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 |
---|---|
31263 | What for? |
11105 | Is it alive? |
11105 | And what do you think the father of that little girl said, when he knew that the captain wanted to take the girl home with him? |
11105 | Did you ever hear about them? |
11105 | Let me see, what story shall I tell first? |
11105 | Shall I tell you about it, little friend? |
11105 | Shall I tell you his story about what he saw once, when he sailed a great way north? |
11105 | Shall I tell you some of the stories that this good old sailor told me when he had to stay at home, because he had broken his hip? |
11105 | What could they do? |
11105 | What do you think about it? |
11105 | What should they do? |
51910 | As there was no immediate chance of going to Greenland, why not see Shetland? |
51910 | By the iceberg is a sail Chasing of the swarthy whale; Mother doubtful, mother dread, Tell us, has the good ship sped?" |
51910 | I knew that at this season the animals would float, and as I was on the lee side, why did they not drift down to me? |
51910 | Some ruins have been found, but where are the people? |
51910 | The first question asked by us was,"Is England at war?" |
51910 | The next time it would be beside a boat-- which boat? |
51910 | Was it water or seals? |
51910 | What could it be? |
51910 | What danger is there in the pursuit of any member of the deer or antelope family, and what chance has the animal in these days of high power rifles? |
51910 | Would it come up under us or beside us? |
43959 | Amid the perils and dangers of the deep, how long will the ship''s company remain unbroken? |
43959 | And yet could it be that within so short a distance no deliverance would be extended? |
43959 | Could it be they were ignorant of the ordinary laws of humanity, and wilfully misconstrued the most obvious signs of needy and suffering seamen? |
43959 | He went to him, and struck a smart blow upon his back, and said to him,"Jack, what are you doing here?" |
43959 | How many of these seamen will be saved?--how many will be lost? |
43959 | Is the sailor less dependent on the blessing of a gracious God than the husbandman? |
43959 | It may be asked,"Why did not the officers and crew avail themselves of the canoes of the natives, and go off to the ship?" |
43959 | There are trials, and peculiar ones too, in the whaling service; and in what branch of industry are there not? |
43959 | This providential economy is still further suggestive, prompting us to ask, Whence comes the_ food_ for the young whales there? |
43959 | Was it all illusion, dream, or magic? |
43959 | What intelligence more to be desired and sincerely asked for than the announcement of a sail in sight? |
43959 | What were our present prospects? |
43959 | Why should any one feel at liberty to prosecute his daily employment at sea, when he would be ashamed to do so on land? |
43959 | Will the_ ship_ ever return, and reënter her port again? |
43959 | or if they had exhibited towards us the spirit of hostility and war? |
43959 | or, if they should, will they ever see again those whom they are now leaving? |
23260 | And what sort of man is the captain? |
23260 | Are you going to sea, youngster? |
23260 | Are you much hurt, Jack? |
23260 | But you will let my young friend, Jack Kemp, and your other apprentice, Medley, go with me? |
23260 | Can you be brother Bill? |
23260 | Can you tell me, sir, the names of the English vessels the pirates are supposed to have plundered? |
23260 | Could not you send for them? |
23260 | Do you think so? |
23260 | How could you hear that? |
23260 | The` Lady Alice''are you speaking of? |
23260 | Then what will your wife and daughter do? |
23260 | Were the people on board ill- treated? 23260 What am I to do without my barber and clerk and storekeeper, I should like to know?" |
23260 | What business have we to interfere with the quarrels of foreigners? |
23260 | What can he have seen to alarm him? |
23260 | What can the old man be about? |
23260 | What do you think of those black clouds out there? |
23260 | What if on board that schooner there were others than her crew-- prisoners taken from any vessel they might have pillaged? 23260 What is it you want here, my men?" |
23260 | What is that? 23260 Who are you that''s afther spakin''to me in that way? |
23260 | Who has gone? |
23260 | Who says that? |
23260 | Will they remain on board, or take a passage home in the first full ship they fall in with? |
23260 | Wo n''t you give it up and come on shore with us? |
23260 | And you!--are you brother Jack? |
23260 | Are my wife and daughter well?" |
23260 | Can it come from a ship?" |
23260 | Can you tell me where she is? |
23260 | Did the ruffians take any of them away, or did they merely carry off such valuables and stores and provisions as they could lay hands on?" |
23260 | Directly afterwards the watch on the quarterdeck came hurrying forward with the third mate, who sang out, in a tone of alarm,"Where is that boy?" |
23260 | In what direction could they have been driven? |
23260 | It must ere long come up again-- but could we hold on till then? |
23260 | Should we go back to the Galapagos, look into their harbours, and cruise about those islands? |
23260 | The moment he said this the thought flashed across my mind,"What if she should have fallen in with the` Lady Alice''?" |
23260 | The question was in what direction we should steer? |
23260 | The stranger passing within hail, a voice inquired,"What ship is that?" |
23260 | Was it on account of some unseen danger threatening us? |
23260 | We were just about to rise from our knees when I heard Dan Hogan''s voice exclaim,"Arrah now, you young psalm singers, what new trick are you after?" |
23260 | What could have become of the"Lady Alice"?--had any accident happened to her? |
23260 | What if the pirates had, as I dreaded, attacked the` Lady Alice'', and carried off Mrs Bland and Mary?" |
23260 | What if, while we were congratulating ourselves on being safe on shore, any misfortune should happen to those in whom we were so deeply interested? |
23260 | What resistance could the five or six people left on board offer, even though they might have suspected her character before she got up to them? |
23260 | What was even now going forward on board her, who could tell? |
23260 | have n''t you brought Jack Kemp with you?" |
23260 | what for come ober her now?" |
32029 | Air? |
32029 | But how does the blubber- man get out? |
32029 | But the guard? |
32029 | Do n''t you see? 32029 How large a school?" |
32029 | Just because you ca n''t see them, you think that? 32029 Now, if only we had n''t lost Beddoes.... Y''think you can bag three, Mister Torrance?" |
32029 | What are you waiting for? 32029 What if those two were going to visit us in the cell- chamber? |
32029 | What of it? |
32029 | What will we do then? |
32029 | What''s the matter? |
32029 | Why have n''t you tried before? 32029 Why not?" |
32029 | After what I told you? |
32029 | And was this dim emptiness around him air? |
32029 | And why not? |
32029 | And you know the way?" |
32029 | But why were there no lights? |
32029 | But with that guard on duty.... What''s your plan?" |
32029 | Could he breathe it? |
32029 | Do n''t they leave you alone here?" |
32029 | Even if he did manage somehow to get away, what good would it do? |
32029 | First Torpooner Kenneth Torrance, as he sat up and stretched, heard the usual crisp question:"Where away?" |
32029 | Good Lord, what kind of seals are these?" |
32029 | Had they come the right way? |
32029 | He wrote:"How?" |
32029 | How could he, a puny, helpless mite, ever hope to locate the_ Narwhal_ in this vast sweep of Arctic sea? |
32029 | How did the cavern come to be but part- filled with water? |
32029 | How did they catch you?" |
32029 | How did you get here? |
32029 | How ever do they get it down here?" |
32029 | I''m not just dreaming again?" |
32029 | Is it you, Ken?" |
32029 | It''s been so lonely, so dark.... You are there, Ken? |
32029 | Ken said sharply:"You killed him? |
32029 | Now-- how much of your air- units is left?" |
32029 | Or was he still to be kept a prisoner? |
32029 | Out of the depths of slumber he mumbled:"What''s the matter?" |
32029 | Was it only imagination that made it appear faintly human- shaped? |
32029 | Were they releasing him? |
32029 | What had happened? |
32029 | What, then? |
32029 | You did n''t see it anywhere? |
32029 | You''re sure they killed the whale in that trap? |
32029 | he shouted, and then:"That torpoon ready, there? |
63211 | Any difference between a bowhead and a right whale? |
63211 | Dead? |
63211 | Do n''t you know that a boat that gets fast to a whale in that ice will be smashed, sure? |
63211 | Do you want to get us all killed? |
63211 | Ever been a sailor? |
63211 | Have you noticed that pile of stones with a cross sticking in it on the harbor head? |
63211 | How do you head? |
63211 | Humph, you do n''t believe I smell whale, eh? |
63211 | No? |
63211 | Now for fine ride behind Arctic race horse-- eh? |
63211 | Oho, Gabriel,Mr. Winchester laughed contemptuously,"you think your boat can out- pull us, eh? |
63211 | See how dat spout slant up in de air? |
63211 | Sick, eh? |
63211 | Slim,he sang out,"what''s the matter with you?" |
63211 | Want to collect a little ivory? |
63211 | What can we make? |
63211 | What''s the matter with that man? |
63211 | What? |
63211 | Where away? |
63211 | Where is he? |
63211 | Where''s Slim? |
63211 | Where''s my brudder? |
63211 | Who''s that overboard? |
63211 | Why did n''t you get my rifle and shoot him? |
63211 | You do n''t know you freeze to deaf up here in winter time, no? |
63211 | You know why it do n''t shoot straight up? |
63211 | You want to give me a bad name with Captain Shorey when he takes command, do you? |
63211 | You want to make it appear I have been hard on my men, eh? 63211 You wo n''t come?" |
63211 | Your boat can beat us, eh? |
63211 | ''Where do you feel bad?'' |
63211 | As he swung himself into the shrouds to climb to the mast- head, he shouted to me,"Did n''t I tell you I could smell''em?" |
63211 | But say, will I have the law on him when we get back to Frisco? |
63211 | Ca n''t you smell it yourself?" |
63211 | Can you pull an oar?" |
63211 | Did she expectorate? |
63211 | For instance:"You wear no clothes in winter?" |
63211 | Gabriel:"And what do you think they had for dinner? |
63211 | Gabriel:"And what do you think they had for supper? |
63211 | Gabriel:"And who do you think was second greaser? |
63211 | Gabriel:"And who do you think was skipper of her? |
63211 | Had she found an opening? |
63211 | I sits down and the captain says,''Well, my boy, what''s the matter with you?'' |
63211 | Know what a lay is? |
63211 | Now how were we going to find our whale again? |
63211 | Should he allow that fortune in whales to escape him without a try for it? |
63211 | Stow us away, wo n''t you?" |
63211 | Was it possible, I wondered in an instant''s flash of surprise, that the forecastle was laid with a velvet carpet? |
63211 | What could it mean? |
63211 | What did it matter that I had passed all my humdrum days on dry land? |
63211 | Which would it be? |
63211 | Will I?" |
23383 | And how do your eyes feel, Archy? |
23383 | And may I likewise stay? |
23383 | Are you happy, boy? |
23383 | But would Jesus pardon me, who has so grievously offended Him? |
23383 | Did any one see you come in here? |
23383 | Do you ever pray? |
23383 | Do you really speak the truth to me? |
23383 | How did you know you could find a place where you could hide yourself? |
23383 | I do not ask how they were prepared to meet their God, but how are you prepared? 23383 Just think, mates, how we should feel if we had been with the sledges had they crossed and left us to our fate on the floe?" |
23383 | See, see, what is that? |
23383 | Surely we can not be far off the land? |
23383 | Then tell me, what do you think makes him brave? |
23383 | Well, boy, what do you think of it? |
23383 | What do you propose doing, then? |
23383 | What is it, what is it, boy? |
23383 | What, lad, are you going to hear the old man preach? |
23383 | What, lad, art afraid? |
23383 | What, widow Hughson''s son? 23383 What, you would not desert old Andrew?" |
23383 | Where are you going, Archy? |
23383 | Where do you come from, lad-- who are you? |
23383 | Why do you say that? |
23383 | Why, lad, where do you come from? |
23383 | Why? |
23383 | Would you leave the poor fellows to perish for the sake of sooner putting food into your own mouths? 23383 Archy was awakened by hearing one of the officers, who had gone out of the tent, exclaim,Why, what have become of the boats?" |
23383 | Archy, you have the sharpest eyes among us, ca n''t you make her out, lad?" |
23383 | Are you prepared to meet your God?" |
23383 | As the embers of their fire died out, Foubister, brave and determined man as he was, had exclaimed,"Why need we go further? |
23383 | But do n''t you go and tell others what I say; I only ask you, if we go, will you join us?" |
23383 | Captain Irvine, looking sternly at him, inquired how he had managed to conceal himself so long on board? |
23383 | Could they hope to live through the night in an ill- built snow- hut without fire, might it not too probably become their tomb? |
23383 | Do you know that way, laddie, which only a God of infinite love and mercy could have devised for saving weak fallen man from the consequences of sin? |
23383 | Even if you are living pure and blameless lives, have you made peace with Tim according to the only way He has offered to reconcile you to Himself? |
23383 | Have you a living faith in the atoning blood of Jesus shed for you? |
23383 | Have you earnestly sought him, laddie? |
23383 | Have you sought that way?" |
23383 | Have you sought the Saviour? |
23383 | How can I lead you?" |
23383 | I ask you again, will you come with us?" |
23383 | Now lad, I have to ask you what is your hope? |
23383 | On the return of daylight, which would stream down through the open hatchway, should he not be discovered? |
23383 | Revived by their meal they again proceeded as before, yet what could they expect at the end of their day''s journey? |
23383 | The natives manage to live, why should not we?" |
23383 | What do you see?" |
23383 | What is your name?" |
23383 | What other comfort could he have afforded? |
23383 | Would they turn away? |
23383 | You will promise me that?" |
23383 | and let the poor lad who has still got his eyesight perish with us?" |
23383 | he asked at last--"me, who have so often been told of His loving kindness and mercy?" |
23383 | what can I do? |
21202 | ''Then why did you ask?'' 21202 All the money gone, Mother?" |
21202 | And have ye really seen the whales, my boy? |
21202 | And how big is it? |
21202 | And what''s the meaning of barometer? |
21202 | And who will look after my mother when I''m away? |
21202 | Aye, who wos it that throw''d that fire overboard? |
21202 | Bob Ledbury,said he,"have you got your cutting- in gear in order? |
21202 | But how do they shine like that, sir? |
21202 | But, I say, how much is that? |
21202 | Can_ wot_ be true? |
21202 | Do n''t you know? |
21202 | Do n''t you? |
21202 | Do you think we''ve any chance, Tom? |
21202 | Hold on, lads, did anyone hear a cry? |
21202 | How big? 21202 How much is billions, mate?" |
21202 | How was that, sir? |
21202 | I say, Bill Blunt, I think this consarns_ you_,cried Tom:"is n''t your sweetheart''s name Susan Croft?" |
21202 | Read''em out, then, ca n''t ye? |
21202 | Right off the lee- bow-- there, do n''t you see it? |
21202 | Robert, how big is a whale? |
21202 | Seen them? 21202 That''s a fact,"said Bill, looking up from his paper,"and who has got a word to say agin the prettiest lass in all Liverpool?" |
21202 | Tom,said I,"what like is a whale?" |
21202 | Well, what is it? |
21202 | What does he mean by that, Tom? |
21202 | What does she look like? |
21202 | What is it, Tom? |
21202 | What''s a microscope? |
21202 | What''s that floating on the water? |
21202 | What''s that to you? |
21202 | What''s that you say about the Emperor, Bill? |
21202 | Where away? |
21202 | Where away? |
21202 | Where away? |
21202 | Where away? |
21202 | Where is it, Tom? 21202 Will you take me to your mother''s house, lad?" |
21202 | Wot d''ye mean, youngster, by goin''on in that there fashion all the mornin'', a- botherin''everybody, and makin''a fool o''yourself like that? 21202 Yes; what is the glass?" |
21202 | You see, Bob Ledbury,said he, beginning to fill his pipe,"young fellers like you do n''t know nothin''about the weather--''cause why? |
21202 | Bob, wot''s the matter?" |
21202 | But what have you been a- thinkin''of, Tom?" |
21202 | But, dear me, you are very warm; will you take a cup of tea to cool you?" |
21202 | Has war been and broke out with the French?" |
21202 | I say, what sort o''brute was that that had hold of him? |
21202 | Is n''t that true, Tom?" |
21202 | That was a good fish we got last, sir, was n''t it?" |
21202 | To which I reply,"Tom, can it all be true?" |
21202 | What does he kill him for?" |
21202 | You heer''d the captain say he''d go an''take a squint at the glass?" |
21202 | You''re a sharp fellow, and have been in these seas before; what say you?" |
21202 | and without any warning?" |
21202 | wot have ye got there that makes ye look as wise as an owl? |
21202 | wot''s wrong now?" |
21731 | All the money gone, mother? |
21731 | And have ye really seen the whales, my boy? |
21731 | And how big is it? |
21731 | And what''s the meaning of barometer? |
21731 | And who will look after my mother when I''m away? |
21731 | Ay, who wos it that throw''d that fire overboard? |
21731 | Bob Ledbury,said he,"have you got your cutting- in gear in order? |
21731 | But how do they shine like that, sir? |
21731 | But, I say, how much is that? |
