zir?" |
21357 | What do you zay now to lying down and having a nap while I take the watch?" |
21357 | What do you zay to trying, then?" |
21357 | What does it mean?" |
21357 | What for? |
21357 | What is it?" |
21357 | What is it?" |
21357 | What makes you think that?" |
21357 | What place is this? |
21357 | What say you?" |
21357 | What then? |
21357 | What then?" |
21357 | What to do? |
21357 | What will massa say?" |
21357 | What you looking at, zir?" |
21357 | What''s the good o''saying that?" |
21357 | What''s the matter?" |
21357 | What''s the skipper thinking about? |
21357 | What''s to be done now, zir?" |
21357 | Where are the others?" |
21357 | Where are we going to be took?" |
21357 | Where are we, zir? |
21357 | Where did you tie it up?" |
21357 | Where it is hidden?" |
21357 | Who are these-- the two who have been in hospital, Mr Groves?" |
21357 | Who is it?" |
21357 | Who is to believe your word? |
21357 | Who wants music? |
21357 | Why ca n''t the rascals leave me and mine alone?" |
21357 | Why not try for a salmon? |
21357 | Why not, pray?" |
21357 | Why should I die now?" |
21357 | Why waren''t I born clever?" |
21357 | Why was not Pete there to join him, and they might all get away together? |
21357 | Will you risk it, zir?" |
21357 | Will you tell him he is to stay?" |
21357 | Would n''t it be possible to hear from him where the boat was kept? |
21357 | You came with the men after the salmon?" |
21357 | You got out?" |
21357 | You will have it? |
21357 | You''ll put in a good word for a poor fellow, wo n''t you?" |
21357 | You''ve got zome''at to tell me?" |
21357 | You, Zerk, what you go and done wid de oder man?" |
21357 | Zay, Master Nic, are n''t the water nice and cold?" |
21357 | Zay; they are n''t got another boat anywhere, have they?" |
21357 | and that means I was like a bear-- eh, sir?" |
21357 | and them zee us go, Master Nic?" |
21357 | arguing again? |
21357 | cried Pete,"what did you do that for?" |
21357 | cried the Captain, catching his son by the shoulder;"then you knew of it too, sir? |
21357 | cried the Captain.--"And you, Solly, you mutinous scoundrel, how dare you laugh?" |
21357 | cried the girl;"ca n''t you see what he meant?" |
21357 | ejaculated Solly;"that was it, sir? |
21357 | fever stronger.--Has he been talking to you-- sensibly?" |
21357 | he cried,"whar dem oder white fellow? |
21357 | he cried;"this man is not one of you-- one of the gang taken that night?" |
21357 | he said to himself;"how''s he going to take it when he knows all?" |
21357 | laughed Pete savagely;"just found that out?" |
21357 | or skin a''possum? |
21357 | or to kill a deer out in the woods? |
21357 | said the man quietly as he looked from one to the other;"where are the dogs?" |
21357 | that poacher who used to defy us all?" |
21357 | those scoundrels after the salmon?" |
21357 | what''s that?" |
21357 | where we rested for the night, Pete? |
21357 | where''s my cap, and--?" |
21357 | who minds a trifle like that, Solly?" |
21357 | you heard news?" |
36244 | ''He is n''t half white, is he?'' 36244 ''How do you know?'' |
36244 | ''Tain''t bad, ai n''t it? |
36244 | A whale or a hurricane? |
36244 | A witness to what? |
36244 | Aaaah? |
36244 | Ai n''t you ashamed of yourself after all the fuss I''ve had to get her to come round? |
36244 | Am I much lighter? |
36244 | Am I to be left upon this island? |
36244 | And how did that happen? |
36244 | And how, pray you, do you know my title so well? |
36244 | And now that''s settled,said the Skipper,"why do n''t you damned miserable, worthless fellows go and get those weapons?" |
36244 | And the Captain? |
36244 | And to whom, Uncle? 36244 And water?" |
36244 | And what about the ransom, Lord George Trevelyan? |
36244 | And what of ghosts and skeletons? |
36244 | And where did you come from, sir? |
36244 | And why should we leave Lord George Trevelyan upon this island? 36244 And you''re the girl who fired on the letter of marque?" |
36244 | And you,said I,"how did you get in with these fiends?" |
36244 | And your party, where are they? |
36244 | Are there any more of those guavas? |
36244 | Are there any more prisoners to come before me? |
36244 | Are those guavas? 36244 Are we putting out to sea in an open boat, Uncle?" |
36244 | Are you afraid of fainting? |
36244 | Are you alone? |
36244 | Are you better? |
36244 | Are you going to see what that fool wants? |
36244 | Are you not hungry? |
36244 | Are you really afraid, Uncle Antony? |
36244 | Are you really insane,said I,"or are you only feigning lunacy?" |