21731 | Can_ wot_ be true? |
21731 | Do n''t you know? |
21731 | Do n''t you? |
21731 | Do you think we''ve any chance, Tom? |
21731 | Has anybody brought you anything, then, since I went out? |
21731 | Have you anything in the kettle? |
21731 | Hold on, lads, did any one hear a cry? |
21731 | How big? 21731 How much is billions, mate?" |
21731 | How was that, sir? |
21731 | I say, Bill Blunt, I think this consarns_ you_,cried Tom:"is n''t your sweetheart''s name Susan Croft?" |
21731 | Read''em out, then, ca n''t ye? |
21731 | Right off the lee- bow-- there, do n''t you see it? |
21731 | Robert, how big is a whale? |
21731 | Seen them? 21731 That''s a fact,"said Bill, looking up from his paper,"and who has got a word to say agin the prettiest lass in all Liverpool?" |
21731 | Tom,said I,"what like is a whale?" |
21731 | Well, what is it? |
21731 | What does she look like? |
21731 | What is it, Tom? |
21731 | What''s a microscope? |
21731 | What''s that floating on the water? |
21731 | What''s that to you? |
21731 | What''s that you say about the Emperor, Bill? |
21731 | Where away? |
21731 | Where away? |
21731 | Where away? |
21731 | Where away? |
21731 | Where is it, Tom? 21731 Why, then, mistress,"broke in the seaman,"how can you expect to have your tea so soon?" |
21731 | Will you take me to your mother''s house, lad? |
21731 | Wot d''ye mean, youngster, by goin''on in that there fashion all the mornin'', a- botherin''everybody, and makin''a fool o''yourself like that? 21731 Yes; what is the glass?" |
21731 | You see, Bob Ledbury,said he, beginning to fill his pipe,"young fellers like you do n''t know nothin''about the weather--''cause why? |
21731 | ` Then why did you ask?'' 21731 Bob, wot''s the matter? |
21731 | But what have you been a- thinkin''of, Tom?" |
21731 | But, dear me, you are very warm; will you take a cup of tea to cool you?" |
21731 | Has war been and broke out with the French?" |
21731 | I say, what sort o''brute was that, that had hold of him? |
21731 | I''m not very learned on this matter, and ca n''t explain myself very well; but what think you, lads, shall we give the whales a rest on Sundays?" |
21731 | Is n''t that true, Tom?" |
21731 | That was a good fish we got last, sir, was n''t it?" |
21731 | To which I reply,"Tom, can it all be true?" |
21731 | What does he kill him for?" |
21731 | You heer''d the captain say he''d go an''take a squint at the glass?" |
21731 | You''re a sharp fellow, and have been in these seas before, what say you?" |
21731 | and without any warning?" |
21731 | ran out frequently from the mast- head, and the answering cry from the captain,"Where away?" |
21731 | wot have ye got there that makes ye look as wise as an owl? |
21731 | wot''s wrong now?" |
1356 | ''Sides,persisted Goliath,"wa''yew gwine do wiv''him? |
1356 | But what about the wages? |
1356 | But why do n''t we harpoon him? |
1356 | D''yew think, sir,said Nat,"THET''S proper grub for men?" |
1356 | Do the big whales give much more trouble than the little ones? |
1356 | Hold him up, Louey, bold him up, cain''t ye? |
1356 | Lookin''fer a ship, stranger? |
1356 | S''pose no got more? |
1356 | See anythin'', Louey? |
1356 | Then,said the colonel,"how is it you find yourself fighting for these accursed Yankees?" |
1356 | Well, Cap''n George,said one of the men,"you shorely do n''t think we k''n eat shells, do yer?" |
1356 | Where away-- where? |
1356 | Wot for? |
1356 | Yes; do you want a hand? |
1356 | You my flem? |
1356 | ''Cawse ef you bin hangin''on to dat ar wale ev''sence you boat smash, w''y de debbil you hain''t all ter bits, hey?" |
1356 | And the allied forces aft-- what of them? |
1356 | As soon as he saw me, he said,"Can you steer?" |
1356 | At last he blurted out,"Whar you bin all de time, ennyhaow? |
1356 | Beneath that mass every thought, every feeling, fled but one--"How long shall I be able to hold my breath?" |
1356 | But grumbling was dangerous, so I gulped down the dirty mixture mis- named coffee, ate a few fragments of biscuit, and filled up(?) |
1356 | But what of that? |
1356 | Going up to him, I looked at the coin, and said,"Belitani money?" |
1356 | Guess thet''s so, ai n''t it, Johnny?" |
1356 | He came out of the cabin at once, saying,"Well, boys, what''s the matter?" |
1356 | He is not at all particular as to his diet; but what sea- fish is? |
1356 | He looked at me pityingly for a moment before he replied,"You go chapella Belitani? |
1356 | He stared at me for a minute, and then, with an indescribable intonation, said,"How de ol''Satan yew fink yew gwain ter get''m, hey? |
1356 | How could we know any better? |
1356 | Look out, indeed? |
1356 | Meanwhile, what of the daring Irishman and his old barrel of a ship? |
1356 | NOW what''s the matter, I thought, when to my amazement the chief addressing me said,"Wonder why we''ve hauled up, do n''t ye?" |
1356 | No go Davy Jonesy dis time, hay?" |
1356 | No put bes''close on top?" |
1356 | Now, one thought was uppermost--"What if he should breach?" |
1356 | Perhaps his presence had something to do with it? |
1356 | Perhaps it is not so different in other professions nearer home? |
1356 | Rapacious the shark certainly is; but what sea- fish is not? |
1356 | Reads funny, does n''t it? |
1356 | See?" |
1356 | Shall I be laughed at when I confess that our musical efforts were confined to Sankey''s hymns? |
1356 | So the port watch, in their best(?) |
1356 | The skipper looked, saying, inquiringly,"Well?" |
1356 | Then one man turned his back on the carver, who holding up each portion, called out,"Who''s this for?" |
1356 | They both hated these weapons, nor ever used them if they could help it; but what was to be done? |
1356 | To us, though, they bore no terrific aspect; for were they not the turning- point from which we could steer north, our head pointed for home? |
1356 | True, they are lazy; but what inducement have they to work? |
1356 | Turning his happy face to me, he shouted exultingly,"How''s dat fer high?" |
1356 | Up from below came the deep growl of the skipper,"Foremast head, there, what d''ye say?" |
1356 | Was n''t Mr. Count mad? |
1356 | What need to say more? |
1356 | Whatever could it be? |
1356 | Why, you old sinner, you do n''t mean to say you''re goin''to growl about havin''chicken for dinner?" |
1356 | Would he never be quiet? |
1356 | Yet, but for them, how would such great creatures as the sperm whale be fed? |
1356 | You savvy duff?" |
1356 | and to me,"Haul that main sheet, naow haul, why do n''t ye?" |
1356 | says somebody, within a few miles of Hong Kong? |
21479 | After that has gone, what can we give the little girl to eat? |
21479 | All right, Missie Alice? |
21479 | Any vessel in sight? |
21479 | Are you sure that those are people? |
21479 | But are we not to try and catch some fish? |
21479 | But how can you light a fire to cook them? |
21479 | But oh, Nub, do you think papa and Walter can have been on board? |
21479 | But suppose you are wrong, and my father is on board the raft, could not we shove off and overtake it? |
21479 | But where is Walter? 21479 But, Mr Shobbrok,"said Walter,"suppose we get back safely, when do you propose altering the boat, so that we may commence our voyage to Sydney?" |
21479 | Can it be de cap''en''s? |
21479 | Can papa be there? |
21479 | Can you see anything? |
21479 | Could we manage to manufacture something that would answer the purpose? |
21479 | Did you ever see any harm come? |
21479 | Do n''t you think that if we could make some bird- lime we might have a better chance of catching the smaller birds? |
21479 | Do n''t you think the large mollusc- shell will answer the purpose? |
21479 | Do n''t you think, Mr Shobbrok, that we could manage to enlarge our boat so that we might reach some civilised place? |
21479 | Do you think it will last long? |
21479 | Do you think this is papa''s boat? |
21479 | Here, Missie Alice,he said;"will you take some breakfast? |
21479 | How can that be? |
21479 | How is that? |
21479 | How so? |
21479 | How you know dat, Missie Alice? |
21479 | Is it an island, or is it the back of an enormous whale? |
21479 | Is that Cape Horn? |
21479 | Is the lightning likely to strike us? |
21479 | Is the ship standing towards the shore, do you think? |
21479 | Is there anything the matter? |
21479 | May I return, father? |
21479 | Mr Shobbrok, when do you propose to begin enlarging the boat? 21479 Now, it has done you good, has it not?" |
21479 | O Mr Shobbrok, can we do nothing to save him? |
21479 | O Nub, what is that? |
21479 | O Walter, where are we? |
21479 | Oh, Mr Lawrie,he exclaimed,"what is that terrific monster? |
21479 | Oh, Mr Shobbrok, what is that dreadful creature? |
21479 | Oh, tell me, Mr Shobbrok,she exclaimed,--"was the raft drawn down by the whale, and has my dear brother been drowned?" |
21479 | Oh, what are those black- looking things moving about on either side of him? |
21479 | Oh, what can have made Walter sail away again? |
21479 | Oh, what has happened? |
21479 | Oh, what has happened? |
21479 | Oh, what has, happened? |
21479 | Oh, where can my father have gone, then? |
21479 | Our father''s boat? |
21479 | Shall we all assist in putting up the house, Mr Shobbrok, or might it not be as well to try and get one or two bows made first? |
21479 | Shall we remove the ladder? |
21479 | Shure, Mr Shobbrok, how are we to fight the wild bastes or savages, if they come, without arms? |
21479 | Shure, can it be the captain''s boat, or one of the other boats which have been looking for us since the ship went down? |
21479 | The biscuits and water will soon be all gone, and den what shall we do? |
21479 | What are we to do, Mr Shobbrok? |
21479 | What boat is it? |
21479 | What can it be? |
21479 | What can that be? |
21479 | What could have occurred? |
21479 | What do you propose doing? |
21479 | What does this strange conduct mean, my men? |
21479 | What is it like? |
21479 | What is it you see? |
21479 | What is it? |
21479 | What is that you have got there? |
21479 | What island is that? |
21479 | What say you, Massa Shobbrok? |
21479 | What you like to have, Mr Shobbrok? 21479 What''s the matter?" |
21479 | When will that be, do you think? |
21479 | Where are the rest? |
21479 | Where away? |
21479 | Where away? |
21479 | Where de oders? |
21479 | Who is at the helm? |
21479 | Who is he? |
21479 | Who will volunteer to go back and get what we want? 21479 Who''s that with you?" |
21479 | Why are you all armed? |
21479 | Why do n''t you turn in, Walter? |
21479 | Why do you tink dat? |
21479 | Will a ship neber come? |
21479 | Will it kill poor Nub? 21479 Will you plaise just step to the weather- gangway, out of earshot of the man at the helm? |
21479 | Alice threw her arms around his neck when she saw him, exclaiming,--"What has all that noise been about? |
21479 | Alice,--Walter, can you guess who that man is?" |
21479 | Are you all right, Nub?" |
21479 | As soon as he was safe, Walter threw his arm around him, exclaiming,"Have the creatures bitten you, Nub? |
21479 | At last he could not help exclaiming,"Oh, Mr Shobbrok, can you give me just one mouthful of water? |
21479 | But few words were exchanged among the party, for who could speak at such a fearful time? |
21479 | But has it struck you, Walter, what must have happened?" |
21479 | But how can the bird come out here, so far away from land? |
21479 | But how do you propose lighting one on the top of the whale, Nub?" |
21479 | But what had become of the raft? |
21479 | Can any human beings live there?" |
21479 | Can he escape them?" |
21479 | Can they be birds?" |
21479 | Dan Tidy, where are you?" |
21479 | From what sort of a tree did you break this off?" |
21479 | Have you really escaped them? |
21479 | He then, lifting up his own voice, shouted in return--"Is that you, Alice? |
21479 | Is dat you, Massa Walter?" |
21479 | Is that you, Nub?" |
21479 | Look at those beautiful birds; what can they be?" |
21479 | Mr Shobbrok, you got tinder- box and flint and steel?" |
21479 | Oh, what shall I do should anything happen to her?" |
21479 | Roast beef, boiled mutton, pork pies, or plum pudding?" |
21479 | Shall we attack it, or will it be better to get out of its way?" |
21479 | Still the thought arose,"How is that to be? |
21479 | The cry arose from those near him, who saw the sense of his remark,--"What provisions have we got?" |
21479 | The head looks to me like that of a crocodile; but do such creatures exist on land? |
21479 | What do you see? |
21479 | What has become of the raft?" |
21479 | What murderous work are you about?" |
21479 | What will he do?" |
21479 | Where can it rest at night?" |
21479 | Where can that light come from?" |
21479 | Where is Walter? |
21479 | Why did you not come and tell me?" |
21479 | You will never leave me, will you?" |
21479 | can not we help them?" |
21479 | eat them raw?" |
21479 | is it you?" |
21479 | is that your game, my lads?" |
21479 | oh, why did you go-- oh, why did you go?" |
21479 | what are those curious creatures which have just come out of the water? |
21479 | what can that be?" |
21479 | what is that curious fish?" |
21479 | what is the matter?" |
21479 | where is Walter?" |
21474 | An acknowledgment of his guilt? |
21474 | And he has been telling you that I am a slaver, I suppose, or something worse, eh? |
21474 | And so you are a young gentleman, are you? |
21474 | And so you are the youngster who wanted to make himself useful, are you? |
21474 | And so, my son, you think there is more danger than before? |
21474 | And so, young''un, you''ve done your business on board; and what are you going to do next? |
21474 | And tell me, sir, oh tell me-- Mary, where is Mary, sir? |
21474 | And that of your companion? |
21474 | And what are those boats doing inshore of us? |
21474 | And what have you got to say for yourself? |
21474 | And you believe that the people who so treated you have run off with the ship to turn pirates? |
21474 | And your name is Peter Lefroy, is it? 21474 Andrew, what say you to this?" |
21474 | Are there any more of them? |
21474 | Are you neither an Englishman nor an American? |
21474 | But are you sure you see a sail? 21474 But do n''t you know, youngster, the water gets into these trumpets, and makes them sound different?" |
21474 | But do n''t you think she may be the_ Shetland Maid_ come to look for us? |
21474 | But do you think He would take the trouble to look after such a poor fellow as I am? |
21474 | But how are we ever to get back to the ship, with only one boat to carry us? |
21474 | But how are we to cook him? |
21474 | But how can that be? 21474 But how is it, old friend, you seemed to have forgotten me altogether since we sailed?" |
21474 | But if I stay, what office are you to hold on board, Mary? |
21474 | But lend us a jacket, some one, will ye? 21474 But still, does it not strike you as odd that a vessel should be in want of water in these seas?" |
21474 | But why not get on the raft at once? |
21474 | Can you mend it? |
21474 | Could not we make a fire as a signal? |
21474 | Did he tell you what trade he was in? |
21474 | Did you ever hear tell of the Dutchman who had a ride on the back of a whale? |
21474 | Did you never hear speak of that? 21474 Do you belong to her?" |
21474 | Do you think there is any danger, though? |
21474 | Does any one see him? |
21474 | Does any one see him? |
21474 | Has not my father told you that he thinks of asking you to remain with him? 21474 Hillo, who have we here?" |
21474 | Hillo, who left the companion- hatch open? |
21474 | How can I return home? 21474 How can we tell that the floe will not break up into small pieces, or perhaps drift out and join the middle ice?" |
21474 | How dare you strike me, Captain Swales? |
21474 | How do we know but that it is for our benefit that we are left where we are? 21474 I hope not,"said Thompson;"but who can tell? |
21474 | Is that a walrus blowing? |
21474 | It''s very dark, Andrew,I remarked;"what can be going to happen?" |
21474 | Let me ask you, even if we are sure, how are we to get off with the sea there breaking on this sheet of ice? 21474 Look there-- what is that?" |
21474 | O my young cock- a- hoop, you show fight, do you? |
21474 | Please, sir,said I in an unusually humble tone,"are you the first mate of the ship?" |
21474 | Prisoner at the bar, can you swear that you did not aid and abet those engaged in making unlawful war against the United States brig_ Neptune_? |
21474 | Tell me first, Molly, where are my father and mother, and brothers and sisters-- are they all alive and well? |
21474 | The mate finds this stuff very good,said I;"will you take a glass?" |
21474 | Then I suppose you mean to go to the westward? |
21474 | Then do n''t you think, messmate, He would look after a human being, with a soul to be saved? |
21474 | Then why do you wish me to do what you know I must consider wrong? |
21474 | Then you think we shall have to winter here? |
21474 | To whom? |
21474 | Well, Massa Peter, if de brig catch we, we all be hung; how you like dat? |
21474 | Well, if I am, and what then? |
21474 | Well, lad, how long do you think it would take you to pull on shore now? |
21474 | Well, what do you think of it now? |
21474 | What are you doing here, you young scamp? |
21474 | What brought you out here? |
21474 | What chance have we of escaping? |
21474 | What do you mean by lately? |
21474 | What do you mean, Flint? |
21474 | What do you propose to do? |
21474 | What do you think of our being off Cape Flyaway, youngster? |
21474 | What has happened? |
21474 | What hope, then, have we? |
21474 | What is it now, youngster? 21474 What is she?" |
21474 | What is your name, youngster? |
21474 | What''s that? |
21474 | What''s the matter now? |
21474 | What''s to be done now? |
21474 | What''s your name? |
21474 | What, the_ Mary_, Captain Dean? |
21474 | What, your friend Captain Hawk''s craft, the_ Foam_, you mean, I suppose? |
21474 | Where away is she? |
21474 | Which way is she heading? |
21474 | Who is certain that she is standing away from us? 21474 Why not?" |
21474 | Why, do n''t you think the ship will be able to take us off? |
21474 | Will she near the iceberg again, or will she sail off in an opposite direction? |
21474 | Will she see us? |
21474 | Wo n''t he eat one? |
21474 | You would not have me quit my shipmates? |
21474 | _ Do_ you know me now? |
21474 | A third bellow was followed by a loud hail, in a gruff, voice,"What ship is that, ahoy?" |
21474 | Again the captain made the final inquiry,"Does any one yet see him?" |
21474 | And now, what have ye got to say?" |
21474 | Are you afraid of sailing with me, in consequence of my telling you this? |
21474 | Are you prepared for death, Peter?" |
21474 | But what do you know of him?" |
21474 | Can any of you see or hear him?" |
21474 | Do n''t you think it may be the wing of a seafowl?" |
21474 | Do you consent to abide by this arrangement?" |
21474 | Give me as food for the sharks, I suppose?" |
21474 | Has the monster struck her, and hurled her gallant crew to destruction? |
21474 | Have not you ever seen one of them before?" |
21474 | Have you bit your nose?" |
21474 | How also could such a vessel as we had the means of building be expected to withstand the slightest pressure of the ice? |
21474 | How can I avoid being suspected? |
21474 | How can I face my father after having thus disobeyed him?" |
21474 | I called out, and Andrew''s voice answered,"Is that you, Peter? |
21474 | I hoped I should be observed, for I heard the captain ask,` Does any one see him?'' |
21474 | I looked conscious, I suppose; for he continued,"And you believed him, and were afraid to sail with so desperate a character, eh? |
21474 | I was roused up at midnight, and just as I had got on my feet, I heard a voice sing out,"Where''s the_ Mary''s_ light?" |
21474 | Indeed, what other subject could we talk on but religion? |
21474 | It might be done, might it not?" |
21474 | Look there, boy, and answer me: Are not those presumptive evidences of your guilt? |
21474 | Nearly the last words Mary uttered were,"Then you will sail with father, if he asks you, Peter?" |
21474 | Shall we run down and secure it?" |
21474 | Such things were-- such things are: when will they cease to be? |
21474 | Tell me, Peter, do you think it was God who made the foresail belly out at the moment it did?" |
21474 | The harpooner stands up, with his unerring weapon in his hand: when was it ever known to miss its aim? |
21474 | There was one fair, blue- eyed girl-- can I ever forget her? |
21474 | Was that calm sent by Providence to effect, our salvation? |
21474 | We had preserved our lives for the present moment; but what could we expect beyond, but starvation in its worst form? |
21474 | What can you do now?" |
21474 | What could our utmost efforts accomplish in overtaking a ship, her sails filled even with the light air then blowing? |
21474 | What frightens you all so?" |
21474 | What would have been our sensations had we known that we had a volcano on board? |
21474 | What, too, would they think of me? |
21474 | Where did they come from?" |
21474 | Who is there besides?" |
21474 | Who would dare to say that our good captain is not one? |
21474 | Would they believe me innocent when they saw me in such company? |
21474 | are any of you there?" |
21474 | but how you like feel being hung, Massa Peter?" |
21474 | he exclaimed,"den you no pull and haul, and help work de guns which fire at de sip of war? |
21474 | what has Peter the Whaler to do with such poetical ideas? |
23049 | Ah, what is that I see in the corner there? |
23049 | And so, Jack, you like a sea- life, do you? |
23049 | Are there any fish there? |
23049 | Are they going to act? |
23049 | Are you all ready? |
23049 | But here am I chained up like a dog, and how am I to get free? |
23049 | But may I ask where you picked up your knowledge of languages? |
23049 | But what can I do, sir? |
23049 | But what it to become of the chain? |
23049 | But what will be done with poor father? 23049 Can you see the felucca, Tillson?" |
23049 | Did n''t you hear all hands called to shorten sail an hour ago? |
23049 | Do I? |
23049 | Do you hear me there? |
23049 | Do you remember a little lad sitting crying on the quays at Dublin, to whom he gave a bundle of old clothes? 23049 Do you remember the breeze we had in Kingston Harbour on your first voyage?" |
23049 | Do you strike, Sare? 23049 Do you think the savages are going to kill us, sir?" |
23049 | Do you think we shall take her? |
23049 | For what you do dat, Jupiter? |
23049 | From what quarter does the sound come? |
23049 | Had n''t you a very tall seaman aboard the brig when you first went to sea in her? |
23049 | Have they sailed? 23049 Have you ever seen anything like this before?" |
23049 | Heaven be praised, then? |
23049 | How are you so well able to distinguish the difference in pronunciation? |
23049 | How dare ye venture on board my noble ship? 23049 How did you learn that?" |
23049 | How many of you are there? |
23049 | How was it you came to be where we found you? |
23049 | I wonder if he is skipper of that craft? |
23049 | Is it really you, Jack? |
23049 | May I not take this man with me, sir? |
23049 | No, no,said Captain Helfrich;"worse than that-- see there? |
23049 | Oh, Jack Williams-- is that your name, boy? |
23049 | Oh, Peter, Peter,I exclaimed,"what is the matter? |
23049 | Perhaps I formed part of the pirate crew; but you do n''t fancy I was hung, do you? |
23049 | Pretty well, is it not, I have done, remembering the point from which I started only a few years ago? |
23049 | Shall we be able to do anything for all those poor people? |
23049 | Shall we really fight them? |
23049 | Shall we weather her? |
23049 | So you want to find one of your captured countrymen? |
23049 | Then, Peter, you would not go in the boat if one was lowered? |
23049 | Was it Terence, do you think? |
23049 | We have arms, have we not? |
23049 | Well, Peter, what do you think of her? |
23049 | Well, what do you make of her, Mr Gale? |
23049 | What are they but actors? 23049 What boat''s that?" |
23049 | What brig''s that? |
23049 | What can eight or ten men do against forty or fifty cut- throats, which probably that craft out there has on board? |
23049 | What can that be? |
23049 | What countryman do you make that craft out there to be, Mr Gale? |
23049 | What do you make her out to be? |
23049 | What do you mean, sir? 23049 What do you want me to do?" |
23049 | What do you want? |
23049 | What has been the matter aboard? |
23049 | What has happened? |
23049 | What is your name? |
23049 | What means that? |
23049 | What other lingo am I likely to speak? |
23049 | What say you, lad, will you come with us? |
23049 | What would have happened,said I to Peter,"if it had been night instead of day; and if, instead of passing by the wreck, we had struck against her?" |
23049 | What!--is that little hooker the craft we are going to fight, captain? |
23049 | What''s going to happen now? |
23049 | What''s the matter with the young squeaker there, mate? |
23049 | What''s the matter, lad? |
23049 | What''s the matter? 23049 What''s to be done now, captain?" |
23049 | What''s to be done? |
23049 | What? 23049 What? |
23049 | Where am I? 23049 Where am I?--where am I going?--what has occurred?" |
23049 | Where are we going to? |
23049 | Where are you bound for? |
23049 | Where could that have been? 23049 Where do you come from then?" |
23049 | Where do you come from then? |
23049 | Where do you say Lord Hood is? |
23049 | Where she gone to now, eh? 23049 Where''s the old man?" |
23049 | Whereabouts is the English fleet? |
23049 | Who are you? 23049 Who can have done this?" |
23049 | Who has sent you here, Jack, with that pretty little craft? |
23049 | Who knows but that one day I may become an admiral, or a governor of one of these islands? 23049 Who saw it first?" |
23049 | Who''ll just take a spell at the old fellow''s nose, for I am tired of holding on? |
23049 | Why ca n''t you set yourselves alive? |
23049 | Why has the ship been gut into this condition? |
23049 | Why wo n''t father speak to me? |
23049 | Why, what harm can it do? |
23049 | Why, what''s all this about? |
23049 | You are a German, I presume? |
23049 | You are attached to your captain, and would wish to do him a service? |
23049 | You find life and liberty sweet, my man? |
23049 | You gib him back, eh? 23049 You speak Dutch also, perhaps?" |
23049 | You thought to kill me, did you? |
23049 | You''ll let me shake hands, sir, wo n''t you? |
23049 | You''ll make me, will you? |
23049 | You''ve been well- treated since you''ve been here? |
23049 | Your captain do you ask for? |
23049 | ` What''s he about now?'' 23049 ` Where can he be going to?'' |
23049 | Are many of his crew able to amuse themselves as you two appear to be doing?" |
23049 | Are you inclined to join us? |
23049 | But have you shown it? |
23049 | But how came your vessel to be called by the name of one which proved so unfortunate?" |
23049 | But the pirate brig, where was she? |
23049 | But what could we hope to do against the crowd of ruffians who swarmed on board? |
23049 | But where did you pick her up my man?" |
23049 | Could I believe them? |
23049 | Could that heartless stranger have heard them, would he have ventured to brave the fate to which he had left so many of his fellow- creatures? |
23049 | Did I offer him good advice? |
23049 | Do you remember the boy''s name?" |
23049 | Do you strike?" |
23049 | Does your captain, think you, want another man in his stead?" |
23049 | He had got something in his head, do you see? |
23049 | His companion, and the master and crew, where were they? |
23049 | His dying eyes had rested on the pages of Horace-- his dying thoughts, were they heavenward? |
23049 | How should he? |
23049 | How was I to succeed? |
23049 | However, we will not leave you short- handed; but His Majesty''s ships must be manned, do you see?" |
23049 | I called to him, and I thought I heard him answer,"Halloa, who calls?" |
23049 | I was on shore often enough, but what scenes did I witness among docks, and narrow streets, and in the precincts of great commercial towns? |
23049 | In what direction was she to be found? |
23049 | Is he right?" |
23049 | Is the admiral still here?" |
23049 | It''s not a bad name, is it?" |
23049 | Jack Williams, I am certain?" |
23049 | Jack Williams, is that you?" |
23049 | Should such feelings find room in the bosom of a dying Christian? |
23049 | The question is, how will it be obtained? |
23049 | Then, indeed, the question pressed on us, What has become of the brig? |
23049 | We now guessed why the sharks had been accompanying us; or could they have scented the dead body of the pirate chief, which we had still on board? |
23049 | Were they going to allow our shipmates to perish unaided? |
23049 | What can I do?" |
23049 | What can she do, left alone in the world? |
23049 | What can the sailor who never strays beyond these know of all the civilising influences of a well- ordered country home? |
23049 | What could have thus so speedily enticed them on shore? |
23049 | What did I reply to Newman? |
23049 | What do you come here for?" |
23049 | What do you say? |
23049 | What other lingo am I likely to speak?" |
23049 | What say you, mates? |
23049 | What will his poor wife do?" |
23049 | What''s the use of it to them now? |
23049 | When they saw that no white men were on board, did they pull away and leave us to our fate? |
23049 | Where were the survivors?--who had buried these men? |
23049 | Who are you, my man?" |
23049 | Who''ll speak for me? |
23049 | Who''s that?" |
23049 | Whose fault was that? |
23049 | Why should I regret it? |
23049 | Why, Poplar, is not that the name of the young man we picked up at sea a few voyages back to the West Indies?" |
23049 | Will it be the captain next, or I, or the only other remaining prisoner? |
23049 | Will you help me to do so, by teaching me all I want to know?" |
23049 | Will you trust me?" |
23049 | Yet what voice sounded more full of life and spirit than his as we cheered at the captain''s answer to the Frenchman''s hail? |
23049 | Yet who ever found rest in this world-- perfect tranquillity and joy? |
23049 | Yet, would a beneficent Creator have implanted the desire in the human heart without affording the means of gratifying it? |
23049 | You make him smile in me face''gain, eh?" |
23049 | You understand me?" |
23049 | a ship- boy with a conscience?" |
23049 | are you pressed, Peter?" |
23049 | can we do nothing for them, sir?" |
23049 | do you see that?" |
23049 | do you speak English, old fellow? |
23049 | do you speak English, old fellow? |
23049 | have we so soon got back to Jamaica?" |
23049 | he exclaimed,"do you see that unusual whiteness glimmering there ahead, and on our starboard bow? |
23049 | he exclaimed,"she''s the very craft which put that old gentleman aboard the time we came away from Saint Kitt''s, you remember?" |
23049 | how are the places of Mr Wilmot and Mr Noel occupied then?" |
23049 | is it true that you have no friends?" |
23049 | is that you?" |
23049 | the hurricane do you mean? |
23049 | what is all this that has happened?" |
23049 | what''s all this?" |
23049 | what''s going to happen us?" |
23049 | you mark my back with hot iron,"said one, gripping him by the shoulder;"you take out de mark?" |
21711 | ''Ow did you lose the fish, sir? |
21711 | ''Ow''orribly''eavy it is, hain''t it? |
21711 | Ah, then, is it yerself, darlint? |
21711 | Ah, then, ye do n''t onderstand me? 21711 Ai n''t it glorious?" |
21711 | An''do n''t ye think it''s worth makin''enquiries about_ me_? |
21711 | And do n''t they_ never_ melt? |
21711 | And what am I to do, Captain? |
21711 | Are you quite sure, Frederick? |
21711 | Arrah, then,_ do n''t_ ye onderstand me? |
21711 | Ba- a- ck ye- e- r to- o- psails, will ye? |
21711 | Bad luck to ye,cried O''Riley,"wo n''t ye spaake?" |
21711 | But how can this be put right, Tom? |
21711 | Ca n''t ye lead us a better road? |
21711 | Can you make her out, Mr Bolton? |
21711 | Did ye see yon? |
21711 | Do n''t you? |
21711 | Do you hope to effect much? |
21711 | Do you know I feel quite sad at quitting this dreary spot? |
21711 | Does he? |
21711 | Good- day, old chap,said the last who made his exit;"tiller''s fixed agin-- nailed amidships? |
21711 | Hallo, West, are you hurt? |
21711 | Have n''t I bin workin''like a naagur for two hours to git out of that hole, and ai n''t I playin''a tune on me pipe now? 21711 Have ye, Capting? |
21711 | Have you seen Dumps or Poker anywhere? |
21711 | Heavy? |
21711 | How many is there, an''ye plaze? |
21711 | How so? 21711 How was that, Jack?" |
21711 | How''s her head, Mr Bolton? |
21711 | How''s her head? |
21711 | I say, Fred, before we go on deck, will you promise to do what I ask you? |
21711 | Ig-- what? |
21711 | Is it to sail on the ice ye''re goin'', boy? |
21711 | Is that not another tomb? |
21711 | Is there any danger, Buzzby? |
21711 | Is there much? |
21711 | Is''t away? |
21711 | Let it go, poor thing? |
21711 | Look here, Mivins,said O''Riley, as the captain went below,"can ye point out the mornin''star to me, lad?" |
21711 | May they not have got some of the stores of the brig we saw nipped some months ago? |
21711 | Mayhap there''s some o''them asleep inside,suggested Tom Green, the carpenter''s mate;"suppose we go in and see?" |
21711 | Och, where''s the ball? 21711 Oh, but it''s good, is n''t it?" |
21711 | Oh, you''re there? 21711 Please, sir, may I remain?" |
21711 | Sky- larking, are you? |
21711 | The morning star? |
21711 | Then why did he not say what he meant? 21711 Tom,"said Fred, after another long silence,"has not the thought occurred to you that God made it all?" |
21711 | Tom,said Fred, breaking another long silence,"you''re very tiresome and stupid tonight; why do n''t you talk to me?" |
21711 | Very good, and who else, think''ee? 21711 Waes me,"cried the big Scotch mate, as he ran up and down the quarter- deck wringing his hands,"what_ is_ to be done noo?" |
21711 | Well, what''s to be done? 21711 What a jolly style of travelling, is n''t it?" |
21711 | What are they? |
21711 | What can yonder mound be? |
21711 | What do you mean, you young rascal? |
21711 | What do you think of her, Buzzby? |
21711 | What have you got there? |
21711 | What if it should be my father''s brig? |
21711 | What is a water- sky, Captain? |
21711 | What is''t all about? |
21711 | What line was that, Buzzby? |
21711 | What mane ye by that, ye blubber- bag? |
21711 | What mean you, girl? 21711 What means all this mystery?" |
21711 | What of your theatricals, Fred? 21711 What think you, Saunders?" |
21711 | What think''ee, Meetuck? |
21711 | What''ll ye bet it was Dumps as did it? |
21711 | What''ll you do, Tom, you''ve no gun? |
21711 | What''s that ahead of us? |
21711 | What''s to be done noo? |
21711 | What''s wrong with O''Riley? |
21711 | What''s wrong, boy? 21711 When shall we sink the canisters, sir?" |
21711 | Where away? |
21711 | Where have you seen such poor wretches, Tom? |
21711 | Where is my husband?--my boy? |
21711 | Where''s my hatchet? |
21711 | Whereabouts is he? |
21711 | Who can accompany you? |
21711 | Why do n''t I, is it? 21711 Why do n''t you answer?" |
21711 | Why do n''t you kick with your right leg, then, stupid, like other people? |
21711 | Why so? |
21711 | Why, ma''am, in coorse I do,replied Buzzby vehemently;"for why? |
21711 | Why, what are you at there, Meetuck? |
21711 | Why, what put_ them_ into your head? |
21711 | Wot a jolly game football is, ai n''t it? |
21711 | Wot is it? |
21711 | Wots come o''Dumps and Poker? |