36244 | Beg your pardon, sir, Mr. Jones, but where''s them crew? |
36244 | Believe a sailor? |
36244 | But I can trust you not to mention that, Mr. Jones, sir, to any one? |
36244 | But how? |
36244 | But if you do not mind death, Bo''s''n, and you say not-- if you do not mind leaving this world and----"Oh, sir, can not you see? 36244 But where is the Grand Papaloi himself?" |
36244 | Ca n''t you cry or do something? 36244 Ca n''t you lend me a trouser leg?" |
36244 | Call that nigger a king? |
36244 | Can it be Uncle? |
36244 | Can it be Uncle? |
36244 | Can you duplicate my ring? |
36244 | Can you plunge to the bottom of the sea and bring up them corpses? |
36244 | Can you raise the dead? |
36244 | Captain Schuyler,I said,"why did you run the risk of bringing your niece on such a dangerous voyage?" |
36244 | Captain,said I, when I could speak to him alone,"who brought you into this cavern?" |
36244 | Captain,said I,"do you notice there are snakes and the heads of goats everywhere about these buildings? |
36244 | Could you leap it, sir? |
36244 | Did I say a small one? 36244 Did he eat it?" |
36244 | Did n''t I tell you that pudding was n''t fit to give to a dog? |
36244 | Did n''t you call him? |
36244 | Did that dam''ghost fellow show you the way in again? |
36244 | Did you ever cook anything, Miss Archer? |
36244 | Did you ever see such a fiendish looking lot of ruffians? |
36244 | Did you get it? |
36244 | Did you hear me tell you to stop sassin''me a while back? 36244 Did you know who the picture was meant for?" |
36244 | Did you remark what a difficult time Bill Ware had to get pointed straight, Uncle Tony? |
36244 | Did you see any one as you came along the beach, Bo''s''n? |
36244 | Did you teach him that? |
36244 | Do I look like Birnam Wood? |
36244 | Do n''t you know me? |
36244 | Do n''t you see those black figures climbing over the bulwarks? 36244 Do n''t you think she might prospect a little?" |
36244 | Do n''t you want some rest? |
36244 | Do we? 36244 Do you believe it''s a mutiny? |
36244 | Do you call_ that_ life? |
36244 | Do you feel that, and that, and that? |
36244 | Do you hear it? |
36244 | Do you mean to say that you have left that old man alone down there? |
36244 | Do you mean to tell me, Uncle Tony, that you do n''t believe Tomkins on his oath? |
36244 | Do you mean to tell me,she asked fiercely,"that you''ll run from those letter- of- marque people without even a struggle? |
36244 | Do you really suppose that we shall need all those dreadful things? |
36244 | Do you remember, sir,he said, screwing up his eyes and turning his head to one side like a wise bird--"do you remember that hollow tree?" |
36244 | Do you think I want to stay here, Captain? |
36244 | Do you think he intends to let me go,asked I,"or is the ring making only a pretense to kill me?" |
36244 | Do you think he''ll wait? |
36244 | Do you think that we can ever get back to you? |
36244 | Do you think they''re asleep? |
36244 | Do you think we''ll get ahead of that other ship? |
36244 | Do you wear our wedding ring, Cynthia? |
36244 | Does Mrs. Jones know it, sir? |
36244 | Does n''t he intend to obey my orders any more? |
36244 | Does n''t he look foolish? 36244 Done to him? |
36244 | Even if we could get up there, what good would it do them? |
36244 | Far off from where? |
36244 | For God''s sake, what was that? |
36244 | For me? |
36244 | From the ship, or the boat? |
36244 | From whom? |
36244 | Got pistols, I''ll be bound, every man Jack of''em!--By the way, Jones, what have we got in the way of firearms? |
36244 | Had n''t that Cook better build a fire? |
36244 | Had n''t they better wait until morning? 36244 Had n''t you better go out and put some more on?" |
36244 | Handsome, ai n''t he? |
36244 | Have I not heard your men here addressing you, sir? 36244 Have n''t I heard you call him so?" |
36244 | Have n''t we had enough of this farce, Miss Archer? |
36244 | Have they any weapons, Uncle Tony? |
36244 | Have they anything to show that they are of our order? |
36244 | Have you a cup, Captain? |
36244 | Have you finished the crown that I gave you to make? |
36244 | Have you finished the robe that I commanded for the Queen? |
36244 | Have you got that ring yet, Jones? |
36244 | He''s bagged the whole of us, has n''t he? |
36244 | How am I to be killed, then? 36244 How can she tell? |
36244 | How can we ever get it all to Belleville? |
36244 | How can you be sure he''s gone? |
36244 | How can you make me so ridiculous, Uncle? |