21711 | ''Tis very cold,"( Grim shuddered here tremendously)"and-- and-- what''s next?" |
21711 | Any fun going?" |
21711 | But can you tell me, Mr Saunders,''ow it is that them''ere hicebergs is made? |
21711 | But when a thought about them strikes you, will you always_ think it out_, and, if possible,_ act it out_, as God shall enable you?" |
21711 | But where were Fred Ellice and Tom Singleton all this time? |
21711 | But why do you run down my father''s ship? |
21711 | But you are talking nonsense, boy; do you think that I will believe a man means to say a thing is good when he calls it cracked? |
21711 | Come off, will ye, and take yer turn at the right time, wo n''t ye?" |
21711 | Come, West, lind a hand to fix the dogs, will ye?" |
21711 | Did I sleep many hours?" |
21711 | Did you ever see such a miserable set of creatures as the old Esquimaux women are, at Uppernavik?" |
21711 | Do n''t you think it would be worth while communicating your views on the subject to one of the scientific bodies when we get home again? |
21711 | Do n''t you think so?" |
21711 | Do you see the high cliffs yonder away to the nor''-east? |
21711 | Do you think I''m going to stand that? |
21711 | Does it not seem like a dream, Fred?" |
21711 | Fred fired instantly, and the bear stopped, and looked round, as much as to say:"Did you speak, gentlemen?" |
21711 | Fred, Fred, can you not tell us in which direction we ought to go to search for them?" |
21711 | Have not these women feelings like other women? |
21711 | Have you ever been in these seas before, Buzzby?" |
21711 | How came you to know this?" |
21711 | How say you, Meetuck, shall we take to it again when we get through this place?" |
21711 | I can make nothing of this knot; try what you can do with it, messmate, will you?" |
21711 | I misremember exactly who fired it; wos it you, Meetuck?" |
21711 | I see; is the hut finished? |
21711 | If I kill the two bears you speak of, will you marry me?" |
21711 | Is it not_ very_ strange that the idea of the Creator is so seldom, and so slightly, connected with his works in our minds?" |
21711 | Is n''t it quare?" |
21711 | Is the soup in the coppers, David Mizzle?" |
21711 | Now I, on the contrary, am always--""Inclined to talk too much, and think too little; eh, Fred?" |
21711 | Now, I never saw such a miserable old woman as that before; did you?" |
21711 | Now, is n''t it, West? |
21711 | Now, lads, will you agree to that?" |
21711 | Poker sprang forward, wagging the stump of his tail, and turned his head to one side, as if to say:"Well, what''s up? |
21711 | Seizing Isobel by the shoulder he gasped, rather than said:"Speak quick-- is-- is she alive?" |
21711 | That''s not the morning work, is it? |
21711 | Think you that there are not amongst them those who have` known better times?'' |
21711 | Wake up, sir, d''ye hear me?" |
21711 | We start at 10 o''clock a.m., do n''t we?" |
21711 | Well, well, now, is n''t that strange? |
21711 | Were not the goods at Store Island all right this morning, Mr Bolton?" |
21711 | What can be the cause of it?" |
21711 | What do you think of the health of the men, Doctor?" |
21711 | What time is it?" |
21711 | What was to be done? |
21711 | Where did you leave them, say you?" |
21711 | Where have ye comed from, now; tell me, dear,_ doo_ now?" |
21711 | Who d''ye think might go?" |
21711 | Why, do n''t you know that there hain''t no_ morning_ star when it''s_ night_ all round?" |
21711 | Will you take that part, Buzzby?" |
21711 | Write to me, darling Isobel, wo n''t you? |
21711 | Your first harpoon, you know, was a little wide of the mark, if I recollect right, was n''t it?" |
21711 | _ me_?" |
21711 | and I''m sure nobody would say a cracked tea- pot was as good as a whole one; but tell me, Buzzby, do you think they ever_ will_ come back?" |
21711 | and did n''t I hear one of the sailors say that she was a crack ship, a number one? |
21711 | are you ready?" |
21711 | begin to spin the whole yarn o''the voyage afore I''ve had time to say` How d''ye do?''" |
21711 | cried Buzzby, whose appearance was such that you would have hesitated to say whether his breadth or length was greater,--"heavy, d''ye say? |
21711 | did I iver expect to ride in a carriage and six?" |
21711 | do you know what time it is?" |
21711 | do you mean to say it was_ yesterday_ when we started, and that we''ve been walking all night, and got into_ to- morrow morning_ without knowing it?" |
21711 | he exclaimed in an earnest tone;"who calls me father?" |
21711 | is that a bear I sees before me?" |
21711 | is that you? |
21711 | messmates, wot''s ado now? |
21711 | no passage, I suppose?" |
21711 | what''s to be done now?" |
21711 | what''s wrong there for''ard?" |
21711 | where are the rest of you?" |
21711 | where''s Mr Saunders?" |
21711 | where?" |
21711 | ye wo n''t take it, wo n''t ye? |
11602 | ''Ow did you lose the fish, sir? |
11602 | ''Ow''orribly''eavy it is,_ h_ain''t it? |
11602 | Ai n''t it glorious? |
11602 | An Esquimau hut, maybe,replied Grim.--"What think''ee, Meetuck?" |
11602 | An''do n''t ye think it''s worth makin''inquiries about_ me_? |
11602 | And do n''t they_ never_ melt? |
11602 | And what am I to do, captain? |
11602 | Are we keeping right for her? |
11602 | Are you quite sure, Frederick? |
11602 | B- a- ck ye- r t- to- p- sails, will ye? |
11602 | But how can this be put right, Tom? |
11602 | Ca n''t ye lead us a better road? |
11602 | Danger? 11602 Did ye ever see walruses afore, Davie?" |
11602 | Did ye see yon? |
11602 | Do n''t you? |
11602 | Do you hope to effect much? |
11602 | Do you know I feel quite sad at quitting this dreary spot? |
11602 | Does he? |
11602 | Good day, old chap,said the last who made his exit;"tiller''s fixed agin-- nailed amid- ships, eh?" |
11602 | Have n''t I bin workin''like a naagur for two hours to git out of that hole, and ai n''t I playin''a tune on me pipe now? 11602 Have ye, capting? |
11602 | Have you seen Dumps or Poker anywhere? |
11602 | How many is there, an ye plaze? |
11602 | How so? 11602 How was that, Jack?" |
11602 | How''s her head? |
11602 | I say, Fred, before we go on deck, will you promise to do what I ask you? |
11602 | Ig-- what? |
11602 | Is it to sail on the ice ye''re goin'', boy? |
11602 | Is that a way to drive the poor dogs? |
11602 | Is that not another tomb? |
11602 | Is there any danger, Buzzby? |
11602 | Is there much? |
11602 | Is''t away? |
11602 | Look here, Mivins,said O''Riley, as the captain went below,"can you point out the mornin''star to me, lad?" |
11602 | May they not have got some of the stores of the brig we saw nipped some months ago? |
11602 | Nothing missing from the ship? |
11602 | Now, is n''t that disgusting? |
11602 | Oh, but it''s good, is n''t it? |
11602 | Please, sir, may I remain? |
11602 | S''pose we may sup first? |
11602 | Sky- larking, are you? |
11602 | The morning star? |
11602 | Then why did he not say what he meant? 11602 Tom,"said Fred after another long silence,"has not the thought occurred to you that God made it all?" |
11602 | Tom,said Fred, breaking another long silence,"you''re very tiresome and stupid to- night, why do n''t you talk to me?" |
11602 | Very good; and who else, think''ee? 11602 Was it a log- line, or a bow- line, or a cod- line, or a bit of the equator, eh?" |
11602 | Well, what''s to be done? 11602 What a jolly style of travelling, is n''t it?" |
11602 | What are they? |
11602 | What can yonder mound be? |
11602 | What do you mean, you young rascal? |
11602 | What do you think of her, Buzzby? |
11602 | What have you got there? |
11602 | What if it should be my father''s brig? |
11602 | What is a water- sky, captain? |
11602 | What is''t all about? |
11602 | What line was that, Buzzby? |
11602 | What mane ye by that, ye blubber- bag? |
11602 | What mean you, girl? 11602 What means all this mystery?" |
11602 | What of your theatricals, Fred? 11602 What think you, Saunders?" |
11602 | What''ll ye bet it was Dumps as did it? |
11602 | What''ll you do, Tom, you''ve no gun? |
11602 | What''s that ahead of us? |
11602 | What''s to be done noo? |
11602 | What''s wrong with O''Riley? |
11602 | What''s wrong, boy? 11602 When shall we sink the canisters, sir?" |
11602 | Where away? |
11602 | Where have you seen such poor wretches, Tom? |
11602 | Where is my husband? 11602 Where''s my hatchet?" |
11602 | Whereabouts is he? |
11602 | Who can accompany you? |
11602 | Why do n''t I, is it? 11602 Why do n''t you answer?" |
11602 | Why do n''t you kick with your right leg, then, stupid, like other people? |
11602 | Why so? |
11602 | Why, what are you at there, Meetuck? |
11602 | Why, what put_ them_, into your head? |
11602 | Wot a jolly game football is, ai n''t it? |
11602 | Wot is it? |
11602 | Wot''s come o''Dumps and Poker? |
11602 | ''Out on the ice to the north''is a wide word.--Fred, Fred, can you not tell us in which direction we ought to go to search for them?" |
11602 | ''Tis very cold[ Grim shuddered here tremendously], and-- and--(what''s next?)" |
11602 | And did n''t I hear one of the sailors say that she was a crack ship, a number one? |
11602 | And to think of their taking two years''provisions with them_ in case of accidents!_--doesn''t that prove that there are going_ to be_ accidents? |
11602 | Any fun going?" |
11602 | Bolton?" |
11602 | Bolton?" |
11602 | Bolton?" |
11602 | But can you tell me, Mr. Saunders,''ow it is that them''ere_ h_icebergs is made? |
11602 | But tell me, Buzzby, do you think they ever_ will_ come back?" |
11602 | But then me mother was lame o''the_ right_ leg intirely, and wint about wid a crutch, so I ca n''t make out how it was, d''ye see?" |
11602 | But when a thought about them strikes you, will you always_ think it out_, and, if possible,_ act it out_, as God shall enable you?" |
11602 | But where were Fred Ellice and Tom Singleton all this time? |
11602 | But why do you run down my father''s ship? |
11602 | But you have thought on Jesus long ere now, have you not?" |
11602 | Come off, will ye, and take yer turn at the right time, wo n''t ye?" |
11602 | Did I sleep many hours?" |
11602 | Did you ever see such a miserable set of creatures as the old Esquimau women are at Upernavik?" |
11602 | Do n''t you think so?" |
11602 | Do you see the high cliffs yonder away to the nor''-east? |
11602 | Do you think I''m going to stand that? |
11602 | Do you think that I will believe a man means to say a thing is good when he calls it cracked? |
11602 | Does it not seem like a dream, Fred?" |
11602 | Fred fired instantly; and the bear stopped, and looked round, as much as to say,"Did you speak, gentlemen?" |
11602 | Have not these women feelings like other women? |
11602 | Have you ever been in these seas before, Buzzby?" |
11602 | How came you to know this?" |
11602 | How say you, Meetuck-- shall we take to it again when we get through this place?" |
11602 | I can make nothing of this knot; try what you can do with it, messmate, will you?" |
11602 | I mis- remember exactly who fired it-- wos it you, Meetuck?" |
11602 | I see; is the hut finished? |
11602 | If I kill the two bears you speak of, will you marry me?" |
11602 | Is it not_ very_ strange that the idea of the Creator is so seldom and so slightly connected with his works in our minds?" |
11602 | Is n''t it quare?" |
11602 | Is the soup in the coppers, David Mizzle?" |
11602 | Now I, on the contrary, am always--""Inclined to talk too much and think too little-- eh, Fred?" |
11602 | Now, I never saw such a miserable old woman as that before, did you?" |
11602 | Now, is n''t it, West? |
11602 | Now, lads, will you agree to that?" |
11602 | Poker sprang forward, wagging the stump of his tail, and turned his head to one side, as if to say,"Well, what''s up? |
11602 | Saunders?" |
11602 | Saunders?" |
11602 | Seizing Isobel by the shoulder he gasped, rather than said,"Speak quick-- is-- is she alive?" |
11602 | That''s not the morning work, is it? |
11602 | Then Poker sprang up and barked savagely, as much as to say,"Play, wo n''t you?" |
11602 | Think you that there are not amongst them those who have''known better times''? |
11602 | We start at ten o''clock, A.M., do n''t we?" |
11602 | Well, well, now, is n''t that strange? |
11602 | What can be the cause of it?" |
11602 | What time is it?" |
11602 | What was to be done? |
11602 | Where did you leave them, say you?" |
11602 | Where have ye comed from, now? |
11602 | Who d''ye think might go?" |
11602 | Why, do n''t you know that there_ h_ain''t no_ morning_ star when it''s_ night_ all round?" |
11602 | Will you take that part, Buzzby?" |
11602 | With God''s blessing we shall come back soon.--Write to me, darling Isobel, wo n''t you? |
11602 | You know what glaciers are, Mivins?" |
11602 | Your first harpoon, you know, was a little wide of the mark, if I recollect right, was n''t it?" |
11602 | _ me_?" |
11602 | are you hurt?" |
11602 | are you ready?" |
11602 | begin to spin the whole yarn o''the Voyage afore I''ve had time to say,''How d''ye do?''" |
11602 | but ye''re too fond o''me intirely, Doo lie down agin, and I''ll sing ye a ditty?" |
11602 | cried Buzzby, whose appearance was such that you would have hesitated to say whether his breadth or length was greater--"heavy, d''ye say? |
11602 | cried O''Riley,"wo n''t ye spaak?" |
11602 | cried the big Scotch mate, as he ran up and down the quarter- deck wringing his hands,"what_ is_ to be done noo?" |
11602 | d''ye hear me?" |
11602 | did I iver expect to ride a carriage and six?" |
11602 | do you know what time it is?" |
11602 | do you mean to say it was_ yesterday_ when we started, and that we''ve been walking all night, and got into_ to- morrow morning_ without knowing it?" |
11602 | he exclaimed in an earnest tone;"who calls me father?" |
11602 | is that a bear I sees before me?" |
11602 | is that you? |
11602 | messmates, wot''s ado now? |
11602 | my boy?" |
11602 | no passage, I suppose?" |
11602 | or would it be better to slump dinner with tea this afternoon?" |
11602 | spluttered O''Riley, as he rose and ran away;"why do n''t ye hit a man o''yer own size?" |
11602 | then, is it yerself, darlint?" |
11602 | then, ye do n''t understand me? |
11602 | then,_ do n''t_ ye onderstand me?" |
11602 | w''ere''s Meetuck? |
11602 | what''s the matter with you?" |
11602 | what''s this?" |
11602 | what''s to be done now?" |
11602 | what''s wrong there for''ard?" |
11602 | what''s wrong?" |
11602 | what''s yon?" |
11602 | where are the rest of you?" |
11602 | where are you from, and what''s your cargo?" |
11602 | where''s the ball? |
11602 | where?" |
21475 | Am I to be thwarted and insulted on board my own ship? |
21475 | And art thou and this other lad brothers? |
21475 | And if so, what are we to do? |
21475 | And was thy mother a bumboat- woman, a true, honest soul, one of the excellent of the earth? |
21475 | And what about Jack? |
21475 | And what about yourself, my son? |
21475 | And where is Tom going to put up himself? |
21475 | Are any of them there? |
21475 | Are we gaining on the leaks, think you, Jim? |
21475 | Are ye the only people aboard? |
21475 | Are you the only two? |
21475 | Brown,he said,"did you ever see that ship before?" |
21475 | But ca n''t you give me any idea as to what has become of Jack? |
21475 | But do you see, Peter, we must try and get help to cut away the lower rigging, which keeps the masts battering against the sides? |
21475 | But it must be said notwithstanding, and now how are we to tell mother? |
21475 | But now what''s to be done? |
21475 | But, I say, is any one hungry? |
21475 | But, sir, what will my sister do without me when she recovers and leaves you, and where will Nancy go when the widow dies? |
21475 | Can anything have happened to father? |
21475 | Can anything have happened to her? |
21475 | Can he be my brother Jack? |
21475 | Dick Porter, look after my boat, will ye, till I comes back? |
21475 | Did I heave my quadrant at you? |
21475 | Did n''t you see them before? |
21475 | Do you call me a fool? |
21475 | Do you intend to make a sailor of him? |
21475 | Do you know anything of a young fellow named Jack Trawl? |
21475 | Do you think he''s aboard her, Miles? |
21475 | Do you think the brig will go down? |
21475 | Do you think they could have escaped from the savages? |
21475 | Do you twig, doctor? 21475 Do you want me, sir?" |
21475 | Do you want to lose your lives or keep them, lads? |
21475 | Good- bye, Peter; you''ll remember what I have said to you? |
21475 | Gray is my name, young man,he answered, looking somewhat surprised,"Who art thou?" |
21475 | Had n''t we better take in a reef or two? |
21475 | Hast seen anything of Jack Trawl''s wherry? |
21475 | Hast thou, James Pulley, been guilty of stealing thy shipmate''s sugar? |
21475 | Have you a second one, sir? |
21475 | Have you been long at sea? |
21475 | Have you the rent ready, good people? |
21475 | How are Mary, and father, and mother, and Nancy? |
21475 | How are you, Captain Finlay? |
21475 | How dare you speak to me? 21475 How did you come to be on board the vessel which went down?" |
21475 | How do you know that, youngster? |
21475 | How is mother? |
21475 | How is mother? |
21475 | I must n''t give in,she said at length,"I have the children to look after, for if I was to go what would become of them?" |
21475 | I say, Peter, do n''t you think we ought to bury the skipper? |
21475 | I say, mister,he continued, turning to the mate,"will you take us poor fellows off? |
21475 | I say, you fellow, do you happen to know whereabouts an old chap, one Tom Swatridge, lives? |
21475 | I suppose thy father is ill on shore? |
21475 | If it was n''t a tom- cat, what was it? |
21475 | Is Mary well, sir? 21475 Is dere any danger?" |
21475 | Is old Tom Swatridge saved? |
21475 | Is there any chance for us? |
21475 | Just help me, Nancy, will you? 21475 Let me see,"he said, holding his paddle in the air for a moment;"were you ever aboard the ship that my rascally people sent to the bottom out there?" |
21475 | Now, I say, ai n''t you Robinson Crusoe? |
21475 | Now, lads, say who stole Andrews''s sugar and concealed it in Pulley''s chest? |
21475 | Oh, Captain Hawkins, will you put Jim and me on board her? |
21475 | Oh, Peter, what are we to do? |
21475 | Oh, sir, wo n''t the captain put into Plymouth to land us as he promised? 21475 One half guinea is de charge, eh? |
21475 | Peter, Peter, are n''t you Peter, now? 21475 Peter, do you know if there''s a prayer- book aboard?" |
21475 | Please, marm, where is the other boy, my shipmate? |
21475 | Shall I be better in the morning, think you, doctor? |
21475 | Shall we be seen, Jim, think you? |
21475 | She''s standing, as far as I can make out, directly towards us, and why should we fancy that we are to be deserted? 21475 So you and Jim Pulley have not taken yourselves off?" |
21475 | Some one was carried overboard? |
21475 | Surely, sir, he would not carry us away from home? 21475 The work''us, do ye say? |
21475 | Then you think, sir, that we shall remain here long enough to explore the island? |
21475 | Was the person you fancy I am killed with the rest of the crew? |
21475 | Was thy cask of sugar open, Andrews? |
21475 | We''re afloat and why should n''t she be? |
21475 | Well, jump in, my lads,said the mate;"but have n''t you anything at the place where you have lived so long to bring away?" |
21475 | What are the men about? |
21475 | What are those youngsters idling there for? |
21475 | What are you about to do, lads? |
21475 | What are you lads making that noise for? |
21475 | What are you looking at? |
21475 | What can have happened? |
21475 | What cheer, Peter? 21475 What do you mean?" |
21475 | What do you say to it, Peter? 21475 What do you say to that white patch in the head of her foresail?" |
21475 | What do you think, Peter? 21475 What harm could the black cat do, if she did come aboard?" |
21475 | What in the world is it? |
21475 | What is dreadful? 21475 What is that drunken old Swatridge talking about?" |
21475 | What lies are you telling, youngster? |
21475 | What ship is that, shutting out the light from my palace window? |
21475 | What was the use of calling me up for such fool''s work? |
21475 | What''s all this about? |
21475 | What''s that for? |
21475 | What''s that you say? |
21475 | What''s the matter, mother dear? |
21475 | What''s the matter, sir? |
21475 | What''s the matter? 21475 What''s the matter?" |
21475 | What''s the number? |
21475 | What''s this? 21475 What''s up?" |
21475 | What, are you my little brother Peter? |
21475 | What, did you come out here all by yourself, youngster? |
21475 | What, do n''t you know one another? |
21475 | What, the old captain, and mate, and Andrews, and the rest? |
21475 | When I commission another ship, would you like to go with me, my lad? |
21475 | When was it your majesty fancied that you saw me? |
21475 | Where am I? 21475 Where are they, lads?" |
21475 | Where are you going, Captain Hawkins? |
21475 | Where away-- where away? |
21475 | Where do they come from? |
21475 | Where have you been away from your duty? |
21475 | Where''s mother? |
21475 | Whereabouts are we, sir? |
21475 | Who are you? |
21475 | Who do you suppose he is? |
21475 | Who sent this? |
21475 | Who wrote this letter? |
21475 | Who''s got his property? |
21475 | Why do n''t you propose that to him, and if he does not agree, just steer as you think best? |
21475 | Why do these men come on board my ship? |
21475 | Why do you wish to explore the island? |
21475 | Why, Peter, how did you come by this? |
21475 | Why, lads, what made you shout out in that fashion? |
21475 | Why, my laddies, what has happened? 21475 Will a couple of guineas tempt you?" |
21475 | Will you take charge, sir? |
21475 | Wo n''t you come yourself, mother? |
21475 | Wo n''t you get those wet duds of yours off, missus, and have some hot tea and supper? |
21475 | Would n''t it be better to go and stay under the trees? 21475 Would you like to see Jack Trawl''s son in a ragged shirt, without shoes to his feet, and his daughter a beggar- girl, or something worse? |
21475 | You are still resolved to let this poor outcast remain in your house, Mrs Trawl? |
21475 | You know who I am? |
21475 | ` Had n''t we better go back?'' 21475 Are we all going to be drowned? |
21475 | Are you not gone yet, gal?'' |
21475 | Ca n''t we try and find him?" |
21475 | Can he really be old Tom''s nephew?" |
21475 | Can not we let them live? |
21475 | Can you show me where Mr Gull, the attorney, lives?" |
21475 | Dead, do you say?" |
21475 | Did any one see an axe in the hands of James Pulley?" |
21475 | Did he succeed? |
21475 | Do you mean to say that she''s the_ Intrepid_?" |
21475 | Do you twig? |
21475 | Feel for it, will you?" |
21475 | He took me for Mary, do you see, Peter; and I was not going to undeceive him? |
21475 | Hitherto the wind had been fair, but any day it might change, and then, they asked, what would become of us? |
21475 | How did it happen?" |
21475 | How did this craft come here?" |
21475 | How''s the missus?" |
21475 | I asked him if the ship was going to put into Saint Helens, or if not, would he get the captain to land Jim and me at Portland? |
21475 | I had been asleep for some time when I was awakened by hearing Horner''s voice, exclaiming,"You are here, then? |
21475 | I wonder what we shall do?" |
21475 | I wonder whether he really is old Tom''s nephew?" |
21475 | Is anything dreadful going to happen?" |
21475 | Is he alive?" |
21475 | Is she still with you?" |
21475 | It looked like a big tom- cat; but who knows that it was really a cat at all?" |
21475 | It''s a good job I did n''t, is n''t it?" |
21475 | No fear of that, Cockle, eh?" |
21475 | Now I look at you, ai n''t you Bill Bolton?" |
21475 | Now come along to the half- deck; he and I are going to dinner; I suppose you''ll join us?" |
21475 | Please, sir, can I go and find him?" |
21475 | Presently he asked--"You young Englishman ever been here before? |
21475 | She said nothing, however, to Mary and me, but I heard her sighing and whispering to herself,"What will poor missus do? |
21475 | Should you like to be so?" |
21475 | So I went up to him, and pulling off my hat said--"Beg pardon, sir; may I be so bold as to ask if you are Mr Gray?" |
21475 | We might thus prolong our lives; but should we be able to hold out till a passing vessel might pick us up? |
21475 | What are your names?" |
21475 | What can have come over me? |
21475 | What could you not help?" |
21475 | What do you say to my proposal?" |
21475 | What has become of that? |
21475 | What has happened?" |
21475 | What has happened?" |
21475 | What is your name?" |
21475 | What mattered it, if he were lost, what else might happen? |
21475 | What shall I do?" |
21475 | What shall we do, then?" |
21475 | What ship shall I put you aboard?" |
21475 | What will poor missus do?" |
21475 | What would become of Mary and Nancy? |
21475 | What''s the matter?" |
21475 | What''s your name, my man?" |
21475 | When did you last get news of him?" |
21475 | When, if ever, should we see him again? |
21475 | Where have you come from?" |
21475 | Where was it found?" |
21475 | Where was the other? |
21475 | Who can say that we sha n''t be landed at Portsmouth itself?" |
21475 | Who can they be? |
21475 | Who then can I get to see poor mother?" |
21475 | Why do n''t you let us have a piece for our breakfasts?" |
21475 | Will you remember my name?" |
21475 | Wo n''t Dr Cockle look at his watch and see?" |
21475 | Would you believe it? |
21475 | You''ll try and cure missus, wo n''t you?" |
23674 | ''What will folks think?'' |
23674 | A feller who would be as good as his word in that particular would n''t lie about his name, would he? |
23674 | A man ought to know his own name, ought n''t he? |
23674 | A whaleship? |
23674 | An American whaleship? |
23674 | And I look like him? |
23674 | And it had been there waiting for you for some time? |
23674 | And that is where this Professor stays? |
23674 | And the letter was from Bolderhead? |
23674 | And these are the natives you told me were perfectly harmless? |
23674 | And why did he swim for your craft instead of to shore? |
23674 | And why not? |
23674 | And why should such a foolish remark,I added,"have frightened mother? |
23674 | And why should we obey your behest, young man? |
23674 | And you say you''ve begun studying navigation? |
23674 | Are n''t you a pretty fellow? |
23674 | Are you sure you wish to talk about it now, mother? |
23674 | Are_ you_ here? |
23674 | As how? |
23674 | But did he have any way of proving his name to be Carver? |
23674 | But he could n''t carry out his threat; I wonder if you will be better able to compass your revenge? |
23674 | But how about father? 23674 But how about the brig Emeline of New Bedford? |
23674 | But suppose I should n''t want to remain with you? |
23674 | But you''ll hear to me, mother, wo n''t you? 23674 By the way, sir,"I said,"do you ever run around to Santiago?" |
23674 | Call this a fight? |
23674 | Did n''t the man-- this Carver-- belong in Bolderhead? |
23674 | Did you at that time mail a letter for Professor Vose from that town? |
23674 | Did you ever hear of such depravity-- such viciousness? 23674 Did you?" |
23674 | Do n''t know nobody named Vose? |
23674 | Do you mean that there ever_ was_ such a story circulated? |
23674 | Do you mean,I said,"that there_ was_ any such story told when my father was lost at sea?" |
23674 | Does seem so, does n''t it? |
23674 | Got a job? |
23674 | Got that mess o''stuff out o''the box? 23674 He had swum out from shore?" |
23674 | He paid you? |
23674 | He''s been squally enough already, has n''t he? |
23674 | How d''you know it was? |
23674 | How dare you come here with such a tale as this, you dirty beach- comber? |
23674 | How do you know his name is Vose? |
23674 | How do you suppose that happened? |
23674 | How is she? |
23674 | How long did you say you had known him? |
23674 | How old be you? |
23674 | I''d like to know how you figure that out? |
23674 | If I went with you, what would you give me a month? |
23674 | Is that so? |
23674 | Is that so? |
23674 | Jest summer visitors, are ye? |
23674 | Keep your eye on my Wavecrest, will you, Lampton? |
23674 | Know''em, do you? |
23674 | Meaning they''ll come over here and try to see mother? |
23674 | Mother,I asked,"was father and Mr. Chester Downes very good friends?" |
23674 | No? |
23674 | Now, ai n''t that a fact? 23674 Oh, I ca n''t hey?" |
23674 | Or being puzzled, either? |
23674 | Pray tell me why not, mother? |
23674 | S''pose there''s somebody there? |
23674 | See what he has done, Mary? |
23674 | Shall I bring down your bags, sir? |
23674 | Shall I bring down your bags, sir? |
23674 | She has been frightened-- ees eet not? |
23674 | So everybody knows it, hey? |
23674 | So that''s your yarn, is it? |
23674 | So that''s your yarn? |
23674 | So you come from Bolderhead, do you? |
23674 | So you wo n''t help me get away? |
23674 | That critter''s gone to sleep down there, has n''t it? |
23674 | That my poor father had to jump overboard from his dory, to save himself from trouble and mother and I from poverty? 23674 The Scarboro?" |
23674 | The name of the feller I was tellin''you of? |
23674 | Then he had not gone back to Bolderhead? |
23674 | Then he is a physician? |
23674 | Then, where did Paul pick up that old scandal to throw at me? |
23674 | Think I''ve forgotten what you did to me at the consul''s office? |
23674 | Think we''re going to have the other boats give us the yah- yah because we pass up a fifty- foot she whale, eh? |
23674 | This man swimming aboard your schooner? |
23674 | Valparaiso, you mean, son? |
23674 | WHAT? |
23674 | Was that letter addressed to Tom Anderly, at the office of Radnor& Blunt, in New York-- a firm of shipping merchants? |
23674 | Well, he is n''t like your father was--_he_ had to commit suicide to get out of trouble----"What do you mean? |
23674 | Well, sir? |
23674 | Well, who wants to go out in your old tub? |
23674 | Were you becalmed outside? 23674 What are you doing, Paul?" |
23674 | What became of him? |
23674 | What did this man look like? |
23674 | What do you know about my father? |
23674 | What do you know about this, Tom? |
23674 | What do you mean to do with me? |
23674 | What do you mean, Ham? |
23674 | What for, sir-- if I''m not too curious? 23674 What have you been doing to that little mother of yours now?" |
23674 | What have you been saying-- you fool? |
23674 | What have you done? |
23674 | What have you to say to me, sir? |
23674 | What in tarnation d''ye s''pose that critter is? |
23674 | What in the e- tar- nal snakes is that? |
23674 | What is it, mother? |
23674 | What is the matter? |
23674 | What made that crazy Paul say he committed suicide, and that if he had n''t we''d have been paupers? |
23674 | What nonsense is that you said? |
23674 | What old scandal do you mean, Clinton? |
23674 | What shall we do with these? |
23674 | What was his name, Tom? |
23674 | What was it? |
23674 | What was queer? |
23674 | What will your father and my mother say? |
23674 | What you been doing for the last hour Clint Webb? 23674 What you givin''us, old hardshell? |
23674 | What you got to run oil into, sir? |
23674 | What''s he going to do? |
23674 | What''s the use of talking that way, Paul? |
23674 | When did all this happen, Tom? |
23674 | When did what happen? |
23674 | Where are you going from here when your Sea Spell sails, Captain Tugg? |
23674 | Where away? |
23674 | Where do you hail from? |
23674 | Where? |
23674 | Why, you shipped for the voyage, did n''t you? |
23674 | Why-- why-- Whoever heard of such insolence? |
23674 | Will it really make you so happy, my boy? |
23674 | Will you pass down a dish of those beans mate? |
23674 | Would n''t you like to know? |
23674 | Yet you were going to cut her up? |
23674 | You do n''t suppose that I had anything to do with this business tonight? 23674 You said you heard from him ten years after?" |
23674 | You see, Mary, what this young ruffian has done to poor Paul? 23674 You''re goin''to_ crawl_ now, are ye?" |
23674 | You''re one of the crew of the Scarboro? |
23674 | You-- you believe there is some truth in the story Paul hinted at? |
23674 | ''Cap''n Symes,''says I,''thar she blaows; shall I lower?'' |
23674 | And me with more than two thousand in gold aboard?" |
23674 | And meanwhile, what was going to become of poor Ben Gibson? |
23674 | And then, what better off would I have been? |
23674 | And they put you out of the consulate, too, I understand?" |
23674 | And when would I get back? |
23674 | And where would the Wavecrest be in a week''s time? |
23674 | Are there any Carvers there?" |
23674 | But he was all in when the crimp brought him aboard----""Who is the fellow?" |
23674 | But what am I to do? |
23674 | CHAPTER XXIII IN WHICH I BEGIN TO WONDER"IS IT ME, OR IS IT NOT ME?" |
23674 | Captain Tugg jumped and yelled to Pedro:"What in tarnation you doin'', numbskull? |
23674 | Could you blame''em?" |
23674 | Did I want to go home? |
23674 | Do you know that I am a man, your uncle, and your mother''s business agent? |
23674 | Do you mean to say you have run across Jim Carver on board that whaling bark? |
23674 | Do you want to be swamped by the critter?" |
23674 | Drown a whale, eh? |
23674 | Eldridge?" |
23674 | Ever heard tell of him in Bolderhead? |
23674 | Had trouble with your captain? |
23674 | Hounsditch?" |
23674 | How dare you, sir?" |
23674 | I cried in amazement and pain,"could n''t my father earn money enough to support us?" |
23674 | I suddenly put in:"Your schooner is going right to your headquarters now?" |
23674 | I wondered whether this was really me, or was it not me? |
23674 | If it has n''t anything to do with your private business, you''ll answer me?" |
23674 | If she turned turtle, what would become of me? |
23674 | If they burst upon the drifting mammal where would I be? |
23674 | Is it any wonder that I desire to see the last of you and your precious son?" |
23674 | Is it serious? |
23674 | Is it to be wondered that I was amazed? |
23674 | Is your sloop any good?" |
23674 | Mr. Downes had observed us too, and he broke in with:"What is the meaning of this outrage, Clinton Webb? |
23674 | Not that we would have believed a scoundrelly beach- comber like you----""You do n''t believe what?" |
23674 | Old Tom stood up to glance about the sea- scape:"And now where''s that thundering old hooker?" |
23674 | Or have you just got out of jail?" |
23674 | Overstayed your leave? |
23674 | Professor, how came you here?" |
23674 | Say, boy, who be you?" |
23674 | Shall I lower?'' |
23674 | Shall I lower?'' |
23674 | Shall I lower?'' |
23674 | She sailed on July 11, 1841 and in twenty- six months she returned home with how much ile d''you suppose?" |
23674 | Sperm whale, ai n''t she, John?" |
23674 | Stand still, will you?" |
23674 | Sure you ai n''t got no relative named Vose?" |
23674 | Tell me what you want? |
23674 | That I brought it about?" |
23674 | We''ll pepper them skunks-- now, wo n''t we?" |
23674 | What boy would not have delighted in being thus thrust into the midst of the very life and work he had so longed to follow? |
23674 | What could my father think but that, if he were out of the way, it would be far, far better for his wife and child? |
23674 | What did it mean? |
23674 | What do you think, Marie? |
23674 | What do you want?" |
23674 | What have I told you about that boy?" |
23674 | What puzzled us all-- from Captain Hi down to the cook''s cat-- was what had become of the iron? |
23674 | What was_ his_ opinion of Aunt Alice''s husband?" |
23674 | What will folks think?" |