36244 | How can you tell he''s gone? |
36244 | How dare these strangers intrude upon our sacred rites? |
36244 | How dare you accuse me of being a coward? |
36244 | How did it happen? |
36244 | How did she happen to consent? |
36244 | How did they get you, Captain? |
36244 | How did you find me? |
36244 | How did you get here? 36244 How did you get our pail, Mr. Jones, sir?" |
36244 | How did you get up so high as to put your head out of the window? |
36244 | How do you know he is a captain? |
36244 | How do you know? |
36244 | How do you know? |
36244 | How do you know? |
36244 | How do you know? |
36244 | How do you mean? |
36244 | How does anything happen? |
36244 | How is she? |
36244 | How long do you suppose it has been there? |
36244 | How many of you want to go? |
36244 | How shall we ever get any water? |
36244 | How were we to know it was you? |
36244 | How''s he to know, Captain Schuyler, sir? |
36244 | How''s that? |
36244 | How? 36244 How?" |
36244 | How? |
36244 | Hungry again? |
36244 | I asked for you? 36244 I should always do my best to take care of your niece, Captain Schuyler,"said I;"but how do you know she does n''t care two straws for me?" |
36244 | I suppose you kept your promise to me, and sat with your back against the outer side of the cave? |
36244 | I what, sir? |
36244 | I wonder how you would live then? |
36244 | I wonder if the question will ever come up, Mr. Jones, sir? |
36244 | I? |
36244 | If he is a prince, why do not his friends send for him, that he may return to his country Amerique? |
36244 | Is it mutiny, Uncle? 36244 Is it not time to finish this business?" |
36244 | Is it really you, sir? |
36244 | Is it? |
36244 | Is n''t he rather heavy to carry round? |
36244 | Is n''t it exciting? |
36244 | Is she inside of it? |
36244 | Is that about the size of the Lord George Trevelyan? |
36244 | Is that your house? |
36244 | Is the Bo''s''n mad? |
36244 | Is the breaker ashore? |
36244 | Is what? |
36244 | Is your side closed, too? |
36244 | Is-- that-- Christophe''s castle? 36244 It ai n''t a reel cheerful weddin'', Mr. Jones, sir, now is it, sir?" |
36244 | It does n''t seem only a day, does it-- in fact, only a few hours-- since that happened? |
36244 | Jones, what do you say to rowing back up along the beach and seeing if those fellows are alive? 36244 Keep house on what?" |
36244 | Know the coast pretty well? |
36244 | Looks hospitable, do n''t it? |
36244 | Married, Uncle? 36244 May I take the circle in my hand?" |
36244 | Must the Captain speak twice? |
36244 | My baby chain,she said,"my baby chain?" |
36244 | No other cage? 36244 Now where are your trees?" |
36244 | Now where could that have come from? 36244 Now where is it?" |
36244 | Now where''s your castle? |
36244 | Now, Bo''s''n, look out there; what are you doing? 36244 Of mine?" |
36244 | Of what are the prisoners talking? |
36244 | Of what nation are you? |
36244 | Oh, he does, does he?--So you''ve been here before, have you, Tomkins? |
36244 | Oh, is it? |
36244 | Oh, is that you? 36244 Oh, she has, has she? |
36244 | Oh, you call those trees, do you? 36244 Oh, you intend to take her a present of a plant, do you?" |
36244 | Oh, you mean the skeletons? |
36244 | On what? |
36244 | Remember, Mauresco? 36244 Say? |
36244 | Seems to me we''re farther in shore than we ought to be.--Tomkins, did you keep her exactly on the course the Captain gave you? |
36244 | Sha n''t we wait for the Bo''s''n, Captain? |
36244 | Sha n''t we wait for the Captain? |
36244 | Shall I really say? |
36244 | Shall I take the wheel, Uncle? |
36244 | Shall we lower a third one, Captain? |
36244 | Shall we put any blankets in the boat, Mr. Jones, sir? |
36244 | Shall we put them there again, Bo''s''n? |
36244 | Sick, is he? 36244 Soldiers of fortune?" |
36244 | Story? |
36244 | Suppose I take this watch to the Captain? |
36244 | Suppose we sleep now for a while? |
36244 | Suppose we waken the Captain and take him along? |
36244 | The Cook, too? |
36244 | The Cook? |
36244 | The chronic question? |
36244 | Then how did you know her name? |
36244 | Then this absurd marriage is off? |
36244 | Then what shall I do with it, Cynthia? 36244 Then what will happen?" |
36244 | Then why have you been so long in coming? |
36244 | They did n''t get you, then, did they, sir? |
36244 | This was my baby chain; I have worn it ever since I was a little thing.--How old, Uncle Tony? |
36244 | Tomkins,she said,"as you shall answer at the day of judgment, when the secrets of all hearts shall be revealed, did you wreck the Yankee Blade?" |