23674 | What would happen to me if any of those whirling columns of water and mist struck the dead whale? |
23674 | What would happen to the Wavecrest? |
23674 | What you doin''yere in Maria Debora''s?" |
23674 | Whatever shall I do?" |
23674 | When the Wavecrest was fast he asked more meekly:"Are n''t you going to take this cord off my wrist?" |
23674 | Who else would know enough about me to represent himself as Clint Webb? |
23674 | Why do n''t you speak up and deny this charge?" |
23674 | Why for should he lie about it? |
23674 | Why, he suddenly raised his voice and stood up,"what do you mean by coming here with such a yarn? |
23674 | Would the line ever sag? |
23674 | Would the whale ever reach the bottom? |
23674 | Would you make an attempt to get Ben to Buenos Ayres in that sloop of yours?" |
23674 | Ye ai n''t a native, though, eh?" |
23674 | You know him?" |
23674 | You want to blow yourself to everylastin''bliss?" |
23674 | You wo n''t bother about Chester Downes and Paul? |
23674 | You''re going to finish out the cruise, are n''t you?" |
23674 | ai n''t you smart?" |
23674 | are n''t we going to get that whale? |
23674 | are n''t we in yet?" |
23674 | are we so near your headquarters?" |
23674 | how do I know? |
23674 | they''re not head- hunters?" |
23674 | was the greeting I received from a smart looking youngster-- not much older than myself-- who welcomed me at the rail"is that your whale?" |
23674 | you do n''t mean to illuminate the schooner? |
36881 | About who, Dan''l? |
36881 | All? |
36881 | And-- how?... |
36881 | Are you going ashore, Noll? |
36881 | Are you going to stick to your claim? |
36881 | Are you too proud to drink with the skipper? |
36881 | Are you waiting for a squall to tear it off? |
36881 | Aye-- but what if he''s dead afore it? |
36881 | Best speak to the captain? |
36881 | Brander.... What did Brander say? |
36881 | Brander? 36881 Brander?" |
36881 | But where did the men get liquor? |
36881 | But-- did you ever look at a hill, so far away it is just a deep blue shape against the sky? 36881 But-- what happened? |
36881 | By God, Roy.... What did you go and do that for? 36881 Ca n''t you see he''s a man of education, Mr. Ham? |
36881 | Can you use me? |
36881 | Cap''n Marks? |
36881 | Could I say anything you would believe? |
36881 | D''you make a spout? |
36881 | Did you get him?... |
36881 | Did you mark the greed in the one eye of Mauger when they came aboard? |
36881 | Do you think so? |
36881 | Do you want to go back to the fo''c''s''le, man? |
36881 | Does Mauger-- Is Mauger the captain''s man? |
36881 | Eh? 36881 Eye?" |
36881 | Fix you up a cask? |
36881 | Have I not seen? 36881 Have you got him?" |
36881 | How about it? |
36881 | How are they, when they''re together? |
36881 | How come you''re not with her? |
36881 | How did he know to stick it in the man''s leg so neat? 36881 How did it kill him, there?" |
36881 | How do I look at Mr. Brander, Roy? |
36881 | How do you know? |
36881 | How if you were to leave the ship completely? |
36881 | How long have I? |
36881 | How long will you be? |
36881 | How much is there of it? |
36881 | How much was it? |
36881 | I dunno, ma''am.... Did they have any?... |
36881 | I kissed you, Dan''l? |
36881 | I reckon he''s forgot his threat to stick a knife in me.... Do n''t you think he has? |
36881 | I tell you, Dan''l, we stick with the_ Sally_; and we get her safe away.... Are you afraid to stick? |
36881 | I''m afraid some one may come along this path.... Will they?... 36881 I....""Why not?" |
36881 | Is Noll Wing still captain?... |
36881 | Is it true? 36881 Is it, now?" |
36881 | Is n''t it unusual to go almost six weeks without getting a whale? |
36881 | Is there any reason, why you should not tell me all about it? |
36881 | It''s gone.... Gone, by God....Faith asked sharply:"What is it, Noll?" |
36881 | Leave the ship? |
36881 | Left them? |
36881 | Look here, Faith.... Why do you keep looking at Brander? 36881 Mauger?" |
36881 | Must a woman always be loving? |
36881 | New Bedford? |
36881 | Noll Wing''s ship? |
36881 | Not without a fire going.... Do you, Faith? 36881 Nothing? |
36881 | Of course, Brander does n''t intend to claim it all.... To push his claim...."Ye think not? |
36881 | Right? |
36881 | Roy? |
36881 | Roy? |
36881 | Slatter? |
36881 | Stuck the knife in him? |
36881 | Takin''a swim? |
36881 | The dog struck me.... Where would the ship be if I let that go? 36881 Then why did you run to me?" |
36881 | Trash? |
36881 | Was n''t I right? |
36881 | Wha''s that you say? |
36881 | Wha''s that? |
36881 | What I mean is, how about Mauger? 36881 What are you doing here?" |
36881 | What are you doing it for? |
36881 | What did Brander say? 36881 What do you say? |
36881 | What do you think you''ve found? |
36881 | What do you want me to do? |
36881 | What do you want? |
36881 | What else? |
36881 | What is it, Noll? |
36881 | What is it, Noll? |
36881 | What is it, sir? |
36881 | What is it? |
36881 | What manner of foolish talk? |
36881 | What now, Mr. Tobey? 36881 What shall I say?" |
36881 | What ship? |
36881 | What talk of Brander and my wife? |
36881 | What talk? |
36881 | What was he down here for? |
36881 | What was it, Noll? |
36881 | What was it? |
36881 | What was your talk with the men, there? |
36881 | What would you suggest? |
36881 | What''s an eye? 36881 What''s in her eyes?" |
36881 | What''s it worth? |
36881 | What''s this, ma''am? |
36881 | What''s wrong, below? |
36881 | What''s wrong, here? |
36881 | What''s your notion? |
36881 | What, then? |
36881 | What? 36881 What?" |
36881 | Where did they get it? |
36881 | Where have you looked? |
36881 | Where''s Faith? |
36881 | Where''s the_ Thomas Morgan_? |
36881 | Who is this? |
36881 | Who says I stole whiskey? |
36881 | Who''s that man? |
36881 | Who? |
36881 | Why are you-- angry? |
36881 | Why did you do it? |
36881 | Why did you ever ship as a whaler? |
36881 | Why not? |
36881 | Why not? |
36881 | Why not? |
36881 | Why, youngster? |
36881 | Why.... What makes you....Faith asked quietly:"Do n''t you want to tell?" |
36881 | Why? 36881 Will you tell him to bring Roy?" |
36881 | Wo n''t you go with me? |
36881 | Would you mind coming on deck for a moment, sir? |
36881 | Ye think I''d lie? |
36881 | You had a-- garden? |
36881 | You know this place? |
36881 | You say the men had been drinking? |
36881 | You think Brander means to do that? |
36881 | You''ll take out a ship o''mine? |
36881 | You''re full? |
36881 | You''re not denying it''s yours? |
36881 | You''re sure it''s the stuff you think? |
36881 | You-- what? |
36881 | Your charge? |
36881 | A man?" |
36881 | All the time?" |
36881 | And the matter of their debate was this: was the ambergris the property of the_ Sally_, a fruit of the voyage; or was it Brander''s? |
36881 | Are we near there?..." |
36881 | Are you so much of a hog?" |
36881 | At night, when they were going to bed, Faith asked him:"Who have you decided to promote to be an officer, Noll?" |
36881 | Brander understood the one- eyed man; he asked:"What''s wrong, Mauger?" |
36881 | Brander, at Noll''s heels, asked:"Do we lower?" |
36881 | Brander?" |
36881 | Brander?" |
36881 | But I ca n''t stand by and see them do this to you....""What are they about?" |
36881 | But who does know them?" |
36881 | But.... Noll make her unhappy? |
36881 | Ca n''t you handle the ship?" |
36881 | Can a girl, born in rather sordid conditions, lift herself through sheer determination to the better things for which her soul hungered? |
36881 | Can you remember?" |
36881 | Can you use a hand?" |
36881 | Cox?" |
36881 | Cox?" |
36881 | Damn you.... Is it true?" |
36881 | Dan''l Tobey protested:"Are n''t you saying anything about Mauger?" |
36881 | Dan''l came down a little later, respectful...."Why not put into port somewhere, sir?" |
36881 | Dan''l caught a glimpse of the shadow in his eyes and asked in a friendly tone:"What''s wrong? |
36881 | Dan''l suggested awkwardly:"You-- think he''s telling truth?" |
36881 | Dan''l ventured to say:"You think Mr. Brander is right?" |
36881 | Dan''l, what do you think?" |
36881 | Defend himself? |
36881 | Did he claim it for his own?... |
36881 | Did he mean to push his claim, to make trouble?... |
36881 | Did you secure it?" |
36881 | Do I have to look after everything aboard this ship?" |
36881 | Do I need a shirking fourth mate to tell me when I''m right or wrong? |
36881 | Do n''t you want to?" |
36881 | Do you mind?" |
36881 | Do you want I should send a man with you?" |
36881 | Does she need men?" |
36881 | Eh?" |
36881 | Faith asked casually:"Why is it that you and Mr. Tobey do not like each other?" |
36881 | Faith asked the one- eyed man:"Where did you get it, Mauger?" |
36881 | Faith was silent for a little; then she asked:"Were there other white men here? |
36881 | God''s sake, ca n''t a man have a ship without a pack of thieves on her? |
36881 | Have n''t you, Dan''l?" |
36881 | Have you seen it anywhere?" |
36881 | He asked quietly:"What kind of dirt?" |
36881 | He asked the fourth mate straightforwardly:"Look here, do you claim that ambergris is yours?" |
36881 | He asked:"What are you doing?" |
36881 | He asked:"Why do you think I have said anything?" |
36881 | He cried breathlessly:"What was Noll Wing that you should cling to him so, Faith?" |
36881 | He did not seem minded to go on; and Faith asked again:"What happened?" |
36881 | He got to his feet in Brander''s path, demanded sharply:"Do you honestly mean to claim that for your own, Mr. Brander? |
36881 | He said harshly:"You heard what I told Tichel? |
36881 | He said hotly:"What is so funny?..." |
36881 | He said:"Yes...."Mauger squirmed out from under Brander...."What hit Slatter?" |
36881 | He started toward the main cabin; and she asked:"Where are you going, Noll?" |
36881 | He was furious with her...."Why did you do it?" |
36881 | He was quiet when Dan''l Tobey came down; and when he saw Dan''l, Noll demanded:"Are we making it, Dan''l? |
36881 | He went forward along the deck, and touched Dan''l''s elbow, and pointed after the cuffed man and asked huskily:"What''s the matter? |
36881 | Hear what?... |
36881 | Him that you....""Brander?" |
36881 | Him you say I love?" |
36881 | Him? |
36881 | How do you come to be here?" |
36881 | How long will you be here?" |
36881 | I am, am I not?" |
36881 | I mean-- who''s goin''to be the new officer? |
36881 | I should have killed him....""Did you not?" |
36881 | I should have....""What do you want?" |
36881 | I thought you had seen her eyes when she looked at the man....""Her eyes?" |
36881 | I''ll trot up there and get them and come back here.... Get a few things that I do n''t want to leave.... Will you turn your back?..." |
36881 | In God''s name, why ca n''t you men do things the right way? |
36881 | In spite of herself, a cold pang of doubt touched her.... Mauger had reason to hate Noll Wing.... Had he?... |
36881 | Is he not a good officer?... |
36881 | Is he not a hopeless thing?" |
36881 | Is that it?" |
36881 | It burns....""Aye?" |
36881 | It burns....""Why not forget it?" |
36881 | It came on cloudy and dark...."I met Trant on the deck; and I said to him:''Do we go ashore here?'' |
36881 | It''s a good thing to be able to find out where you are, on a world as big as this.... Do n''t you think?" |
36881 | It''s a part of the takings of the_ Sally_...."Noll wagged his head dolefully:"Aye, but will the man see it that way?" |
36881 | It''s not fifty miles to...""Leave the_ Sally_?" |
36881 | Listen and see....""Dan''l,"she said steadily,"what''s the end of all this? |
36881 | Nevertheless her voice was steady and quiet as she asked:"What do you mean, Roy?" |
36881 | No man stirred, but Dan''l Tobey asked:"What''s wrong, Cap''n Wing?" |
36881 | Noll Wing bellowed to the masthead man:"Where away?..." |
36881 | Noll had so nearly forgotten that he asked:"Think better of what, man?" |
36881 | Noll stormed at him one night:"Why must you always be defending Faith? |
36881 | Noll was mad....""What was he doing aft, then? |
36881 | Noll''s head drooped and swayed wearily; but after a moment he asked:"Wha''for?" |
36881 | Old Tichel looked at it, and he looked at Noll Wing, and he said:"Who''s to set there, cap''n?" |
36881 | Or do n''t you figure to hev one?" |
36881 | Or for you?" |
36881 | Or... were there others?..." |
36881 | Protest? |
36881 | Roy grinned youthfully, protested:"Oh, say, what''s the secret about? |
36881 | Roy said sharply:"Dan''l, have n''t you seen, yourself, what I mean? |
36881 | Say something? |
36881 | Say....""What?" |
36881 | She asked Dan''l:"Have you found anything?" |
36881 | She asked quickly:"Roy, why did you steal a jug of whiskey from the stores?" |
36881 | She looked at him sidewise; asked:"Who are you? |
36881 | She said steadily:"Mauger, where did the men get the liquor?" |
36881 | Should I hide from them?..." |
36881 | So what do you aim t''do?" |
36881 | So what do you think should be done in the matter?" |
36881 | So you love me, Faith?..." |
36881 | The boy asked abruptly:"Dan''l-- have you noticed the way Faith looks at Brander?" |
36881 | The captain said:"Come, sharp there...."And the man grinned and spat over the side and asked impudently:"What''s hurry?" |
36881 | The man asked:"How long before they sail?" |
36881 | The thief that''s lying now in the irons I put upon him? |
36881 | The whale seems to come and go, in some waters....""These?" |
36881 | They were talking together; and Noll frowned and looked at Dan''l and asked:"You think Mr. Brander is too much with the crew?" |
36881 | They were thus silent for a little before Faith asked:"Tell me.... You''ve never had a chance.... How did you live, there? |
36881 | They''re not sleeping well of nights, for wanting....""Do you, or do n''t you?" |
36881 | This is more lively in the woman than in the man; she is more apt to put it into words in her thoughts, more apt to ask herself:"Could I love him?" |
36881 | This time, he stood aft by the boat house and nagged at the mate, and cried:"Mr. Ham, will you please get that mess straightened out? |
36881 | Tichel?" |
36881 | Tichel?" |
36881 | Tiny bits of white were stirring over the black thing, like bits of paper in the wind.... Noll asked at last:"What do you make of it, Mr. Brander? |
36881 | Tobey?" |
36881 | Tobey?" |
36881 | Wait....""You mean-- you will-- some day?" |
36881 | Was n''t it lonely? |
36881 | Was she lost?..." |
36881 | Was there need of that? |
36881 | What did he do?" |
36881 | What did he do?" |
36881 | What do you want to say?" |
36881 | What else?" |
36881 | What happened?" |
36881 | What is it you want done?" |
36881 | What is it you''ve seen, Dan''l?" |
36881 | What is it?" |
36881 | What married woman is not a matchmaker? |
36881 | What would he want to ship before the mast for?" |
36881 | What would you have me do?" |
36881 | What''s in your mind?" |
36881 | What''s nearest?" |
36881 | What''s that you say?" |
36881 | What''s the end of it all? |
36881 | What''s the matter, Roy?" |
36881 | What''s wrong with him?" |
36881 | When Brander was gone, Faith asked:"Why were you startled?" |
36881 | When they were gone, he went aft again; and as he had expected, Noll asked:"What was that, Dan''l?" |
36881 | Who is there that measures up to our wants, d''you think?" |
36881 | Why did he do it? |
36881 | Why did he not deny? |
36881 | Why did n''t you say so-- since it was done before you came on deck?" |
36881 | Why did n''t you stay at the village?" |
36881 | Why do you hate Brander? |
36881 | Why do you stand by her?" |
36881 | Why not? |
36881 | Why should Brander take up with him, anyhow?" |
36881 | Why was that, now?" |
36881 | Will they do anything for me, Dan''l? |
36881 | Will you do a thing for me?" |
36881 | Will you let me come to your home this night for the saying?" |
36881 | Would she always love it so, when there was nothing else but the sea on every hand?... |
36881 | You''ve seen the Rock?" |
46390 | ''What''s that?'' 46390 Ah, boys,"said the jolly old salt,"so the Liddy Ann is breaking you in, eh? |
46390 | All ready, Mr. Johnson? 46390 Am I?" |
46390 | An''sure, sir,returned Farrell,"do n''t you always stern all, sir, as soon as you''re fast?" |
46390 | An''sure,said Farrell, as he came sliding and tumbling aft with the rest, to haul the tackle,"and is that his head, now?" |
46390 | And did ye''s have much throuble to kill that chap? |
46390 | And does Mr. Bee live in Egypt, too? |
46390 | And have you an''Oldtown,''too? |
46390 | And how did you like the treadmill exercise? |
46390 | And how did you manage it in a calm? |
46390 | And how does it get j''ined together again? |
46390 | And how long does it take''em to get it j''ined again? |
46390 | And how long have you been stowed away in the staysail? |
46390 | And what do you expect me to do with you now? |
46390 | And what may be your other view of the matter? |
46390 | And who is Obed Bee? |
46390 | Antone, do you know whose wheel it is? |
46390 | Are there really any such whales as he tells of, sir? |
46390 | Are these people anything like those at Kingsmill''s Group? |
46390 | Are they safe people to deal with? |
46390 | Bad luck to the soaking I got? |
46390 | Blacksmith, how long is it since you read Robinson Crusoe? |
46390 | Blacksmith,asked the captain, turning suddenly upon me,"can you strike a whale?" |
46390 | But I never told you, did I,continued Jeff, with a_ greenish_ kind of blush,"that I ran away myself in Turkeywarner, once?" |
46390 | But can a convict, then, go into business for himself? |
46390 | But do n''t you think,asked the old man,"that if that convict had been on board the ship, he would have shown himself before this time?" |
46390 | But how did you manage to smuggle this on board, Farrell? |
46390 | But how large a one? |
46390 | But the system, if it did not prevent crime, answered the purpose of peopling the colony, I suppose? |