36244 | Uncle, will you never speak? 36244 Uncle,"she said, turning suddenly,"do you know that part of the Yankee is there still? |
36244 | Was he handsome, Uncle, that young supercargo of yours? |
36244 | Was n''t you, really? 36244 Was that you?" |
36244 | Well, have n''t I? |
36244 | Well, you remember when we went along the shore, do n''t you? |
36244 | Well,said I dejectedly,"you have the dagger, I suppose? |
36244 | Were there so many? |
36244 | What Haïtiens? |
36244 | What about Miss Archer? |
36244 | What about the girl? |
36244 | What are those funny- looking white things on the side, made of glass beads? |
36244 | What are you doing, Jones? |
36244 | What are you looking for, Bo''s''n? |
36244 | What are you talking about, Cynthy? 36244 What battle?" |
36244 | What became of the supercargo? |
36244 | What boy? 36244 What can it be? |
36244 | What can we do? |
36244 | What cave? |
36244 | What could possess you to do such a thing? |
36244 | What diamond? |
36244 | What did Lacelle say, Bo''s''n? |
36244 | What did they want with your clothes? |
36244 | What did you mean by saying that she has consented? |
36244 | What did you tell him? |
36244 | What do you mean? |
36244 | What do you say,said I,"to our beginning a fusillade on those fellows and picking off all we can, and then rushing out and fighting the rest?" |
36244 | What do you think I''ve found, sir? |
36244 | What do you think can have become of Uncle? |
36244 | What do you think of this place for a landing, Captain? |
36244 | What do you want of me? |
36244 | What do you wear your trousers at half mast for, Bo''s''n? |
36244 | What does he carry that ridiculous picture all around the world for? |
36244 | What have I told you since I first met you on board the Yankee Blade, Miss Cynthia, Miss Archer? |
36244 | What have you got there, Bill Ware? |
36244 | What is it smells so sweet? |
36244 | What is it, Bo''s''n? 36244 What is it, Uncle Tony?" |
36244 | What is it? 36244 What is it?" |
36244 | What is that? |
36244 | What is that? |
36244 | What lady? 36244 What ring?" |
36244 | What shall we do, Jones? 36244 What sort of a girl are you, anyway?" |
36244 | What under heaven do you mean, Bo''s''n? |
36244 | What under heaven do you mean? |
36244 | What was that? |
36244 | What with, Cap''n, sir? |
36244 | What young girl? |
36244 | What''s all this about rubies and diamonds and precious stones generally? |
36244 | What''s his name when he''s sober? |
36244 | What''s that? |
36244 | What''s that? |
36244 | What''s the matter with him? |
36244 | What''s the matter with the man? |
36244 | What''s the matter? |
36244 | What''s your antediluvian bird talking about, Miss Archer? |
36244 | What, after all the trouble I''ve taken? 36244 What, from those honest sailors?" |
36244 | What? 36244 When does he purpose starting?" |
36244 | When will that be? |
36244 | When? |
36244 | Where are they? 36244 Where are those Haïtiens?" |
36244 | Where are you going? |
36244 | Where are you, Cynthia? |
36244 | Where can he be? |
36244 | Where can they be? |
36244 | Where did they put the breaker? |
36244 | Where did you find it? |
36244 | Where is Mauresco? 36244 Where is Mauresco? |
36244 | Where is Miss Archer? |
36244 | Where is Wilson? |
36244 | Where is it? |
36244 | Where is it? |
36244 | Where is it? |
36244 | Where is that glass? |
36244 | Where is the Bo''s''n? |
36244 | Where is the Captain? |
36244 | Where is the sacrifice? |
36244 | Where is young Trevelyan? |
36244 | Where to? |
36244 | Where to? |
36244 | Where were they? |
36244 | Where''s Jones? |
36244 | Where''s Ned Chudleigh? |
36244 | Where''s William Brown? |
36244 | Where''s that Minion? |
36244 | Where''s that damn Minion? |
36244 | Where''s that kag of salt pork and that bag of hard bread? |
36244 | Where? 36244 Where?" |
36244 | Where? |
36244 | Which one was that? |
36244 | Which way did he go? |
36244 | Which way, Jones? |
36244 | Who are you? |
36244 | Who brought her? 36244 Who brought these up here?" |
36244 | Who is talking about such absurd things? |
36244 | Who is that? |
36244 | Who is that? |
36244 | Who the devil is it, then? |
36244 | Who would help us? 36244 Who, sir?" |
36244 | Who, that black brute? |
36244 | Who? 36244 Who? |
36244 | Whose consented to what? |
36244 | Why ca n''t we do that up here? |
36244 | Why did n''t he come, then? |
36244 | Why do n''t they push the boats off and row for it? |
36244 | Why do n''t you throw it into the sea? |
36244 | Why do n''t you throw the cat overboard, and shoot an albatross? |
36244 | Why not meet them at the archway? |
36244 | Why should I take a range? 36244 Why should the British attack us, Uncle?" |
36244 | Why should we die at all? |
36244 | Why should you care, anyway? |
36244 | Why under heaven ca n''t you keep your tongue between your teeth? |
36244 | Why, Uncle Tony, is n''t Haïti a friendly country? |
36244 | Why? |
36244 | Why? |
36244 | Why? |
36244 | Will he take my cassava bread, and capture Solomon? |
36244 | Will that do, Cap''n? |
36244 | Will you ask it now? |
36244 | Will you shoot me? 36244 Wonder what kind of weather we''re goin''to have for the weddin''?" |
36244 | Would Lord Trevelyan like to try his hand at this very pretty game? |
36244 | Would it, sir? |
36244 | Would you like anything for yourself, sir? |
36244 | Yes, what of that? |
36244 | Yes, yes, Cynthy; but how did you find this hiding place? 36244 You go and see how my niece is, do you hear? |
36244 | You go back and put out that light, do you hear? |
36244 | You have n''t had any? |
36244 | You mean the Bo''s''n and the Minion? |
36244 | You saw my chain? |
36244 | You see Sir Evylyn Wulbur''s left eye? |
36244 | You see that deck there? 36244 You still have faith in them, have you? |
36244 | You would n''t believe it, now would you? |
36244 | You''ve got fanciful, Jones; who else could it be? 36244 You''ve heard of skinning eels? |
36244 | Your niece is a very beautiful young girl----"Do you think so? |
36244 | Your what? |
36244 | _ Le bruit du gouffre!_"How can I tell what she means? |
36244 | ''Ever been there before?'' |
36244 | ''What of it?'' |
36244 | --Mary Schuyler Archer?" |
36244 | About those graves now,"continued the Skipper ruminatingly,"you remember what I said about a man in love, do n''t you?" |
36244 | Ai n''t we uncomfortable enough without your ringin''the changes on ghosts and spooks and spectres?" |
36244 | Aloud,"Where is that other pincers?" |
36244 | Am I keeping the Yankee Blade between us?" |
36244 | Am I to be made to walk out upon that dreadful plank?" |
36244 | An American, hey? |
36244 | And she''ll go and tell Mary''Zekel, and I promised Mary''Zekel-- Where''d we better put that damn thing, anyway?" |
36244 | And the symbol has supernatural or magic properties, has it? |
36244 | And then to the Admiral:"There, sir, how do you like Sir Popinjay now? |
36244 | And when you had entered the darkness of the archway, so that you could not recognise its owner, who took your hand and led you into the cave?" |
36244 | And you''ll take me along, sir? |
36244 | Any whom you have wronged? |
36244 | Are they kind to you?" |
36244 | Are they treating you as you should like to be treated?" |
36244 | Are those our colours, Mr. Jones? |
36244 | Are we leaving you pretty comfortable? |
36244 | Are you insane? |
36244 | As we started on our walk toward the throne, I heard a muttering beside me:"Have n''t you got anything to conjure with?" |
36244 | As we were left alone a few moments while Lacelle and the Skipper were getting into the boat, she turned to me and asked:"Was that Heloïse''s ring?" |
36244 | Aunt Mary''Zekel? |
36244 | Believe a sailor? |
36244 | Besides, you do n''t suppose, sir, those hellions would leave an oar where they could get it?" |
36244 | Bill Ware spoke up eagerly:"Tomkins says as there''s two or three springs on the way, sir----""How does he know?" |
36244 | But for the Lord''s sake, how did you climb up there?" |
36244 | But if the King will not let me have the sacred symbol, how shall I duplicate it?" |
36244 | But then, after all, what should I tell her other than she knew already? |
36244 | But was she not perhaps reserved for some terrible future, when we, her protectors, should be gone? |
36244 | But who did he think would perform this act, when to all intents and purposes our party knew nothing as to what had befallen the Minion? |
36244 | But would death end it soon? |
36244 | But, Mr. Jones----"She cast down her head and whispered hurriedly:"What do you think? |
36244 | By the way, why do n''t you ask the girl how you----""How can I ask her anything, Uncle?" |
36244 | Ca n''t you make love to the she- devil, or something? |
36244 | Ca n''t you speak, Jones? |
36244 | Can it be Zalee returned?" |
36244 | Can it be my scissors or my thimble?" |
36244 | Can you imagine how my feelings overcame me when I saw Lacelle issue from the sleeping chamber? |
36244 | Can you reproduce it?" |