46390 | But when was you in the Plutarch? 46390 But why was the system abolished?" |
46390 | But you boys never believed it was true, did you? |
46390 | But you do n''t mean to say that he is a convict, now? |
46390 | Cooper,said I,"where''s your fiddle to- night? |
46390 | Did any of my crew help you, or stow you away? |
46390 | Did n''t you admire the sparring match, this afternoon? |
46390 | Did n''t you? |
46390 | Did you ever see any very bad ones taken? |
46390 | Did you ever, in your own experience, have any proofs that they really eat men at any of this group? |
46390 | Did you have roast pig for dinner? |
46390 | Did you see the man who went out at the back door while you stood in the bar? |
46390 | Do ships always have to cut the line when they pass along here, sir? |
46390 | Do the bulls wear bonnets, too? |
46390 | Do they ever eat up boats? |
46390 | Do they have new bonnets as often as the fashions change? |
46390 | Do they often get whales as easily as we got this one to- day? |
46390 | Do they ship for a fixed length of time, then? |
46390 | Do you expect to stay out the voyage in that hooker? |
46390 | Do you furnish the outfit of clothes here, sir? |
46390 | Do you mean to go on board and give yourself up? |
46390 | Do you mean, sir,I asked,"that they cut the forefinger off, or have it cut off, designedly?" |
46390 | Do you swap boats''crews, Upton? |
46390 | Do you think he believes his own stories, sir? |
46390 | Do you want to try yourself? |
46390 | Gauze and ribbons? |
46390 | Halloo, Jeff, ai nt you turned in yet? |
46390 | Have you ever been right whaling, Cooper? |
46390 | Have you ever been there, sir? |
46390 | Head? 46390 How big round is it?" |
46390 | How could he do that? |
46390 | How did he break his bill off so short? |
46390 | How does that sail to windward bear now? |
46390 | How far off? |
46390 | How long was it before they found him? |
46390 | How much do you suppose it would have made? |
46390 | How so? |
46390 | How''s dat, when dey''s got no teeth? |
46390 | How''s that? |
46390 | How''s the victuals on these whaling boats? |
46390 | I say, darlin'',said Farrell,"would ye tell me what''s yer sweet name, now?" |
46390 | I''m sayin'', ould chap, what''s the matter wid y''er leg? |
46390 | In that plum pudd''ner that got in last week-- what''s her name? |
46390 | In the old Bajazet? 46390 Is he running off yet?" |
46390 | Is n''t it painful, do you think? |
46390 | Is that gun loaded with ball? |
46390 | Is that the only fresh water here? |
46390 | Is there any one living on it now? |
46390 | Is there, indeed? 46390 Knocking off, eh? |
46390 | Leave me? 46390 Let''s go down and try''em?" |
46390 | Let''s see, Cooper,said the fun- loving second mate,"you did n''t save the case of that big whale I heard you telling about?" |
46390 | Make more oil than sperm whales, do n''t they? |
46390 | My name? 46390 Now, haint you got a few fathoms of second- hand towline that you can spare as well as not? |
46390 | Now,said I to myself,"why would n''t this be the sort of cruise for me? |
46390 | O that''s it? 46390 O, that old brig over at the New North Wharf? |
46390 | Right whaling? 46390 Save him clean? |
46390 | Say, ould chap, what ails y''er leg? |
46390 | See rock ahead? |
46390 | Some years, I suppose? |
46390 | Tell that for anybody to believe it, Cooper? |
46390 | That is the island where the French are planting a colony now, or trying to, is n''t it? |
46390 | The voyage, you say, will not be more than twenty months, sir? |
46390 | The what, sir? |
46390 | Then you mean to say that both pumps were going all the time? |
46390 | Think so? |
46390 | Tikee- moee- moee? |
46390 | Well, Blacksmith, what do you think of Chilian women? |
46390 | Well, Cooper, how moosh you tink dis one he make? |
46390 | Well, Farrell, my boy,said Mr. Grafton,"how do you feel after your Baptism?" |
46390 | Well, Mr. Grafton,said the old man, as they both drew a long breath after the vision had passed out of view,"how do you feel? |
46390 | Well, how moosh my part? |
46390 | Well, where next? |
46390 | Well,said I,"I shall not believe that the captain--""Who''s the captain?" |
46390 | What account do they give of them? |
46390 | What are they made of? |
46390 | What are you blowing about your rights? |
46390 | What can be the matter? |
46390 | What did I tell you? |
46390 | What did you value your life at, when the cannibals were holding their powwow over you, the other day to Dominica? |
46390 | What do you mean by that? |
46390 | What for cap''n go Hanarora,said he,"with white man?" |
46390 | What for no keep off in middle? 46390 What for you stop up dere? |
46390 | What made y''er leg swell that big? |
46390 | What made you run away from the Cambridge? |
46390 | What makes you think so? |
46390 | What name o''this? 46390 What ship is that, pray?" |
46390 | What ship was he in? |
46390 | What ship_ is_ this? |
46390 | What sort of fish are they? |
46390 | What that you talk''bout r- r- rights? 46390 What the devil ails you, Uncle Dan? |
46390 | What the devil is that for? |
46390 | What the devil is that? |
46390 | What the plague do you call the natural rights of man? |
46390 | What then? |
46390 | What was that, sir? |
46390 | What would you do with that knife, Peter? |
46390 | What would you have done if we had set the staysail when we first got under way? |
46390 | What you talk about-- do all dut_ee_? 46390 What''s a kiko?" |
46390 | What''s sperm oil worth? |
46390 | What''s the matter, Peter? 46390 What''s the word? |
46390 | What''s your lay? |
46390 | Where Bailey? |
46390 | Where away? |
46390 | Where did you join her? |
46390 | Where four Kanaka pull boat? |
46390 | Where is the whale? |
46390 | Where trade? 46390 Where''s the whale? |
46390 | Where''s the whale? |
46390 | Where? |
46390 | Whereaway? |
46390 | Which way did they walk? |
46390 | Who are you? |
46390 | Who commands the Arethusa? |
46390 | Who''s got the watch here? 46390 Who?" |
46390 | Whon- eater? 46390 Why do n''t you get the ship''s buckets?" |
46390 | Why is n''t he there? |
46390 | Why not say aquafortis? |
46390 | Why not? 46390 Why not?" |
46390 | Why should he go so far out of his old tracks where he has always been successful? |
46390 | Why what did you have for dinner? |
46390 | Why, how fast would she go? |
46390 | Why,I asked,"what do you suppose ails me?" |
46390 | You are thinking of Captain Kearney, sir? |
46390 | You do n''t mean to say that these woman are going to lug all this water two or three miles? |
46390 | You_ wet_, no? |
46390 | ''Spose you made a port in some out- of- the- way place?" |
46390 | ''Taint sunk yet, has it?" |
46390 | ''Yes, why not? |
46390 | A common question with whalemen when they meet, and asked with as much gravity as that of the noble Thane, Macduff,"Stands Scotland where it did?" |
46390 | A description would present no points of marked interest to the general reader, and what whaleman needs a description of Talcahuana? |
46390 | A ship is literally crammed full when she sails, and one is tempted to ask,"Where is the oil to be put when we get it?" |
46390 | A shudder and murmur of indignation ran through us visitors from the ships at this cruelty, but what could we do or say about it? |
46390 | All ready with your sail, Bunker? |
46390 | And yet how else are we to prevent the annoyance, and secure our property? |
46390 | Are you going to fetch her up?" |
46390 | Are you the man they were searching for this morning?" |
46390 | Arrowroot,"said he, musingly,"what name can it be that sounds like that? |
46390 | Bear a hand-- what are you all staring at?" |
46390 | Black_smith_, where you?" |
46390 | Bunker, do you see that fellow? |
46390 | But did you notice any of them with a finger cut off?" |
46390 | But do you really suppose they_ are_ cannibals?" |
46390 | But instead of following this up by asking"Who give you that name?" |
46390 | By the way, have you any mechanical trade?" |
46390 | Ca n''t we go down and have a dig at him? |
46390 | Ca n''t we keep the run of him till the weather moderates?" |
46390 | Carry his own smell wid him eh? |
46390 | Do they work well?" |
46390 | Do you feel that, Mr. Grafton? |
46390 | Grafton?" |
46390 | Grafton?" |
46390 | Grafton?" |
46390 | Grafton?" |
46390 | Grafton?" |
46390 | Grafton?" |
46390 | Haint you got a piece of salt pork to spare, captain?" |
46390 | Haul the foresail up? |
46390 | Have a cigar, sir?" |
46390 | Have you got a strange man on board, captain?" |
46390 | He said they were good eating; but Hoeg slung him overboard again with,"Who in thunder do you suppose wants to eat that flat- headed snake?" |
46390 | Heave away that windlass? |
46390 | Here is something floating; we lay round for it; it is the life- preserver which has been cut adrift from the taffrail; but where is the man?? |
46390 | Here is something floating; we lay round for it; it is the life- preserver which has been cut adrift from the taffrail; but where is the man?? |
46390 | Hook take well, Mr. Grafton? |
46390 | How did they feed you, pretty well?" |
46390 | How did you get on board? |
46390 | How do you head, Kelly?" |
46390 | How long was that whale, now, on a guess?" |
46390 | I naturally asked,"where is the water?" |
46390 | I remember asking"Who is it?" |
46390 | I suppose you can get us into Oldtown to- night, ca n''t you pilot?" |
46390 | I think we''ve run far enough, eh, Mr. Grafton? |
46390 | I was going to ask you how much you ever see a sparm whale make? |
46390 | I went there to be measured for a pair of boots, and, of course, I asked him when they would be done? |
46390 | Johnson?" |
46390 | Manoel, what are you doing away in there?" |
46390 | Not immediately seeing any adequate cause for this, I asked, in great surprise, what it meant? |
46390 | Now then, Bunker, where are you? |
46390 | Now''s your time, Mr. Grafton-- hook on-- all ready, Bunker? |
46390 | Now, you see, you and me''s got to do''bout all the duty here--""What you talk about?" |
46390 | O, here you are, eh? |
46390 | One of the girls ventured to whisper an answer to me:"You see? |
46390 | Polk?" |
46390 | Say, Cooper, have you seen any flying fish come from the pump yet?" |
46390 | See that boat coming? |
46390 | See the Pandora, there? |
46390 | See the whale now, Mr. Dunham? |
46390 | Sure it''s a sperm whale, eh, Mr. Johnson? |
46390 | That helm eased down? |
46390 | That watchtackle ready boatsteerers? |
46390 | The Pandora''s crew tried to gally you, did n''t they?" |
46390 | The brothers were both on board the Arethusa in the evening, and I heard the question casually asked,"how long it was since they saw each other last?" |
46390 | The old man remained aloft, anxiously waiting the next rising, from time to time hailing the deck to know"what time it was?" |
46390 | Then I steered a boat in her next v''y''ge with''Bimelech Swain-- you knew him?" |
46390 | Then I suppose this Selkirk story is really true, is it?" |
46390 | Then as his head rises above the rail,"How goes it, Upton? |
46390 | Then looking to windward,"How_ is_ the weather, anyhow? |
46390 | These people had the gristles of their noses split, and many of them had inserted large ornaments(?) |
46390 | To the startling hail from the old man,"What are you doing down on deck? |
46390 | Was that so Hoeg? |
46390 | Well, how did you leave old Nantucket? |
46390 | Well, now, Jeff, how much did you ever see a whale make?" |
46390 | Well, what do you think of these Portuguese?" |
46390 | Well, when we got home, would you believe it? |
46390 | What do they want now?" |
46390 | What do you think about that eating whale, Blacksmith?" |
46390 | What for you begin gr- r- owl now, no got ship out sea yet? |
46390 | What is to be done with me, then?" |
46390 | What kind of telegraph do you make use of here?" |
46390 | What name man?" |
46390 | What time is it, there? |
46390 | What time is it? |
46390 | What was it, that same whale that was so long you had to sling stages over the stern to cut his head off?" |
46390 | What''s''Cooper''running so far for? |
46390 | When did you leave Sydney?" |
46390 | Where are_ you_, Jeff, with the song? |
46390 | Where did you come from?" |
46390 | Where''s Cooper? |
46390 | Where''s Old Jeff at my midship oar? |
46390 | Where''s your bucket? |
46390 | Where_ is_ the whale, Upton?" |
46390 | Who ever saw the likes?" |
46390 | Who had her then?" |
46390 | Who shipped any such black ghost as you to guess about the weather?" |
46390 | Whose overboard is it?" |
46390 | You have read Peter Simple, I suppose?" |
46390 | You know that fellow, I suppose?" |
46390 | You know what the pot called the kettle, Jeff? |
46390 | a sparm whale?" |
46390 | and then,"Name o''captain?" |
46390 | and where''s your rights that you''ve been blowin''about?" |
46390 | and"what kept them there when up? |
46390 | by swimming?" |
46390 | fish for them, indeed,"said the cooper,"but did they catch any?" |
46390 | get the short spades all ready to use in the waist? |
46390 | gun-- hatchet-- tobacker?" |
46390 | homesick?" |
46390 | how d''ye do, Captain Upton? |
46390 | is he sick?" |
46390 | meaning,"How much can you give us to believe it? |
46390 | pass up my quadrant? |
46390 | said I, considerably mystified,"What do you mean by that?" |
46390 | says Captain Barney, as he recognizes Father Grafton at the man- ropes,"you out here again?" |
46390 | shouted Obed B., as he recoiled from the haul he had made, staring with disgust,"what the deuce have I got on my hook now?" |
46390 | shouted the mate;"Who the devil is this boarding us over the bows? |
46390 | the next query is,"Name o''ship?" |
46390 | what for? |
46390 | wonder what is the use of it, and what becomes of it all, finally? |
21714 | A slave- dealer? |
21714 | A what, Bumble? |
21714 | A wot? |
21714 | Ai n''t it beautiful? |
21714 | Ai n''t we all pursooers? 21714 All for_ one_ fish?" |
21714 | An''are they a- crownin''of him now? |
21714 | An''so you expec''s they''re goin''to make you a king for all that? |
21714 | An''the boat? |
21714 | An''warn''t the doctors right? 21714 And all,"continued Martha,"in consequence of his resolutely and obstinately, and wilfully and wickedly going to sea?" |
21714 | And do you think he''d be so mean as to tell? |
21714 | And how much is` so''much, Ailie? |
21714 | And so, sir,said Captain Dunning,"you call this your` misfortune?''" |
21714 | And they''ve got something to say to you about going to sea-- would you like to go? |
21714 | And what, my pretty one,he said,"what should we do with the fellow in the stern? |
21714 | And when are ye to be crowned, Bumble? |
21714 | And when''s that? |
21714 | And who''s to pay for our foretopsail- yard? |
21714 | Are not all serpents poisonous? |
21714 | Are you quite sure of that? 21714 Are you quite sure of that?" |
21714 | Ay, greedy; has any o''you lads got a dickshunairy to lend him? 21714 Been to sea as a cook?" |
21714 | Blowed away? |
21714 | But are you sure your messmates are as willing as you are to witness against the captain? |
21714 | But have you not seen Rokens or Briant? |
21714 | But what''s the fire for? |
21714 | But where did ye come from, an''why are they arter ye, lad? |
21714 | But, I say, lads,interposed Jim Scroggles, seriously,"wot''ll we do if it comes on to blow a gale and blows away all our purvisions?" |
21714 | By the bye, Millons, did n''t you once fall into a whale''s skull, and get nearly drowned in oil? |
21714 | Can it be? |
21714 | Can it have been Glynn? |
21714 | Can you? 21714 Can_ you_ get un for us?" |
21714 | Come now, avic, wot''s the raisin ye wo n''t go? 21714 Could n''t we have the tipple first?" |
21714 | Could you not,she said, in a half- whisper,"cut the rope, and then paddle away back while_ they_ are paddling down the river?" |
21714 | D''ye hear? |
21714 | D''ye see it, Ailie? 21714 Dear child, what can you possibly know about law?" |
21714 | Did anybody else ever see it? |
21714 | Did n''t you, ma''am? |
21714 | Did ye ever see that word in Johnson? |
21714 | Did you ever see_ three_ kittens together? |
21714 | Did you hear that? |
21714 | Did you not tell me a few minutes ago that the water was almost done? |
21714 | Do n''t I know wot''s best for ye? 21714 Do n''t ye know that_ we_ is the purshooers,''cause why? |
21714 | Do n''t you see your drogue has broke loose? |
21714 | Do n''t you think it will be required? |
21714 | Do n''t you think our house will fall, dear papa? |
21714 | Do n''t you think, dear, Martha, that there''s some more of that word on the next line? |
21714 | Do whales go to school? |
21714 | Do you ever swear? |
21714 | Do you see that mountain? |
21714 | Do you think that we can continue to exist if our daily allowance is reduced one- fourth? |
21714 | Does God work miracles still? |
21714 | Eh? 21714 Eh?" |
21714 | Even suppose we were strong enough to punish them, what good would it do? 21714 Fat you say, sare?" |
21714 | George,said Martha, drying her eyes, and speaking in tones of deep solemnity,"did you ever read_ Robinson Crusoe_?" |
21714 | Girl,said the captain, turning suddenly towards her,"is breakfast ready?" |
21714 | Harm? 21714 Have whales got brains?" |
21714 | Have you a madman on board your ship? |
21714 | Have you really anything to say to me about that ship? |
21714 | He said that, did he? 21714 Here you are, lassies; how are ye?" |
21714 | Here''s a puzzler wot''ll beat it, though,observed Tim Rokens;"suppose we all go on talkin''stuff till doomsday, w''en''ll the boat be finished?" |
21714 | How are you so sure it was n''t that? |
21714 | How can you, brother? |
21714 | How can you? |
21714 | How deep is it, Glynn? |
21714 | How do you know? |
21714 | How far? |
21714 | How many casks did you bury? |
21714 | How much do you claim for damages, George? |
21714 | How much? |