36244 | Can you send Solomon with a line under his wing, or can you, in passing, tie a note to the thread which I shall lower close to the jasmine vine? |
36244 | Captain Jonas turned to a man standing near:"You hear what the Admiral orders? |
36244 | Chicken- livered, hey, my lord, hey?" |
36244 | Could those wretches have returned? |
36244 | Dangerous? |
36244 | Dangerous? |
36244 | Did n''t you find the note in the cork of the bottle?" |
36244 | Did the King order that drink for me?" |
36244 | Did you ever hear such stuff?" |
36244 | Do n''t you see that big pile of stone?" |
36244 | Do n''t you see? |
36244 | Do n''t you think I understand pretty well how they conduct a mutiny?" |
36244 | Do you hear me damning you, Mr. Jones, sir? |
36244 | Do you hear me?" |
36244 | Do you hear, Jones? |
36244 | Do you know that I have been here every evening since I wrote to you? |
36244 | Do you know that our Cook''s half black, Mister Superior Cargo?'' |
36244 | Do you know we''re running for our lives? |
36244 | Do you know what a hot morning it is?" |
36244 | Do you know what the motto means?" |
36244 | Do you know what you done, sir, damn you? |
36244 | Do you know you''ve driven her raring, staring, stark mad?" |
36244 | Do you see that rainbow, sir?'' |
36244 | Do you suppose that I should be willing to kill several of those men just for a fancied grievance?" |
36244 | Do you think that perhaps while we were in hiding some wild parrots have come around and learned to speak as he does?" |
36244 | Do you think that you could manage to get to the breaker, Mr. Jones, and bring me a little water?" |
36244 | Do you think there is any truth in that young liar''s words?" |
36244 | Do you think they could have noticed that signal?" |
36244 | Got rheumatism, or what? |
36244 | Guess he''ll be sick before we''ve-- Why do n''t you get out that boat, you rascals?" |
36244 | Had n''t I better tell him that you are friends of Christophe''s? |
36244 | Had some one found the locket down there in the stream? |
36244 | Had those ruffians killed my friends, and was I to hang here as he had hung who had been removed to make room for me? |
36244 | Handsome Mauresco? |
36244 | Have we enough food for two days, Uncle?" |
36244 | Have you forgotten him?" |
36244 | Have you your dagger still?" |
36244 | He might show her mercy because of these black princesses, but what if they should change toward her? |
36244 | He shook his head anxiously as he stood gazing at Cynthia with a puzzled expression, as if to say,"What will become of her?" |
36244 | Here the Captain turned to me and said:"S''pose we condescend to let those devils get up?" |
36244 | How could I bear this of all troubles the greatest? |
36244 | How could I tell what these half savages intended doing; what violence they might commit? |
36244 | How could you? |
36244 | How did I not know that my interpreter was perhaps only amusing himself with us as he seemed to be amusing himself with the Papaloi? |
36244 | How did you find this place?" |
36244 | How do you account for that?" |
36244 | How shall I describe that dance? |
36244 | How shall I describe the confusion which reigned in the fortress? |
36244 | How would it do if I should go and get the water myself? |
36244 | How would she meet me? |
36244 | How''d ye find the Mate, boy?" |
36244 | I asked--"the hiding place that you speak of?" |
36244 | I bowed low before her, and as I did so I contrived to whisper:"Did you hear that voice? |
36244 | I can-- Why, what''s the matter with the young lord? |
36244 | I did n''t tell Jones here you knew it.--What do you want to fluster a girl so for, Jones?" |
36244 | I happened to be in your neighbourhood and met the lad running, and I----""How about the death of The Rogue? |
36244 | I presume she''s told you?" |
36244 | I said;"it ca n''t be you?" |
36244 | I says,''Fer Gord''s sake, Mr. Jones,''I says,''what are you a- doin'', sir?'' |
36244 | I suppose when it is really sunset those men will go away, do n''t you? |
36244 | I suppose you have removed all the traces, Bo''s''n?" |
36244 | I suppose you think I''ve got no right to the name of Schuyler, but I''d like to know who is nearer to a man than his own mother? |
36244 | I suppose you think that I might have risked dropping down into the garden, but of what use? |
36244 | I then turned to the guard who had interpreted for us, and said with all seriousness:"I suppose you do not belong to the sect in reality?" |
36244 | I thin----""Mr. Jones, am I Captain of this vessel, or am I not?" |
36244 | I think they usually respect a lady''s wishes, do n''t you?" |
36244 | I took it to mean"What are you doing here?" |
36244 | I was sittin''by her, and she opened her eyes and she said-- What do you think, Jones?" |
36244 | I was sittin''by you, Cynthy, girl-- you will acknowledge that, wo n''t you? |
36244 | I wonder if we shall go that way?" |
36244 | I wonder now where we can stow these away until we can come for them in safety?" |
36244 | I wonder"--with a look in my direction--"if that handsome pirate was with them?" |
36244 | If no one else will do anything, I''ll-- Get me a slow match; light it quickly, do you hear?" |
36244 | If so, why had I not been on deck to take my place on the fo''c''sl? |
36244 | In the confusion, Jones, do you see? |
36244 | In the first place, if I could have escaped from this place, what had I to gain? |
36244 | Is he, indeed?'' |
36244 | Is it wonderful, then, that I regarded our going to the interior of the island as little less than suicidal? |
36244 | Is n''t he a dainty sight?" |
36244 | Is n''t this vessel off her course, Jones?" |
36244 | Is there any sin that you''ve committed that you want to confess? |
36244 | Is there anything left of her, Jones? |
36244 | Is your title a secret?" |
36244 | It comes down in a minute in the tropics, you know.--Cook, are you ready?" |
36244 | It sounded like"Kala?" |
36244 | It was,"Q''bagga''ça?" |
36244 | Jones!''?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Jones?" |
36244 | Let''s see, where was I? |
36244 | Mr. Jones, do you know who you are speaking to, sir? |
36244 | My niece?" |
36244 | Need I say that I accepted the offer, and drained the cup which the Smith held to my lips? |
36244 | No other cage? |
36244 | Not quite so much free board as the Yankee, has she, now?" |
36244 | Nothing, after all this fuss? |
36244 | Now do you think you can get horses from whoever''s governor down there, and be back in a week?" |
36244 | Now there was a faint"What?" |
36244 | Now what can I do for you?" |
36244 | Now, what for, I wonder? |
36244 | Now, would n''t it be better for you and I to be friends? |
36244 | Now,"I whispered,"where is the serpent ring? |
36244 | Occasionally he shouted,"Will you obey?" |
36244 | Of course, you feel better, Smith?" |
36244 | On that dock?" |
36244 | On what?" |
36244 | Our side? |
36244 | Say, Mr. Jones, where is Cynthy?" |
36244 | See it? |
36244 | Shall I give it to you?" |
36244 | Shall I pray for you?" |
36244 | She is trying to pay off the indebtedness before my brother comes of age; she----""What would she say to sixty thousand pounds?" |
36244 | She looked dubiously at me and said:"How can you be so bloodthirsty, Mr. Jones? |
36244 | She raised her eyes to Cynthia''s as a dog or other animal of lower intelligence might look at a master, as if to say:"Is it as you wish? |
36244 | She took it from me, saying at the same time:"What is the matter with your hand?" |
36244 | Smith?" |
36244 | So soon as I had received the end of the vine I asked:"How much more have you of the vine?" |
36244 | So you take it upon yourself to question me? |
36244 | So you took the original, did you, Mr. Grand Papaloi Mauresco, and you dropped it on the seashore, and some one whom I know found it? |
36244 | Some seemed to run a little way inside a passage and then return, for we constantly heard the inquiry"Found?" |
36244 | The Bo''s''n asserted that it was intended for"Qui est la?" |
36244 | The interpreter, who was standing by the curtain, looked inquiringly at me, and asked rather anxiously, I thought:"Well, what have you got?" |
36244 | The youngest one came to me in tears, and with Lacelle''s help-- Do you know that Lacelle is here?" |
36244 | Then I heard the Skipper''s voice in wonder:"Why, Mr. Jones, are you speaking to me?" |
36244 | There was something familiar about the man, and I asked, wondering,"Where have I seen you before?" |
36244 | They had their chance.--Is there any one on board, Bill?" |
36244 | Think he''s hungry so soon?" |
36244 | This statement sounded extremely brave, but how was I to get it? |
36244 | Those honest sailors?" |
36244 | To one of the pirates, to the ghost of the cave, to the Minion, to this little English lad, or to yourself? |
36244 | To wander to the interior, and tell King Christophe that this is one of our stopping places?" |
36244 | Usually they ask,"Where am I?" |
36244 | Was I dreaming, or had these words really been uttered? |
36244 | Was I going out of my mind and imagining things? |
36244 | Was I to be left to linger and rot, the flesh to drop from my bones, the threads of my clothing to fall in dust heaps around me? |