21714 | How so, Ailie? 21714 How would you like to go with me to the whale- fishery?" |
21714 | How? 21714 I ax yer parding, sir,"said Tim Rokens, addressing Dr Hopley;"but I''m curious to know if crocodiles has got phrenoligy?" |
21714 | I s''pose I may set here till ye come back? |
21714 | I say, Dr Hopley,remarked Captain Dunning, as he gazed intently into the gloom astern,"did you not hear voices? |
21714 | I suppose you mean a suggestion, eh? |
21714 | I think we may say, what has brought_ you_ here? |
21714 | I wonder why God made them? |
21714 | I''ll be the death o''that brute yet,said Gurney, wiping the perspiration from his forehead;"but go on, Rokens; what was it you saw?" |
21714 | I''m sorry for that,replied the child;"for a fire is_ so_ nice and cheery; and it helps to keep off the wild beasts, too, does n''t it?" |
21714 | If you are Jacko''s self- appointed uncle, and Miss Ailie is his adopted mother, wot relation is Miss Ailie to you? |
21714 | In course I do n''t; how should I? |
21714 | Is any one inclined to try it? |
21714 | Is everything snug, Mr Millons? |
21714 | Is he dead? |
21714 | Is it good? |
21714 | Is it? |
21714 | Is n''t Tim Rokens very funny, papa? |
21714 | Is n''t it strange, Glynn, that there are such ugly beasts in the world? |
21714 | Is n''t what funny? |
21714 | Is she? |
21714 | Is that a bit o''the wreck? |
21714 | Is that all? |
21714 | Is that another on ahead? |
21714 | Is there nobody to look arter these matters in Christian lands? |
21714 | Is your mistress at home? |
21714 | Is_ this_ your favourite tipple? |
21714 | Is_ who_ dead? |
21714 | It was rather odd,replied Glynn;"but where did you go after that?" |
21714 | It''s meself ca n''t tell,replied Briant;"d''ye know, Tim?" |
21714 | Like what, papa? |
21714 | Looking at the fish, Ailie, as usual? |
21714 | May he? |
21714 | Me ketch''i m? |
21714 | Me tell a story? 21714 Messmates,"said Tim Rokens, who for some time had leaned with both elbows on his oar and his face buried in his hands,"wot d''ye say to a bath? |
21714 | No, never,replied the captain;"what has that got to do with it?" |
21714 | Not goin''to be king? 21714 Not ready for supper?" |
21714 | Now, what am I to do with it? 21714 Now, what''s wrong?" |
21714 | O, why did ye kill her? |
21714 | Obey orders, will you? |
21714 | Oh, Glynn, is that you? 21714 Oh, it''s_ him_ you mean, is it? |
21714 | Oh, nonsense, why not? |
21714 | Oh, thank you, Glynn; but why did you go down so quick and stay so long? 21714 Oh, that''s a pity, is n''t it, Glynn?" |
21714 | Oh, then we went on, and on again, until we came to--"It''s your turn at the wheel, lad, ai n''t it? |
21714 | Oh, then you did_ not_ see the drogue attached to the whale? |
21714 | Plaze, sir, may I shoot him? |
21714 | Say, is it? 21714 See who?" |
21714 | Shall I give the order, sir? |
21714 | Shall we ever see land again? |
21714 | Shall we go back an''pick it up, sir? |
21714 | Shall we sleep here till morning? |
21714 | So he does,said Ailie;"is n''t it funny?" |
21714 | So much? 21714 Sure? |
21714 | Tell both of''em I''m here, then,said the captain, stepping into the little parlour without further ceremony;"and is my little girl in?" |
21714 | The eggs? |
21714 | Then I suppose you have no objection to try a glass of my favourite tipple, have you? |
21714 | Then why ai n''t Bibles sent to''em at once? |
21714 | Then why do n''t they git more funds? |
21714 | Then,argued Martha,"will you, can you, George, contemplate the possibility of your only daughter coming to the same dreadful end?" |
21714 | There''s ever so many Johnsons in the world; which on''em all do you mean? |
21714 | Too bad, indeed; yes, is n''t it? |
21714 | W''y? 21714 We are certain of nothing,"replied the captain;"but even suppose we were, how are we to get hold of them?" |
21714 | Well, Ailie,said Glynn, cheerfully, as he opened the door and peeped in;"how d''ye get on, dear? |
21714 | Well, Millons, what news? |
21714 | Well, and what does skulking mean, and shirking work? |
21714 | Well, it''s so long ago since I sung that song, shipmates,replied Gurney,"that I''ve bin and forgot it; but Tim Rokens knows it; where''s Rokens?" |
21714 | Well, we came up with a big whale, and fixed an iron cleverly in him at the first throw--"An iron? |
21714 | Well,began Ailie;"but where was I?" |
21714 | Were the other men as eager for the fight as you were? |
21714 | Werry good,returned Rokens;"but wot makes ye for to expect it?" |
21714 | What are they saying to you to- night? |
21714 | What are you going to do with the wood, papa? |
21714 | What d''ye say to dig a hole and stick the things in it? |
21714 | What do they spear them for? |
21714 | What do you mean by striking that fish? |
21714 | What has detained you, eh? |
21714 | What have you got to say, then? |
21714 | What is it? |
21714 | What is that? |
21714 | What mean you by stopping me? |
21714 | What mean you, sir? |
21714 | What mischief have you been about? |
21714 | What nonsense you talk, George; but I suppose you really do use pretty large hooks and lines when you fish for whales? |
21714 | What now? 21714 What right have you to ask?" |
21714 | What''s come of Glynn? |
21714 | What''s that? |
21714 | What''s that? |
21714 | What''s the very ticket? |
21714 | What? |
21714 | What? |
21714 | What_ can_ have done it? 21714 Where away now?" |
21714 | Where away? |
21714 | Which is it, doctor dear? |
21714 | Who from? |
21714 | Who''s Johnson? |
21714 | Who''s that? |
21714 | Who''s the` pursooers?'' |
21714 | Who, then? 21714 Who? |
21714 | Why did n''t you heave- to when I ordered you,he said,"and so save all this trouble and worry?" |
21714 | Why do n''t you go away when you''re told, eh? |
21714 | Why not? |
21714 | Why not? |
21714 | Why, Glynn, what has kept you, lad? |
21714 | Why, what have you got there? |
21714 | Why, what would you do with it, Dick? |
21714 | Why, what''s the matter, man? |
21714 | Why, what''s wrong? |
21714 | Why? |
21714 | Will it do you much harm, dear, papa? |
21714 | Will no one call out murder? |
21714 | With or without capers- sauce? |
21714 | Wo n''t I? |
21714 | Wo n''t he? |
21714 | Wo n''t we leave it, dear papa,said she,"to go up yonder?" |
21714 | Wo n''t you come in and say it here? |
21714 | Wos he a big or a little feller? |
21714 | Wot can it be a- doin''of here? |
21714 | Wot can it be? |
21714 | Wot then? |
21714 | Wot was it? |
21714 | Wot''s a Solon? |
21714 | Wot''s he bin doin''? |
21714 | Wot''s that there soup made of? |
21714 | Wot, do n''t ye know who Johnson is? |
21714 | Wot? |
21714 | Would you like a little more tart? |
21714 | Would you? |
21714 | Yes, Ailie; the one in the middle, you mean, do n''t you? 21714 You ai n''t afraid, air you?" |
21714 | You are quite sure that you saw it? |
21714 | You do n''t mane to tell me, now, that_ whalers_ comes in here for slaves, do ye? |
21714 | You do n''t mean it? |
21714 | You do n''t suppose I''d go fur to tell lies, do you? |
21714 | You do n''t, do n''t you? |
21714 | You may sit there till they turn you out; but come and take breakfast with me at the same hour to- morrow, will ye? |
21714 | You no tell what I go to say? 21714 You wants a cook, I b''lieve?" |
21714 | You''ll stay a long time with me before you go away to sea again, wo n''t you, dear papa? |
21714 | You''re a cook, are you? |
21714 | You''re quite sure of that? 21714 _ Quite_ dead?" |
21714 | ` We''ve been all''--I ca n''t make this word out, can you, dear? |
21714 | ` Why do n''t you ask himself?'' 21714 ` Will ye come an''see it this night?'' |
21714 | ` Wot''s all to do?'' 21714 ` Would n''t I?'' |
21714 | A dog- kennel, eh?" |
21714 | Ai n''t it? |
21714 | All ready?" |
21714 | And did n''t I hear the convarse o''all the doctors in the place? |
21714 | And did n''t they go through adventures that would have made the hair of mortals not only stand on end, but fly out by the roots altogether? |
21714 | Anything more?" |
21714 | Are you one?" |
21714 | Are you ready, my pet? |
21714 | At last Ailie held her hand towards it and said--"Wo n''t it come to me, dear, sweet pet? |
21714 | At last he emitted several strong puffs of smoke, and said--"Young man, did you ever_ see_ your own mind?" |
21714 | Being apparently satisfied with the man''s account of himself, Captain Dunning put to him the question--"Do you drink?" |
21714 | Besides, the rascals in front might take it into their heads to paddle after us, you know, and what then?" |
21714 | Both ladies exclaimed,"What point, George?" |
21714 | Business first, and pleasure, if ye can get it, arterwards-- them''s my notions, Nip-- Nip-- Nippi-- what''s your name?" |
21714 | But tell me, Ailie, how was it that you managed to keep afloat so long? |
21714 | Can you, Jane?" |
21714 | Come, Jim Scroggles, you can tell him what it means-- you''ve been to school, I believe, hain''t you?" |
21714 | D''ye see that whale now?" |
21714 | D''ye think the bottle o''brandy stole his- self?" |
21714 | Dear me, Martha, you and Jane-- look as if you had been running a race, eh? |
21714 | Did Glynn speak to you within the last ten minutes?" |
21714 | Did I niver tell ye o''the Widdy Morgan, as had a ghost come to see her frequently?" |
21714 | Did any of ye iver study midsin?" |
21714 | Did n''t I say that I''d tell ye a story as would prove to ye that ghosts drink, more especially Irish ghosts? |
21714 | Did n''t he lamp two on''em with a rope''s- end once till they wos fit to bust, and all for nothin''but skylarkin''? |
21714 | Did n''t he make them talk, as mortals never talked before; and sing as mortals never dreamed of? |
21714 | Did n''t yer poor owld mother tell ye, Phil, that ye''d come to a bad end-- she did--""Are ye badly hurt?" |
21714 | Did you find out who the poor fellow is yet?" |
21714 | Do n''t they look so_ very_ like as if they were all painted black?" |
21714 | Do n''t you observe it''s''cause he han''t got none at all to see? |
21714 | Do n''t you think, captain, that we might have our breakfast to- night? |
21714 | Do you know which part of the whale struck your boat? |
21714 | Do you think it was the Holy Spirit who put them into my mind? |
21714 | Doctor, can you tell me now, which is the easiest of digestion-- a hard egg or a soft one?" |
21714 | Else, wherefore does the Father love it and care for it so tenderly? |
21714 | Glynn, Glynn Proctor,"roared the first mate from the deck--"where''s that fellow? |
21714 | Glynn,"exclaimed Ailie, in a whisper-- for she felt that things were beginning to look serious--"what_ are_ we to do?" |
21714 | God would not make me feel so happy if we were going to be lost, would He?" |
21714 | Have ye sich an article in these parts?" |
21714 | Have you breakfasted?" |
21714 | Have you caught any codlings, Bumble?" |
21714 | Have you had a glass this morning?" |
21714 | Have you thought?" |
21714 | He han''t got even the ghost of one, so how could ye expect anybody to see it?" |
21714 | He''ll take such famous care of me; now_ wo n''t_ you let me go, papa?" |
21714 | How came you to leave your cabin, dear? |
21714 | How d''ye know that?" |
21714 | How wos it, now, that you so mistook yer trade as to come for to go to sea?" |
21714 | I could only just make out the winder by the pale starlight that shone through it, but the moment I set my two eyes on it, wot does I see? |
21714 | I looks round in all directions, but I could n''t see nothin''--cause why? |
21714 | I was born at sea, d''ye see? |
21714 | I wonder if it was a poisonous serpent?" |
21714 | I''ve found ye, have I? |
21714 | Is floating on your back a miracle?" |
21714 | Is n''t that the usual way of serving these fellows out?" |
21714 | Is there a chorus to it?" |
21714 | It treats every one ill.""Wo n''t it treat Captain Dixon well, if he wins, aunt?" |
21714 | Jim says he never seed his own mind-- very good; and he says as how nobody else niver seed it nother; well, and wot then? |
21714 | Kit stowed and anchor tripped? |
21714 | Let me go, will ye?" |
21714 | Might it not have been the part of the fish near the tail, now, that struck you, or the fin just under the tail?" |
21714 | Not love our fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, wives? |
21714 | Now, what say you? |
21714 | Now, wot then?" |
21714 | Serves him right; do n''t it, Glynn?" |
21714 | So again I say, who cried` Shame?''" |
21714 | So it wos you stole the brandy, wos it? |
21714 | Tarquin?" |
21714 | The mate came close to the captain''s side and said,"Did you see, sir, the way them men on the mainyard were scramblin''down?" |
21714 | Then he thought,"What if I have turned just as I was coming up with her?" |
21714 | There ai n''t no ghosts, is there?'' |
21714 | W''at say you, doctor?" |
21714 | Was it grand, Glynn?" |
21714 | Was it not the_ third_ oar, now?" |
21714 | Was it the head?" |
21714 | Was n''t it funny? |
21714 | Was n''t it odd?" |
21714 | Was n''t it strange? |
21714 | Was n''t we all pursooing the whale together?" |
21714 | Was the drogue attached when the boat came up? |
21714 | Well, now, what have you to tell me about the_ Termagant_? |
21714 | Well, reader, and why not? |
21714 | Well, wan evenin''I wint to see her, an''says I,` Mrs Morgan, did ye iver hear the bit song called the Widdy Machree?'' |
21714 | Well, would ye b''lieve it, shipmates, at that same moment up starts the ghost again as bold as iver? |
21714 | Were the other men in your boat in a similarly unobservant condition?" |
21714 | What a very pretty bit of coral I see over there, close to the white rock; do you see it? |
21714 | What d''ye say, boys; shall we beat''em?" |
21714 | What do you say to go with me and Ailie on our next trip, sisters? |
21714 | What is that?" |
21714 | What more can you tell me? |
21714 | What say you?" |
21714 | What sort o''baccy d''ye smoke, Rokens?" |
21714 | What think you, Ailie, my pet, will you be able to stand it?" |
21714 | What was to be done? |
21714 | What''s that?" |
21714 | What_ is_ it, doctor?" |
21714 | Where have you been?" |
21714 | Where is he?" |
21714 | Where is it?" |
21714 | Who are you, and where bound?" |
21714 | Who are you, and where from?" |
21714 | Who has not? |
21714 | Who is it, did you say?" |
21714 | Who is? |
21714 | Who made it?" |
21714 | Why wo n''t ye, now?" |
21714 | Why, what are you making? |
21714 | Why?" |
21714 | Why?" |
21714 | Will you trust me?" |
21714 | Wot is to be done?" |
21714 | Wot more would ye have? |
21714 | Wot''s a ship without a''elm? |
21714 | Wot''s a song without a chorus? |
21714 | Wot''s plum- duff without the plums? |
21714 | Wot''s wrong wid ye, Bumble?" |
21714 | Wot-- supposin''ye had the chance-- would ye give, at this good min''it, for a biled leg o''mutton?" |
21714 | Would your lordship be so good as to note that? |
21714 | Yes or no?" |
21714 | Yes, well?" |
21714 | Yet why should I conceal from her the danger of our position? |
21714 | You know what fire- flies and glow- worms are?" |
21714 | ` Wot,''says I,` keep a garding, and plant taters, and hoe flowers an''cabidges?'' |
21714 | ` Would ye like to hear it, darlint?'' |
21714 | ` Ye ai n''t a- goin''to take spasms?'' |
21714 | ai n''t it swate?" |
21714 | am I?" |
21714 | and then followed it up with the abrupt question--"Do you drink?" |
21714 | at it yet? |
21714 | but I would like to have''em up in a row-- every black villain in the place-- an''a cutlass in my hand, an''--an''would n''t I whip off their heads? |
21714 | came down- stairs like an echo, from the region of Miss Martha Dunning''s bedroom, and was followed up by a"What is it?" |
21714 | capting,"exclaimed the wrathful Irishman, reproachfully,"sure ye would n''t spile the fun?" |
21714 | cried Ailie, laughing,"how can you?" |
21714 | cried Tarquin, looking fiercely round on his shipmates,"who cried shame? |
21714 | cried the captain, with lively interest;"and her captain?" |
21714 | do n''t he pull? |
21714 | do n''t you feel hungry?" |
21714 | doctor, have ye strength to set disjointed limbs?" |
21714 | echoed Rokens, in disgust;"why did n''t ye say, so at first? |
21714 | exclaimed Martha;"to whom do you refer?" |
21714 | exclaimed Phil Briant, all his blood rising at the mere mention of the horrible traffic;"could n''t we land, capting, and give them a lickin''? |
21714 | exclaimed Tim Rokens, withdrawing his pipe from his lips;"do you_ sell_ niggers?" |
21714 | he said,"that''s your game, is it? |
21714 | interrupted Glynn;"what''s that?" |
21714 | more wanting to go ashore?" |
21714 | morther, could n''t I burst?" |
21714 | not give our warmest affections to all these?" |
21714 | observed Rokens;"and d''ye suppose he''d give ye the right name?" |
21714 | said Aunt Jane indignantly;"but what could we expect? |
21714 | said Rokens;"d''ye mean, a ruler of this here country?" |
21714 | says I;`''av coorse ye are, bliss yer purty face; do n''t I know that ivery boy in the parish is after ye?'' |
21714 | shouted Tim Rokens;"wot boat''s that?" |
21714 | the bright, beautiful world that was made by God to be enjoyed? |
21714 | then ye married the widder, did ye?" |
21714 | what a funny bay that must be--`My dearest Sisters''--the darling fellow, he always begins that way, do n''t he, Jane dear?" |
21714 | what air they doin''wid the poor cratur now?" |
21714 | what can that be? |
21714 | what on airth--?" |
21714 | what''s wrong?" |
21714 | what, where?" |
21714 | what_ can_ that be, Jane?" |
21714 | when? |
21714 | where away, Phil?" |
21714 | where, child? |
21714 | who has been with you?" |
21714 | who''d ha''thought it? |
21714 | why, what about?" |
21714 | will ye take_ me_?'' |
21714 | willin''to go? |
21714 | wot you tink?" |
21714 | ye''ve bin to school, no doubt, have n''t ye?" |
21714 | yelled the bereaved one,"do n''t I know ye?" |
21714 | you prefer big spoons to little ones, my man, do n''t you?" |
21714 | you''re a to- teetler?" |