36244 | Was that Solomon?" |
36244 | Was there more in life to drive one mad? |
36244 | Was yours the ship we fired? |
36244 | We all like to roar a jolly chorus, hey, my lads?" |
36244 | We should do perfectly well if left quite to ourselves, but how long would that state of affairs continue? |
36244 | We''ll get along a week easy.--What do you think, Jones?" |
36244 | Well, then, who did?" |
36244 | Well, why should I be silent and willing to ever play the part of a brow- beaten lover? |
36244 | What can I do for you? |
36244 | What could this mean? |
36244 | What do you really think it is, Captain, that makes them so servile?" |
36244 | What do you say to drawing lots?" |
36244 | What do you say to taking his cage for this fellow who shoots our brave sailors as if they were dogs?" |
36244 | What do you suppose they are saying to Uncle?" |
36244 | What do you suppose they will do with you if you dare to harm a hair of my head?" |
36244 | What else could we do? |
36244 | What have you got for water?" |
36244 | What if it were some murderous natives calling thus to lure us on under cover of the night? |
36244 | What is it, sir? |
36244 | What is the hurry? |
36244 | What is the matter? |
36244 | What made you think that?" |
36244 | What shall I describe first? |
36244 | What should I do? |
36244 | What snare did you lay for this popinjay?" |
36244 | What was I to do? |
36244 | What was that gasping, sighing sound that fell on my ear? |
36244 | What was the matter with their ears that they could not hear me? |
36244 | What''ll you do next?" |
36244 | What''s the use of being so damned unpleasant? |
36244 | When I could speak,"Bo''s''n,"said I,"how are we going to get to her?" |
36244 | Where are they, by the way?" |
36244 | Where are you lodged? |
36244 | Where can Mauresco be? |
36244 | Where did the Bo''s''n put the cup?" |
36244 | Where do they come from?'' |
36244 | Where do you carry it?" |
36244 | Where is Mauresco? |
36244 | Where is handsome Mauresco?" |
36244 | Where is she?" |
36244 | Where is the Smith?" |
36244 | Where, I wonder, do they get their water?" |
36244 | Which way?" |
36244 | Who could that some one be? |
36244 | Who is that? |
36244 | Who was it, then, who could communicate with me? |
36244 | Whose hand was it that pushed out from between the leaves and beckoned to you? |
36244 | Why did Geffroy come up here?" |
36244 | Why do I talk to you?" |
36244 | Why do n''t those sails fill? |
36244 | Why in thunder do n''t this fellow come to?" |
36244 | Why should I?" |
36244 | Why should not my cage burst open and set me free, even if my friends were captured or dead? |
36244 | Why wo n''t to- morrow do? |
36244 | Why, then, should not this incredible tale be carried on to the end? |
36244 | Why?" |
36244 | Will you go on?" |
36244 | Would she notice me at all? |
36244 | Would you mind letting me have the use of your back for a few minutes, Bo''s''n?" |
36244 | Wrecked the vessel?" |
36244 | You have got some fine stories into your head about us, but really at bottom we are the most humane of men.--Aren''t we, Jonas? |
36244 | You may say, however,"Why should we succeed, where other Christians have failed?" |
36244 | You?" |
36244 | Young Trevelyan?" |
36244 | carrying me?" |
36244 | do you suppose that we can get away, and that if we do that we can get to the coast in time?" |
36244 | fired the house?" |
36244 | had my terrors only just begun? |
36244 | have you really awakened me to see more sights? |
36244 | in a tone as if to say,"What shall I hear next?" |
36244 | is it any wonder that I was encouraged?" |
36244 | now?" |
36244 | roared Captain Jonas;"and Wiggins and the Turk?" |
36244 | said I,"you might have killed me, do you know that?" |
36244 | said he,"''s that so?" |
36244 | said the Skipper with ill- concealed scorn;"since you have seen everything else in the whole blessed world----""Where are they, Captain?" |
36244 | said the Skipper, his gaze fixed on the stranger,"what did you do with that Cook?" |
36244 | that handsome pirate?" |
36244 | that vessel? |
36244 | where is that Bo''s''n? |
36244 | whispered I hastily,"and why do you take an interest in us? |
36244 | why do n''t you move? |
36244 | will they? |
36244 | would they go away and leave me? |
36244 | you do n''t mean to leave that poor lad here to die alone?" |
36244 | you may say,"why did n''t you just go out on that veranda, and if it was on the first floor step out into the garden and so escape?" |